Read The Middle Kingdom Online
Authors: Andrea Barrett
âWhat is the point?' she asked. She gestured toward some old graffiti. âEarnestly Carry Out Struggle, Criticism, Reform!' she said in a mincing voice. âPut Politics in Command, Let Thought Take the Lead!' She made a disgusted sound and turned away. âThey ruined all these old places during the blood years,' she said. âNow they are embarrassed for foreign visitors to see. So they paint to make them nice again, but it means nothing â it is only for show.'
âYou think?' I said.
âBetter they should leave ruined,' she said. âFor remembering. Come. I will show you something good.'
She led me down another path, to a small shabby building wrapped twice with a long line of people. âCable-lift,' she said. âI hoped it was still here. It climbs up Incense Burner Peak.'
Double chairs hung from a rusty cable and moved slowly up the hill that blocked our view. The chairs swung around a huge wheel sheltered by the eaves of the building, and they scooped up squealing couples from a square of cracked concrete. Babies giggled at me as we waited in line. Men pointed and women smiled and then covered their eyes. I was the only Westerner there.
âThey didn't tell us about this at the hotel,' I said. âIt's not even on the park map.'
âPeople who live here know it,' Dr Yu said. The line moved slowly toward the lift, which resembled an old ski lift back home. âFamilies take the bus here from Beijing, for afternoons off. It is inexpensive, provides fresh air and famous views from the top. Meng used to bring me here in the old days, when we were courting. I am very pleased it is not destroyed.'
She had to buy our tickets when we finally got to the counter; the ride cost ten
fen
and the smallest note I had was a five-yuan FEC bill, which the ticket-taker pushed back to me. Ten
fen
, as best as I could figure, was worth about four cents; my five
yuan
could have put fifty of us on the swaying chairs. When we climbed on, I realized that the lift brought people down as well as up. Every fifteen seconds or so, a couple facing us passed by our chair.
â
Ni hau
,' Dr Yu said to each couple who passed. The riders dissolved into giggles as they stared at me and tested their English across the air between us. âHal-loo!' one would call; âLAA-dee!' the next. Most often we'd hear an excited guess at my nationality. â
Meiguo ren! MEIGUO REN!
'
â
Ni
hau!
' I called back to them. I didn't mind their stares; I was happy to be outside. As we rose I could see the pagodas scattered beneath us like colorful stones, the rolling hills worn old and smooth, the narrow dark paths and roads ribboned in every direction. Small pools dotted the landscape, as blue and artificial as the pond in Boston where the swan boats sat. Dr Yu led me through the smiles and stares to a quiet, sheltered rock that overlooked the entire park. âYou are enjoying this?' she asked.
All around me were faces as singular as stars; if I could memorize them, I thought, they might unlock my life. âIt's wonderful,' I said. âThere's so much to see. I could watch all day.'
âThe world was not put here for you to watch it,' she said. Her voice was tart, and her comment so out of character that I opened my mouth in surprise but then closed it again. Somehow her words seemed to link to what I'd felt in the morning, when I'd first woken up.
âRandy, Walter, Page, Hank,' she continued. âEven your Uncle Owen â you can't just watch these lives and then try them on for size like clothes. You must make your own.'
Below us, some bright birds dipped and swooped through the trees. âHow do you know those names?' I asked.
âYou talked in your sleep,' she said. âWe talked together. You were dreaming, I think. Or something. Do you remember this?'
I stared at the trees again, and then I tried to tell her what had happened to me. How I hadn't been dreaming, not exactly; how Zillah's voice had come to me and bent Dr Zhang's description of his memory palace to her own ends. âI was a house,' I told Dr Yu. âThe parts of my body were rooms. This voice â the voice of a girl I knew when I was small â made me remember things I don't usually think about.'
Things
, I heard Zillah say. Of course. My life was made of things; my language was the language of things. I was drowning in things, devoured by my possessions, and that couldn't have been what Uncle Owen had meant.
Invest it wisely
, he'd written. Instead I'd invested my inheritance sensibly.
âYes?' Dr Yu said. She fixed her eyes on mine. âYour memories came very detailed, like hallucinations? Smell, sound, place? You heard this voice actually speak?'
â
Yes
,' I said. âHow did you know? It was just like that, the voice was so real â it was like I was living those scenes again. I felt everything.'
She nodded slowly. âMeng knows about this,' she said. âYears ago, before the bad times, he studied this. What happened to you is something special, which usually happens only in those having seizures. The place in your brain where memory lives â when it is stimulated, your memories come back entire. As if life is lived again. Sometimes this can happen with high fever.'
âChinese medicine?' I asked.
âNo â Western doctors know about it too. But one doctor here in Beijing became famous when he showed that gentle electricity applied to certain brain parts causes memories to pour out and voices to be heard. Meng did postgraduate training with this man. But then the Red Guards seized the institute and burned all the books and files and locked the doctors away.'
âI'm sorry,' I said. âIs that what made your husband so bitter?'
âThat is some of it,' she said. âThe rest he did himself.' She paused for a minute, and then she said, âWhat did you get from your memories?'
âI'm not sure,' I said. âThey were so
real â
it was like my whole life was given back to me. But I'm not sure I wanted it. When I look at what I've done, the ways I've lived â¦'
Dr Yu rubbed a few pieces of gravel between her fingers. âYes,' she said. âThat is always the way. That is what happened to Meng on the farm, when he put all his heart into making his palace and ignored everything around him. Then he compared what is then, and now, and he sank into sadness. That is the way with old things. Not that you should forget them â but to make a palace of them? No.'
âDid that ever happen to you?' I asked. âDid you ever get lost in your old lives?'
âNever like what happened to you,' she said. âAnd I never did on purpose what Meng did. If I made anything, it was a palace of dreams â what I wish for. What I want. What I hope. I remembered my life before, and then I dreamed of life to come. You understand?'
âA palace of dreams,' I said, turning the idea around in my mind. And then I heard Zillah's voice again, gentle, persistent, and low.
Sally Ferguson
, I heard.
Nancy Knauf. Cece Rubin.
The names of the realtors who'd haunted the first house I'd redone.
âWhat is it you wish for?' Dr Yu continued.
âRight now?' Those women had entered my house and gazed at it with calculating eyes, congratulating me on my skills. I had let Cece sell the first house for me, and then I'd let her sell the others. There was nothing left for me to do but repeat myself, and suddenly I knew, more strongly than I ever had, that I wanted something else. âRight now I wish I could stay here,' I said.
âHere on this hill?'
âHere in China.' The wish crystallized even as I said it. âI like it here. Everything interests me.' The faces, I thought. The surge of people surrounding me; the way a disconnected string of figures would suddenly form a shape in the crowd, standing out like a piece of sculpture. The chaos. The noise. The sense that every person I spoke to held the end of a thread that tied into the web of life I'd been too lost to perceive.
âSo stay,' Dr Yu said.
âHow? Walter â¦'
âWalter,' Dr Yu said impatiently. âForget Walter, for now. Forget all things at home that call you back for bad reasons. You want to stay?'
âYes,' I said. âBut â¦'
âHere are ways,' she said. She raised a finger with each one. âYou could teach English â everyone wants to learn. You could tutor students for examinations. If you wanted to, if you wanted to do science again, you might even be able to work for me. I have wonderful students, and you would be a help to them.'
âYou make it sound so easy,' I said. âBut what about Walter?'
âWalter could stay,' she said. âAny university would be happy to have him â visiting famous scientist, absolutely. But also he could go, and you could stay alone. Visas, all could be arranged if you did work useful to serve the people.'
âI haven't felt useful in years,' I said.
âNo?' She looked at me skeptically. âMaybe not. What about those houses you did?'
âI made some money,' I said. âThat's all.'
âYou can do things with money,' she said. âIf my children had money, if I had money to give them â¦'
We rose and strolled around the hilltop, drawn by the clamor beyond a small ridge. A crowd of people clustered around a young Chinese woman and four tired horses draped in embroidered blankets and crowned with glittering headpieces. An old camera mounted on a tripod stood next to the woman. Dr Yu laughed. âWatch,' she said. âFamily pictures. Oh, this
never
would have been permitted before.'
The parents of a small girl handed the young woman a few
fen
, and then the woman gravely dressed the girl. A red velvet cloak, silver ornaments, an enormous crown dripping baubles and fluffy red balls. Four-foot feathers stuck up from her crown like ears. The woman posed the girl on the horse, against the panorama below. The girl grimaced fiercely, her best imitation of a Mongol warrior, and the woman shot several portraits. The parents beamed.
âSo silly,' Dr Yu said. âBut so nice to see.' Young men posed with their sweethearts, and girlfriends posed together. The photographer put her fees in a small metal box and wrote out receipts for the pictures to come. Dr Yu looked happier than I had ever seen her.
âWhat is it
you
want?' I asked her curiously. I didn't doubt anymore that we'd talked in the hospital, but I'd lost her half of the conversation and it was odd, now, to feel that she knew so much about me when I knew hardly anything about her.
âWhat do I want?' she repeated. She tucked her rumpled blouse in while we watched the photographer. âNot so much for myself, now â it is almost enough to have my life back, my work. It is almost enough to watch this. But I want for Zaofan. I want him to go to the US, to study there, to work. I want more than anything that he make his life there. He is not safe here, I think â someday he will land himself in trouble. There is some way, perhaps, that you could help him leave?'
Zaofan; Rocky. We hadn't mentioned him before and I had managed not to think about him. I remembered our cab ride together and I trembled so violently I had to sit down.
âYou are sick,' Dr Yu said. âOh, this is all my fault. I have taken you outside too soon.'
âI'm just hungry,' I said. I ducked my head between my knees. âI think.'
âI should not have asked you,' Dr Yu said. âForget Zaofan.'
âIt's not that,' I said. âI'm glad you asked.' I thought of Rocky, his gentle hands and the lilt of his voice and the drawings I'd tucked in my purse. âShow to Walter?' he'd said; I'd forgotten completely. Where was my purse? I'd had it at the hospital; I thought I'd seen Dr Yu pick it up. With any luck it was back at the hotel.
âWe have to go,' I said.
âOf course.' She led me to the platform, where a small crowd waited to ride down. They gaped at us as we spoke in English.
âWhy do you want him to leave?' I said. âYour oldest son â¦'
âIt's hard to think about,' she admitted. âBut I know it is best for him. Anything could happen here again. And already he has begun to forget what the bad years are like. He made some of those
dazibao
, those posters, that the students put up on Democracy Wall. That wall is covered now with advertisements for soap and cosmetics and refrigerators, but people remember these things. Some of his friends were arrested then, and his name is known. And Zaofan has no
caution â
this business of his, these things he wants ⦠he does well now. But who is to say what comes next?'
We got on a chair and began our ride down, once again greeting the couples who passed us on their way up. Far away, beyond the green park, three smokestacks belched black clouds. We sat silently for a while, and then I said, âWhat about you? Maybe you should come â you could study with Walter. Or with someone like him.'
Dr Yu shook her head. âIt would be hard for me to get permission,' she said. âI was classified as a “stinking ninth element” â an intellectual â also as the daughter of one and the wife of another. Even though Meng and I have been officially rehabilitated, I think I would still have problems. And also I would not want to go. This is my home. Did you notice, at the conference, how you have seen old and young scientists but none your age?'
I hadn't, but I realized she was right. The scientists I'd seen with Walter had all been Dr Yu's age and older, or almost absurdly young.
âAll the people your age had to do other things,' she said. âWhen the schools were closed. I have students now, finally, and so has Meng. We have work to do, so we stay. But Zaofan â oh, Zaofan is young. He has his whole life before him.'
I didn't tell her about the drawings; of course I didn't tell her about the cab. I prayed that I hadn't spoken of Rocky during my stay in the hospital. âLet me see what I can do,' I said, and for the rest of our ride down the peak, swaying gently in our fragile chair above the scarred, eroded earth, I sat silently and let the air flow into my newly healed lungs. I thought about my mother-in-law embroidering pew cushions in the Fargo airport:
For nothing is secret
, she'd patiently stitched.
Nothing is hid that shall not be known.
The wind played delightfully with my new short hair.