“This is very good,” she says. And her hand steals across the seat and touches my thigh and then retreats again.
It is not clear to me what we are to do after Ben tries to let go of some part of his past there on the side of the road. It is not clear to him either, I think. So I try to make myself slow down. I feel very much like a new socialist woman, an equal worker in the new social order, which means to me you can touch your husband when you want to and you do not have to wait for him to decide this. But I must consider his feelings, too.
I have thought husband. I cannot stop a smile at this word. I am telling myself how I should slow down, and even in the telling, I am going very fast. I watch out the window and I think that in Nha Trang, by the sea, in the wind off the South China Sea, all the spirits of the past will be blown far away and Ben and I can find a place alone together.
For now, I keep my hands in my lap and my eyes out the window. Perhaps I doze. I have not slept well for these three nights and my eyes grow heavy. Along the side of the highway women have spread out rice to dry and then it is manioc root drying there, the white chips they use for flour, and then it is coffee and now I know for sure I have slept, for we are passing the Long Khanh mountains, past Xuan Loc, a town which I have missed, which was a battlefield where our nationalist forces had many victories, and on the side of the road the dark brown beans are laid out to dry and the smell of the coffee fills the air.
I turn my face to Ben. I watch him for a while without him knowing. He is very intent on the road. His hands on the wheel are large, my truck driver’s hands, which know my body, which are part of my own body. There are shadows flashing over us. I look outside and we are running beneath eucalyptus trees, lining both sides of the highway, their bodies white, their thin arms drooping like mothers mourning, and beneath them some little girls in white ao dais are riding bicycles. Ben is driving slow now among these children.
It leads me to speak whatever I can find to say, just to touch him with my voice. “These are eucalyptus trees,” I say. “An oil comes from this tree that we use when we are sick.”
He does not seem to hear me at first. I watch ahead and we pass the last of the girls on bicycles and then an oxcart and we are free also of the trees and I do not expect any words in return now, but he says, “There are eucalyptus in California, along the highways to break the wind.”
These words make me as happy as if he has suddenly kissed me. But still, I can hear his voice working hard in order to speak. I watch a spot in the sky, out ahead of us, near a grove of cashew trees. It seems to be a great bird hovering, hanging motionless against the sky. We near, and the bird moves to one side and then jerks back to the other, and I know it is a kite. There is a child, invisible to us, beyond the trees.
“Tien,” Ben says, low. “I’m sorry if I’m quiet. I’ve driven half my life, nearly, and it has always been in silence.”
“I understand,” I say.
We pass the cashew trees by. The sky is empty now. I take this explanation as an act of love.
He says, “There’s a quiet place in me, since I stopped by the road. I want to keep that. I want it when we reach the sea.”
“Yes,” I say. “It is a good thing, this silent time.” I struggle with my hands, to keep them where they are, in my lap. They obey this time. I try to find that quiet place in me now, too.
And so, together, Ben and I become the landscape rushing past us. Red soil and the smoke of brick kilns and piles of brick along the road, and roof tiles. And in Phan Thiet, TV antennas on bamboo poles and in the air the smell of nuoc mam, our wonderful fish sauce that they make in the town, and then, beyond, the salt flats with their little levees of tan mud and great squares of seawater and the piles of white salt taller than a man, and then paddies again and the smell in the air of rice hay burning and swarms of ducks grazing the wet fields after the harvest, and then coconut trees and then the Truong Son mountains to the west. And the mountains slide over and squeeze us next to the sea. And the sea is there for Ben’s eyes, our first sight of it together, the South China Sea, sudden and vast coming out from behind the dunes and bright from the sun, and it is the dark green of the finest jade.
And now I steal a look at Ben, and his face is turned my way, though his eyes are far out to sea already. He glances at me and out again and then to the road. “We’ll lose it again for a few hours, won’t we,” he says, and I know he means the sea.
“Yes,” I say.
And we go on. And we stop only briefly at a roadside stand to eat, and we sit on tiny plastic chairs in the shade of an umbrella and I keep my eyes away from Ben, because his knees are almost up to his ears as he sits on this thing meant for a Vietnamese, and I like the size of him and I like him looking funny and not even realizing it, but these are the kinds of things I must put aside for now. Still, I am beginning to thrill again, like on the afternoon when I was preparing to make love to him, though we did not make love on that day, the preparation was a very sweet thing, and now I am having the same feeling. We are going fast. We will be at the sea near Nha Trang before the sun is gone.
So we go back on the road and soon we are passing tobacco drying in racks, the large green leaves, like the ears of elephants, and somewhere I think they must be burning the scrap because there is a strong tobacco smell suddenly around us and Ben is moving beside me. I look and he has lifted a little in his seat to dig in his pocket, and he pulls out a pack of cigarettes. This is a surprise for me. I have never seen him smoke. He does not take his eyes off the road. He does not take out a cigarette. He holds the pack for a moment, as if thinking about it, and then he tosses it into the backseat.
And what can it be that whispers in my body at this moment? I am a practical woman, a good citizen of a serious Marxist state, and this part of me says it is the food I ate by the side of the road, upsetting my body, just that, and perhaps also the smell of tobacco, which makes me feel a little bit unbalanced, since I have never smoked a cigarette in my life. Even perhaps it is some idle idea, a public health issue, since the man I love — the man who I am believing, in some shuttered-up room in my mind, will be living with me forever — has just rejected the smoking of a cigarette. I know that the smoke from a cigarette can harm others, especially delicate others. All of these things may be what turn my face to the landscape and whisper such an important message to me, so important that as soon as the thought comes, I ignore the message itself and instead I start thinking around and around about how it might have been prompted by nothing but indigestion or some other trivial thing. And even knowing how it is that I am avoiding the thought itself, I go on trying to discredit it. It could be a trick of the mind: I have just seen a Cham woman walking ahead of us and we raced past her and I turned to see her and she was carrying a baby in a pouch on her chest. The Cham are from different ancestors than other Vietnamese. They are Hindus. They have a god called Shiva who is very powerful and very terrifying to look at and who waits to destroy the world, and I can certainly understand Karl Marx being uncomfortable with religion when I hear of this god, I do not want to believe in this god either. Maybe this woman and her god and her baby are what make me feel this thing about my body.
And how can the most important message of my life be whispered to me in a moment like this? But it can. It can. For though I am in a Saigontourist car and I am watching two ragged dogs running beside us barking at the edge of this village and though my stomach is a little queasy from the soup I had by the side of the road and my head is a little light from the smell of tobacco, it was five days ago that Ben and I made love and I told him to stay inside me and now suddenly there is something deeper in my body I clearly can feel, something, like a shifting in my bones, like a quickening in my blood, something.