Read Inside Out and Back Again Online
Authors: Thanhha Lai
was very salty.
Mother gives me a tamarind candy.
I have never been
so thrilled
to drink my saliva.
Finally President Thi
u 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
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
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
Five papayas
the sizes of
my head,
a knee,
two elbows,
and a thumb
cling to the trunk.
Still green
but promising.
April 15
Uncle S
n,
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 S
n 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
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
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
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
We pretend
the monsoon
has come early.
In the distance
bombs
explode like thunder,
slashes
lighten the sky,