After my Grandpa could finally get up from bed, he immediately set out to uncover the reasons for Baolan’s death. That winter he was like some unknown and coldly aloof lodger at the West Gate home. Even the pitiful cries of Pussycat crawling along the top of the wall couldn’t distract him. Every day he got up early and came back late. He went to the printing plant where Baolan had worked, the school where Ah Jian had taught. He went everywhere and questioned people who had known this husband and wife. But he didn’t find any “spider threads and horse hoofmarks.” My grandfather had become enmeshed in an enigma from which he had no way to extricate himself.
I don’t know if my grandfather went to heaven. Or whether he met Baolan there, who then released him from the endless mental tangles of that enigma.
1.
A
RE YOU SO
sure of yourself now? Has the Old Town story crumbled your notion about first impressions being the important ones? Is it sympathy you want to express, while at the same time an indefinable admiration has sprouted deep within you?
Most Westerners think that when it comes to Asia, and especially China, first impressions are the ones to go by. Even the humblest and most self-effacing of Christians think of China in terms of misery and suffering. So in the West, Chinese movies that are one long lamentation get a big box office and win awards. Yes, of course, we’ve been through a lot of suffering. But suffering has left us with not merely painful memories, but ones worth devoting a lifetime to understand.
Joseph’s eyes narrow as he looks at me. “You ought to write down a history of the Lin family.”
I laugh to myself.
Yes, I’ve had just such an idea
. I graduated from the department of literature. What student in a department of literature doesn’t dream of becoming a writer? I once mentioned this to Uncle Baoqing on a visit back to see my family in Old Town. He was puzzled. “What’s there to write about in our family? Your grandpa was poor and down-and-out his whole life. Your grandma was a housewife. Your mother, like most of that generation, is depressed and frustrated. Let’s not even talk about your generation. Other than earning money and getting divorced, you’re not looking for anything at all.” At the time, my cousin Wei’er was going through an unpleasant divorce. Their little grandson was going to leave the Lin home with his mother, something that vexed and worried Uncle Baoqing and Auntie Fangzi no end.
Before I turned out the lights on my literary dreams, I did try putting something on paper. But if I tried once, I failed a hundred times. The longest thing I ever wrote reached fifty or sixty thousand characters, but still I walked away from it. Nowadays, my literary dream is just one more thing that I have walked away from. And at this very moment what I want to do most is turn right around and get back to Beijing to rally my defeated forces.
Joseph takes out a photograph of Helen from his document folder. I know that picture well. It is the youngest appearance of her that still exists. She was already an old lady of about seventy then, still in India doing voluntary relief work and teaching school. She is standing in the midst of a crowd of children and looking just like some old Indian mama.
Two years ago I bid farewell to Helen before returning to China, after which I then went back to see her again. On that last occasion, she was living in a nursing home in Lompoc. She and many old people were in their wheelchairs around the long dining room table waiting for the attendants to serve the meal. That scene really shook me. What shook me even more was the photograph on the front of each door. All the old people had put out a framed photograph taken during the radiant elegance of their youth. These photographs made you think of Hollywood stars. In fact, the word was that some former Hollywood stars really were there. Looking at the people in the photographs and then seeing the people in the wheelchairs who were totally out of it, their gaze glassy-eyed, their mouths drooling, their skin once glowing with loveliness but now like rotten old tree bark, all this was a reality that would really bring you down. To live our few short decades of life to old age is a matter of sheer luck, but here was what our twilight years looked like! I’d get depressed every time I paid a visit to the nursing home, and that’s when I would long for eternal life and some deity.
Helen didn’t have any pictures of herself when she was young. The one she put on her door was where she looked like the Indian mama. Her daughter, Lucy had told me that she knew very little about her mother. For several decades after leaving China, Helen had helped the destitute and desperate in the Third World, and from the time she was small, Lucy lived with an aunt in America. The wars and upheavals in all these countries time and again cleaned Helen out of everything she had. Her diaries, her photographs from her youth, all were lost and gone forever. She worked in India until she was seventy-five years old, right up until a stroke partially paralyzed her and she couldn’t work any longer. So her daughter never had any evidence to document her mother’s life in China.
Joseph studies the photograph and says, “I really hope that my grandmother is the person in your story. I hope she is the Guo family’s Third Sister. Of course, it’s only a hope.”
Only a hope
…
Real life is never so coincidental
. With an effort I recall the shape and features of Helen’s face. Didn’t she look a bit like my grandmother? But hers was a face that showed all too much the hardships of her life. There was no way of telling just how she really had originally looked. Also, Grandma had said that the so-called Third Sister Story was simply one among many others made up by Great-Auntie.
Suddenly, a melancholy hard to describe wells up within me. During the days spent at Helen’s side, I often had these same piercing feelings. That old lady who never did find a home aroused my self-pity every time. Just what had made me wander so far afield to a little place even more of a backwater than Old Town was something I could never figure out.
To console a wandering ghost drifting through strange lands and on foreign shores, I ponder hard on who could still provide information about Third Sister Guo. Perhaps Great-Auntie in her own old folks’ home still remembered her, though most probably she would improvise new “tales of marvels” and confuse me even more. I think of my Great-Uncle Guo’s wife. She is already over eighty years old and still in good health. To this day she is still the real power in the Guo family. The thing that impressed me the most about her was at the time of Grandma’s burial. Though out of respect for Grandma’s beliefs none of us covered ourselves in white cloth and hemp, she represented the Guo family in leading the great ruckus in the mourning hall. However I explained it to you, though, would make no sense. They keened, they wailed, they beat their breasts and stamped their feet. And in the midst of their laments they bitterly accused my two uncles, Baosheng and Baoqing, of being unfilial to their mother. Just the year before last, one of the Guo family nephews got sick and died, and his widow took their child with her when she remarried. Although this was a girl child, she still belonged to the line of the Guo family. This Big Aunt Guo took a clutch of women, all professional troublemakers, with her and found the widow’s new home. She brought the child back home and raised it with her own meager pension. She had met Third Sister and was a wealth of Guo family secrets. Would she tell what really happened?
Joseph laughed in relief. “Actually, what really happened has already come to light.”
Out of love for Helen, why not turn a beautiful wish into irrefutable truth?
I nod in warm agreement.
“They have reunited in heaven and at this very hour, at this very moment, are laughing at us. ‘Look, those two children are still guessing at riddles.’”
Joseph jabbed his finger heavenward.
The concept of eternal life is truly baffling. If there is eternal life, all the vexations and perplexities of the present one are as easily understood as a blade splitting bamboo. But is it true?
Helen, I want to believe that you have returned to the heavenly kingdom. That is your real hometown
.
With such thoughts, though, my mood now turns heavy. Chaofan once wrote a song called “Who’s Roaming.” It was one of the routine numbers he performed in the open air at Fisherman’s Wharf. Is he still there this evening playing his one-man band? When the song is over and the people all leave, does he still have a woman to go home with him?
“Roaming”—once that was such a beautiful word. There was nothing to compare with how I felt when I imagined backpacking in alien lands and taking unknown roads. But this word, when I hear it now, trails in its wake bitter grief and sadness.
Chaofan has his own music studio for composing accompaniment to televised animation programs and advertisements. Our daughter says he’s got several people working for him, so that makes him a boss. He doesn’t need to sell his art on the street for a living, but he still wants to occupy that tiny spot on the Wharf.
I don’t know whether he is as endlessly infatuated with his roaming as he had been. He stubbornly refuses to receive any news from China. He doesn’t read Chinese newspapers. He doesn’t make friends with other Chinese. Every last one of his studio staff are white people. What’s all the more ridiculous is that he always uses his lame English when speaking with our daughter and every one of his sentences has at least three mistakes in it. The girl hardly understands him at all and feels nothing but disdain. In her overseas calls she laughs as she tells funny stories about her father. All kinds of feelings run through me as I hold the phone to my ear.
This is a severely damaged man. And it is undeniable that I myself am a scar on his memory. I don’t have the confidence and the strength to accompany him through difficult times. I don’t know what strength propped up my grandmother to love my grandfather through an entire lifetime. And
he
was not merely a man who had been “poor and down on his luck” but also someone who always brought calamity upon his family. I raise my head in admiration of Grandma. But
I
can’t do it. I just can’t.
2.
E
VERY
N
EW
Y
EAR
Chrysanthemum makes a resolution:
This year I am definitely going to get myself married
. Year after year goes by and her seasonal love intermezzos are like old records. They go round and round again, never pausing, never stopping in their groaning and moaning. With the closing of the year, the ending goes back to the beginning. Comes the spring and she’s all by herself again, so Spring Festival is a very trying period for her. She has to be on full-scale alert and early on plan her strategy for coping. For three years straight she signed up for travel groups and left Beijing as if she were seeking safety in flight.
Last year, just before Spring Festival, Chrysanthemum suddenly telephoned me to meet with her. She sounded unusually exhilarated and wanted me to come to her home to see something. She could barely control her excitement and sounded like an antique collector who obtained the thing she had most dreamed of having. Chrysanthemum was renting a spot in the northeast corner of the city, an out-of-the-way area I never failed to get lost in. I have been urging her all along to move out of there and get a place of her own, but she’s convinced that her future husband now has the new home ready and is waiting to greet his bride. This was a day of sandstorms and I didn’t want to face these conditions to go see her treasure. But hearing her sound so eager to see me, I arranged to meet at our old place—the coffee shop.
Chrysanthemum was clutching a laptop as she emerged from the murk of the storm and arrived at the coffee shop. The moment she entered she looked for an electrical outlet. “Got some great news for you! I now have hope. You also now have hope!
A rich guy with money to spend had hired Chrysanthemum to package some unknown singer for an MTV clip. He said it didn’t matter how much it cost and once the contract was signed her reimbursements would definitely be deposited to her account. Now seeing Chrysanthemum beside herself with happiness, I had to remind her that signing such a contract could very possibly land her in a scam. “This sort of thing goes on everywhere. You pay the advance but when the time comes you don’t get it back and you’re just out of luck.”
As Chrysanthemum’s two hands worked the laptop, she waggled her chin impatiently. “This is nothing to do with business. It’s almost New Year’s! Who feels like talking business? I want to introduce you to a dating Web site. Here—look!”
On the screen appeared a long series of men’s pictures. She scrolled down and browsed through the data on dozens of men. All around forty years old, with master’s degrees, doctorates—everything you could possibly want, they had it.
“Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves’ treasure is right here. This year I can hope to get married. Do you want me to set up a file for you? You should get married too you know.”
It was a bit tempting, but I hadn’t forgotten that I was still married. “Forget it. This year let me first get divorced so I won’t be taken to court by someone for marriage fraud.”
“Hmmh, so divorce! Fight a quick battle and win a quick decision.”
Chrysanthemum keyed in for me several men she was especially cultivating. Over the past three days she had met three men, and actually felt that all three of them weren’t too bad. Among these, the boss of a car repair shop especially aroused her interest. He was a middle-aged man who really knew how to create the romantic atmosphere. After dinner he took her in his SUV for a spin around the city’s outskirts where there were still traces of snow on the ground. In just a few short hours he had Chrysanthemum head over heels. The man’s screen name was Western Herdsman. She shut the laptop and stirred her coffee in her customary manner as she chattered on and on about Western Herdsman. Seized by an impulse, she had given him her cell phone data and invited him to come here and have coffee together. She gave me strict instructions that if Western Herdsman came, we would pretend we didn’t know each other. Western Herdsman didn’t respond to her invitation and Chrysanthemum looked rather crestfallen.
I realized then that that there was no hope for this turkey. She was only interested in pursuing the unattainable. And because unattainable, distances were only what she imagined them to be. So, in her mind a tiny minnow could be an enormous, heaven-spanning dragon.
This particular intermezzo was monotonous and tediously long. After hearing “Western Herdsman” for more than six months, my ears grew calluses. Always when Chrysanthemum was just about to lose hope, Western Horseman would drop old things in new guise down from heaven and create different romances, leaving her giddy and light-headed. After they dated he would then break off completely and vanish as if gone up in smoke. No need for anyone else to show her where she went wrong. She knew better than anyone. This man practiced what he preached and kept to the rules of the game. Dates were only dates. Don’t get any bigger ideas. Don’t over-step the boundary line even in the slightest.
This kind of game brought out the masochism in Chrysanthemum’s underlying character. She suffered tremendously and she also found tremendous enjoyment as she sank into her unrequited love, like an imperial concubine of the rear palace longing for the emperor’s favor. Day by day Chrysanthemum counted on her fingers the days until his summons came. Soon she was focusing on this alone and no longer felt like carrying out her vow to get married.
The period between his summons stretched out longer and longer. Chrysanthemum’s game of unrequited love now had the acrid taste of a jilting. But the acrid taste was also a kind of enjoyment. In her Ah-Q way she said, “If these days there’s still someone who can make me feel jilted, obviously such a man is a rare and precious animal.” Chrysanthemum, to cite the classics on this, brought over some episodes of the sensational television serial, “Sex and the City,” which had urban women all in an uproar. The female protagonist plays her cards out of turn and falls in love with a man she dates. On every date she tries to leave small feminine things in his bachelor apartment, like lipstick, hair clips, or a tooth brush. Each time, the man would “uprightly return the lost gold” to her afterward. Her unflagging love for him never abates and after the story develops through dozens of episodes, the director moves his heart in sympathy and shows the woman’s clothing placed elegantly in the man’s apartment.
So the possibilities were endless. Chrysanthemum was confident about bringing this game to a conclusion. She stood in front of the mirror, plucking up her courage.
Look, this woman, so attractive, so graceful and charming, cultivated, and able to earn money…she doesn’t worry about the gorgeous powdered ladies in his six palaces. All she has to do is wait for him to finish inspecting all the spring colors of his world and suddenly look back, and in the waning lamplight there she is—my Chrysanthemum!
Western Herdsman not only didn’t suddenly look back, but, like a released fish, swished off free and easy, disappearing without a trace. He didn’t return telephone calls or reply to messages left for him online. Miss Chrysanthemum was well and truly “banished to the cold palace,” a major blow to her self-confidence. The game was over but the old recording still played “Western Herdsman.” The white-haired maid of honor, cherishing the memory of those other years, repeated the ancient theme. “You can’t imagine how nice, how delightful it was when he and I were together. It’s not easy to come across two people so in love. I can’t believe he could forget clean about me.”
To find the answer, Chrysanthemum registered different information at the dating Web site and approached Western Herdsman in these new personas. When the melon was ripe enough to fall off its stem and a date was arranged, at the last minute she embraced the foot of the Buddha, so to speak, and sent
me
into the fray. She keyed in the online chat records and put me through a crash course. The things they had talked about were all over the place, from religion to loving and caring for small animals. In a sea so broad and under a sky so vast, she had found her match. Small wonder battle-scarred Chrysanthemum laid down her arms in surrender.
The curtain lifted for the prologue and I entered the stage as Chrysanthemum’s understudy. The plot developed according to script. We had a romantic dinner on the weekend and Western Herdsman was attentive to me in every detail. After the meal, since he had not said all he had to say, the man suggested, “Let’s leave the noise of the city and go to the outskirts to breathe some fresh air.” So we set out for Huairou District, on the north side of Beijing, in a remodeled SUV. The night sights of the Great Wall, the bright moon, the stardust…
If there hadn’t been a warning from Chrysanthemum’s own chariot tracks, would I also have sunk into them, thinking I had encountered love? Western Herdsman spoke his lines from the script, but I went beyond the prescribed scene and asked, “Hey, you’ve got it all down about creating romance, but what if an online lady falls into your web and can’t get out, then what?” He gave a big laugh, and not without some satisfaction. “My mission is to leave a little flavor in their insipid lives.” I said that my life wasn’t insipid, that it had all kinds of flavors all jumbled together, so one more or less wouldn’t make much of a difference. “I really feel bad about wasting your time.”
The practical joke that Chrysanthemum designed was for me to pretend to be intoxicated by romance. After we came down from the mountain, I would take him home, to Chrysanthemum’s home, that is. Worried that I might get lost, she had drawn a map and put it into my pocket.
When Western Herdsman pointed to an airliner in the night sky, he said, “Doesn’t that look just like a shooting star?” I thought how he had once said the very same thing to Chrysanthemum and was convulsed with laughter. He looked at me, puzzled. Time passed, minute by minute. Still I couldn’t control my laughter. Western Herdsman must have groaned inwardly at his bad luck in running into this nutcase.
Sorry, Chrysanthemum, my laughing wasn’t in the script and the performance died young.
It was time to wind everything up before I ended up shaking everything out of the cloth bundle and giving her game away. Western Herdsman was still enough of a gentleman not to throw me out on the mountainside. He concentrated on driving the car and said not a word the whole way back to the center of the city.
I was giggling like some out-of-control motor as I pounded open Chrysanthemum’s door. After letting me in, she peered all around me, as if Western Herdsman were following right behind. When she found out I had blown the performance, she furiously grabbed up a cushion from the sofa and hurled it at me.
“Oh, Chrysanthemum, don’t get yourself into these one-sided love situations. The arrival of the Internet has created a borderless world, and so no one exists in his or her own special little sphere anymore. Even if you had double the charm, you’ve got to put yourself into perspective. Every day Western Herdsman can screen and select countless charming women just like you from the Internet. Why should he waste time on you alone? Who would just eye one course at a rich banquet and gorge himself only on it?”
Chrysanthemum looked at the ceiling uneasily, and after thinking for a long time, asked, “Don’t people really need love anymore?”
This question was a bit academic, not like the thinking of a New Wave woman, and it took me aback.
Maybe it’s not that people don’t need love now, but the requirements for love have disappeared, like those organisms that became extinct on the earth. It wasn’t that they sought their own extinction, only that the conditions for their survival no longer existed. Love was the product of agricultural society. In those times, people never knew very many other people over the course of their lives. If Lin Daiyu lived in the Internet age, would she have still hovered between life and death for Jia Baoyu?
“If there’s no love in life, what’s the sense of living?” Two brokenhearted teardrops rolled slowly down Chrysanthemum’s face. “
Ai
, I shouldn’t have been so obsessed with getting to the truth of this. Now that I have, the few wonderful images that remained are gone. I feel just like a total idiot. Never mind, I’ll just marry my blockhead, Ah Mu.”
Whenever verging on pessimism, she always thought of her computer repairman, Ah Mu. The guy still hovered moonstruck around her. This true love was worth protecting, like protecting an animal that was in imminent danger.
In fact, Chrysanthemum did not attain sudden enlightenment and marry Ah Mu. Rather, she began to go crazy making dates with Internet partners. In two months she saw over ten men. As she roamed about online, her luck went from bad to worse. She never dated anyone actually worth a second time.
Zhang Three’s stare is too horny. Li Four’s shoes are too dirty, and he’s more of a blockhead than Ah Mu.
The last one she summoned was a software engineer. The software engineer told her that a certain company was currently developing a kind of software with which in the near future the Internet could send out pulses and link up with other Internet users’ brains. All people had to do would be stretch out a finger and click on a key and you could get the feelings of the Seven Emotions and the Six Desires: love, fantasy, happiness, sadness, and even the feelings of floating like an Immortal after love and smoking dope. “The end of the world is here,” mused the engineer.
Chrysanthemum had heaved a great sigh upon hearing this. “If such software hits the world, even Ah Mu wouldn’t pay any attention to me. Everyone would just get married to their ice-cold computers. What a scary idea!”
She made up her mind to get out of these Internet games. It was as if by fleeing the Internet, she was fleeing the end of the world.