15
Chang An Lo travelled by night. It was safer. His
foot still pained him, and in the mountains his progress was slow.
His return journey took too long. They almost caught him.
He heard their breath. The sigh of their horses.
The patter of the rain on their goatskin capes. He stilled his
heart and lay facedown in the mud, their hooves only inches from
his head, but the darkness saved him. He gave thanks to Ch’ang O,
goddess of the moon, for turning her face away that night. After
that he stole a mule from an unguarded barn in a village at the
bottom of the valley, but he left a cupful of silver in its
place.
It was just after dawn, when the wind off the great
northern plain was driving the yellow loess dust into his nostrils
and under his tongue, that the sprawl of houses that made up
Junchow came into sight. From this distance Junchow looked
disjointed. The Oriental jumbled alongside the Western, the soaring
rooftops of the old town next to the solid blocks and straight
lines of the International Settlement. Chang tried not to think of
her in there or of what she must be thinking of him. Instead
he tried to spit on the barren earth, but the dust had robbed his
mouth of moisture, so instead he muttered, ‘A thousand curses on
the fanqui invaders. China will soon piss on the Foreign
Devils.’
Yet despite all his curses and his hatred of them,
one Foreign Devil had invaded him and he didn’t want to drive her
out any more than he would drive out his own soul. As he crouched
in the depths of a spinney, his shadow merging with the trees, he
ached for her, though he knew he was risking more than he had the
right to lose.
Above him the red streaks in the sky looked like
blood being spilled.
The water was cold. He was a strong swimmer, but
the river currents were fierce and wrapped around his legs like
tentacles, so he had to kick hard to be free of them. The foot that
the fox girl had sewn up served him well, and he thanked the gods
for her steady hands. The river meant that he avoided the sentries
and the many eyes that watched the roads into Junchow. He had
waited until dark. The sampans and junks that skittered downstream
with black sails and no bow lights swept past him to their furtive
assignations, and above him the clouds stole the stars from the
sky. The river kept its secrets.
When he reached the far bank, he stood silent and
motionless beside the rotting hull of an upturned boat, listening
for sounds in the darkness, looking for shifting patterns of
shadows. He was back in Junchow, near her once more. He felt
his spirits lift, and after some time spent with only the rustle of
rats for company, he slipped away, up into the town.
‘Ai! My eyes are glad to see you.’ The
young man with the long scar down one side of his face greeted
Chang with a rush of relief. ‘To have you back, alive and still
cursing, my friend, it means I shall sleep tonight. Here, drink
this, you look as if you need it.’
The light flickered as the torch flames hissed and
spat like live creatures on the wall.
‘Yuesheng, I thank you. They came close, this time,
the grey scorpions of Chiang Kai-shek. Someone had whispered in
their ear.’ Chang drank the small glass of rice wine in one swallow
and felt it burn life back into his chilled bones. He helped
himself to another.
‘Whoever it was will have his tongue cut
out.’
They were in a cellar. The stone walls dripped with
water and were covered in vivid-coloured lichen, but it was large
and the sounds of the printing press were deadened by the thick
walls and the heavy ceiling. Above them stood a textile factory
where machines rattled all day, but only the foreman knew of the
machine under his workers’ feet. He was a trade union man, a
Communist, a fighter for the cause, and he supplied oil and ink and
buckets of raw rice wine to the nighttime activists. Since the
Kuomintang Nationalists had swept into power and Chiang Kai-shek
swore to wipe the Communist threat off the face of China, each
breath was a danger, each pamphlet an invitation to the
executioner’s sword. Half a dozen determined young faces clustered
around the presses, half a dozen young lives on a thread.
Yuesheng pulled a strip of dried fish from his bag
and handed it to Chang. ‘Eat, my friend. You will need your
strength.’
Chang ate, his first food in more than three days.
‘The latest posters are good, the ones demanding new laws on child
labour,’ he said. ‘I saw several on my way here, one even on the
council chamber’s door.’
‘Yes.’ Yuesheng laughed. ‘That one was Kuan’s
doing.’
At the mention of her name a slender young woman
glanced up from where she was stacking pamphlets into sacks and
gave Chang a nod.
‘Tell me, Kuan, how do you always manage to find
the most insulting places to stick your posters, right under Feng
Tu Hong’s nose?’ Chang called above the clattering noise of the
press. ‘Do you fly with the night spirits, unseen by human
eye?’
Kuan walked over. She was wearing the loose blue
jacket and trousers of a peasant farmer, though she had recently
graduated from Peking University with a degree in law. She had
serious black eyes. She did not believe in the soft smiles that
most Junchow women offered to the world. When her parents threw her
out of the family home because she humiliated them by cutting her
hair short and taking a job in a factory, it only sharpened her
desire to fight for women, so that they would no longer be owned
like dogs by fathers or by husbands, to be kicked at will. She
possessed the fearlessness of the fox girl but inside her there was
no flame, no light that burned so bright it lit up a room, no heat
so fierce that lizards scurried to be near her.
Where was Lydia now? Cursing him, he had no doubt.
The image of her fox eyes, narrowed and waiting for him full of
fury, sent a laugh through him and Kuan mistook his pleasure. She
gave Chang one of her rare smiles.
‘That camel-faced chairman of the council, Feng Tu
Hong, deserves such special treatment,’ she said.
‘Tell me. What is new while I’ve been gone?’
The smile faded. ‘Yesterday he ordered a purge of
the metal-workers in the iron foundry, those who were asking for
safer conditions at the furnaces.’
‘Twelve were beheaded in the yard. As a warning to
others,’ Yuesheng spat out and ran a hand down the sword scar on
his own face. It seemed to pulsate and darken.
A surge of rage tore through Chang. He closed his
eyes and focused his mind. Now was not the time. This moment was
surrounded by fire. He needed control, with danger so close.
‘Feng Tu Hong’s time will come,’ he said quietly.
‘I promise you that. And this will bring it faster.’ He pulled a
piece of paper from a leather pouch that hung from his neck.
Yuesheng snatched it up, read it through, and
nodded with satisfaction. ‘It’s a promissory note,’ he announced to
the others. ‘For rifles, Winchesters. A hundred of them.’
Six faces found smiles and one young man punched an
ink-stained fist into the air in salute.
‘You have done well,’ Yuesheng said, pride in his
voice.
Chang was pleased. He and Yuesheng were almost
brothers in their friendship. It was the rock on which they stood.
He placed a hand on Yuesheng’s shoulder and their eyes met in
understanding. Each breath was one they earned.
‘The news from the south is good,’ Chang told
him.
‘Mao Tse-tung? Is our leader still evading the grey
bellies’ snares?’
‘He narrowly escaped capture last month. But his
military camp in Jiangxi is expanding every day, where they come
like bees to a hive from all over the country. Some with no more
than a hoe in their hand and belief in their heart. The time is
coming closer when Chiang Kai-shek will discover that his treachery
and betrayal of our country have signed his own death
warrant.’
‘Is it true there was another skirmish near Canton
last week?’ Kuan asked.
‘Yes,’ Chang said. ‘A train full of Kuomintang
troops was blown up and . . .’
A loud crash drowned out his voice and the sound of
the press as the metal door burst open at the top of the stairs and
a boy hurled himself into the cellar, eyes huge with panic.
‘They’re here,’ he screamed. ‘The troops are . .
.’
A shot cracked through the cellar and the boy
collapsed facedown on the earthen floor, a bright red stain etched
on the back of his jacket.
Instantly the cellar was full of movement. Each
knew what to do. Yuesheng had prepared for this moment. Torches
were doused. In the darkness enemy boots pounded down the stairs,
voices raised, commands thrown at shadows, and two more shots made
the walls sing. But in the far corner a ladder was ready.
Well-oiled bolts slid back. A hatch was thrown open. But the square
of night sky was paler, leaving the figures silhouetted against the
opening as they started to slip through it one by one.
Standing last at the base of the ladder beside
Yuesheng, Chang saw the dim outline of a soldier approach from the
stairs, and with a lightning kick he tore the man’s jaw from its
socket and heard a high whinny of pain. In a flash Chang had seized
his rifle and was sending a blast of bullets screaming around the
cellar.
‘Go,’ he shouted at Yuesheng.
‘No. You leave first.’
Chang touched his friend’s arm. ‘Go.’
Yuesheng delayed no longer and sped up the ladder.
Chang fired once more and felt a Kuomintang bullet whistle through
his hair in reply, and then he leaped up the rungs right on
Yuesheng’s heels. Bullets tore into the hatch opening from below
and suddenly Chang felt a dead weight crash down on him. It was as
if his own heart had been torn out.
He seized Yuesheng’s body on his shoulder, sprang
through the hatch, and raced away into the darkness.