
At thirteen, Sophea is already older than her years, though her arms are still thin as bamboo stalks,
her shirt faded, patched, and sun-bleached, and her feet bare on the slick, splintered wood of a long narrow boat gliding across Tonlé Sap. She kneels at the bow, oar pressed into the ochre water,
pulling, pushing, steering—not just the boat, but the small world it holds.
Sophea does not speak. Her breath is tight from rowing, her hair damp and clinging to her neck. Every stroke of the oar is muscle and memory. She learned it from her father before he left. Before the fish vanished. Before fuel became too expensive. Now it’s her job. To row. To ferry. To protect.