The Lotus Eaters. Tatjana Soli. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Tatjana Soli
Издательство: HarperCollins
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Ужасы и Мистика
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9780007364220
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      The Lotus Eaters

      Tatjana Soli

      

       For my mom,

       who taught me about

       brave girls crossing oceans

       For Gaylord,

       with love and gratitude

      …we reached the country of the Lotus-eaters, a race that eat the flowery lotus fruit…Now these natives had no intention of killing my comrades; what they did was to give them some lotus to taste. Those who ate the honeyed fruit of the plant lost any wish to come back and bring us news. All they now wanted was to stay where they were with the Lotus-eaters, to browse on the lotus, and to forget all thoughts of return.

      —HOMER, The Odyssey

      Table of Contents

       Cover Page

       Title Page

       Epigraph

       FIVE Chieu Hoi Open Arms

       SIX Haa To Civilize, to Transform

       SEVEN Hoi Chanh Defectors

       EIGHT Xa Village

       NINE Tiens Fairies

       TEN Thien Ha Under Heaven

       ELEVEN Bao Chi Journalist

       TWELVE A Map of the Earth

       THIRTEEN Ca Dao Songs

       FOURTEEN Back to the World

       FIFTEEN Hang Hum Noc Ran

       SIXTEEN Tay Nguyen

       SEVENTEEN Nghia

       EIGHTEEN Cat Cai Dau

       NINETEEN The Ocean of Milk

       TWENTY Dong Thanh One Heart

       Author’s Notes

       Acknowledgments

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       ONE The Fall

       April 28, 1975

      The city teetered in a dream state. Helen walked down the deserted street. The quiet was eerie. Time running out. A long-handled barber’s razor, cradled in the nest of its strop, lay on the ground, the blade’s metal grabbing the sun. Unable to resist, she leaned down to pick it up, afraid someone would split his foot open running across it. A crashing noise down the street distracted her—dogs overturning garbage cans—and she snatched blindly at the razor. Drawing her hand back, she saw a bright pinprick of blood swelling on her finger. She cursed at her stupidity and kicked the razor, strop and all, to the side of the road and hurried on.

      The unnatural silence allowed Helen to hear the wailing of the girl. The child’s howl was high and breathless, defiant, rising, alone and forlorn against the buildings, threading its way through the air, a long, plaintive note spreading its complaint. Helen crossed the alley and went around a corner to see a small child of three or four, hard to tell with the unrelenting malnourishment, standing against the padlocked doorway of a bar. Her face and hair were drenched with the effort of her crying. She wore a dirty yellow cotton shirt sizes too large, bottom bare, no shoes. Dirt circled between her toes.

      The pitiful scene begged a photo. Helen hesitated, hoping an adult would come out of a doorway to rescue the child. She had only days or hours left in-country. Breathless, the girl staggered a few steps forward to the curb, eyes flooded in tears, when a man on a bicycle flew around the corner, pedaling at a furious speed, clipping the curb and almost running her down. Helen lurched forward without thinking, grabbed the girl’s arm and pulled her back, speaking quickly in fluent Vietnamese: “Little girl, where is Mama?”

      The child hardly looked at her, the small body wracked with sobs. Helen’s throat constricted. A mistake, stopping. A pact made to herself that at this late date she wouldn’t get involved. The street rolled away in each direction, empty. No woman approached them.

      Tired, Helen knelt down so she was at eye level to the child. In a headlong lunge, the girl wrapped both arms around Helen’s neck. Her cries quieted to soft cooing.

      “What’s your name, honey?”

      No answer.

      “Should I take you home? Home? To Mama? Where do you live?”

      Rested, the girl began to sob again with more energy, fresh tears.

      No good deed goes unpunished. The camera bag pulled, heavy and bulky. As she held the girl, walking up and down the street to flag attention, it knocked against her hip. She slipped the shoulder strap off and set it down on the ground, all the while talking under her breath to herself: “What are you doing? What are you doing? What are you doing?” The child was surprisingly heavy, although Helen could feel ribs and the sharp, pinionlike bones of shoulder blades. The legs that wrapped viselike around Helen’s waist were sticky, a strong scent of urine filling her nostrils.

      A stab of impatience. “I’ve got to go, sweetie. Where is Mama?”

      She bounced the girl to quiet her and paced back and forth. Her mind wasn’t clear; why was she losing her precious hours, involving herself now, when she had passed hundreds of desperate children before? But she had heard this one’s cries so clearly. A sign?