Book Read Free

House Without Walls

Page 9

by Russell


  88 | WE SEE LIGHT

  Dawn comes on the third day.

  The first boat,

  whose engine apparently had only minor damage,

  has sailed away.

  Our boat and the second one

  remain adrift at sea.

  Our captain makes a deal with the second boat,

  that both captains will help each other

  to repair the engines.

  We see light at the end of the tunnel.

  Our people pull the other boat

  close to ours.

  Our captain jumps over to the other boat,

  to help repair their engine

  as both captains have promised.

  By noon, their boat is fixed.

  People in the other boat

  cheer.

  Our spirits lift

  as the other boat’s captain

  comes to help fix our engine.

  Several old people declare that

  Buddha, the Heaven God, Duc Me, and Kwun Yum

  haven’t left us.

  They are still blessing us.

  The two captains don’t stop working

  as two groups of strong men, taking turns,

  continue bailing out the water

  nonstop.

  In the evening, we hear the engine come to life.

  All faces light up with hope

  and people cheer,

  “We can navigate now!”

  But the engine sputters a few times

  and dies.

  “The engine can’t be fixed

  without a replacement part,”

  both captains announce.

  There is silence,

  like that of the dead.

  89 | TOWING AGAIN

  Our captain negotiates with the other captain.

  They agree to tow us

  without getting anything in return.

  We are very thankful to their kind captain.

  They tie two ropes, one on each side of our boat,

  and begin to tow us.

  But our boat is heavy,

  and the water keeps coming in,

  despite how hard the men bail it out

  constantly.

  On the fourth day,

  we see a shadow far away.

  It looks like we are close to land,

  but, with regret, the other captain unties our boat.

  They fear that they are going to run out of gas

  from towing our heavy boat.

  They say we are close to the shore,

  and they will send someone to help us.

  Then the boat motors away.

  Our people are furious

  and curse,

  all except Auntie.

  They ask,

  “How can they find someone to help?

  It is just an excuse to get rid of us!”

  “They don’t honor their words.

  They will all die in a hard way!”

  “They are ungrateful!”

  It is the captain who tries to cool

  the boiling water down.

  He says,

  “Stop cursing and yelling.

  It won’t help a bit.

  I understand your concern.

  But we can’t just let our boat drift.

  We have avoided being attacked by pirates.

  We have to find a way to let our boat make progress.”

  “How?” several people ask.

  “We haven’t figured that out yet,” he declares.

  Some young men suggest,

  “Let’s abandon the boat

  and swim toward the shore!”

  The older people reject that idea

  and claim,

  “No! We will drown for sure!”

  The captain says to the young men,

  “Swimming toward the shore

  is not a wise solution.

  It is much farther than you may think.”

  “So, let the boat just drift?”

  “No. We won’t let our boat just drift,”

  the captain replies.

  90 | THEIR SPIRITS ARE HIGH

  Someone is breaking up

  something on top of us.

  Dee Dee goes to have a look.

  “They are trying to get boards off the deck!”

  he reports.

  “Why?” people ask.

  “I don’t know.”

  Soon

  there are about eight people

  who were waiting for their turn

  to bail out the water

  paddling the boat

  with the long boards

  that they took from the deck.

  They paddle in the direction of the shadow

  that’s now far away.

  Our boat is moving slowly forward.

  People are smiling.

  They praise the captain

  and his crew members.

  More men come up to join in,

  giving the paddlers a hand.

  Their spirits are high.

  Together they bail, with the rhythm of the water bailing;

  they paddle, with the rhythm of the paddling,

  they chant, with the rhythm of their breathing,

  despite their dripping sweat

  mingling with the spray of the breaking waves.

  When one group takes a rest,

  another group comes up

  without any interruption.

  They continue to strike

  toward the land,

  toward victory.

  91 | RELAXED

  People in the cabin are more relaxed than ever.

  They continue to eat their own food

  and get water from the barrel.

  Despite my seasickness,

  I stumble to the storage room.

  I use our pot to scoop out water.

  But the water is being depleted quickly.

  Compared to the last time I got the water,

  there is less than half a barrel in both barrels.

  Yet the rice is untouched.

  I gently shake Auntie and implore her to eat

  while Nam and Dee Dee are eating their food.

  She refuses.

  I beg, “Please, Auntie.”

  Nam cries and threatens,

  “If you don’t eat,

  I won’t, either.”

  It works.

  Auntie and I eat together.

  She eats one piece of cracker and

  sips some water.

  I am happy.

  Nam is happier.

  I grope my way onto the deck

  with the water and food.

  Uncle has been bailing out the water

  and is now waiting for his turn to paddle.

  He is so glad to see me.

  He asks if Auntie is eating anything.

  I tell him the truth.

  “Good,” he says

  and lets out a long sigh.

  92 | MIDDLE OF NOWHERE

  Strong winds rise

  as dusk falls.

  One paddler cries,

  “Captain! We seem to have lost our direction.

  It seems we are in the middle of nowhere!”

  All the paddlers stop paddling,

  as if they agree.

  The shadow is no longer in sight!

  The troop is defeated by unseen enemies.

  They debate.

  Some say one direction,

  and others say the opposite.

  Even the captain

  is hard-pressed to say where they should head.

  Our boat is surrounded by

  water, wind, waves, and darkness.

  We are alone.

  We can’t distinguish where the edge of the sky is

  from the edge of the water.

  They look like they are

  merged.

  Our boat really is

  in the middle of nowhere.

  93 | THE BROKEN COMPASS

&nbs
p; The captain orders,

  “NO

  ONE

  TURN

  ON

  A

  FLASHLIGHT.”

  He fears they might attract pirates.

  The paddlers all come back down

  to the cabin,

  so discouraged that they don’t want to talk.

  They only want to sleep.

  And the strong men

  who are bailing out the water

  are getting slower and slower

  in their task.

  The old man in blue complains,

  “Why didn’t they look at the compass?”

  An angry paddler fights back.

  “Shut up! It was broken long ago!

  Why don’t you just move your butt

  and paddle yourself!”

  The old man in blue keeps quiet.

  Dee Dee asks me,

  “What are we going to do now?”

  “Don’t ask me!” I snap.

  My mood is as bad as the paddler

  who told the old man in blue to shut up.

  94 | THE OLD LADY IN BLACK

  The old lady in black cries all night long.

  “We are waiting to die!

  We are being punished

  because of our sins. . . .”

  No one shouts at her.

  I wish I could stick a cloth in her mouth

  and shut her up.

  She keeps ranting and runs up to the deck,

  screaming,

  “The Heaven God has punished all of us!

  I am going to ask the Heaven God for mercy!”

  Her daughter and son pull her back.

  She grows much stronger.

  They are unable to stop her,

  until a couple of men hold her down.

  For her safety,

  they lock her in the storage room

  after removing the water and rice.

  We still hear her chilling cries.

  95 | AUNTIE

  With so much going on

  and the screaming of the old lady in black,

  Auntie, still lying there,

  has not once opened her eyes

  to investigate.

  It’s as if she is in another world.

  Her body shrinks smaller each day.

  I fear that someday

  she will just melt away.

  I can’t believe that

  she is the same gentle auntie

  who cared for us

  before.

  I squeeze her bony hand for a second.

  I do not know what to say.

  I squeeze Nam’s hand.

  He has been sitting next to his ma

  the whole time.

  I do not know what to say to him,

  either.

  96 | UNCLE’S WORDS

  Uncle comes back to the cabin in despair.

  He says to me,

  “I should not have asked you

  to come with us.

  You might have already settled down.”

  He sighs.

  “I did it with good intentions,

  but I am sorry

  it has turned out like this.”

  I express myself from the bottom of my heart,

  “I am so thankful to you for taking us.

  You and Auntie are like parents to us.

  We will stay with you

  no matter what,

  without any regrets.”

  “I appreciate you trusting us.

  I hope everything

  will turn out good,” he says.

  “I know it will.

  When the sun comes up tomorrow,

  boats will spot us.”

  “I hope you are right,” Uncle says.

  He is exhausted,

  but fears it will irritate Auntie

  if he lies down beside us.

  He finds a space away from her

  and sleeps.

  97 | A SMALL LEAF

  We are alone.

  We see no other boats—

  no refugee boats,

  no pirate boats—

  all day long!

  We just let our boat drift by itself

  as if in circles through the open sea,

  since we can’t determine

  which direction we should go.

  So

  our boat is like a small leaf

  floating in the huge South China Sea

  without an anchor to settle it down,

  without any guiding light to show it

  where to sail,

  with only the strong wind

  that comes with the darkness.

  It lifts our boat high and low,

  like our cat playing with a helpless mouse

  back home.

  We scream.

  At any minute,

  our boat could be swallowed up and sink.

  That is

  what everybody

  knows.

  That is

  what everybody

  fears.

  98 | ON THE FIFTH DAY AT SEA

  On the afternoon of the fifth day,

  the drinking water is gone.

  The cabin is quiet,

  as quiet as the dead,

  except for the lady in black who

  once in a while will wail

  like a funeral dirge.

  Some hours later, in the evening,

  we hear voices yell for help on the deck.

  Many people rush onto the deck.

  Dee Dee, Nam, and I join, too.

  The mist is very thick,

  like a steam room that I once saw in a movie.

  But the captain and two other sailors

  are vigorously waving boards

  wrapped with burning clothes above their heads.

  A ship is half hiding, half appearing in the mist.

  Still, we can see her white flag

  with a big red rising sun

  flapping against the wind.

  “We will be saved at last!”

  we all say, laughing,

  despite the strong wind

  ripping through us,

  as if sending us

  into the sea.

  More men

  take off their shirts,

  smear them with engine oil,

  and light them as a torch

  to attract the Japanese ship.

  The deck is so loud with yelling in

  Mandarin, Cantonese, Vietnamese, and English.

  Someone warns,

  “Our boat is going to capsize.

  Get the small children back to the cabin!

  The boat is about to sink!”

  Dee Dee, Nam, and the other small children

  do not listen.

  They are jumping up and yelling,

  letting their energy out,

  despite the wind that threatens

  to knock them down.

  But

  the wind has swallowed our yelling;

  the mist has obscured our excitement;

  the waves have blocked our jumping

  and even our boat,

  for the Japanese ship is getting smaller and smaller.

  At last, it turns into a dot

  and disappears over the horizon.

  Some curse,

  some cry,

  some scream,

  some express regret.

  Only Auntie

  sleeps through the whole ordeal,

  as if she would not wake up

  even if the sky were falling down.

  99 | DEE DEE’S QUESTION

  Dee Dee asks,

  with his lips cracked with blood

  like a red caterpillar

  clawing at his small face,

  “Why didn’t the boat come to save us?

  Why did they turn away?

  Didn’t they see us?”

  “They might not have seen us,

  or they didn’t want to be bothered,” Uncle s
ays.

  “Why? Are they bad guys?”

  “No. They might have felt

  it was too much trouble for them,”

  Uncle says.

  “Don’t worry. Sooner or later,

  someone will rescue us.”

  100 | ON THE MORNING OF THE SIXTH DAY

  On the morning of the sixth day,

  again there is a commotion

  on the deck.

  Fluffy white clouds dot the blue sky.

  Far away, the surface of the water looks as if

  it is embroidered with brilliant stars.

  We can easily see a ship

  with the Republic of China, Taiwan,

  written in Chinese and English.

  Our captain estimates that

  it is even closer to us

  than the Japanese ship had been,

  and they can spot us.

  A spark of hope spreads to the

  single Chinese men

  like a forest fire.

  They raise their torches and yell

  in Mandarin and Cantonese,

  “Chinese! We are Chinese!”

  “Chinese help Chinese!”

  I am weak.

  I still yell,

  “I’m Chinese! Chinese help Chinese!”

  Dee Dee jumps up and down and yells, too.

  Someone’s torch burns out,

  so another man raises one up.

  We wait; we jump; we yell

  and wait.

  Again,

  the ship gets smaller and smaller

  after the flame of hope

  has spread for about an hour,

  and then dies down.

  The whole cabin full of people

  cry.

  Some say they should not have come.

  Some say they should have

  died in their homeland

  rather than be eaten by sea creatures. . . .

  Some Vietnamese curse,

  “The heartless Chinese . . .

  they won’t even help their own people!

  They will die in a hard way!”

  For the first time in my life,

  I am ashamed to admit that

  I am Chinese.

  101 | THE BURDEN

  I feel so low.

  It just dawned on me that

 

‹ Prev