Read Mountain Girl River Girl Online
Authors: Ye Ting-Xing
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Adolescence, #People & Places, #Social Issues, #Asia, #General, #Juvenile Fiction, #Friendship, #Emigration & Immigration
PUFFIN CANADA
MOUNTAIN GIRL, RIVER GIRL
TING-XING YE
, born in Shanghai in 1952, was an English interpreter for the Chinese government before leaving China in 1987. Her memoir,
A Leaf in the Bitter Wind,
has been published in nine countries. She is also the author of
Throwaway Daughter
and the award-winning
White Lily
. She lives in Orillia, Ontario.
Also by Ting-xing Ye
A Leaf in the Bitter Wind
My Name Is Number Four
Throwaway Daughter
White Lily
Three Monks, No Water
Weighing the Elephant
Share the Sky
Mountain Girl,
River Girl
a novel
Ting-xing Ye
PUFFIN CANADA
Published by the Penguin Group
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Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
Published in Puffin Canada paperback by Penguin Group (Canada),
a division of Pearson Canada Inc., 2008
Published in this edition, 2009
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 (OPM)
Copyright © Ting-xing Ye, 2008
All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part
of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system,
or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying,
recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright
owner and the above publisher of this book.
Publisher’s note: This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Manufactured in the U.S.A.
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication data available
upon request to the publisher.
ISBN: 978-0-14-316813-3
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A N
OTE ON
P
RONUNCIATION
AND
U
SAGE
The standard pin-yin notation is used through-out. Most letters in pin-yin are pronounced more or less the same as in English.
Pan-pan
is pronounced as in English.
Shui-lian
is pronounced “shway lee-an.”
The words Lao (old, venerable) and Xiao (young) when used with a surname are common terms of respect in China.
For Bill, who calls China his second home.
Shan chong shui fu yi wu lu
Liu an hua ming you yi cun
Mountain folds into mountain,
river flows into river,
with no path in sight.
In the shadow of a willow
wildflowers glow.
A village comes in view.
—FROM “TOURING SHANXI VILLAGE”
BY SONG DYNASTY POET LU YOU, 1125–1210
Chapter
One
Pan-pan
“Give the back of your neck a good scrub.”
Startled, her heart pounding in her throat, Pan-pan gripped the rim of the enamel washbasin to contain her irritation. “Yes, Ah-Po,” she murmured.
“And behind your ears.”
“Yes, Ah-Po.”
“Good Heavens! They’re a whole shade darker than the rest of your skin,” the old woman rattled on. “You should know they’re also part of your face.”
“Are they really?” Pan-pan muttered, slowly turning away from the stone sink. Blinking and squeezing soapy water out of her eyes, she looked up to find that the tip of her nose was only an inch away from her grandmother’s.
“Yes, Ah-Po,” she said again.
“And—”
“And,”
Pan-pan cut her off, lifting her chin and staring into her grandmother’s eyes, “give my armpits a good wash and dust them with the talcum powder
you
so kindly bought for me.”
“Aiya,
Pan-er,” Ah-Po exclaimed, her voice rising. “Did you eat gunpowder for supper last night? Fine, then. Do whatever you want! I’m leaving. Why do I care so much?” she lamented, reaching to brush soapy water off Pan-pan’s bare shoulder with her open palm before she turned and shuffled toward the door. There she raised her plump arms in surrender and called out, “I give up. It’s your face, after all. And your body.”
“You’ll never give up!” Pan-pan shot back angrily, but not until the kitchen door had shut behind her grandmother. “As for today,
my
face and
my
body are all yours.” She paused, making sure that Ah-Po was gone, and yelled, “And don’t call me Pan-er. I’m not a boy. My name is Pan-pan!”
Pan-pan had told Ah-Po time after time that she didn’t like to be sneaked up on, particularly when she was washing herself. That was why for months she had been getting up each morning before anyone else in the house. Now, two weeks before her fifteenth birthday, Pan-pan enjoyed having the tiny kitchen to herself. She cherished the quiet moments and solitude, or her “privacy,” a word she had heard Xin-Ma—new mother—use a lot lately.
Rubbing her neck with a rough cloth, Pan-pan held back another surge of fury as she realized that even the hinges on the door had betrayed her, letting her grandmother come into the kitchen unheard. For as long as she could remember, the warped wooden door had squeaked each time it was pushed open. Didn’t Mom use to say that when a person is feeling low or struck by bad luck, she can be bullied by her own shadow?
Thinking about her mother brought tears to Pan-pan’s eyes, and, overcome with frustration, she wiped them away with the back of her hand more forcefully than necessary. Today’s grand ceremony would mark the third anniversary of Mom’s death. Her father had remarried, and over a year ago Xin-Ma had given birth to Gui-yang, Pan-pan’s half-brother. No matter how hard she tried, Pan-pan couldn’t work up much enthusiasm for the coming rituals.
No one in the family had ever explained to Pan-pan why her mother had died so unexpectedly at the age of thirty-six. People are not supposed to die so young, and Mom hadn’t even been sick. Many times Pan-pan had begged her father for an answer, but each time he hemmed and hawed as if he had suddenly lost his voice. He would fidget, rubbing the back of his neck or repeatedly wiping his face with his hand. His pain and agony were so hard to watch that eventually Pan-pan stopped asking him questions altogether.
Trying to get information out of Ah-Po posed a different challenge; she simply ignored Pan-pan, playing deaf and dumb, using her favourite evasion, “I’m an old bag of bones who should be treated with respect, not pestered with questions.” Pan-pan had concluded long ago that it would be easier to find a three-legged chicken than the truth about her own mother’s death.
Pan-pan could still vividly recall the morning she and her father had seen Mom off at the local donkey-cart depot. Mom planned to ride the cart to the long-distance bus station and board the bus for the fifty-kilometre trip northwest to the city of Tongren, where Auntie Cai-fei, Mom’s older sister, lived with her family.
It was an unusually cold spring morning and Mom had insisted Pan-pan wear the wool hat that Ah-Po had knitted for her. Mom promised Pan-pan she was going to buy her the best birthday present anyone in the village had ever seen. “That’s why I have to go alone,” she had said mysteriously, “or the gift won’t be a surprise.”
“It’s not fair,” Pan-pan had whined, plucking at her hat. “First you won’t take me, now you want me to look like a turtle. Why do I have to cover my hair? I want to look like you,” she added, pointing to her mom’s new perm. Earlier that morning Ah-Po had remarked that Mom’s short and curly hair resembled a duck’s behind.
“It’s a new millennium next year, dear Po-Po,” Mom had responded, smiling happily and showing the dimples at the corners of her mouth. “Catch up with the trend, will you?”
It was Dad who had insisted that he and Pan-pan walk Mom all the way to the depot in the neighbouring village, despite Mom’s objection that it was too far for Pan-pan and the mountain road too winding and steep. Pan-pan knew what she meant. The road was called the “Trail of Sheep’s Intestines” because of its many twists and turns, abrupt rises and perilous descents, and its narrow, uneven surface. As the three of them slowly made their way, Mom chatted and laughed with Pan-pan, but Dad stayed quiet most of the time, trudging ahead of them with Mom’s woven bamboo basket, heavy with dried beans, dates, and sunflower seeds for Auntie Cai-fei’s family, strapped to his back.
At the depot, before climbing into the wagon pulled by a donkey, Mom had thrown her arms around Dad and pressed her lips against his. Dad blushed, amid the laughter of farmers waiting for a ride. But he’d smiled for the first time since they left home. Mom then took Pan-pan in her arms and kissed her on her forehead. As the cart rumbled away, she called out again that she would bring back a wonderful gift for Pan-pan’s twelfth birthday.
That was the last time Pan-pan saw her mother laugh. A week later she was brought home on a stretcher. There was no birthday present. Ten days later, her mother died.
In the days following her mother’s death, Pan-pan lay on her back on the bed she shared with Ah-Po, staring at the criss-crossed bamboo poles that supported the thatched roof. From time to time, her eyes were drawn to the corner of the room where, on top of the chest of drawers, her mother’s picture stood, now wrapped in black ribbons. Pan-pan found no peace anywhere she looked, particularly at night. Each time she closed her eyes and drifted off to sleep, she was startled awake by the sound of her own sobbing. She wondered if she would ever be able to sleep again.
“Are you still awake?” Ah-Po’s voice rose beside her one night. “Be strong my child,” she added softly, almost pleading.
“Yes, Ah-Po,” said Pan-pan, drying her tears before she turned onto her side. Ah-Po’s words reminded her of the happy years when she was doted on by three grown-ups and enjoyed an endless share of their love and care. It was when she earned her reputation as a strong-willed child, or to use her teacher’s words, someone with a “high tolerance for pain.” Mom had laughed good-naturedly at the comment. During a school outing, on a narrow path in the mountains, Pan-pan had badly scraped both knees as she held onto the harness of a sliding donkey that had lost its footing. The blood had oozed through her pant legs, yet she hadn’t uttered one complaint until the donkey was safely pulled back up the slope. Ah-Po ought to know that there was a big difference between losing some blood and losing one’s mother, Pan-pan thought as she lay in the dark. She worried that with Mom forever gone, she’d never be strong again.
Now, three years later, Pan-pan couldn’t remember the details of the funeral, the burial of her mother’s ashes, or the disappearance of her father. And she recalled only vaguely his turning up a few days later in the back of a police car, smelly and drunk, his hands wrapped in dirty bandages. He had stumbled into the house with Ah-Po’s sharp words ringing in his ears.
Shortly after his hands had healed, Dad decided to follow the lead of other villagers and quit the life of a farmer. Taking with him a small bag and a bedroll, he headed out to the cities to take on jobs that urban dwellers declined to do.
How ironic it is, Pan-pan thought bitterly as she carefully powdered her armpits and buttoned up her shirt. Mom had once told her that she and Dad had named her Pan-pan—Hope—because they wanted their daughter to be free to wish for anything she liked. Yet Pan-pan couldn’t even find the answer to the question that had plagued her for the past three years—Why had her mother been taken from her so suddenly? It was obvious that something unexpected, even horrible, had happened in Tongren, but no one would tell her what it was.
Her parents, Pan-pan thought, should have called her Hopeless.