Read Inside Out and Back Again Online
Authors: Thanhha Lai
whistling.
He eats
two, three, four
pork chops.
I eat
one, two chops.
I have a feeling
having muscles
makes whistling
possible.
September 2
Evening
I sneak into
my brothers’ room.
The full moon shines on
the bulkiest lump.
I shake it awake.
Outside!
Brother V
swats my hand
but follows me.
Moonlight turns us silver.
They pulled my arm hair.
They threw rocks at me.
They promised to stomp on my chest.
Brother V
yawns.
A boy did pull my arm hair!
Brother V
pats my head.
Ignore him.
It’s not like I follow him around.
Why were you whistling?
Someone called me Ching Chong.
Is that good?
Didn’t sound good.
Then he tripped me,
so I flew up and
almost scissor-kicked him
in the face.
You missed?
I wanted him to stop,
not hurt him.
I didn’t even like
seeing him scared.
I would have kicked him.
Teach me to fly-kick, please.
Not with your temper.
I shout, I’m so mad.
I shouldn’t have to run away.
Tears come.
Brother V
has always been afraid
of my tears.
I’ll teach you defense.
How will that help me?
He smiles huge,
so certain of himself.
You’ll see.
September 2
Late
Next morning
halfway down the block,
away from Mother’s eyes,
I hear the
clink clank
of Brother Khôi’s bicycle.
He stops and pats
the upper bar
of the triangle frame.
I sit sidesaddle,
holding on to the handlebar.
The edges of our hands
touch.
As we glide away
I ask,
Every day?
I feel his chin
nod into
the top of my head.
After school too?
Another chin nod.
We glide
and I feel as if
I’m floating.
September 3
MiSSS SScott
points to me,
then to the letters
of the English alphabet.
I say
A B C
and so on.
She tells the class
to clap.
I frown.
MiSSS SScott
points to the numbers
along the wall.
I count up to twenty.
The class claps
on its own.
I’m furious,
unable to explain
I already learned
fractions
and how to purify
river water.
So this is
what dumb
feels like.
I hate, hate, hate it.
September 10
I wish
Brother Khôi wouldn’t
keep inside
how he endures
the hours in school,
that Mother wouldn’t
hide her bleeding fingers,
that Brother Quang wouldn’t
be so angry after work.
I wish
our cowboy could be persuaded
to buy a horse,
that I could be invisible
until I can talk back,
that English could be learned
without so many rules.
I wish
Father would appear
in my class
speaking beautiful English
as he does French and Chinese
and hold out his hand
for mine.
Mostly
I wish
I were
still
smart.
September 11
Brother V
now makes everyone
call him
Vu Lee,
a name I must say
without giggling
to get defense lessons.
I need the lessons.
I’m hiding in class
by staring at my shoes.
I’m hiding during lunch
in the bathroom,
eating hard rolls
saved from dinner.
I’m hiding during outside time
in the same bathroom.
I’m hiding after school
until Brother Khôi
rides up to
our secret corner.
With Vu Lee
I squat in
ng t
n,
weight on legs,
back straight,
arms at my sides,
fingers relaxed,
eyes everywhere at once.
I’m practicing
to be seen.
September 13
Eggs explode
like smears of snot
on our front door.
Just dumb kids,
says our cowboy.
Bathroom paper hangs
like ghosts
from our willow.
More dumb kids,
says our cowboy.
A brick
shatters the front window,
landing on our dinner table
along with a note.
Brother Quang
refuses to translate.
Mother shakes her head
when Vu Lee pops his muscles.
Our cowboy
calls the police,
who tell us
to stay inside.
Hogwash,
our cowboy says,
then spits a brown blob
of tobacco.
I repeat,
Hogwash,
puckering for the ending of
ssssshhhhhh.
Mother decides
we must meet