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    Inside Out and Back Again

    Page 3
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      I can no longer be your president

      but I will never leave my people

      or our country.

      Mother lifts one brow,

      what she does

      when she thinks

      I’m lying.

      April 21

      Watch Over Us

      Uncle Sn returns

      and tells us

      to be ready to leave

      any day.

      Don’t tell anyone,

      or all of Saigon

      will storm the port.

      Only navy families

      can board the ships.

      Uncle Sn and Father

      graduated in the same navy class.

      It was mere luck

      that Uncle Sn

      didn’t go on the mission

      where Father was captured.

      Mother pulls me close

      and pats my head.

      Father watches over us

      even if he’s not here.

      Mother tells me

      she and Father have a pact.

      If war should separate them,

      they know to find each other

      through Father’s ancestral home

      in the North.

      April 24

      Crisscrossed Packs

      Pedal, pedal

      Mother’s feet

      push the sewing machine.

      The faster she pedals

      the faster stitches appear

      on heavy brown cloth.

      Two rectangles

      make a pack.

      A long strip

      makes a handle

      to be strapped across

      the wearer’s chest.

      Hours later

      the stitches appear

      in slow motion,

      the needle a worm

      laying tiny eggs

      that sink into brown cloth.

      The tired worm

      reproduces much more slowly

      at the end of the day

      than at the beginning

      when Mother started

      the first of five bags.

      Brother Khôi says too loudly,

      Make only three.

      Mother goes

      to a high shelf,

      bringing back Father’s portrait.

      Come with us

      or we’ll all stay.

      Think, my son;

      your action will determine

      our future.

      Mother knows this son

      cannot stand to hurt

      anyone,

      anything.

      Look at Father.

      Come with us

      so Father

      will be proud

      you obeyed your mother

      while he’s not here.

      I look at my toes,

      feeling Brother Khôi’s eyes

      burn into my scalp.

      I also feel him slowly nodding.

      Who can go against

      a mother

      who has become gaunt like bark

      from raising four children alone?

      April 26

      Choice

      Into each pack:

      one pair of pants,

      one pair of shorts,

      three pairs of underwear,

      two shirts,

      sandals,

      toothbrush and paste,

      soap,

      ten palms of rice grains,

      three clumps of cooked rice,

      one choice.

      I choose my doll,

      once lent to a neighbor

      who left it outside,

      where mice bit

      her left cheek

      and right thumb.

      I love her more

      for her scars.

      I dress her

      in a red and white dress

      with matching hat and booties

      that Mother knitted.

      April 27

      Left Behind

      Ten gold-rimmed glasses

      Father brought back from America

      where he trained before I was born.

      Brother Quang’s

      report cards,

      each ranking him first in class,

      beginning in kindergarten.

      Vines of bougainvillea

      fully in bloom,

      burgundy and white

      like the colors

      of our house.

      Vines of jasmine

      in front of every window

      that remind Mother

      of the North.

      A cowboy leather belt

      Brother V sewed

      on Mother’s machine

      and broke her needle.

      That was when

      he adored

      Johnny Cash

      more than

      Bruce Lee.

      A row of glass jars

      Brother Khôi used

      to raise fighting fish.

      Two hooks

      and the hammock

      where I nap.

      Photographs:

      every Tt at the zoo,

      Father in his youth,

      Mother in her youth,

      baby pictures,

      where you can’t tell whose bottom

      is exposed for all the world to see.

      Mother chooses ten

      and burns the rest.

      We cannot leave

      evidence of Father’s life

      that might hurt him.

      April 27

      Evening

      Wet and Crying

      My biggest papaya

      is light yellow,

      still flecked with green.

      Brother V wants

      to cut it down,

      saying it’s better than

      letting the Communists have it.

      Mother says yellow papaya

      tastes lovely

      dipped in chili salt.

      You children should eat

      fresh fruit

      while you can.

      Brother V chops;

      the head falls;

      a silver blade slices.

      Black seeds spill

      like clusters of eyes,

      wet and crying.

      April 28

      Sour Backs

      At the port

      we find out

      there’s no such thing

      as a secret

      among the Vietnamese.

      Thousands

      found out

      about the navy ships

      ready to abandon the navy.

      Uncle Sn flares elbows into wings,

      lunges forward

      protecting his children.

      But our family sticks together

      like wet pages.

      I see nothing but backs

      sour and sweaty.

      Brother V steps up,

      placing Mother in front of him

      and lifting me

      onto his shoulders.

      His palms press

      Brothers Quang and Khôi

      forward.

      I promise myself

      to never again

      make fun of

      Bruce Lee.

      April 29

      Afternoon

      One Mat Each

      We climb on

      and claim a space

      of two straw mats

      under the deck,

      enough for us five

      to lie side by side.

      By sunset our space

      is one straw mat,

      enough for us five

      to huddle together.

      Bodies cram

      every centimeter

      below deck,

      then every centimeter

      on deck.

      Everyone knows the ship

      could sink,

      unable to hold

      the piles of bodies

      that keep crawling on

      like raging ants

      from a disrupted nest.

      But no one

      is heartless enough

      to say

      stop


      because what if

      they had been

      stopped

      before their turn?

      April 29

      Sunset

      In the Dark

      Uncle Sn visits

      and whispers to Mother.

      We follow Mother

      who follows Uncle Sn

      who leads his family

      up to the deck

      and off the ship.

      It has been said

      the ship next door

      has a better engine,

      more water,

      endless fuel,

      countless salty eggs.

      Uncle Sn lingers

      without getting on

      the new ship;

      so do we.

      Hordes pour

      by us,

      beyond us.

      Above us

      bombs pierce the sky.

      Red and green flares

      explode like fireworks.

      All lights are off

      so the port will not be

      a target.

      In the dark

      a nudge here

      a nudge there

      and we end up

      back on the first ship

      in the same spot

      with two mats.

      Without lights

      our ship glides out to sea,

      emptied of half its passengers.

      April 29

      Near midnight

      Saigon Is Gone

      I listen to

      the swish, swish

      of Mother’s handheld fan,

      the whispers among adults,

      the bombs in the ever greater distance.

      The commander has ordered

      everyone below deck

      even though he has chosen

      a safe river route

      to connect to the sea,

      avoiding the obvious escape path

      through Vng Tu,

      where the Communists are dropping

      all the bombs they have left.

      I hope TiTi got out.

      Mother is sick

      with waves in her stomach

      even though the ship

      barely creeps along.

      We hear a helicopter

      circling circling

      near our ship.

      People run and scream,

      Communists!

      Our ship dips low

      as the crowd runs to the left,

      and then to the right.

      This is not helping Mother.

      I wish they would stand still

      and hush.

      The commander is talking:

      Do not be frightened!

      It’s a pilot for our side

      who has jumped into the water,

      letting his helicopter

      plunge in behind him.

      The pilot

      appears below deck,

      wet and shaking.

      He salutes the commander

      and shouts,

      At noon today the Communists

      crashed their tanks

      through the gates

      of the presidential palace

      and planted on the roof

      a flag with one huge star.

      Then he adds

      what no one wants to hear:

      It’s over;

      Saigon is gone.

      April 30

      Late afternoon

      PART II

      At Sea

      Floating

      Our ship creeps along

      the river route

      without lights

      without cooking

      without bathrooms.

      We are told

      to sip water

      only when we must

      so our bodies

      can stop needing.

      Mine won’t listen.

      Mother sighs.

      I don’t blame her,

      having a daughter

      who’s either

      dying of thirst

      or demanding release.

      Other girls

      must be made

      of bamboo,

      bending whichever way

      they are told.

      Mother tells Uncle Sn

      I need a bathroom.

      We are allowed

      into the commander’s cabin,

      where the bathroom is

      so white and clean,

      so worth the embarrassment.

      May 1

      S-l-o-w-l-y

      I nibble on

      the last clump

      of cooked rice

      from my sack.

      Hard and moldy,

      yet chewy and sweet

      inside.

      I chew each grain

      s-l-o-w-l-y.

      I hear others chew

      but have never seen

      anyone actually eating.

      No one has offered

      to share

      what I smell:

      sardines, dried durian,

      salted eggs, toasted sesame.

      I lean toward

      the family

      on the next mat.

      Mother firmly

      shakes her head.

      She looks so sad

      as she pats

      my hand.

      May 2

      Rations

      On the third day

      we join the sea

      toward Thailand.

      The commander says

      it’s safe enough

      for his men to cook,

      for us to go above deck,

      for all to smile a little.

      He says there’s enough

      rice and water

      for three weeks,

      but rescue should happen

      much earlier.

      Do not worry,

      ships from all countries

      are out looking for us.

      Morning, noon, and night

      we each get

      one clump of rice,

      small, medium, large,

      according to our height,

      plus one cup of water

      no matter our size.

      The first hot bite

      of freshly cooked rice,

      plump and nutty,

      makes me imagine

      the taste of ripe papaya

      although one has nothing

      to do with the other.

      May 3

      Routine

      Mother cannot allow

      idle children,

      hers or anyone else’s.

      After one week

      on the ship

      Brother Quang begins

      English lessons.

      I wish he would

      keep it to:

      How are you?

      This is a pen.

      But when an adult is not there

      he says,

      We must consider the shame

      of abandoning our own country

      and begging toward the unknown

      where we will all begin again

      at the lowest level

      on the social scale.

      It’s better in the afternoons

      with Brother V,

      who just wants us

      to do front kicks

      and back kicks,

      at times adding

      one-two punches.

      Brother Khôi gets to monitor

      lines for the bathrooms,

      where bottoms stick out

      to the sea

      behind blankets blowing

      in the wind.

      When not in class

      I have to stay

      within sight of Mother,

      like a baby.

      Mother gives me

      her writing pad.

      Write tiny,

      there’s but one pad.

      Writing becomes

      boring,

      so I draw

      over my words.

      Pouches of pan-fried shredded coconut

      Tamarind paste on banana leaf

      Steamed corn on the cob


      Rounds of fried dough

      Wedges of pineapple on a stick

      And of course

      cubes of papaya tender and shiny.

      Mother smoothes back my hair,

      knowing the pain

      of a girl

      who loves snacks

      but is stranded

      on a ship.

      May 7

      Once Knew

      Water, water, water

      everywhere

      making me think

      land is just something

      I once knew

      like

      napping on a hammock

      bathing without salt

      watching Mother write

      laughing for no reason

      kicking up powdery dirt

      and

      wearing clean nightclothes

      smelling of the sun.

      May 12

      Brother Khôi’s Secret

      Brother Khôi stinks;

      we can’t ignore it.

      He stews and sweats

      in a jacket

      he won’t take off.

      Forced to sponge-wipe

      twice a day,

      he wraps the jacket

      around his waist.

      He keeps clutching something

      in the left pocket,

      where the stench grows.

     


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