Before the boats were built we sat on trees felled by storm and made songs for the river. My sisters came and we laughed at what we wore, our confusion and skin. There were no synonyms. When the elders arrived, the fires burned on and Kwa-Sun used a leaf to wipe her lips and Fo-Beh spoke of village scandal. I thought how nice never to grow up, how nice to remain a girl. My mother gave me a doll made of tiger-skin and twigs, which I kept between my legs at night. And with it I dreamed of what’s beyond the river, why Bo-Kan never crossed it, not even to sing of its fury. What a strange boy he was, sitting in the nightcold, no blanket against his knees.
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