Duong Huong - The Zenith

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The Zenith: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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A major new novel from the most important Vietnamese author writing today.
Duong Thu Huong has won acclaim for her exceptional lyricism and psychological acumen, as well as for her unflinching portraits of modern Vietnam and its culture and people. In this monumental new novel she offers an intimate, imagined account of the final months in the life of President Ho Chi Minh at an isolated mountaintop compound where he is imprisoned both physically and emotionally, weaving his story in with those of his wife’s brother-in-law, an elder in a small village town, and a close friend and political ally, to explore how we reconcile the struggles of the human heart with the external world.
These narratives portray the thirst for absolute power, both political and otherwise, and the tragic consequences on family, community, and nationhood that can occur when jealousy is coupled with greed or mixed with a lust for power.
illuminates and captures the moral conscience of Vietnamese leaders in the 1950s and 1960s as no other book ever has, as well as bringing out the souls of ordinary Vietnamese living through those tumultuous times.

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As the sun finally began to set the evening meals were set out. The villagers ate hastily, eager to get back outside. Without any plan or forewarning, everyone from all sections of the village began to gather in front of Secretary Vui’s house — an entire crowd, some carrying flashlights, others storm lanterns, others oil torches that burned effusively. But the front gate of Miss Vui’s house was locked and both the yard and the house were pitch dark.

“How strange! Where can she be?”

“Some saw her this morning in the store buying materials.”

“Maybe she’s at that joker Quy’s house! When Miss Ngan was grabbed, there were only the police chief and the militiamen. We didn’t see Quy at all.”

“That Quy signed the order for the police chief to execute. He’s hiding his face now; of course that’s so. How can a firstborn son bring police to collar a stepmother like that? Only a gangster!”

“So why is Miss Vui hiding her face?”

“You forget that she took Quy’s order to go to Khoai Hamlet to investigate Miss Ngan’s background and there learned the story of Mr. Quang building a house for his wife’s father? In this whole village she is the only one who went all the way into the dragonfly nest.”

“Under the circumstances, if she’s not the chairman’s right hand, then she’s his left hand.”

“No wonder: I saw them gossip with each other. It looked really cozy.”

“Oh well! Climb a ladder and ask heaven. People blow hot and cold. These two don’t look each other in the face anymore.”

“How do you know that?”

“The day I pulled some sacks of charcoal past Miss Vui’s house, I saw Quy coming out, his face dark like a water buffalo’s vagina. I ran across Miss Vui a couple of days later and when I pretended to inquire about Quy, her face ballooned like a cracked vat. She said, ‘I don’t know and I have nothing to do with Quy!’”

“Oh-oh! Are you in trouble now! How dare you compare the chairman’s face with a water buffalo’s vagina? If I squawk, you’re finished.”

“I dare you to tell. ‘Dark like a water buffalo’s…’ is merely an old saying. I just use it as it is.”

“I am just joshing you a little bit. I didn’t expect them to split so fast.”

“What do you expect? People hook up with people like a latch knot: you undo it, then tie it; tied, you undo it again — like a game. There is nothing permanent in life.”

“But Quy is the chairman. How dare the committee secretary undercut her boss?”

“That, only heaven knows. OK, time to sleep. Tomorrow morning I have to weed cassava. If we don’t do it tomorrow, in a few days the tubers will wither and there will be no crop. All the work of planting and tending will go to waste.”

“Absolutely correct! True that cassava doesn’t bring us money, but it does let us feed pigs and gives us flour for rainy days. We should not let the crop go to waste. Time to go.”

Thus the villagers encouraged one another into leaving; they had wasted the whole day following this dramatic play. Whatever would happen tomorrow, would certainly happen in any event. For the villagers, the rows of cassava were waiting.

The flickering lights moved along the winding paths, past the gardens and the lines of hills. The chatting melted away into the spacious envelope of the mysterious night sky.

At the top of Lan Vu mountain, there was a sudden slash of fire that resembled a shooting star. Someone said, “Oh! A shooting star. Why is there a shooting star in the spring?”

“It’s not a shooting star; it’s a falling star. When a star falls, someone has just died.”

“When an owl or hog bird cries, a person has gone on. But a falling star tells us that a saint’s exile on earth has expired and he is returning to paradise.”

“Is that true? Heaven and earth are hard to explain.”

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The next day, rain cascaded again. So plans to work up in the cassava fields were canceled. People sighed, because the more the rain fell, the thicker the grass grew, its roots plunging into the ground as fast as a wind blowing, in no time flat growing right through the cassava tubers. Cassava that has been invaded by grass either rots or has no taste, or tastes faintly bitter, useful only for feeding pigs, not people. They had to put on raincoats to go weed the fields; if they didn’t do that, they would have to do some other chore. Not here the smooth white shirts of those who have the leisure to just enjoy their time on earth.

Past noon, the rain completely stopped just as lunch was finished. Sitting around to drink water and pick their teeth, the villagers heard the blowing of a car horn on the rural road. It was a rare noise that was heard only several times a year. At New Year, it had to be the sound of the drama troupe’s vehicle. Once in a blue moon, it might be the sound of a medical team coming to inspect for serious diseases such as malaria, hepatitis, or diphtheria, or to check the gynecological health of women and young girls. For inhabitants of Woodcutters’ Hamlet, the noise of a car was thus synonymous with a happy event. With it came the presence of a fairy with lipstick and blush, with brilliant skirt and shirt under the lights, or doctors in white lab coats. On that afternoon, when the horn was heard, everybody was puzzled and asked one another:

“How strange, what team is this?”

“Why didn’t we get any word? Not from the chairman or the vice-chairman, or the women’s secretary or the youth secretary.”

“It can’t be a birth-control campaign.”

“That birth-eradication program has been stopped temporarily. I heard the central government is reevaluating it.”

Villagers came out to see who it might be, just like those gawking city people who usually form a crowd to watch a demented and naked patient escaped from the hospital, showing her breasts and butt on the streets. On the sandy road running through the three sections of the hamlet, a jeep painted the color of harvest gold was inching along slowly like a beetle. The road was narrow and bumpy. The jeep went straight to the upper section, followed by twenty kids, all loudly screaming while running behind it. In the middle of the upper section, the driver stuck his head out and asked those standing along the side of the road, “Will you please tell me where is Chairman Quy’s house?”

So it was discovered that it was a police vehicle, full of policemen. A quick bolt spread fast among the crowd along the road:

“The police are coming to Chairman Quy’s house!”

This is the first time they had seen a police car since the land reform.

“For sure the car comes to take Miss Ngan to the provincial capital.”

“Correct! Only the province has the authority to sit in judgment. It’s not land-reform time, when villages could set up courts. Whoever said yesterday that village officials could investigate her is wrong.”

“The village police chief — who else?”

“If he said that, then it was a lie. If villages could investigate and sentence, then heads would roll and blood would flow; later on, rectification of errors over and over again.”

“Why didn’t you speak up yesterday? I saw you in front of the storehouse where they shut in Miss Ngan.”

“I eat when invited; I speak when asked. Obviously, to speak to the air under heaven is for the demented.”

“OK, be quiet and watch! They have arrived.”

The villagers crowded the way to Quy’s house. About twenty minutes later, the team of provincial police returned with Chairman Quy. But the chairman had not one bit of the bearing of someone who holds power. Those standing farther away saw him walk with his head bowed, his face emptied of blood. At the door of the jeep, he climbed up and slid inside, sitting all the way in the corner so that he did not have to see anyone and no one could see or bother him. Those standing close by could see clearly the sweat dripping from his forehead and temples down his long and pointy face all the way to his chin. They also could see clearly his hands shaking madly and his lips quivering white. These strange sights made the crowd hold their breath; their instinct told them that something important was about to happen. When the jeep turned around to approach the storehouse, villagers stepped back to both sides of the road, no one saying a word. When the car then moved forward, they silently followed it, walking as if in a funeral procession rather than as a gaggle of onlookers looking to satisfy their unhealthy curiosity.

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