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Authors: Hualing Nieh

Mulberry and Peach (26 page)

BOOK: Mulberry and Peach
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‘And then what?'
Teng laughs. ‘Mulberry, you don't need to ask what happened next. Then, well, you know. Really coarse skin. Just to have somebody to do it with. She even started to cry in bed, saying she'd never been so happy.' Teng steps on the gas as he says ‘happy'.
Ninety miles an hour.
‘Good!' I look at the headlights in front of us, like two eyes staring at us. Behind us are two more eyes staring at us. I'm not afraid of bright lights anymore.
‘Help! My car had a breakdown. Could you please help me?' A head suddenly pokes out of a car at the side of the road, looks at us desperately and yells.
We zoom by. The car behind us catches up and is about to cross the yellow line. Teng steps on the gas again: one hundred miles an hour.
The two cars race side by side down the highway.
‘You crossed the yellow line!' Teng sticks his head out the window and yells.
‘You're speeding!'
‘So are you!'
‘You didn't stop to help!'
‘You didn't either!'
‘I couldn't stop!'
‘I couldn't either!'
‘You're crazy!'
‘You're the one who's crazy!'
‘No, you're the one who's crazy!'
‘I'll kill you!' Teng picks up the paperweight, and is about to throw it at that car. Suddenly he withdraws his hand. ‘Mother-fuckers, it's not worth it to throw the Great Wall at those white devils!'
The paperweight rolls on the seat.
The snow floats in the paperweight.
The other car falls back, about to turn at the intersection. Teng pulls a sailor's knife out of his pocket, snaps the blade in position, points it at the people in that car and yells:
‘Good luck!'
Teng folds the knife and puts it back in his pocket, his two hands firmly holding the steering wheel, his eyes blankly staring at the road ahead, his short chunky body sitting up tall.
‘Teng, you've suddenly become a man!'
‘You've suddenly become a young girl!'
‘You thought I was too old before!' I eye him and laugh, as I light up a cigarette.
‘I didn't mean that. I only meant, you're so radiant today, and seem suddenly younger!'
I blow smoke in his face.
‘You smoke?'
‘Uh.'
‘Since when?'
‘Today.' I blow more smoke in his face.
‘You're making me itch all over, Mulberry! Damn! We've gone the wrong way!' He looks at the sign at the side of the road, slows the car down. ‘Highway 5! I've never heard of a Highway 5! I'm muddled because of that smoke!'
‘Just keep on going down the highway, we're sure to come across the right road.'
‘That's true. Let's just keep going.'
The car follows the curving highway awhile. Highway 7. Highway 12. No more highway. No more road signs. The car races along the gravel road. Speeds through a little town with no sign.
‘This is just like a labyrinth!' Before Teng even finishes speaking, the car makes a strange whine, and suddenly stops.
Out of gas.
We are stopped by an auto graveyard. Junked Fords, Dodges, Chevrolets, and Pontiacs are piled in the yard. Most are twisted, empty shells, smashed up in wrecks. Beyond the graveyard is a street lined with grey houses with black windows. An empty gas station on the corner. No sign of anyone. It's a ghost town. It was once a booming town, then the young people left to make their way in the world and the old people all died off.
‘What'll we do?'
‘Wait.'
‘For what?'
‘Wait till someone drives through and we can ask for some gas.'
‘Who'd come to this creepy place?'
‘What else can we do except wait? It's too quiet! Let's have a little noise!' Teng turns around and switches on the tape recorder in the back seat.
‘. . . To tell the truth, our Action Committee still has not taken a position. We're only a bunch of free Chinese who have banded together. We not only have freedom of thought, we also have freedom of action. But the desire for freedom is like smoking pot, the more you smoke, the more you want it. Once you're addicted the trouble begins. What the Action Committee advocates is “action”. Some people say we're people without roots in a world without faith, worth or purpose. But it's better this way! Then we can have true freedom to create by our action a life of worth and purpose, even create a God. What kind of action? How to take action? I
hope everyone will think about that when he's finished work for the day, finished writing his thesis or finished helping his wife with the dishes...
‘I propose organising a “Committee to Defend Human Rights” to protest against incidents which threaten human rights!
‘We must first get to know ourselves. Get to know each other, be frank with each other. Now to act as Chinese, this is the most important thing. So ... I suggest that we first take action, to understand through our actions, so ... What you said is not right. I think . . .'
I laugh. ‘We're stranded here in this ghost town listening to Chinese debate how to take action.'
‘OK, here's concrete action! Listen to a recording of hog butchering in a packinghouse. “Killing” should be a course of action!' Teng turns around and presses a button on the tape recorder in the back seat, adjusts the tape, then presses the button again. He turns around, picks up the little glass paperweight and shakes it.
The snow floats up in the paperweight. All around is pitch black. The snow on the Great Wall is white.
The sound of machines, people - deafening clatter from the tape recorder.
The clatter stops.
‘Our slaughterhouse slaughters 450 hogs an hour. The method we use is highly effective, the result of a combination of man working with machines.
‘But we also strive to make it as humane as possible.
‘Now, all of you who have come for hog butchering, please come with me. I'll explain every step in the slaughtering process. Over there is a small gate. Those hogs over there in front of the gate, raising up their snouts and looking at us, it's really funny, isn't it? They're ready to enter the slaughterhouse. First a number has to be stamped on the hog's body. That little gate only allows one hog to enter at a time. Beside the gate is a board which blocks from sight the man who wields the club. On the head of the club are many tiny needles; those tiny needles, when dipped in ink, make up the numbers. When each hog goes by, the man behind the board stamps him with the club with needles on it, a number is thus stamped on the hog's body. That number is stamped on its skin beneath the bristles. When the bristles are removed, by hot water, the number remains imprinted on the hog's body. This is what we consider our most efficient point.'
The sound of machines, people - deafening clatter.
The clatter stops.
‘Now, these little fellas are going to take a hot bath. There's a pool with
hot water. The hogs soak in it, the bristles soften up and then are pulled out. Then the preparation before entering the slaughterhouse has been completed.'
The sound of machines, people - deafening clatter.
The clatter stops.
‘Now these little fellas are ready to enter the slaughterhouse. The method we use lessens the animals' pain as much as possible. The hog is on that slope. We use a pair of electric tongs like the curling irons women used to use to curl their hair a long time ago. You poke them in the hog's body. The hog is given an electric shock and it immediately blacks out and collapses. Someone above it lowers a hook, catches one of the hog's feet on the hook and lifts the hog up.'
The sound of machines, people - deafening clatter.
The clatter stops.
‘Then a butcher raises a butcher's knife and skillfully pierces the hog's throat. He cuts right into the hog's heart. The hog's heart is very close to its throat. You could say the hog's an animal without a throat. (Laughter.) That one stroke, you could say, is quick of sight, quick of hand, beautiful and solemn, just like a religious ceremony.'
The sound of machines, people - deafening clatter.
The clatter stops.
‘Now, the hog is hanging high in the air. The blood gushes down on the steel-ribbed, cement floor. The blood's bright red; it's very beautiful. That man standing on the high counter, wearing rubber boots, uses that thing in his hand, it looks like a broom, to sweep the blood into a gutter. He stands in the blood all day long doing that. He's been doing it for twenty-six years. When the blood flows out the gutter, it coagulates. Man can use coagulated blood to make all kinds of food products. The Scots like to eat pudding made from hog's blood. The Chinese eat bean curd simmered with hog's blood.'
The sound of machines and people combine into a deafening din, as if it will never stop . . .
‘Look! Teng!' I point to the fields in front of us. After our car stops, the headlights have remained on, shining into the field. ‘There are many dots of light like lanterns in the distance. Do you see them? There, over there, they're moving! They're coming toward us! One, two, three, four, five, six, more than ten! There, there're some more!'
We get out of the car and run toward the moving lights. They disperse, scatter in all directions.
‘Deer! The light's from their eyes!' I call out.
The deer race back into the trees on the hillside.
Teng and I walk into the graveyard. A statue of a black angel, wings outstretched, bends over protecting a grave. Teng strikes a match to light up the inscription on the tombstone:
‘Nicholai Vandefield 1805-1861'
The grass on the grave is tall, a little red flower has been placed on the grave.
The black silhouette of a barn looms on the horizon.
Teng and I lie down on the grass of the grave. I undress him.
 
How could I have done such a shameless thing with that nice young man, Teng? I probably was insane I don't even recognise myself!
I hear my brain talking again, it seems like there's another brain inside my brain. The two brains are separate, one talks the other listens. I'm very frightened I sing loudly to suppress the voice in my brain but it still goes on talking I don't know what it's saying. The voice is unclear, it's as if it's ridiculing me now I can hear it. It says: ‘You raped another man! You can't get an abortion!'
 
I-po didn't come. I called him over and over but no answer. Once it was Betty who answered I hung up. I want to tell him I don't want to get an abortion. I must not sin again.
‘From the first to the fifteenth when the moon is full,
Spring breezes sway the willow, the willow turns green . . .'
I hear again our family servant singing a folksong in his soft voice. I ride on his shoulders to watch the monkey circus. We walk in wide-open fields. A beggar carrying a broken basket searches for burnt coal in the garbage. The field in front of us is crowded with people Li suddenly stops singing, points saying Little Mulberry let's go see the execution. I ask are they executing good people or bad people Li says they're executing Communists. I ask are Communists good or bad, Li says whoever gives the common people food to eat is a good person whoever lets the common people starve is a bad person. A volley of gunfire. Li runs over carrying me on his back. The people who have been shot are lying on the ground in a pool of blood a thin stream of blood trickles down the hill. A skinny old woman kneels by the side crying and burning paper money scattering water and rice over the ashes. A scrawny yellow dog is sniffing at the trickling blood . . .
When I see the blood my whole body turns to ice, I curl up into a ball. I want to talk with someone I call Teng I want to tell him that I'm a bad
woman, when he and I were together I was already pregnant with I-po's child But I can only utter one word to him: ‘blood!'
 
The train is rushing over the Pearl River Bridge in Canton refugees cling to the roof of the train many heads are sticking out the windows. A telephone wire scrapes along the roof of the train. One two three people drop with a splash into the river. Someone standing on the roof of the last car is pissing in the river as he sees the people falling into the river. The people at the window say that on such a sunny day it's raining but the rain smells a little strange. People at another window say the Communists have already crossed the Yangtze River and will take over China. The heads of the people in the river come up several times then vanish.
 
One instrument that establishes contact between people is the body, another is the telephone. My Friday night pastime is making telephone calls.
351-7789. ‘Hello!'
‘Helen!'
‘How did you know it was Helen?'
‘You have a foreign accent.'
‘I haven't used the name Helen for a long time.'
‘I'm sorry. I can't pronounce foreign names. I can't even pronounce my own husband's name, I-po. I call him
Bill
. What does Mulberry mean in Chinese?'
‘Mulberry is a holy tree, Chinese people consider it the chief of the tree family, it can feed silkworms, silkworms can produce silk, silk can be woven into silk and satin material. The mulberry tree is green, the colour of spring . . .'
‘Helen, don't stop, go on talking, go on, it's coming, that magical feeling is coming, crawling all over my body! Crawling all over my eyes! Crawling into my brain! I can see the silk worms, silver, twisting, curling, spitting out silk, wrapping it all around their bodies, the multi-coloured silk, delicate and luminous, wrapped around the bodies of the silk worms, their heads emerging from the strands of silk, no they're human heads . . .'
BOOK: Mulberry and Peach
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