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House Without Walls

Page 8

by Russell


  while the old comers

  envy and wonder

  in silence.

  I am not sure.

  I am happy and sad at the same time.

  A knot is inside my heart.

  What about Dao?

  What if we are separated from Uncle and Auntie?

  The translator announces that

  the third group will be leaving first

  to go to another place within the hour.

  Everyone in the third group should pack

  immediately.

  The first and second groups will follow.

  We are dismissed

  to pack our belongings.

  I am disheartened at this announcement.

  I follow Uncle back to our “houses.”

  He stops and waits for us.

  He whispers,

  “You and Dee Dee come with us,

  but don’t say anything

  and don’t ask any questions.

  Just keep it between us.”

  My eyes cloud with tears.

  He is mourning his daughter,

  but he is still thinking about us.

  I am even more touched by his

  kindness.

  I am no longer worried that

  Dee Dee and I will be separated

  from them.

  Dee Dee is overjoyed.

  “Are we going to America now?”

  “Not yet,” Uncle replies.

  78 | GOODBYE, DAO

  Dee Dee and I do not have much to pack.

  I help Uncle pack the pot,

  bowls,

  and mats.

  Auntie, who didn’t go for the announcement,

  is still crying

  and sometimes just stares into space.

  She hasn’t eaten for days;

  she just sips tea.

  I want to comfort her.

  But I don’t know what to say.

  We all take a brisk walk to say goodbye to Dao,

  all except for Auntie.

  Dao is resting underneath the biggest tree,

  where Uncle wrote Dao’s name on a piece of board

  on top of the newly piled up dirt

  as a grave marker.

  I say to Dao quietly,

  “Goodbye, Dao.

  I promise I will go to Disneyland

  to see Snow White for you.

  I promise I will touch and feel the snow

  for you.

  I promise I will keep your secret

  for you.

  I promise I will try my best to help care for your ma,

  your baba, and Nam.

  You rest and don’t worry.”

  Dao doesn’t say a word.

  Dao doesn’t answer me.

  79 | WAITING

  The third group is ready to leave.

  Dee Dee holds the plastic sheets.

  I hold the bucket

  with bowls and canned food inside.

  Uncle takes the pot and the mats.

  Nam holds his mother’s hand and supports her

  since she doesn’t want Uncle to touch her.

  We quietly stand next to Uncle.

  We wait

  to board the buses

  that are parked next to the soldiers’ shed.

  The mother whose baby died

  at the camp

  doesn’t want to leave.

  Her husband tries to convince her

  to go, and he weeps

  so brokenheartedly

  it seems

  as if all the trees around us

  shed tears for them.

  I spot Twin Number One.

  I feel like something is squeezing my heart.

  If not for him,

  could Dao still be alive?

  Or was it just her bad fate?

  And should I tell him

  that such a beautiful girl

  had a crush on him?

  But I decide

  I already promised Dao that

  the secret

  belongs only to

  Dao

  and me.

  80 | BOARDING THE BUS

  There are soldiers guarding the buses.

  The translator calls out names.

  Whenever he calls a person’s name,

  they will board the bus

  along with their belongings.

  I am frightened,

  even when

  Uncle whispers to Dee Dee and me,

  “Don’t say anything

  and don’t ask any questions.

  We will be on the same bus.”

  I want so badly

  to ask Uncle

  How?

  My mind is unsettled,

  like something is hanging

  in my heart.

  Uncle’s name is called.

  He approaches the bus

  but doesn’t board it.

  Instead he says, “I am waiting for my family.”

  The translator announces,

  “The Nguyen family members!”

  Auntie has stopped crying,

  but she seems glued to the ground,

  despite how much Nam urges her.

  Uncle scolds us loudly,

  “Didn’t you hear?

  Are you still angry with one another?

  Help your mother!

  Move!”

  I get it.

  He wants me to take Dao’s place.

  What about Dee Dee?

  I shoot a questioning glance at Uncle.

  I don’t want to leave Dee Dee

  behind.

  Uncle continues to ignore me,

  demanding,

  “Come quick! Don’t make other people wait!”

  I remember how he told me earlier,

  “Don’t say anything,

  and don’t ask any questions.”

  Immediately,

  I hold Auntie’s other side

  while Nam helps her on his side.

  I look over my shoulder

  and motion

  for Dee Dee to follow us.

  I am very thankful that

  Auntie is cooperative

  and willing to move.

  Together

  we approach the bus,

  but my heart is thumping

  like a tap dancer.

  I am afraid the soldier

  who carried Dao is there.

  I am afraid the interpreter

  will look at the list

  and find out the truth.

  I am afraid that someone in the camp

  will blurt out that

  I am not their daughter.

  But my worry

  turns out to be nothing.

  We reach the bus,

  even though my hands are still

  shaking.

  And I feel my stomach

  churning like the open sea

  when I find out that

  Dee Dee is still

  standing in the same place,

  unmoving.

  81 | DEE DEE

  I look at Uncle with fright.

  He again ignores me

  but hastily

  stomps over to where Dee Dee is

  and slaps him in the face,

  hard.

  Dee Dee bursts out crying.

  Uncle drags him by his arm,

  scolding,

  “Why are you still throwing temper tantrums?”

  He hoists him up onto the bus

  and pushes him down into a seat,

  hard.

  I understand

  and let out a silent sigh of relief.

  I help Auntie board the bus

  and squeeze into a seat opposite Uncle,

  without saying a word.

  I notice Uncle is trying to

  control his hands

  from shaking.

  There are two soldiers with guns

  sitting behind us.

  As if a clock is in my heart,

  I am
counting each second,

  hoping the bus will take off immediately

  before the soldiers

  discover the truth.

  So I sit like a statue

  too nervous

  to turn my head aside

  to say thanks to the people

  who are wishing us good luck.

  I just close my eyes and tell myself,

  Be calm.

  The soldier behind us will sense that

  I am tense

  until the engine of the bus

  comes to life

  and we set off.

  I give a “thank you” nod to Uncle

  and he returns it with a

  nod of assurance.

  82 | THE UNKNOWN

  We get off next to a small ferry

  where an old refugee boat is docked.

  We are told to get into the boat

  after the soldiers distribute a bag of food

  to everyone.

  Some are suspicious, asking,

  “Why are we going back to a boat?

  Aren’t they supposed to take us

  to the regular camp?”

  Someone says,

  “They never told us where they were taking us.

  We just assumed that we are going to the camp.”

  It is true.

  We quiet down.

  Uncle asks one of the soldiers.

  The soldier simply says,

  “Just get into the boat.”

  “I am sick of riding boats again!”

  I complain and so do the others.

  We have no choice

  but to do what we are told.

  We are just like a kite in the sky that

  is controlled by its kite flyer.

  We are facing

  the unknown.

  PART THREE

  June 11, 1979

  South China Sea

  83 | TOWARD THE OPEN SEA

  A big ship is anchored at a distance

  from the shore.

  Two other refugee boats are floating

  behind it in a row,

  between our boat and the big ship.

  After we all board the boat,

  the big ship begins to move.

  Soon the first refugee boat that is

  closest to the big ship sails.

  The other boat behind it

  moves ahead.

  Then our boat,

  slowly following the second one,

  leaves the dock

  with nobody on board piloting it.

  It is then that we discover

  the big ship is towing all three refugee boats,

  one after another,

  like a long train.

  Our boat is the caboose.

  We are perplexed.

  So is the captain.

  Why is the big ship towing us?

  Some guess,

  “It might save a lot of gas

  while towing us to the refugee camp.”

  Others agree.

  Someone says, “It is still too early to say.”

  After being towed

  for two days and two nights nonstop,

  it seems the refugee camp is

  on the other side of the world.

  People start asking questions

  about this endless towing.

  “Where is the camp?

  We could have gone halfway

  around the world by now!”

  Others try to comfort them, declaring,

  “You don’t need to worry about where we are

  as long as they are towing us,

  as long as they are with us.”

  Most of the people agree

  and go back to sleep.

  I feel so sick

  I can’t sleep,

  like many other people,

  as our boat is being thrown

  up and down.

  And suddenly we hear

  a loud sound.

  It sounds close.

  It sounds different from the time

  the fishermen cut our rope.

  84 | WATER

  Everyone is suddenly awake,

  wondering

  where the sound has come from.

  Someone shines a flashlight

  around

  to check.

  We don’t see anything.

  We try to go back to sleep,

  but then someone screams,

  “Water!

  Water is coming into the boat!”

  More flashlights shoot toward

  where the noise is coming from.

  People are rushing toward

  the source of the noise.

  The captain goes to investigate

  and soon returns, declaring,

  “The front of the boat has split!

  The dragon bone has broken

  because they have been towing

  this old boat from the front.

  We need strong men

  to help bail the water out

  before it sinks!”

  Uncle and some men go up

  with the captain right away.

  The men form a bucket brigade immediately.

  They take buckets

  and go down a hatch in the front of the boat.

  Soon they send the buckets of water

  up

  and the men on the deck

  dump it,

  then return

  the empty buckets to those down below.

  They repeat this task

  nonstop.

  Meanwhile, people

  yell in the darkness in

  Cantonese, Mandarin, and Vietnamese,

  “Giúp tôi! Giúp tôi!”

  “Help! Our boat is sinking!”

  Some shine flashlights to get the attention

  of the big ship,

  but the lights are swallowed up

  by the darkness.

  The yelling is ripped away

  by the roaring wind.

  But they keep yelling!

  They keep shining the flashlights.

  They keep bailing out the water.

  85 | THE NIGHTMARE

  The second boat, the one in front of us,

  hears us.

  They yell for us.

  The first one hears them.

  They yell for us.

  But the big ship does not hear them.

  It keeps sailing on.

  Strangely, it sails

  farther and farther away,

  completely immersed in the darkness.

  The soldiers do not hear us.

  It is then that

  our captain notices that

  our boat is just drifting,

  although we are still tied to the

  second boat.

  The soldiers must have cut the towrope

  to the first boat

  without any warning.

  When?

  Before the dragon bone broke?

  No one knows,

  not even the captain.

  So all three of our refugee boats

  are just drifting

  in the dark open ocean.

  86 | INSIDE THE CABIN

  The fury of our anger

  over being betrayed again explodes

  like dragon’s fire

  bursting up to the sky,

  as our captain discovers that

  the engine in our boat

  doesn’t work.

  Someone declares,

  “Maybe they messed up the boat on purpose

  so we can’t get back to land!”

  Some agree;

  some are not sure.

  One says calmly,

  “I am not sure about that.

  Maybe it was disabled by other refugees before,

  like how we sabotaged ours.”

  “Oh, yes,” we remember.

  The angry voices

  die down.

  Just then the sailor with rotten teeth
reports,

  “There are two full barrels of water

  and a bag of rice

  in the storage room.”

  This ignites a flame of anger

  once more.

  Someone says,

  “That’s why they left us the water and rice!

  They know they are guilty!”

  Another declares,

  “We should be glad that

  they still have a conscience

  to leave us water and rice.”

  The old man in blue cries out,

  “Having a conscience or no conscience,

  we still face the same fate!”

  The old lady in black

  wails,

  “How pitiful we are!

  Buddha hasn’t blessed us!

  We will all be drowned for sure.”

  Someone shouts,

  “Shut up! You’re getting on my nerves!”

  But the old lady in black

  doesn’t shut up;

  she keeps on wailing,

  “There’s no use in having water and rice.

  We are all going to drown!”

  Babies and small children seem to know

  what is ahead of us

  and cry with fear,

  no matter how much

  their mothers try to comfort them.

  Dee Dee holds me tightly and asks,

  “Are we going to die?”

  I can’t answer him.

  The whole boat is facing

  a disaster.

  Auntie appears to be

  the calmest of all.

  She doesn’t cry,

  she doesn’t ask,

  she doesn’t say a word,

  as if the world is far

  beyond her.

  Seeing that,

  I am scared and sad

  at the same time.

  87 | DRIFTING

  Three boats are drifting in the vast sea,

  surrounded by the darkness.

  All three boats,

  which are not our original boats,

  have the same fate:

  their engines don’t work.

  Without knowing the direction we are drifting,

  without knowing where we are,

  without knowing if a storm will come

  at any minute,

  we are all in danger of being

  swallowed up by the open sea.

  The captains and sailors

  are helpless.

  They just let the boats drift. . . .

 

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