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    Inside Out and Back Again

    Page 4
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      Neighbors complain,

      even the ones

      eight mats away,

      saying it’s bad enough

      being trapped

      in putrid, hot air

      made from fermented bodies

      and oily sweat,

      must everybody

      also endure

      something rotten?

      Finally Brother V

      holds Brother Khôi down

      and forces him

      to open his hand.

      A flattened chick

      lies crooked,

      neck dangling

      off his palm.

      The chick had not

      a chance

      after we shoved

      for hours to board.

      Brother Khôi screams,

      kicks everything off our mats.

      Brother Quang

      carries him

      above deck.

      Quiet.

      May 13

      Last Respects

      After two weeks at sea

      the commander calls

      all of us above deck

      for a formal lowering of

      our yellow flag

      with three red stripes.

      South Vietnam no longer exists.

      One woman tries to throw

      herself overboard,

      screaming that without a country

      she cannot live.

      As they wrestle her down,

      a man stabs his heart

      with a toothbrush.

      I don’t know them,

      so their pain seems unreal

      next to Brother Khôi’s,

      whose eyes are as wild

      as those of his broken chick.

      I hold his hand:

      Come with me.

      He doesn’t resist.

      Alone

      at the back of the ship

      I open Mother’s white handkerchief.

      Inside lies my mouse-bitten doll,

      her arms wrapped around

      the limp fuzzy body of his chick.

      I tie it all into a bundle.

      Brother Khôi nods

      and I smile,

      but I regret

      not having my doll

      as soon as the white bundle

      sinks into the sea.

      May 14

      One Engine

      In the middle

      of the night

      our ship stops.

      Mother hugs me,

      hearts drumming

      as one.

      If the Communists

      catch us fleeing,

      it’s a million times worse

      than staying at home.

      After many shouts

      and much time

      the ship moves forward

      with just one engine.

      Mother would not

      release me.

      The commander says,

      Thailand is much farther

      on one engine.

      It was risky to take

      the river route.

      We escaped bombs

      but missed the rescue ships.

      The commander decides

      the ration is now

      half a clump of rice

      only at morning and night,

      and one cup of water

      all day.

      Sip,

      he says,

      and don’t waste strength

      moving around

      because it’s impossible

      to predict

      how much longer

      we will

      be floating.

      May 16

      The Moon

      During the day

      the deck belongs

      to men and children.

      At nightfall

      women make their way

      up.

      In single files

      they sponge-bathe

      and relieve themselves

      behind blanket curtains.

      I always stand in line

      with Mother.

      Every night

      she points upward.

      At least

      the moon remains

      unchanged.

      Your father could be looking

      at the same round moon.

      He may already understand

      we will wait for him

      across the world.

      I feel guilty,

      having not once

      thought of Father.

      I can’t wish for him

      to appear

      until I know where

      we’ll be.

      May 18

      A Kiss

      The horn on our ship

      blows and blows,

      waking everyone

      from a week-long nap.

      A sure answer,

      honk honk,

      seems close enough

      and real enough

      to call everyone on deck.

      A gigantic ship

      with an American flag

      moves closer.

      Men in white uniform

      wave and smile.

      Our commander wears

      his navy jacket and hat,

      so white and so crisp.

      Now I realize

      why I like him so much.

      In uniform,

      he looks just like Father.

      He boards the other ship,

      salutes and shakes hands

      with a man whose hair

      grows on his face

      not on his head

      in the color of flames.

      I had not known

      such hair was possible.

      We clap and clap

      as the ships draw together

      and kiss.

      Boxes and boxes

      pass onto our deck.

      Oranges, apples, bananas,

      cold sweet bubbly drinks,

      chocolate drops, fruity gum.

      The American ship

      tows ours

      with a steel braid

      thick as my body.

      Our rescue now certain,

      the party blossoms

      as food suddenly

      comes up from below.

      Ramen noodles, beef jerky,

      dried shrimp, butter biscuits,

      tamarind pods, canned fish,

      and drums and drums of real water.

      Mother says,

      People share

      when they know

      they have escaped hunger.

      Shouldn’t people share

      because there is hunger?

      That night I stand behind

      blowing blankets

      and pour fresh water

      all over my skin.

      How sweet water tastes

      even when mixed with soap.

      May 24

      Golden Fuzz

      Water, water

      still everywhere

      but in the distance

      appears a black dot.

      We are told

      to pack

      our crisscrossed packs

      and line up in a single file.

      Twenty at a time

      board a motorboat

      heading toward the dot.

      An arm extends

      to help us board,

      an arm hairy with fuzz.

      I touch it,

      so real and long,

      not knowing if I will

      have another chance

      to touch golden fuzz.

      I pluck one hair.

      Mother slaps my hand.

      Brother Quang speaks quickly

      in the language I must learn.

      The fuzzy man laughs.

      I’m grateful the boat

      starts to rock,

      so Mother hasn’t

      the composure

      to scold me,

      not just yet.

      I roll my fuzzy souvenir

      between my thumb and finger

      and can’t help

      but smile.

      May 26

     
    ; Tent City

      We have landed

      on an island

      called Guam,

      which no one can pronounce

      except Brother Quang,

      who becomes

      translator for all.

      Many others arrived

      before us

      and are living

      in green tents

      and sleeping on cots.

      We eat inside a huge tent

      where Brother V

      becomes head chef,

      heating up cans of

      beef and potatoes

      tasting like salty vomit.

      We eat only

      canned fruit

      in thick syrup,

      and everyone wants extras

      but we get only a cup.

      Brother V somehow

      brings home

      a huge can,

      pumping it to work out

      his arm muscles.

      We eat

      straight from the can

      as I search for

      cherries and grapes.

      May 28

      Life in Waiting

      A routine starts

      as soon as we settle

      into our tent.

      Camp workers

      teach us English

      mornings and afternoons.

      Evenings we have to ourselves.

      We watch movies outdoors

      with images projected

      onto a white sheet.

      Brother Quang translates

      into a microphone,

      his voice sad and slow.

      If it’s a young cowboy

      like Clint Eastwood,

      everyone cheers.

      If it’s an old cowboy,

      like John Wayne,

      most of us boo

      and go swimming.

      The Disney cartoons

      lure out the girls,

      who always surround

      Brother V,

      begging him to break

      yet another piece of wood.

      I can still hear them begging

      when I go sit with Brother Khôi,

      who rarely speaks anymore

      but I’m happy to be near him.

      June to early July

      Nc Mm

      Someone

      should be kissed

      for having the heart

      to send cases of fish sauce

      to Guam.

      Everything is

      more edible

      with nc mm.

      Brother V

      sautés the beef-and-potato goo

      with onions

      and sprinkles on the magic sauce

      before serving the mess with rice.

      Lines extend to the beach.

      Someone catches

      a sea creature

      puffy and watery

      like a cucumber.

      Brother V slices it

      into slippery strips

      and stews it with

      seaweed

      and the magic sauce.

      So many appetites

      wake up

      that Brother V

      just has time

      to cook rice

      and serve it with

      plain fish sauce.

      People begin to cook

      as long as they

      can get a cup

      of nc mm.

      Brother Khôi hands it out

      in the same white cups

      as tea.

      Both dark brown,

      so of course

      I drink a gulp of the

      most salty,

      most bitter,

      most fishy

      tea

      ever.

      My head whirls

      and my breath stinks

      for days.

      I do not mind.

      July 1

      Amethyst Ring

      Mother wants to sell

      the amethyst ring

      Father brought back

      from America,

      where he trained

      in the navy

      before I was born.

      She wants to buy

      needles and thread,

      fabric and sandals

      from the camp’s

      black market.

      I have never seen her

      without this purple rock.

      I can’t fall asleep

      unless I twist the ring

      and count circles.

      Brother Quang says,

      NO!

      What’s the point of

      new shirts and sandals

      if you lose the last

      tangible remnant of love?

      I don’t understand

      what he said

      but I agree.

      July 2

      Choose

      Some choose to go to France

      because many Vietnamese

      moved there

      when North and South

      divided years ago.

      Uncle Sn says

      come with his family

      to Canada,

      where his sister lives

      and can help watch over us

      until Father returns.

      Mother knows his wife

      would mind.

      She tells him

      Canada is too cold.

      We stand in line

      to fill out papers.

      Every family must decide

      by tonight,

      when fireworks will explode

      in honor of America’s birth.

      Mother starts to write

      “Paris,”

      home of a cousin

      she has never met.

      The man behind us whispers,

      Choose America,

      more opportunities there,

      especially for a family

      with boys ready to work.

      Mother whispers back,

      My sons

      must first go to college.

      If they’re smart

      America will give them

      scholarships.

      Mother chooses.

      July 4

      Another Tent City

      We are flown

      to another tent city

      in humid, hot Florida,

      where alligators are shown

      as entertainment.

      The people in charge

      bring in Saigon-famous singers

      to raise refugee spirits,

      but faces keep twisting with worries.

      For a family to leave,

      an American must come to camp

      and sponsor a family.

      We wait and wait,

      but Mother says a possible widow,

      three boys, and a pouty girl

      make too huge a family

      by American standards.

      A family of three

      in the tent to our left

      gets sponsored to Georgia;

      the couple to our right

      goes to South Carolina.

      Newcomers leave before us.

      Mother can barely eat,

      while Brother Quang

      picks the skin at his elbows.

      I don’t mind being here.

      My hair is growing

      as I’ve become dark and strong

      from running and swimming.

      Then by chance Mother learns

      sponsors prefer those

      whose applications say “Christians.”

      Just like that

      Mother amends our faith,

      saying all beliefs

      are pretty much the same.

      July to early August

      Alabama

      A man comes

      who owns a store

      that sells cars

      and wants to train

      one young man

      to be a mechanic.

      He keeps holding up

      one finger

      before picking Brother Quang,

      whose studies in engineering

      impress him.

      Mother doesn’t
    care

      what the man

      came looking for.

      By the time

      she is done

      staring, blinking,

      wiping away tears,

      all without speaking English,

      our entire family

      has a sponsor

      to Alabama.

      August 7

      Our Cowboy

      Our sponsor

      looks just like

      an American should.

      Tall and pig-bellied,

      black cowboy hat,

      tan cowboy boots,

      cigar smoking,

      teeth shining,

      red in face,

      golden in hair.

      I love him

      immediately

      and imagine him

      to be good-hearted and loud

      and the owner of a horse.

      August 8

      PART III

      Alabama

      Unpack and Repack

      We’re giddy

      when we

      get off the airplane.

      Our cowboy,

      who never takes off

      his tall, tall hat,

      delivers us

      to his huge house,

      where grass

      spreads out so green

      it looks painted.

      Stay until you feel ready.

     


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