Read Inside Out and Back Again Online
Authors: Thanhha Lai
in front of Mother.
None of us would want
to make her sadder
than she already is.
Every day
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
I, the youngest,
get to celebrate
my actual birthday
even though I turned
a year older
like everyone else
at T
t.
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
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
Every spring
President Thi
u
holds a long long long
ceremony to comfort
war wives.
Mother and I go because
after President Thi
u’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,
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 cu
n
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 cu
n
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 cu
n