The Incarnations (13 page)

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Authors: Susan Barker

Tags: #Fiction, #Sagas, #Historical, #Literary

BOOK: The Incarnations
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‘Of course I did.’

‘Well, go back to school and study it again! You obviously know nothing about our
history
. You wouldn’t know our history if it slapped you in the face!’

At the forceful spit of the word ‘history’, Wang stiffens, hands tightening around the steering wheel. Then he looks in the rearview at the indignant official, and the suspicion passes. He has to get a grip. He has to keep his paranoia in check.

The market. Vegetable stalls of pesticide-sprayed spinach and earth-clodden turnips. Racks of carcasses hanging from hooks, ribs and spinal cords exposed. A butcher in a bloodstained apron slams his cleaver, seasoning a joint of pork with ash spilling from his cigarette. Wang roams from stall to stall, gradually filling his bag with items on Yida’s list. Bean curd. Spring onions. Vinegar. The ground is slippery with plums fallen from a fruit stall and trampled to pulp. The children of the migrant vendors chase about, skidding through the mess as they play tag. Wang buys two jin of rice. The rice seller hands Wang his change without looking away from the old Bruce Lee movie on his laptop, perched above the till.

The dusk is balmy and suffused with spring. Wang detours down an alley behind the Golden Elephant pharmacy, passing a Uighur selling fake Rolexes and a shifty-looking man lurking by the tobacco and liquor store, on the lookout for police. Wang has seen him before and knows he is a seller of identities: student IDs, graduate diplomas and other papers. Documents, both stolen and forged, used by migrants to gain employment in the capital. Another man nearby is peddling blank receipt booklets from hotels and restaurants for officials to claim fraudulent expenses. He rustles a wad of banknotes, hinting at a profitable day’s trade.

Further down the alley, neon-lit shops cater for the darker pleasures of the flesh. An ‘Adult Health Store’ has shelves of rubber and latex sex toys and powdered ‘male power enhancers’. In a glass-fronted massage parlour, girls perch on stools, skirts ridden up to the shadowy meeting place of their thighs. The whores are heavy-lidded with boredom as they wait behind the glass. A teenager in leopard-print catches Wang’s eye with a gap-toothed smile, and he reddens and looks away.

A pole of red, white and blue stripes spins by a barber’s doorway. Inside, a man in his thirties and a teenager on a laptop slouch on leatherette chairs. The thirtyish man has his boots up on the ledge under the mirrors, stretching out his long, denim legs. He reminds Wang of someone he once knew. But older. And with shorter hair and smoker’s wrinkles around his eyes. Out in the alley Wang stares through the glass. No, he thinks. Can’t be. But on the man’s bicep is an emerald dragon. On his forearm is a knotty gnarl of scar tissue. Who else has that tattoo? Those scars?

Wang’s heart is beating hard. The wisest thing to do would be to walk on by. But he does not do the wisest thing. He opens the door and enters the barber’s.

Leaning back in his chair, Zeng Yan looks over, weary at the arrival of another customer. Then recognition widens his eyes and he swings his heels down from the ledge and stands. He is taller than Wang remembers, and thinner, his jeans sliding off his narrow hips.

‘Wang Jun!’ he laughs. ‘Is that really you?’

Wang nods and sways slightly. He feels as though reality is disjointed, as though he’s knocked back several glasses of baijiu in a row.

‘Long time no see,’ he says.

‘How long has it been?’ Zeng smiles. He pauses to cough. ‘Nine years? Ten?’

‘Ten,’ Wang says.

They look each other up and down, taking in a decade of change. Wang has become softer and rounder, the hair sparser on his head and the stubble coarser on his jaw. Zeng is gaunter, more angular, but his hair wavy and thick. Zeng Yan has lost the handsome looks he was so proud of at twenty – a loss Wang knows must have been painful for him.

‘You look well, Wang Jun.’

‘Liar,’ Wang laughs. ‘I’m balding. I’ve gained weight.’

‘Bullshit! You’re handsome as ever.’

‘You look much better than I do.’

Zeng coughs at this, his congested lungs protesting Wang’s lie. Looking at how haggard Zeng has become, Wang suspects something worse than heavy smoking and late nights. Some chronic illness lurking within.

The teenager on the laptop has stopped chatting on qq and stares at Wang with a hostility that makes him shift awkwardly. He looks around the run-down barber’s. The linoleum floor is peeling at the edges, scattered with tufts of hair. Duct tape mends the rips in the fake leather chairs. The cords of the hairdryers are frayed electrocutions waiting to happen.

‘How long have you been working here?’ he asks Zeng.

‘Two years.’

‘I live in Maizidian. Just round the corner. How come we haven’t seen each other in the street?’

‘I’ve seen you,’ Zeng says, ‘with your little girl.’

‘And you didn’t say hello?’

‘You’re a family man now. I thought it better to leave you be.’

Zeng lowers his eyes in shame. Still in the same line of work he was in as a teenager, but now on the lowest rung. Wang can tell he doesn’t have wealthy men throwing money at him any more. Now Zeng has to haggle over his fee with working-class men or migrants from outside Beijing.

‘Would you like a haircut?’ Zeng asks.

Wang went to the barber’s three weeks ago, but he nods. ‘Sure.’

‘Go clean up the back room, Wu Fei,’ Zeng orders the teenager. The boy shunts his chair back and exits through the beaded curtain, the strands swinging aggressively in his wake. Zeng shakes out a hairdressing cape and holds it up so Wang can thread his arms through. Wang then sits in one of the ripped leatherette chairs, and Zeng squirts shampoo and water from a plastic bottle on to his scalp and lathers it up. ‘How long you been married?’

‘Nine years.’

‘Long time,’ says Zeng. ‘What’s your wife’s name? What does she do?’

‘Ma Yida. She’s a masseur at Dragonfly Massage.’ Wang then asks, ‘How about you? Married?’

Zeng’s laughter lapses into a coughing fit. His chest revs like a car that won’t start.

‘I’m still a bachelor,’ he laughs, thumping his sternum. ‘I’m not the marrying kind.’

Wang leans back into the washbasin, and Zeng cradles his head, kneading his temples and digging his thumbs behind his ears. Wang shuts his eyes as Zeng’s strong fingers go to work on his scalp. The massage is part of the seduction routine. Many men wander into the barber’s on a whim.
Only a haircut
, they tell themselves. But Zeng’s fingers persuade them to stay for more. ‘Look what we do to your scalp,’ they say. ‘Think of what else we can do.’

‘How long have you been driving a taxi?’ Zeng asks.

Wang opens his eyes. He stares at Zeng’s upside-down face. ‘How do you know I’m a taxi driver?’

‘I’ve seen you in your cab.’

‘Really? When?’

‘Sometime last year, near Liangmaqiao.’

Water sprays from the nozzle, rinsing the lather out.

‘How many times have you seen me?’ Wang asks, his heart quickening. ‘Do you know where I live?’

Zeng starts at Wang’s tone. ‘No,’ he says. ‘I only saw you twice.’ He continues rinsing in silence, and Wang’s suspicion recedes.

Zeng rubs Wang’s head dry with a towel, then combs his sparse, damp hair. Wang watches, reversed in the mirror, as Zeng starts to cut. He stares at the deep scar, from elbow to wrist, on the inside of Zeng’s forearm. They’d been rallying a ping-pong ball in the hospital yard, when Zeng had told him how he punched out a window when his boyfriend, Dragon, dumped him. Some nerve endings were severed, and Zeng couldn’t make a proper fist. He had put down the ping-pong paddle to show Wang the looseness of his grip.

‘Should have punched with my left hand. Certain things I could take care of on my own, I can’t any more.’

Zeng had grinned, then admitted, ‘Some people are as good for you as a bullet in the head, but you want them anyway. Know what I mean?’

And Wang had nodded. He was beginning to understand.

Zeng Yan is blasting the blow-dryer when Wang’s phone buzzes with a message. Yida, waiting at home. Wang signals for Zeng to turn off the dryer.

‘I have to go,’ he says. ‘How much do I owe you?’

‘Nothing.’

Zeng removes the cape and brushes off the collar of Wang’s polo shirt. ‘Come back whenever you like. I will always cut your hair for free.’

‘Thanks,’ Wang says. Though he doesn’t feel gratitude. Only an addict’s fear of relapse.

‘Well,’ says Zeng. ‘See you around.’

But Wang isn’t fooled by his casual, offhand tone. Zeng looks as though he can’t bear to see him leave.

‘Sure,’ he says.

Wang picks up his shopping and walks out of the barber’s and into the alley. He doesn’t say when he will be back, but they both know that he will.

10
Mindsickness

NOTHING SEEMED SERIOUSLY
wrong at first. A few days of struggling through lectures and campus life. A seasonal depression as the earth moved further from the sun and the hours of darkness lengthened. Then one morning Wang couldn’t get out of bed. Under the blankets, he lacked the strength to move. He shut his eyes but could not sleep, because his thoughts wouldn’t grant him a moment’s rest. They mocked his defects and weaknesses. They scorned his punctual and eager attendance at lectures, pen grasped in hand to note down everything the lecturer said. They ridiculed Wang’s ambition to be a history professor – he who was so pathetic he couldn’t even get out of bed.

Under the blankets Wang stagnated. His physiology slowed down to the point of stasis. Waste filtered through his kidneys, seeping from bladder to sheets. His heart pumped so weakly, blood silted up his veins.

Vanishing under the duvet to recover from a hangover, a cold or a broken heart was a norm of dormitory life. Three days went by before Wang’s roommates recognized something was wrong. They crowded around Wang’s bottom bunk, shivering as the windows were flung wide to clear the air. Wang could hear them debating what to do, their voices filtering down to his new subterranean level of reality, where the meaninglessness of everything was bleakly exposed. They shook Wang’s shoulder, then withdrew from his limp unresponsiveness. There was laughter as they threw a glass of water over him. Then confusion as Wang did not so much as flinch or blink.

‘What’s wrong with him? It’s like he’s
died
.’

Wang’s father came to collect him the following day. A commanding figure in his expensive suit, Wang Hu went to the student accommodation office first and handed over an envelope stuffed with cash for the ‘inconvenience’ caused. He was charming and apologetic; slick and experienced at bringing disagreeable situations under his control. Wang Hu then went to his son’s dormitory with two security guards from the Ministry of Agriculture, who heaved Wang out of bed. The guards stripped Wang under his father’s watchful eye and dumped the soiled clothes and bedsheets into a bin bag. Then Wang Hu told them to stand him under a shower.

‘Be as rough as you need to be. Make sure the water is
cold
.’

The shower got Wang functioning again, putting one foot in front of the other and moving in the direction that he was told.

During the medical check-up Wang did not answer a single question. Clinical depression, diagnosed the doctor. A high suicide risk. Owing to his deteriorated mental state, 21-year-old Wang sat out in the waiting room as, in hushed conspiratorial tones, his father and doctor determined his fate.

‘What’s your madness?’ The elderly man peered at Wang through the opalescence of his eyes.

‘Don’t know,’ Wang said. ‘Dr Fu has it in his notes.’

A frozen wind gusted through the wrought-iron bars of the window, and Wang smelt the sourness of the old man’s estrangement from water and soap. The old man squinted his cataract-clouded eyes at Wang. ‘Neurasthenia,’ he decided. Then he shuffled away, remarking loudly to the empty hall, ‘His mother was here once. She pretended to be a cat and peed on the floor. What a hiding the nurses gave her.’

Wang was leaving his room for the first time that day, holding his breath as he passed the urinals on the way to the common room. He stared through the doorways into the other dorms. Six iron bedsteads and one wardrobe per room. The walls empty, no photographs or calendars to count the days. Not even a potted plant on the sills. The patients huddled under blankets, or stared about with the idleness of nothing to do.

The illness of some of the men in the common room was evident in their smiles. Others were deceptively sane-looking as they watched the TV news bulletin, wearing long johns and mildewy jumpers coming apart at the seams. It was 1997. The year Deng Xiaoping died and Hong Kong returned to the motherland. Wang was certain that neither historical event had even for a moment shaken the patients out of their lassitude.

Eleven o’clock was personal-grooming hour. A nurse clipped an old man’s nails, nagging him to keep his splayed and liver-spotted fingers still. Another nurse was cutting a patient’s hair over sheets of the
People’s Daily
spread under his chair. Wang saw some electric clippers on the table and asked her to shave his head. The nurse refused. Skinheads were against regulations. Why not go for a short back and sides? Wang scratched his head.

‘My scalp is itchy. I’ve got lice.’

He sat before the nurse and bowed his head. The buzzing clippers vibrated against his skull, tremors descending vertebra by vertebra down his spine. Wang felt like a sheep being shorn. Fleeced. Afterwards he rubbed his hand over the stubble, waving away the nurse’s offer of a mirror. The palm of his hand had told him all he needed to know.

The clinic was a low building with wrought-iron bars over the windows.
Kindness, Friendship, Tolerance
, said the breeze-fluttered banner stretching across the entrance. Sometimes Wang stared out from between the bars at the suburbs of Beijing. Fields of poorly irrigated crops, fertilized by sewage. The dust-blown sign of the near-empty-shelved corner shop creaking in the wind. A bus stop where a bus from the city stopped twice a day. ‘A temporary stay,’ Wang was told. ‘A month or two at the most.’

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