The Piano Teacher (11 page)

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Authors: Janice Y.K. Lee

BOOK: The Piano Teacher
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Angeline and Will look at each other and shrug.
“Of course, darling,” Angeline says.
As soon as Trudy leaves, they drift away from each other. Will finds Angus Enderby leaning against a wall. Trudy’s cousin, Dominick, wanders by, gives them a curt nod.
“Strange fellow, that,” says Angus. “Can’t figure him out.”
“Trudy says he’s a girl.”
“Something more than that, though. Less innocent.” He pauses. “You know there are Fifth Columnists infiltrating. They’re supporting that Wong Chang Wai chap, who the Japanese installed in China. I’ve heard Dominick has been seen with a lot of that crowd. And Victor Chen, of course, thick as thieves with whoever can help him. Rumor has it that he had the Japanese consulate over for dinner last week. Very hush-hush. Better watch himself. That’s a dangerous game.”
“He’s a survivor.”
“Yes.” Angus shrugs. “Can’t believe the war effort’s been turned into a party. The new governor’s a fool for coming.”
A stout woman is at the bar, with a thinner lady, both sipping whiskey, watching the dancing impassively.
“Do you know Edwina Storch?” Angus asks Will, nodding toward the two.
“I’ve seen her around. Not met them formally.”
“Headmistress of Essex, old-timer. Grim, formidable. Been around forever. Her partner, Mary Winkle.”
Will and Angus walk over to the women. Edwina inclines her head regally, a queen holding court.
“Hello, Angus. Merry Christmas.”
“Edwina, I wanted you to meet Will Truesdale, somewhat of a new arrival to these shores. And Will, this is Edwina Storch and Mary Winkle, Hong Kong institutions. They know where all the skeletons are buried.”
“Pleased to meet you,” says Will.
“I’ve seen you around,” Edwina says. “You’re with the Liang girl.”
“Yes,” Will says. He is not surprised by her bluntness. He has run into this type before: the unapologetic, rude English matron who fancies herself an adventuress and desires nothing more than to intimidate.
“That didn’t take you long.”
“No, it didn’t, luckily,” he says lightly. “She’s been a wonderful introduction to Hong Kong.”
Edwina Storch harrumphs.
“That’s a skewed sense of Hong Kong you’re getting! ”
Mary Winkle lays a small, reproachful hand on Edwina’s arm.
“Now, now,” she whispers. “Trudy has always been lovely, if misunderstood. I do like her so very much.”
Will smiles at her. “She is lovely, isn’t she?”
Edwina sips noisily at her glass.
“What’s that you’re drinking? ” she asks.
“Single malt.”
“A man’s drink. Since you’re with Trudy, I thought you might be a champagne drinker.”
“Are you friends with her? ” he asks politely.
“Of course,” she says. “In Hong Kong, everyone has to be friends or it’s very unpleasant.”
“Of course,” he says agreeably to the women and bows to them before taking his leave. After a pause, Angus joins him back at the bar.
“Something about that woman turns me into a schoolboy about to wet his trousers,” Angus says.
“And you keep going back for more,” Will says drily.
“That one likes her creature comforts,” Angus says. “Always after me about civil salaries and what an outrage they are. Never met a headmistress more interested in money.”
The two men pull at their drinks.
“I heard the governor’s told all the men in the Bachelors they were off their heads for wanting their wives back. His wife’s still in Malaysia, no?”
“Yes, but I don’t know that that’s any safer, do you?” Will says. “How is Amelia?”
“Fine, but she’s making noises about coming back. She’s just in China, you know, refused absolutely to go to Australia. So, she’s in Canton, and complaining mightily. I can hear the racket from here.” Angus looked gloomily at the dance floor. “Might let her come back just so I can get some peace.” He paused. “Though that seems rather counterintuitive, eh?”
“Everything to do with women seems counterintuitive.”
“Trudy not leaving? ” Angus asks.
“Refuses. Says there’s nowhere to go. Which is sort of the truth for her, I think.”
“Pity,” says Angus. “A lot of places could use her right now.”
“Yes, she could charm everyone,” Will says.
“A formidable weapon, indeed,” Angus says.
“Did you see the paper today? Roosevelt sent Hirohito a cable?”
“Yes. We’ll see how effective that is. What are they having you do at the office? ”
“They sent around a memorandum a few weeks ago saying that our Volunteer positions took precedence over company business, but we are supposed to register with them during fighting, if it breaks out. They’ve given us a number to call with our location. I don’t know that they know what they’re doing.”
They watch Trudy twirl around the dance floor, laughing, ivory-white arms draped over her partner’s shoulders. Afterward, breathless and happy, she tells Will that her partner was the “head of the whole thing. He’s very important, and he seemed to like me very much, telling me all about the situation we’re in. And it’s terribly ironic,” she says. “The dreariest of people are safe—the Germans, bless their stolid hearts, the Italians with their awful, funny ways. Hong Kong’s going to be so dull, no parties worth going to at all.”
“So you’re interested when he tells you about the war, are you?”
“Of course, darling. He knows what he’s talking about.”
 
The orchestra is playing “The Best Things in Life Are Free,” and Trudy is complaining. “He’s horrible,” she says about the accompanist. “I could get up right now and play better than that.” But she isn’t given a chance because a short man with a megaphone strides through the ballroom and gets up onstage. The orchestra grinds to a halt.
“All those men who are connected to the American Steamships Line are ordered to report aboard ship as soon as possible. I repeat, all those connected with American Steamships Line are required to report onboard right now.”
There is a long silence, then on the dance floor, couples uncouple, at the bar, men stand up from their bar stools and pull down their shirt fronts. A few start to make their uncertain way to the door.
“I hate American accents,” Trudy says. “They sound so stupid.” She seems to have forgotten her great love for Americans.
“Trudy,” Will says. “This is serious. Do you understand?”
“It’ll be fine, darling,” Trudy says. “Who would bother with our small pocket of the world? It’s just the alarmists.” She calls for more champagne.
Dominick comes by and whispers something in her ear. He stares at Will while he’s doing it.
“Good evening, Dominick,” he says.
“Hallo,” is the laconic reply. Dominick is one of those queer Chinese who are more English than the English, yet has no great love for them. Educated in the most precious way in England, he has come back to Hong Kong and is affronted by everything that is in the least bit crass, which is to say, everything—the swill on the streets, the expectorating, illiterate throngs of coolies and fishmongers. A hothouse flower, he thrives only in the rarest of society circles, around damask napkins and clear, ringing crystal—Will would very much like to see him in a rubber apron ladling out soup to butchers and their ilk in a street-market noodle shop, the kind with the bare electrical bulb hanging dangerously on a filament.
“Terrible news, isn’t it? ” Will says.
“This too will pass.” Dominick dismisses him with a slow wave of his marble-white palm. Will finds himself wondering if those hands have seen any labor more arduous than the writing of a thank-you note on cream bond or the lifting of a champagne bowl. He watches the two of them whispering together. They belong together (were it not for the accident of their family relations) but he supposes such a pairing would combust, their pale electricity extinguishing the other.
Dominick says suddenly, “It’s not all bad for Trudy and me, you know. The Japanese are closer to us than the English. At least they’re Orientals.”
Will almost laughs and then realizes that Dominick is serious.
“But you’re the least Oriental person I know,” he says mildly.
Dominick narrows his eyes. “You’ve no idea what you’re talking about,” he says.
Trudy intervenes. “You’re both talking nonsense. Don’t talk about this beastly nationality matter—it makes me ill.” She brushes Will’s hair back from his face. “All I know is that the Japanese are a very peculiar people.”
“You should not say such things,” Dominick says. “You should not.”
“Oh, bother! ” Trudy says. “Have another drink and shut up.”
It is the first time Will has seen Trudy get irritated with Dominick. She wants to go shortly thereafter and they leave, but not before she gives Dominick a quick kiss on the cheek to let him know he’s been forgiven.
 
On Sunday they wake and go to town for dim sum. There is an odd tension in the air, and the wet markets are filled with grim shoppers filling their bags. They go home and listen to the radio and eat a simple dinner. The amahs are flitting about, chattering nonstop, and it’s giving Will a headache. The office rings up and says that work is suspended until further notice. That night, he and Trudy slip and slide in their sleep, waking each other in their restlessness, breathing loudly.
Monday, December 8. The rude
brrring
of the telephone. Angeline wakes Trudy and Will with the news that her husband has just received word of a broadcast to all Japanese that war with Britain and the United States is imminent. The engineers have been ordered to blow all bridges leading into the territory. Then, as they digest the news still groggy from sleep, they hear the air-raid sirens, and then, terribly, from a distance, then closer, the whing and whine of aircraft and the dull thud of bombs. The phone rings again. All Volunteers are to be in place by three in the afternoon. They turn on the radio and Will gets dressed as Trudy watches him from the bed. She is pale and quiet.
“It’s madness for you to go out in this,” she says. “How are you going to get to the office? ”
“I’ll drive,” he says.
“But you don’t know what condition the roads are in. You might be hit by a bomb or someone might . . .”
“Trudy,” he says. “I have to go. I can’t just sit by.”
“Nonsense,” she says. “And I don’t want to be alone.”
“Let’s not quarrel,” he says gently. “Call Angeline. Then go over to her house. Have her send her boy to escort you. And I’ll ring you there when I’m able. You should probably stock up on some food as well.”
He kisses her cool cheek and leaves.
In town, he drives by the King’s Theater. It still seems to be operating.
My Life with Caroline
is the feature and there are, astonishingly, a few people queuing up for tickets.
When he reports to HQ, it’s abuzz with activity, men jostling for space and supplies, with a sense of urgency he has not seen before. Outside, it’s eerily quiet but for the intermittent boom of bombs. He sits and waits for his assignment. There’s a map over a desk with the colony marked out. A dotted line is drawn from Gin Drinkers Bay to Tide Cove with a fortress at Shing Mun—the first line of defense. There’s been a concrete tunnel built south of the Jubilee Reservoir where soldiers can climb to pillboxes to fire. “This should keep us for a while,” a man says, noticing Will studying the map. “It’s fairly difficult to breach, I’d say.” On the wall, someone has typed up excerpts from General Maltby’s speech that morning: “It is obvious to you all that the test for which we have been placed here will come in the near future. I expect each and every member of my force to stick it out unflinchingly, and that my force will become a great example of high-hearted courage to all the rest of the British empire who are fighting to preserve truth, justice, and liberty for the world.”
Suddenly, over the radio, they hear Roosevelt’s voice. “Quiet, dammit,” someone shouts. The volume is turned up. Roosevelt announces the bombing of Pearl Harbor and a quiet shock descends upon the office.
Roosevelt is done, and there is the buzzing of the radio before the announcer comes in. “And that was President Roosevelt of the United States . . .”
“That’s good for us,” a fellow says finally. “Means the Americans are in it now, whether they like it or not.”
“It means the war has gotten much bigger,” says another, quietly.
November 1952
SHE WAS PARANOID. She always had been. When she pushed open a door or picked up a wineglass, she made a point of smudging the slight map that her oils, finger whorls, and dust had created—as if Scotland Yard were hot on her trail. She didn’t want to be leaving clues, fragments, parts of herself, around. When she ran her fingers through her hair, she kept the strands that slid out, and disposed of them in a dustbin. Her fingernail parings were housed in a tissue and flushed down the toilet.
This paranoia was beneficial, it turned out. Martin, distracted with work, with the workings of water, never noticed that her comings and goings had suddenly taken on a much more deliberate air. Must get Darjeeling at the shop, must go visit at St. Stephen’s Hospital every Thursday, must do a lunch with the girls every Wednesday. She limited their intimacy to the bare minimum. She could not think that she was that woman, that woman she had heard her mother and her friends talking about in the kitchen, that woman who went from man to man in a single day. The kind of woman who could be kicked out of the colony and sent home on a ship in disgrace.
The awful thing was, she didn’t feel as badly as she thought she ought to. She had always thought of women who had lovers as immoral women who cared nothing about society and manners and the way things should be. And yet, here she was, carrying on with a man who didn’t even particularly seem to like her. And Martin was good. This was the inescapable fact. And he was good to her. Whether he loved her, she didn’t know. He was certainly pleased to have a wife and a home and all of that taken care of, but she didn’t know how much of that had to do with her as a person. Sometimes she felt that he had married her, dropped her into a slot labeled “wife,” and gotten on with his life. But she was sensible enough to see that she was the guilty one in this arrangement. Martin was guilty of nothing but benign neglect. She was taking advantage of a good man.

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