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Authors: Lisa Brackman

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BOOK: Year of the Tiger
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‘I think you’ve managed it,’ I say awkwardly.

She giggles a little, pats me on the shoulder, and pours me more tea.

After breakfast, Mr and Mrs Liang leave for the Simatai Great Wall. They won’t get back till after dark. I check out the village, walking along the one paved road that forms the center of town. Tongren Village has a market, a white-tiled municipal headquarters, a few vendors, elderly men and women selling baskets of candies and snacks. There’s a
jiaozi
place for lunch and a teahouse for after that. I sit in the teahouse and read this trashy suspense novel that somehow ended up at the Liangs’, try to lose myself in a world of terrorists and super-germs for a while.

A couple of the locals come up and start conversations. They ask me the usual questions: how did I learn Chinese, how do I like China, what do I think of their village, am I married? I answer some, dodge the rest, smile, and drink tea.

After that, I take a walk. There isn’t much to see, though I find a crumbling temple that seems almost abandoned, the washed-out red paint of its walls peeling off in chunks. On the gray wall beneath are faded characters, Cultural Revolution slogans, something about ‘smashing the Four Olds!’ Flayed tires and cracked roof tiles are piled in a corner of the courtyard, and inside, the statue of Guanyin is missing an arm, its once-gaudy colors bleached to gray wood.

It’s not a bad place, this little village in the shadow of the northern hills. It’s relaxing here. Quiet. I wonder if I could find some place to stay long-term. Hang out. Just live.

I walk past an old house, its tiled roof peeking above a gray stone wall, chipped stone lions on either side of the wall’s red door. A scholar’s home once, or an official’s, it looks like. Maybe I could live there. Rent a room. My disability money would probably cover it. I could, I don’t know, read books. Take walks. Eat
jiaozi
.

What would it be like, being someplace peaceful?

I realize I have no idea.

By now I’m really sleepy. No surprise, considering what the last couple days have been like. I decide to go back to the Liangs’ place for a nap.

I walk up the dirt road that leads to the Liangs’, past a few silent farmhouses tucked among barren fields that back into the hills, the late afternoon shade spilling over the road like a veil.

As the little house comes into view, I figure I’d better use the toilet before I go in.

The Liangs’ bathroom is an outhouse above the pigpen – a squat shitter, two blocks straddling a trench, with a gap between the wall and the floor on the downhill side. For me, with my leg, it’s a little tough, even with the iron bar protruding from the bricks to grasp, especially because I’ve got my backpack, and the additional weight of that makes balancing harder.

As I squat there, clutching the iron bar, trying to breathe through my mouth, one of the hogs comes snuffling up to the gap below the wall, nosing at the run-off from the trench.

Pigs eat shit. Who knew?

I’m thinking maybe I don’t want to live in a peaceful rural Chinese village.

As I’m thinking this and exiting the outhouse, I hear a car coming up the drive.

Not a motorcycle cart, not a farmer’s blue truck. Something with a smooth, low-pitched engine and some horsepower.

I duck back into the outhouse.

Tires crunch gravel. The engine stops. A car door slams.

Standing on the block above the latrine, I can just see out the ventilation windows that run along the upper wall of the outhouse. A black car – maybe a Lexus.

A man approaches the Liangs’ door. Knocks. He’s stocky, broad across the shoulders, wearing a white polo shirt. Chinese, I think, but I can only see his back, his black, bristling hair.

He jiggles the doorknob. Locked. Walks around to the side of the house.

I duck down.

I think about running, but how far could I get?

The space between the outhouse wall and the latrine, where the trench runs down to meet the pig-pen. I scramble into it, then squeeze myself as far as I can beneath the floorboards next to the trench. The stench coats my nose and throat like liquid.

One of the pigs sticks its snout under the wall and stares at me. Snorts.

I stare back. Hold my breath. My stomach roils.

Footsteps. The outhouse door creaks open.

Bangs shut.

The pig snuffles.

A minute later, I hear the car start and then head back down the drive.

I wait until I can’t hear the car any more, count to ten, and climb out, shaking so badly that I stumble at the outhouse door.

I tell myself, maybe he had nothing to do with me. Maybe he was, I don’t know, the Liangs’ postcard supplier. In a black Lexus. Right.

Inside the Liangs’ house, I change out of the muddy sweatpants and sweatshirt that the Liangs lent me, clean myself and my fake Pumas as best I can, and put on my party clothes. I don’t have anything else to wear.

I leave the house key and three hundred yuan on the table and lock the door behind me.

There’s no way of knowing which way the Lexus guy went, so the only thing I can think of to do is head toward the bus stop at the end of town. And here I catch a break: a
mianbao
, one of those little white vans shaped like bread loaves, idles roughly at the bus stop, letting off passengers.

I approach the driver’s window.


Shifu, ni hao
. I need to get to Beijing. Can you take me?’

I’m not going to Mati tonight. They know where to find me there.

The driver, round-faced and reeking of tobacco, shakes his head and taps out a last cigarette from his crumpled pack of Horse & Camels.

‘Can’t. They don’t let us drive
mianbao
in Beijing City.’

‘To Shunyi District; can you do that?’ Shunyi’s just outside of Beijing proper. I can catch a cab or a bus from there.

He takes a long drag on his cigarette and considers. ‘
Keyi
,’ he says with a nod.

We agree on a price and set off.

I don’t know where I’m going to go from Shunyi. I’ll figure it out when I get there.

I power up my iPhone and check for messages.

A couple from Trey, which I ignore. Chinese text spam. And finally, a reply from Sloppy: ‘Hi Yili, Harrison Wang invite us two for dinner tonight. Can you come?’

Harrison Wang. I don’t know who this is. Then I remember: some art guy Sloppy was all excited about meeting last night at Simatai.

The dinner is at seven thirty, in Chaoyang District, which is northeast Beijing. It’s about four o’clock now. I’m wearing the same clothes I’ve been in and out of since the party, and my fake Pumas smell like shit. I don’t know what this guy actually does or why he might want to talk to me. I don’t know anything about anybody, when it comes right down to it. I think Lucy Wu wants to make money off of Lao Zhang’s art, but how can I be sure? I thought Sloppy was my friend, but how do I know that?

Harrison Wang? No clue.

I think I should just keep running. Go somewhere. Hide someplace.

That didn’t work too well in Tongren Village, though.

If they can find me no matter where I go, what difference does it make if Sloppy or Lucy or Harrison Wang is part of it? They’re going to catch up with me eventually. Whoever they are.

It comes down to this: I don’t know what else to do.

Besides, I’m hungry.

‘Okay,’ I type back. ‘I might be late.’

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

We met after our shifts like we usually did, on the berm by the guard tower. It wasn’t yet dawn, and the air was shirtsleeve-cool, with a slight scent of rain. Trey was hyper, pacing back and forth, smoking cigarettes, jamming his hands in his pockets, then waving them around, like he was high on something, except I don’t think he was.

‘Ellie. I think we got the guy,’ he said. ‘The one who’s been dumping mortars on us the last three months. I think we finally got him.’

‘That’s great, Trey.’ I meant it. The mortars were why I was at this shithole in the first place, one of them having wounded my predecessor. Plus, the week before, a round had landed on our rec tent, taking out an exercise bike and the rowing machine, which seriously sucked.

Trey flopped down on the berm next to me. ‘Yeah.’ He tapped a cigarette out of the package and offered it to me, then tapped out another one for himself. ‘I feel like we’re finally getting somewhere,’ he said. ‘You know? We take out this guy, he’s the leader – maybe we cut the guts out of this whole bullshit resistance around here. If that happens, we can finally get things running the way they should
.
Fix the sewers and the power plant, show the locals it’s all been worth it.’

He flicked his Zippo to light my cigarette, but the wind came up, so he cupped his hand around mine to form a break, and I felt his palm on the back of my hand, and all of a sudden, neither of us gave a shit about the cigarette any more. We were kissing, sitting there on the berm, his hand on my back, on my tit, the beard coming in on his chin scraping against my lips, and I’m thinking, Hallelujah, fuck me now.

Then he stopped.

‘We can’t do this,’ he said.

‘We can’t?’

‘Not here.’

I almost asked why, and then I realized that he was actually making sense.

‘Yeah.’ I sat up, pulled down my T-shirt, and picked my cigarette out of the dirt.

Trey stared at me. ‘We could go someplace,’ he said. ‘If you want to.’

‘Yeah,’ I said, staring back. ‘Yeah. I want to.’

The thing about Camp Fucking Falafel was that, unlike my first FOB, there weren’t a lot of places to go for privacy. My first thought was the laundry facility (seeing as how that had served me well back at the old FOB), but Trey had another idea.

‘People’ll be showing up at Laundry any time now. But there’s some rooms in the Admin Core nobody’s using.’

I’d hardly ever been in the Admin Core: once when I got here for processing, and a couple times for mission briefings when I was subbing for Menendez or Hilliard, the medics who usually pulled the off-campus patrols. Otherwise, I didn’t have any reason to go there. My bunk was in an outbuilding, part of the old barracks, and so was the aid station.

Trey took me to a wing I’d never been to, through an entrance guarded by a soldier I’d met a few times.

‘Hey, Morris,’ he said casually. ‘You know Doc McEnroe, right?’

‘Sure,’ he said, trying not very hard not to stare at my tits.

‘I got a PUC problem she’s gonna help me out with. Off the books.’

The soldier gave a half-shrug, like this was the last thing he cared about. And we went inside.

You ever been in a place you know is wrong?

I’m not going to claim I figured that out right away. That night, that early morning, it was just another Iraqi dump as far as I was concerned: a concrete-block maze that had been painted this sort of baby-food puke yellow, now scabbing over the walls like an infection, revealing the plaster and cement underneath. The lights were bare bulbs, sometimes encased in rusting metal cages.

Trey and I walked down the hall, passing a couple of closed doors, then an open door into a room containing a bunch of battered file cabinets, where another soldier sorted papers. We crossed a wider hall. At the very end I could see a couple soldiers loitering by a door, laughing, giving each other shit. Then we turned down a smaller corridor. At the end of that was a staircase. At the top of that, another hall, this one with a wooden floor and baseboards and molding.

Trey stopped at one of the doors and jiggled the knob. Unlocked. He opened the door, and we went inside.

There was a desk and a couple chairs, like this had been somebody’s office. At the back of it was a narrow door.

‘It’s not much,’ Trey said, in a hushed voice. ‘I wish I could give you something better.’

It was practically a closet, with a cot stuck inside that took up almost all the room. I guessed whoever had worked here used to take naps or even spend the night. An old wool blanket was spread on top of whatever thin, lumpy mattress covered the springs.

‘It’s fine,’ I said. ‘It really is.’

We didn’t talk. He didn’t whisper how much he cared about me; we didn’t fall asleep and wake up in each other’s arms. We fucked until Trey came and I felt like my butt was bruised from the busted springs in the bedframe. I didn’t come, and neither one of us did anything about that.

But it felt like what I needed right then.

Afterward we lay there for maybe fifteen minutes, a half hour at most, smoking cigarettes and not saying very much.

‘We’d better go,’ Trey finally said.

‘Yeah.’

We got dressed and walked out of there. I went to my bunk, and he went to his.

The next day – night – after our shifts, we met up on the berm as usual. We didn’t talk about what we’d done. We just sat there, smoked cigarettes, and chucked rocks at the storage shed. We didn’t get around to doing it again for about a week. It started with us sitting up on the berm, me talking about some shit, Master Sergeant Dickhead Blanchard, I think, when Trey suddenly leaned over and kissed me and mumbled, ‘Do you wanna go to the room?’ and I of course nodded and said ‘Sure.’

BOOK: Year of the Tiger
9.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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