Old Town (61 page)

Read Old Town Online

Authors: Lin Zhe

Tags: #Fiction, #General

Ah Ming was just then with the Lins reporting to his “auntie” and “big brothers” the doctor’s odd behavior, when all of sudden he spotted the doctor coming home, face all black and still shouldering the pole with its two empty baskets. The four people sitting around the Eight Immortals table all came to the same immediate conclusion:
He really has gone crazy!

Would Ninth Brother walk the streets from now on bringing coal to people? Is he strong enough to do something like that?
Second Sister’s heart ached as she wondered this.

She called him over to drink some water and to clean his face. “If you’re thinking of doing labor reform, let Ah Ming assign you to sweeping the streets,” she said.

Ninth Brother made no response. Utterly spent, he remounted his throne, closed his eyes and shut his ears.

 

One month later, Baohua sent a letter saying that Big Zhang had now been transferred to the P Town jail.

 

At the end of the 1970s, my stepfather held the position of deputy commissioner of P Town district. The personal misfortune of spending several years in jail hadn’t done anything to improve his temper. After his release he learned that his adopted son, Maomao, at age four had been kidnapped from the granny’s home and sold. This was really a great blow to Big Zhang. He left no stone unturned and experienced all kinds of setbacks in trying to find Maomao. Finally, he discovered that the child had fallen into a beggar band and within a few years had been thoroughly infected with all its evil ways. He was now a cunning and lazy little rascal. Disappointed to his very core, Big Zhang’s temper became more violent than ever. His home was in a constant uproar and my mother would frequently return to West Gate crying to the heavens. The Lin family’s relationship with Big Zhang stalemated at a new low point.

When the news of my grandfather’s passing reached P Town, Deputy Commissioner Zhang was just then in charge of convening an important meeting. He immediately handed off this job and sent his secretary out to buy mourning apparel. My mother told him that hemp coverings and white sackcloth were not the fashion at Christian funeral services, but he insisted on this, and then rushed off, driving his own car the more than thirty miles to West Gate. There he fell on his knees with a thump, and, tears streaming down his face, knocked his head on the ground three times.

At that time, the two Lin brothers had a falling-out with their brother-in-law because in a fit of temper Big Zhang had smashed a thermos and scalded my mother’s foot. When my two uncles raced in a fury to P Town to burst into his office and have it out with him, Big Zhang brought the police and police vehicles into play. At West Gate He paid no attention at all to Baosheng and Baoqing, but insisted on joining them in carrying the coffin in the funeral procession. His expression looked more imposing in its deep grief than anyone else’s in our family.

5.

 

W
ITH
O
LD
T
OWN
folk, happiness lies in being contented. They have always been optimistic in their belief that Old Town is a place blessed with riches. Look, in the beginning of the 1970s, the schools began classes, work started up at the factories, and food wasn’t so scarce in the markets. All under heaven was peaceful and tranquil. Though the streets were still filled with slogans like “Vow to carry out the Great Cultural Revolution right to the very end!” in fact, the revolution no longer had anything to do with the citizens of Old Town. People had started to live orderly lives amid all the upheaval.

The little vessel that was the Lin home had weathered the tempest, frightened but unscathed, and like the rest of the people of Old Town, began a dull and contented life. Big Zhang was still in jail. Baohua returned to work in the maternity ward. With Old Wang looking after them, they were able to meet every week. Baosheng and Baoqing resumed work at their respective organizations. The lofty sentiments and grand aspirations of their younger years had long since felt like yesterday’s dreams. Now they endured life with equanimity as low-level functionaries. Young Li’s wish came true. He returned to his home village in Tongpan District where his fellow villagers chose him to be the local production brigade chief. Enchun was assigned to sweep and clean the school library and for him this was like putting a fish back in water. Everything went peacefully and smoothly. Everything exceeded what was needed and sought after.

Women with perms now began to appear on the streets. Grandma also kept up with the latest fashions and went to get her hair done. I let my hair grow long. Every day before going to school I would comb it into braids and clip on butterflies of different colors and designs. The two uncles saw this but expressed no opinions. Perhaps they had simply forgotten the family revolution they had launched over my hair.

At some point, I don’t know when, my grandfather retrieved that thick, calfskin book from Shuiguan’s home. Now openly and honorably he sat in the main hall reading it and writing notes, with no one feeling uneasy about this.

At that time, my grandparents’ biggest worries were about Pussycat, getting old but still restless. More often than not it would be off somewhere, and frequently got hurt in cat gang warfare. Every time it came home more dead than alive, it would jump up on the wall but couldn’t get down. So Grandpa, himself over seventy years old, still had to move the ladder and climb up to carry Pussycat down.

 

When Baolan and her husband, Ah Jian, came to West Gate to visit their Ninth Uncle and Ninth Aunt, the two old folks were treating Pussycat’s wounds and feeding it rice gruel with brown sugar.

It was an afternoon in early autumn. Baolan’s face was lightly made up and she was wearing a pale violet-hued dress. As she stood there in the sunlight of the sky well, she dazzled everyone with her beauty. She was now a middle-aged lady over forty years old and though the past twenty years had been rough ones for her, she was still able to stay this attractive.

Grandpa was delighted at his niece’s visit. As he dressed the cat’s wounds, he looked up and said all in one breath, “Baolan! I’m so happy to see you. Stay a while, both of you. I’ll boil a cup of good tea for you!”

Over all these years, the doctor had quietly kept a hotline connection with Ah Jian. He had never spoken a single word of comfort to Baolan and to date had never told her that he knew she had been designated a rightist and sent to do coolie labor in a factory, or that at the start of the Cultural Revolution both her legs had been broken by the rebel faction. In the cowshed she had insisted on treating her own wounds and doing her own physical therapy. She refused to end up as a cripple. His niece’s indomitable character gained his admiration but also distressed him. Actually, he very much wanted to comfort her. He wished that she could be like Baohua and cry herself dry of all the injustices and heartbreaks she carried inside her. But every time he saw her she always appeared so cheerful and happy. It was as if all the information from Ah Jian were just so many rumors that didn’t stand up in the light of day.

The doctor washed his hands and started the complicated tea ritual. Performing this was his highest level of hospitality to guests. Apart from Young Li, no one could enjoy the same level of courteous treatment as Baolan received.

Since that particular day was neither New Year’s nor any other festival, Baolan and her husband’s visit with gifts for her uncle must be “the arrival of good luck when misfortune has reached its limit.”
Perhaps Ah Jian has returned to his teaching job or maybe Baolan has been transferred back to her newspaper.
The comfortable sight of Old Town’s ordinary people enjoying whatever peace and ease they could had clouded the doctor’s mind and he too turned into an optimist. He didn’t even notice that Baolan wasn’t laughing much on this day.

After three rounds of tea, Baolan said, “Uncle, from what I know, Christians have eternal life. The life they vest in Jesus is immortal, is that not so?”

It was as if a lightning bolt split the doctor’s head in two. His feelings at this very instant were complex in the extreme. Ever since the West Gate church had been closed, he almost never talked about Jesus with anyone. For over two years now, he hadn’t even the strength to pray. Right up to recently he would reread the Bible and still not sense he was in touch with God. Baolan’s questions filled him with guilt and remorse.

“Oh, to be sure. Believe in Jesus and gain eternal life. Ninth Uncle owes so much to Jesus. Who knows when the day comes whether Jesus will be willing to take me to my heavenly home?”

Ah Jian said, “Ninth Uncle, you have given your love and warmth to so many people, Jesus surely loves you very much.”

Oh, is this God telling me through them that he has not cast me aside?
Baolan said, “Ninth Uncle, Ah Jian and I have come to see you today to ask you to give us to Jesus, and thereafter we will have immortal life.”

O God, is this real?
Very excited, the doctor took hold of Baolan and Ah Jian’s hands. “From this moment on, you are Christians. The Bible tells us if only we believe in Jesus in our word and in our heart, and we accept Jesus as the savior of our lives, we are Christians!” Then he closed his eyes and prayed, “O Lord, Heavenly Father, I bring Baolan and Ah Jian before you. Please receive them as your children, and grant them eternal life.

Only after eating dinner did Baolan and Ah Jian leave West Gate. Before their departure, Baolan embraced Ninth Uncle and Aunt with great affection. “Ninth Uncle, Ninth Aunt, after Dad and Ma departed from us, you have been my dearest relatives. Now that we have eternal life we will never be separated from you again. Even if tomorrow we should no longer be on this earth, we will be parted for only a short time, right?”

The doctor smiled lovingly and nodded his head. At that moment he thought of his own three children.
When will they suddenly come to their senses and repent?

 

A few days later, Old Town’s marketplace was rife with the story of the man and the woman who killed themselves in a double suicide south of the city on Black Mountain. The great tempest of the Cultural Revolution had passed. Suicide no longer would have happened for political reasons, so this couple’s action caused a sensation in tiny Old Town. People gave full rein to their imaginations and came up with all kind of interesting tidbits.

Early one morning my grandmother went to the vegetable market and heard this news. On my way to school, I heard Rongmei give her own juicy account. Her father came to our house and babbled in deaf-and-dumb talk to my grandfather.

It was a middle-aged couple. They had on their best clothes as if going to attend a grand and solemn banquet. The time, place, and manner had been meticulously set out. Black Mountain was an oasis of serenity amid all the hustle and bustle of life. The time was on the eve of Old Town’s return to life. They sprinkled one-
fen
coins from the foot of the mountain right to under the tree they hung themselves from. Early that morning, two middle school students on their way to school, book bags on their backs, discovered the coins at the road crossing. They picked them up all the way to the top of the mountain where they discovered the man and the woman hanging from the tree. At the time, their bodies had not yet stiffened and still held a trace of warmth.

This couple who had decided to go to their deaths had been so concerned with appearances. Every last detail was planned so that after their deaths their appearances would remain dignified to the extent that they could achieve this.

 

We are a family of intellectuals and scholars. From the time I was little that’s how Grandma taught and raised me. Thus, we never exchanged news of what we heard out in the streets at the dinner table. The story of this couple was just like many folktales and legends, merely a light breeze blowing by the ears. We had no interest in chasing after phantoms.

Who would have expected it, though? The man and the woman were actually our Lin-family relatives—Baolan and Ah Jian. In the beginning, being designated a rightist had not caused Baolan to lose hope. Nor did she do so when the rebel faction broke her legs. After she came out of the cowshed and returned to factory labor, it seemed as if the storms surrounding her had calmed down and people had gotten used to the absurd time when white was black and black was white. With black and white all topsy-turvy, they found balance and enjoyment. Numb Old Town, content Old Town—
this
is what made Baolan lose hope. People always say that the more you think, the more torment it brings you. Baolan was not only the girl genius of the Lin family; she was also the girl genius of Old Town. She could not, nor would she have been willing to just drift along resigned to life like the majority of Old Town people. I heard that Uncle Baoqing received a several hundred thousand character-long letter that she wrote him just before she died. In it she spoke of her views on the conditions of the country and on Marshal Lin Biao
57
and Jiang Qing. He hadn’t finished reading it when his wife, my aunt, snatched it from him and stuffed it into the stove.

This bad news overwhelmed Grandpa. For several days straight he neither ate nor slept. He just lay on his bed without getting up. Grandma persisted in bringing hot meals to his bedside three times a day, and she sat beside him groaning and sighing. She waited until the food had gotten cold before taking it away, untouched.

My grandmother knew that Baolan and Ah Jian’s decision to become Christians was to console their Ninth Uncle, so that he wouldn’t take the news too badly. This husband and wife were so determined to end their lives, who could have held them back? In order to release my grandfather from his pain and grief, Grandma placed the Bible in his hand and said that Baolan and Ah Jian were now already in heaven and, compared to eternal life, this life today, long or short, was nothing. He took the Bible and shoved it into the cabinet drawer by the bedstead.

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