Why No Goodbye?

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Why No Goodbye? Page 3

by Pamela L. Laskin

very far away.

  She is fourteen

  and says they will kill her.

  She loved school

  before they made her stop,

  because it is time

  for her to earn money for the family.

  There is a man

  in the village

  for whom they can get

  get money

  and Zahura will have a real home,

  (that is what he says)

  only the man

  is forty-five.

  She tells me

  even before

  the man

  there was a boy

  her brother’s friend

  who touched her

  on her private parts,

  who fondled her breasts

  who stuck his penis in

  until she started screaming,

  but he said

  he would tell her family

  she was planning to run away

  (she never told him

  how did he know?)

  so she was silent

  and mute

  and swore

  she would never speak again

  until she met me.

  This is what I think

  our people

  we have it so bad

  Ha Jia told me

  there are now less rations

  in the refugee camps;

  he read it

  in an article

  one of the merchants gave to him.

  This is what I know

  this is a shitty world

  (Ha Jia taught me this word)

  where people do not have enough food to eat

  where Zahura

  is touched

  by her brother’s friend.

  I will take care of you

  you can sleep by my side

  okay, I will not touch you

  until you want me to

  okay, if you never want me to touch you

  I won’t,

  but I think you will, some time

  never

  okay

  never.

  It is nice

  at night

  to have someone sleep near me

  I pretend

  there is love in my world

  like I once felt, Mama

  when I had

  a home.

  Here

  is her story

  Zahura was in a camp

  she could leave Myanmar

  and the sweltering heat

  of the camp

  where her Mom and sister were

  but she

  had to marry a man

  three times her age

  and then she was promised Thailand

  a home

  a husband

  like hundreds of thousands of girls.

  This is what she knew:

  she could read and write

  and thought maybe

  just maybe

  she could be a doctor

  since the teachers

  in the hut

  said she was smart,

  and the man

  had a mean look on his face

  it was etched there

  like a dent on a mountain.

  Zahura said

  the mothers, they are afraid

  the alternative

  to a husband

  is a sale into sexual slavery.

  Isn’t this better?

  her mother had asked her.

  Better than what?

  New York Times, 8/3/2015

  She knew a girl

  who also had dreams of working

  in a hospital,

  who now lives

  in a suburb

  of Kuala Lumpur

  the Malaysian capital

  caring for her mother

  her ill sister

  her sister’s baby

  in a cramped room

  while waiting the return

  of her husband

  who disappeared

  months ago

  saying he was looking

  for work.

  New York Times, 8/3/2015

  May-may,

  don’t tell me

  the boys are getting thinner,

  my sister is a stick.

  Do you have any idea

  what my life is like,

  heavy water on my back

  sweat like a set of skin,

  but I have a girl

  she sleeps far away from me,

  soon

  she will sleep close

  so I can feel her breath,

  and she will never leave me

  maybe

  I hope.

  Let’s count stars

  she says,

  and even though it is crazy

  I do it

  and it makes her giggle,

  a tiny little thing

  caught between my fingers

  like a cricket.

  You can make wishes

  on a star,

  she shares,

  so I wish

  to sleep closer to her,

  only she tells me

  not to tell her my wish

  since then it will never,

  ever

  come true.

  I lean over

  and kiss her,

  she doesn’t stop me,

  but she doesn’t let it linger, either.

  Next time.

  Yes, next time.

  The next day

  Ha Jia asks me

  if I am okay.

  Why do you ask?

  You are just acting different.

  I tell him I am fine,

  But what does it mean

  to act different?

  You hardly write

  to May-may.

  You need lots

  of Kan-Kaung-ba-zay *

  I have nothing

  to tell,

  but all I do is shrug my shoulders

  as if to say

  I do not know

  what you are talking about.

  *Good luck

  Am I different because my body

  is now covered with hair?

  Am I different because

  my clothes no longer fit,

  I feel

  as big as the tree.

  Am I different because

  I am so hungry

  I would even eat a rat,

  and I might,

  since I need more meat.

  I need meat.

  I feel heat.

  I must be fifteen

  so much time

  has passed. Your face is a blur

  of forestry,

  and Pay-pay,

  you are dead

  but I need to know

  if this fire inside me,

  sweltering summer heat fire

  is normal.

  You are sweet,

  she says.

  No I am not

  I am angry

  I could be a lizard

  I could sneak up on you at night

  I could eat you in one quick swallow.

  I could kill

  the mother who left me,

  and leave all my siblings orphans.

  I could kill you, too

  because my body

  is a tree

  next to your branch.

  But all I say is

  thanks.

  Why are you here?

  You are too close.

  Please, move away.

  But I can’t.

  I want to feel her body

  even for a moment;

  I won’t hurt her

  just feel her breasts,

  and I am so hungry for her.

  She opens her mouth wide,

  but she can’t scream,

  since she is hiding in these woods,

  so I slip my tongue in her mouth,

  but she bites me

  breaks loose

  runs awa
y.

  Stop.

  Yaq!

  Yaq!

  I am sorry.

  I say it louder

  Stop, I am sorry

  But I’m not.

  Not really.

  She runs

  like the wind.

  I am too tired

  to run after her,

  and angry

  since all I really did

  was kiss her.

  I wouldn’t have done anything else

  unless she let me,

  but she is like every woman

  who runs away.

  I had given her

  half of my food for weeks

  while I starved.

  I lift my body,

  but it won’t move.

  The night cries

  and then it stops.

  Cries

  and then it stops.

  It’s not even

  monsoon season.

  Ha Jia calls me

  a gentle giant,

  but what about those ungentle feelings

  what am I supposed to do

  with them?

  The night

  is filled with ugly sounds,

  and tonight

  they are inside me:

  growling

  barking

  scratching;

  I may be the rat

  that claws my way out of the dirt,

  darting in and out of the woods

  until I find her.

  Phay loe ma thar *

  I want to scream

  and shout.

  *Burmese profanity

  She is lost

  Zahura

  I have looked everywhere,

  sleep

  never came

  and now,

  I must walk barefoot

  because my sandals

  no longer fit,

  I am meant

  to feel the splinters from the trees,

  and carry

  so much weight

  on my broken back.

  Water

  pails and pails of water

  I journey with water

  on my back,

  is it

  a bucket of my tears

  I carry back and forth

  and to and from,

  a bad burden.

  This is what I know

  as I lie on my back

  and count the stars at night

  (do you see stars, Mama?)

  That each night

  there is a different number

  as if

  they are disappearing

  before my eyes,

  and soon

  there will be none.

  And if

  I saw her now

  what would I do?

  Stay away

  like a leper

  is that what she would want me to do?

  Scream at her

  so loud

  the heavens might shake?

  Or would I say

  so

  so sorry

  for what I did

  sorry that the world sucks

  sorry I am a volcano

  and I can’t keep the lava

  inside.

  In my fantasy

  I am a better person

  not one who

  figures women to be

  rats on the run,

  maybe, May-may

  you made my heart hard

  like slimy stone.

  “What’s wrong?”

  “Nothing.”

  “Look at you-

  Bags under your eyes

  you drag your body

  like a dead cow,

  and you don’t even eat

  the little food I give you.

  Do you want

  to waste away?”

  I want to tell Ha Jia

  I am wasted

  there is nothing left in me

  if the rodents ate me for dinner tonight

  I would be fine,

  but all I do

  is shrug.

  She left me

  and now there is nothing

  for me to live for.

  And then

  I remember

  I never told him

  about Zahura,

  and now I know

  I have made it worse for her

  If she ever comes back

  (though she’ll never come back),

  She will be back

  he says

  this is what I know

  she will be back.

  How did you know?

  I saw

  the bounce in your step

  the smile on your face

  how sometimes you ate like a hog

  other times

  I had to force feed you

  like a baby,

  and you did not rip up your May-may’s letters

  not once

  you may not have even read them.

  I did not read them

  well, sometimes I did.

  Ha Jia

  you can not tell anyone

  she is already in trouble

  she ran away

  from an arranged marriage

  at fourteen

  she has already been raped.

  I figured

  he said,

  edging closer to me

  until he was so close

  I could smell his smoke-stained breath,

  until I cuddled in his arms

  like a baby

  and cried

  and cried

  and cried.

  Oh, my son

  my boy, my boy

  he held me tight

  like I was a boy

  lost at sea

  like a boat

  rocking and rocking

  and next thing I knew

  for the first time in weeks

  I was fast asleep

  in his arms.

  When I woke up

  in his arms

  there was a moment

  when I saw the mountains

  the forest

  the blue skies

  dreamed the sea

  and I felt safe

  like a smiling star,

  just for

  a still moment.

  Gway htoot.

  Gway htoot

  Gway htoot *

  Did you hear what I said

  Gway-htoot

  and lee-gon

  and fuck.

  I just learned this word

  from one of these American teens

  who came to visit Ha Jia

  for whatever reason.

  I hope you can hear me, May-may.

  I hope you can, too,

  Zahura.

  *Burmese profanity

  What are you saying?

  Don’t talk that way!!!

  Those are nasty words!

  What should I say?

  My back is broken.

  My heart is broken.

  I will never see my family again.

  What should I say?

  You should say

  everything will work out.

  Bullshit.

  I learned this word

  too.

  We will look for her

  together

  as soon as my nephew leaves,

  there are just too many places to hide

  in these woods,

  and I know

  all of them,

  for I, too, had to hide

  one time

  for a very

  long time.

  I kiss him

  and I hug him

  and I tell him

  I love him

  though I am not sure

  I love anyone.

  I thought I loved Zahura

  but she left me

  like you did

  and Pay-pay

  and my sister

  and my brothers.

  There is no one left


  to leave me.

  Ha Jia

  makes me read your last letter.

  My dear Jubair,

  not a day goes by

  when I do not imagine you

  what you look like

  what you sound like,

  what my tears would feel like

  against your scratchy face;

  yes, scratchy

  since Ha Jia

  tells me you are now

  a man.

  I never said bhine

  to my boy,

  and now he has turned

  into a man.

  How can I answer that

  I do not feel

  like a man;

  I cry little boy tears

  for my May-may

  for my Pay-pay

  for Zahura,

  who perhaps I started to love

  like a man.

  But no one told me

  how to treat a lady,

  Pay-pay died

  in silence,

  and in our hut

  we were swallowed

  by silence,

  too worried

  about the next meal.

  This is what I know

  when you are worried

  about where your next meal

  is coming from,

 

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