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by Toi Derricotte
That time my grandmother dragged me through the perfume aisles2 at Saks, she held me up by my arm, her eyes bright as a dog's cornered in the light. She said it over and over, as if she were Jesus,and I were dead. She had been solid as a tree, a fur around her neck, a light-skinned matron whose car was parked, who walked on swirling5 marble and passed through brass6 openings——in 1945. There was not even a black elevator operator at Saks. The saleswoman had brought velvet7 leggings to lace me in, and cooed, as if in service of all grandmothers. My grandmother had smiled,but not hungrily, not like my mother who hated them, but wanted to please, and they had smiled back, as if they were wearing wooden collars. When my legs gave out, my grandmother ragged1 me up and held me like God holds saints by the roots of the hair. I begged her to believe I couldn't help it. Stumbling, her face white with sweat, she pushed me through the crowd, rushing away from those eyes that saw through er clothes, under her skin, all the way down to the transparent8 genes9 confessing. 点击收听单词发音
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