Read Inside Out and Back Again Online
Authors: Thanhha Lai
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 S
n 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
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
Uncle S
n visits
and whispers to Mother.
We follow Mother
who follows Uncle S
n
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 S
n 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
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 V
ng T
u,
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
At Sea
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 S
n
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
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.