Read The Language Inside Online
Authors: Holly Thompson
I say
no, we didn’t come because of radiation
our town is far from the damaged reactor
if my mother wasn’t sick we’d be there
and I add
Japan’s my home
I tell them that our furniture, our things
are still there in the house
my cat is still there with my friend
our home is still there
just not us
we’ll go back
I say
when my mother is better
Sam glances down
nods
then Sam gathers his things
sets the chair against the wall
has some conversation in Khmer
and places his hands together raising them
with a slight bow, muttering something
and adding in English
see you next week
what’s that?
I say in the hall
when you put your hands together
this?
he says
and raises his hands
palms touching
like he did in the room
sompeas
he says
it’s like a sign of respect—
when you greet a Cambodian
you do that and say
chum reap sour
I do
sompeas
mumble the words
try to commit them to memory
for next week
outside it has started to rain
and feels cold enough to snow
even though it’s only October
I wrap my scarf around my neck
and we hurry across the bridge against the wind
and into the heat of the pizza place
where we order slices
and I choose spinach
which at home I eat as
ohitashi—
a side dish with ground sesame and soy sauce
but which I’ve never before eaten
on pizza
at the table we sit across from each other
with our slices and sodas
and I realize I’ve never done this
sit with a guy I hardly know
at a restaurant
without other friends around
and I’m suddenly nervous
to fill the silence I name pizza combos in Japan
corn and tuna
potato mayo
teriyaki chicken
I tell him I like this spinach kind
that I can’t get in Japan
but I feel idiotic sitting there with Sam
babbling on,
talking blather
as Mr. Hays used to say in English class
I take a breath to slow myself
then we talk about poems and Zena
and Sam says there was another poet
who worked with her for a couple years
a guy who graduated last year and is now
at college and that’s why they wanted me
to work with Zena
but I’m not a poet
I say
I just write stuff in my journal
or for school
whatever
Sam says
if you work with Zena
you’ll be writing tons of poems—
that guy who worked with her and
who I bet is her “sexy man”
started writing and ended up winning a contest
and got a scholarship to a university
where they have a special creative writing program
I ask Sam what he did with Leap Sok today
and he says mostly Lok Ta Leap
was correcting his mistakes in Khmer
he says his mother has always made him study Khmer
but it’s not as good as his English
our high school doesn’t offer Khmer, you know
that’s why my mother and stepfather
wanted me to stay in Lowell
where the high school has it
at all different levels
I’m confused—I say
your mother?
I thought you lived with your uncle
I do, but I have a mother . . .
and a stepfather?
I ask
and a stepfather
he says
plus a father—
loads of adults
want one?
no thanks
I say
I’m good for adults
and we laugh
I ask why he lives with Chris
and not his mother
or father
he says
it’s complicated
and I think, okay
note to self:
don’t ask about family
I finish the part with the cheese and spinach
and I’m chewing my way through thick crust
when he says
my mom’s Khmer
she was supposed to marry a Khmer
but she worked and went to community college
then started classes at the university
where she met my father, Chris’s brother
then got pregnant
I nod, set down my crust
wait for him to continue
after they got married
things were okay for a while
my dad finished school
got a job in New Hampshire
and they moved
but she hated it there
so they fought
and he started drinking
and she moved back to Lowell
and I went back and forth
between New Hampshire and Massachusetts
then after the divorce she married a Cambodian dude
and had two more kids
whoa
I say
when he pauses to
start in on his second slice
so how old are they?