Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Inside Out and Back Again

    Page 2
    Prev Next


      Soft as a yam

      gliding down

      after three easy,

      thrilling chews.

      April 5

      Unknown Father

      I don’t know

      any more about Father

      than the small things

      Mother lets slip.

      He loved stewed eels,

      paté chaud pastries,

      and of course his children,

      so much that he

      grew teary

      watching us sleep.

      He hated the afternoon sun,

      the color brown,

      and cold rice.

      Brother Quang remembers

      Father often said

      tuyt sút,

      the Vietnamese way

      to pronounce the French phrase

      tout de suite

      meaning right away.

      Mother would laugh

      when Father followed her

      around the kitchen

      repeating,

      I’m starved for stewed eel,

      tuyt sút, tuyt sút.

      Sometimes I whisper

      tuyt sút to myself

      to pretend

      I know him.

      I would never say tuyt sút

      in front of Mother.

      None of us would want

      to make her sadder

      than she already is.

      Every day

      TV News

      Brother Quang races home

      from class,

      throws down his bicycle,

      exhausted,

      no longer able to afford

      gasoline for his moped.

      Unbelievable,

      he screams,

      and turns on the TV.

      A pilot for South Vietnam

      bombed the presidential palace

      downtown that afternoon.

      Afterward the pilot flew north

      and received a medal.

      The news says the pilot

      has been a spy

      for the Communists

      for years.

      The Communists

      captured Father,

      so why would

      any pilot

      choose their side?

      Brother Quang says,

      One cannot justify war

      unless each side

      flaunts its own

      blind conviction.

      Since starting college,

      he shows off even more

      with tangled words.

      I start to say so,

      but Mother pats my hand,

      her signal for me to calm down.

      April 8

      Birthday

      I, the youngest,

      get to celebrate

      my actual birthday

      even though I turned

      a year older

      like everyone else

      at Tt.

      I, the only daughter,

      usually get roasted chicken,

      dried bamboo soup,

      and all-I-can-eat pudding.

      This year,

      Mother manages only

      banana tapioca

      and my favorite

      black sesame candy.

      She makes up for it

      by allowing

      one wish.

      I dye my mouth

      sugary black

      and insist on

      stories.

      It’s not easy

      to persuade Mother

      to tell of her girlhood

      in the North,

      where her grandmother’s land

      stretched farther than

      doves could fly,

      where looking pretty

      and writing poetry

      were her only duties.

      She was promised to Father

      at five.

      They married at sixteen,

      earlier than expected.

      Everyone’s future changed

      upon learning the name

      H Chí Minh.

      Change meant

      land was taken away,

      houses now belonged

      to the state,

      servants gained power

      as fighters.

      The country divided in half.

      Mother and Father came south,

      convinced it would be

      easier to breathe

      away from Communism.

      Her father was to follow,

      but he was waiting for his son,

      who was waiting for his wife,

      who was waiting to deliver a child

      in its last week

      in her belly.

      The same week,

      North and South

      closed their doors.

      No more migration.

      No more letters.

      No more family.

      At this point,

      Mother closes her eyes,

      eyes that resemble no one else’s,

      sunken and deep like Westerners’

      yet almond-shaped like ours.

      I always wish for her eyes,

      but Mother says no.

      Eyes like hers can’t help

      but carry sadness;

      even as a child

      her parents were alarmed

      by the weight in her eyes.

      I want to hear more,

      but nothing,

      not even my pouts,

      can make Mother open her eyes

      and tell more.

      April 10

      Birthday Wishes

      Wishes I keep to myself:

      Wish I could do what boys do

      and let the sun darken my skin,

      and scars grid my knees.

      Wish I could let my hair grow,

      but Mother says the shorter the better

      to beat Saigon’s heat and lice.

      Wish I could lose my chubby cheeks.

      Wish I could stay calm

      no matter what

      my brothers say.

      Wish Mother would stop

      chiding me to stay calm,

      which makes it worse.

      Wish I had a sister

      to jump rope with

      and sew doll clothes

      and hug for warmth

      in the middle of the night.

      Wish Father would come home

      so I can stop daydreaming

      that he will appear

      in my classroom

      in a white navy uniform

      and extend his hand toward me

      for all my classmates to see.

      Mostly I wish

      Father would appear in our doorway

      and make Mother’s lips

      curl upward,

      lifting them from

      a permanent frown

      of worries.

      April 10

      Night

      A Day Downtown

      Every spring

      President Thiu

      holds a long long long

      ceremony to comfort

      war wives.

      Mother and I go because

      after President Thiu’s

      talk talk talk—

      of winning the war,

      of democracy,

      of our fathers’ bravery—

      each family gets

      five kilos of sugar,

      ten kilos of rice,

      and a small jug of

      vegetable oil.

      Inside the cyclo

      Mother crosses her legs

      so I can fit beside her.

      The breeze still cool,

      we bounce across the bridge

      shaped like a crescent moon

      where I’m not to go by myself.

      Mother smells of lavender

      and warmth;

      she’s so beautiful

      even if

      her cheeks are too hollow,

      her mouth too dark with worries.

      Despite warnings,

      I still want her sunken eyes.

      Before I see it,

    &nb
    sp; I hear downtown,

      thick with beeps,

      shouts, police whistles.

      Everywhere,

      mopeds and bicycles

      race down the wide road,

      moving out of the way

      only when a truck

      honks and mows straight down

      the middle of the lane.

      We get out

      in front of an open market.

      We push our way to

      a bánh cun stand.

      I love watching

      the spread of rice flour on cloth,

      stretched over a steaming pot.

      Like magic a crepe forms

      to be filled with shrimp

      and eaten with

      cucumber and bean sprouts.

      It tastes even better

      than it looks.

      While my mouth is full,

      the noises of the market

      silence themselves,

      letting me and my bánh cun

      float.

      We squeeze ourselves

      out of the market,

      toward the presidential palace.

      We stand in line;

      for even longer

      we sit on hot metal benches

      facing the podium.

      My white cotton

      hat and Mother’s flowery umbrella

      are nothing

      against the afternoon sun,

      shooting rays into

      my short short hair.

      I’m dizzy

      and thirsty;

      the fish sauce

      in the bánh cun

      was very salty.

      Mother gives me a tamarind candy.

      I have never been

      so thrilled

      to drink my saliva.

      Finally President Thiu appears,

      tan and sweaty.

      We know you have suffered.

      I thank you,

      your country thanks you.

      Then he cries actual tears,

      unwiped, facing the cameras.

      Mother clicks her tongue:

      Tears of an ugly fish.

      I know that to mean

      fake tears of a crocodile.

      April 12

      Twisting Twisting

      Mother measures

      rice grains

      left in the bin.

      Not enough to last

      till payday

      at the end of the month.

      Her brows

      twist like laundry

      being wrung dry.

      Yam and manioc

      taste lovely

      blended with rice,

      she says, and smiles,

      as if I don’t know

      how the poor

      fill their children’s bellies.

      April 13

      Closed Too Soon

      A siren screams

      over Miss Xinh’s voice

      in the middle of a lesson

      on smiley and bald

      President Ford.

      We all know it’s bad news.

      School’s now closed;

      everyone must go home

      a month too soon.

      I’m mad and pinch the girl

      who shares my desk.

      Tram is half my size,

      so skinny and nervous.

      Our mothers are friends.

      She will tell on me.

      She always tells on me.

      Mother will again

      scold me to be gentle.

      I need time

      to finish this riddle:

      A man usually rides his bike

      9 kilometers per hour,

      yet the wind slows him

      to 6.76 kilometers

      for 26 minutes

      and 5.55 kilometers

      for 10;

      how long until he gets home

      11.54 kilometers away?

      The first to solve it

      gets the sweet potato plant

      sprouting at the window.

      I want to plant it

      beside my papaya tree,

      where vines can climb

      and shade ripening fruit.

      Again I pinch Tram,

      knowing the plant

      will be awarded

      today

      to the teacher’s pet,

      who is always

      skinny and nervous

      and never me.

      April 14

      Promises

      Five papayas

      the sizes of

      my head,

      a knee,

      two elbows,

      and a thumb

      cling to the trunk.

      Still green

      but promising.

      April 15

      Bridge to the Sea

      Uncle Sn,

      Father’s best friend,

      visits us.

      He’s short, dark, and smiley,

      not tall, thin, and serious

      like Father in photographs.

      Still, when classmates

      ask about my father,

      sometimes short and smiley

      come to mind

      before I can stop it.

      Uncle Sn goes straight

      to the kitchen,

      where the back door opens into

      an alley.

      Unbelievable luck!

      This door bypasses the navy checkpoint

      and leads straight to the port.

      I will not risk

      fleeing with my children

      on a rickety boat.

      Would a navy ship

      meet your approval?

      As if the navy

      would abandon its country?

      There won’t be a South Vietnam

      left to abandon.

      You really believe

      we can leave?

      When the time comes,

      this house

      is our bridge

      to the sea.

      April 16

      Should We?

      Mother calls a family meeting.

      Ông Xuân has sold

      leaves of gold

      to buy twelve airplane tickets.

      Bà Nam has a van

      ready to load

      twenty-five relatives

      toward the coast.

      Mother asks us,

      Should we leave our home?

      Brother Quang says,

      How can we scramble away

      like rats,

      without honor, without dignity,

      when everyone must help

      rebuild the country?

      Brother Khôi says,

      What if Father comes home

      and finds his family gone?

      Brother V says,

      Yes, we must go.

      Everyone knows he dreams

      of touching the same ground

      where Bruce Lee walked.

      Mother twists her brows.

      I’ve lived in the North.

      At first, not much will happen,

      then suddenly Quang

      will be asked to leave college.

      Hà will come home

      chanting the slogans

      of H Chí Minh,

      and Khôi will be rewarded

      for reporting to his teacher

      everything we say in the house.

      Her brows twist

      so much

      we hush.

      April 17

      Sssshhhhhhh

      Brother Khôi shakes me

      before dawn.

      I follow him

      to the back garden.

      In his palm chirps

      a downy yellow fuzz,

      just hatched.

      He presses his palm

      against my squeal.

      No matter what Mother decides,

      we are not to leave.

      I must protect my chick

      and you your papayas.

      He holds out his pinky

      and stares

      stares

      stares

      until I extend mine


      and we hook.

      April 18

      Quiet Decision

      Dinnertime

      I help Mother

      peel sweet potatoes

      to stretch the rice.

      I start to chop off

      a potato’s end

      as wide as

      a thumbnail,

      then decide

      to slice off

      only a sliver.

      I am proud

      of my ability

      to save

      until I see

      tears

      in Mother’s

      deep eyes.

      You deserve to grow up

      where you don’t worry about

      saving half a bite

      of sweet potato.

      April 19

      Early Monsoon

      We pretend

      the monsoon

      has come early.

      In the distance

      bombs

      explode like thunder,

      slashes

      lighten the sky,

      gunfire

      falls like rain.

      Distant

      yet within ears,

      within eyes.

      Not that far away

      after all.

      April 20

      The President Resigns

      On TV President Thiu

      looks sad and yellow;

      what has happened to his tan?

      His eyes brim with tears;

      this time they look real.

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026