Read Inside Out and Back Again Online
Authors: Thanhha Lai
It’s time to tell Mother
why misery
keeps pouncing on me.
I used to buy less pork
so I could buy fried dough.
I know.
You do?
What else?
I used to like making the girl
who shared my desk cry.
She tilts her head.
I know, Mother, I know, very bad.
She nods.
Now they make me cry.
Will I be punished forever?
Forever is quite long
.
There’s more;
it’s really bad.
She lifts an eyebrow.
At dawn on T
t
I tapped my big toe
to the tile floor
first.
She widens her eyes.
I hate being told I can’t do something because I’m a girl!
She doesn’t scold me,
just nods.
Did I ruin the luck
of the whole family?
Is that why we’re here?
My child,
how you shoulder the world!
I was superstitious,
that’s all.
If anything,
you gave us luck
because we got out
and we’re here.
Lucky
to be
here?
Just wait,
you’ll see.
I don’t want to wait.
It’s awful
now.
Is it really so unbearable?
They chase me.
They yell “Boo-Da, Boo-Da” at me.
They pull my arm hair.
They call me Pancake Face.
They clap at me in class.
And you want me to wait?
Can I hit them?
Oh, my daughter,
at times you have to fight,
but preferably
not with your fists.
November 14
Brother Quang takes us
to the grocery store.
Mother buys everything
to make egg rolls
for a coming holiday
when Americans eat a turkey
the size of a baby.
She has me ask the butcher,
Please grind our pork.
I’m sure I said it right,
but the butcher
sharpens his face,
slams down our meat,
and motions us away.
Mother wrinkles her brows,
thinking, pausing,
then rings the buzzer again.
Please,
she says.
It comes out,
Peezzz
.
The butcher turns away
without a word.
Mother presses the buzzer
for a long time.
When the butcher returns,
he hears a lot of Vietnamese
in a voice stern and steady,
from eyes even more so.
Mother ends with a clear,
NOW!
The butcher stares
then takes our meat
to the grinder.
November 22
Again they’re yelling,
Boo-Da, Boo-Da
,
but I know to run
toward Brother Khôi
two corners away.
Enough time
for them to repeat
hundreds of
Boo-Da
s.
Enough time
for me to turn and yell,
Gee-sus, Gee-sus
.
I love how they stop,
mouths open.
My heart lifting,
I run and shout,
Bully!
Coward!
Pink Snot Face!
Words I learned from them
on the playground.
I turn to see
Pink Boy coming
close to me.
No longer pink,
he’s red,
blood-orange red
like a ripe papaya.
u
Face!
It’s not my fault
if his friends hear
Doo-doo Face
and are laughing
right at him.
Brother Khôi is waiting.
I jump on.
December 4
Friday
SSsì-Ti-Vân heard it from Pem
who heard it from the honey-hair girl
who heard it from the dot-on-face girl
who heard it from the white-hair boy
who heard it from all three girls in braids
that
Pink Boy
has gotten his sixth-grade cousin,
a girl two heads taller than the tallest of us,
with arm muscles that run up and down like mice,
to agree
to beat me up
when we come back
Monday.
December 5
I don’t have to tell Brother Khôi,
who heard in the halls
of
his
school
that my face
is to be flattened
flatter
tomorrow.
You don’t have a flat face,
he says.
Besides, I have a plan
.
December 7
Five minutes
till the last bell
I lean toward the door,
legs bouncing,
books left on the floor.
Rrriiinnggg
I run,
Pem and SSsì-Ti-Vân
close behind.
Outside
Pem and I exchange
coats with hoods.
Pem heads down
my usual path.
I zip to the left.
SSsì-Ti-Vân
stays to block the door.
Running so fast,
I fly above the sidewalk.
Alone.
They must all be with Pem.
I stop at the new corner
where Brother Khôi said to wait.
Where is he?
Footsteps explode
from the street
that smacks into mine.
Pink Boy!
December 8
3:36 p.m.
Pink Boy plows
toward me.
I squat in
ng t
n
,