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Yeye and Nainai
In 1949, Yéye, my grandfather, was a soldier
 Eighteen years old and already fighting,
 Decked in pale camouflage military green
 Assigned to leave Qingdao,
 The town of his home and his sweetheart,
 N?inai, my grandmother, only sixteen,
 Scared about the war that none of them
 Knew anything about
 Besides knowing the difference 
 Between a Communist and a Kuomintang.
  
 Houses lay like charred, fiery beacons
 Screams and pleas for the ones
 Who would never again taste 
 Smoke-smothered duck kebabs and sweet red bean buns 
 Buried to bed in the feathery ashes of gunpowder and cannon fire
 
 The warship blared its horn three times,
 Last call for the uniformed to get away 
 From that god-forsaken land;
 Told to take nothing with them,
 Yéye just couldn’t leave her:
 He jumped on his horse to go back;
 His friends, with shaking heads and blank eyes said,
 “Forget it, or you will die.”
 
 N?inai sat at home, steady hands folded in her lap
 Helpless to do anything but accept her fate; 
 A spider dangled, gleaming on waxy string
 The lucky spider, her mother always said
 Clop, clop on the dusty, dirt road,
 Rode Yéye on his horse, 
 Sweeping her up into the stirrups
 N?inai clamped her eyes shut,
 Pressing her face to his back
 So she wouldn’t have to see
 Everything and everybody they left behind
 
 Just in time, they got to the ship
 Gritty hands clasped
 Holding onto each other, all they had left
 Standing at the masthead
 Salty sea rime blasted their faces, whipped their hair
 As they headed together to a new land

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