55
Lydia waited. In the dark. Hunched inside her
senses. She knew they’d come for her eventually, when they were
sure she was weak and helpless, and then they’d start their
amusement - that’s the word Chang An Lo had used for it. The
thought turned her bones to water.
The only defence she had was inside her head, and
she started working on it. Preparing. For questions. For pain. For
how far she could go.
The nakedness. The cold. Even the absolute darkness
inside Box. They had all seemed so important only hours ago, so
crippling, but now she put them aside into a separate compartment
in her head. She had gone beyond that.
It was a matter of focus.
She went over scenes. Inch by inch. Good scenes.
Scenes with her mother when she was young. Bright shiny scenes of
laughter. Of Russian tales at bedtime or of proudly playing the
left hand of Dance of the Cygnets on the piano while her
mother played the right. Swimming in the river on a hot summer’s
day and diving for fish skeletons to take home. Snowball fights in
the schoolyard with Polly.
Why had Polly betrayed her? Lydia had begged her
not to, had pleaded for her silence. And even if Polly believed she
was helping Lydia by telling her father, what good was that to
Lydia now? What use were good intentions inside a metal Box?
She forced Polly’s name away. Good memories were
what she needed now. Lizard Creek. The touch of Chang An Lo’s warm
skin. The smell of his hair. His penis firm in her hand. Inside
her. Good memories to build up good strength.
She could survive this.
She could.
She would.
The noise cracked like a gunshot. Her ears, so
used to silence, misinterpreted the sound. It took an effort of
mind to realise it was an iron bolt being drawn back. A door being
unlocked. Shuffling footsteps on wood. Stairs? Someone descending
toward her. She had prepared for this, run it already a thousand
times in her head and taught herself to control the panic. Focus.
Breathe.
But her heart rate exploded. Terror swamped
her.
‘Hello?’ she called out.
A guttural stream of Chinese came in response and a
thump on the side of Box, the sound of a palm hitting metal. She
shut up. The best thing was the light. She focused on the tawny
little trickles of twilight that filtered through the six holes and
steadied herself by it. It was only faint. A candle? An oil lamp?
But it was light. Life. She could make out her own knees, see a
bruise on her leg, see her hand. Her eyes squinted after the utter
darkness they had grown accustomed to but they wanted more. More
light. More life.
A scraping sound, something dragging across the
floor. She sat still, listening. The squeak of metal, then a
whoosh and suddenly water was coming through the holes. The
shock was total. Quickly she pushed her face under it and opened
her mouth. The joy of feeling moisture in her mouth took over and
she gulped it down, greedy and stupid. Then the taste of it kicked
in. It was foul. Rank with dirt. Full of grit. She retched on the
floor. Her mouth was full of grease and acid bile. She rubbed at
her tongue with her wrist.
The water kept coming. She forgot about her
mouth.
‘Hey,’ she called out. ‘Stop it. Enough
water.’
A man’s laugh and another bang on the side of
Box.
‘Please. No more water. Qing. Please.’
The flow of water increased. It was inches deep
already and her teeth were chattering so hard they hurt.
‘Stop!’ she shouted, but it came out as a wordless
scream.
Focus.
Breathe.
Breathe deep. Fill your lungs.
The water rose. It crept up past her waist. She
banged on the roof. ‘Please. Qing. Please.’
But the laughter grew louder. Gloating.
Gleeful.
She’d got it all wrong. They were going to drown
her. The noise of her blood in her ears was deafening. Why drown
her? Why? It didn’t make sense.
As a lesson to Chang An Lo.
My love. My love.
The surface of the water rose to her chest, her
neck, and she was ice cold. Her body felt paralysed. She forced it
to move, squatted on her haunches, pushing her face up against the
metal and kept dragging air deeper and deeper into her lungs.
Abruptly rage ripped right through all her focusing and her
breathing, and she hammered uncontrollably on the metal roof.
‘You let me out of here, you bloody murdering
gutter scum, you filthy bastard son of the devil. I don’t want to
die, I don’t, I . . .’
The water reached her mouth. She dragged in a last
gulp of air. Held her breath. Closed her eyes. Water packed inside
her nose, solid as snow. Spasms began in her calves and travelled
up her body. In her mind she found Chang An Lo’s smile waiting for
her and she kissed his warm lips.
Box filled to the brim.
Chang crouched in the garden. Close to the shed.
Somehow it brought her nearer. Dawn was not yet anything more than
a slight bleed in the sky behind him, but already a thrush was
chattering its alarm call from high in a bare willow tree. A
fanqui cat, a colourless shadow in the darkness, strolled
round the edges of the frosted lawn staking out its territory, its
thick fur ruffled by the wind from the northern hills.
The shed.
Chang had been inside, seen the blood, put a hand
in the empty hutch. He promised Chu Jung, god of fire and
vengeance, a lifetime of prayers and gifts in exchange for it being
rabbit’s blood. Not Lydia’s.
Not Lydia’s.
He had worked all night, seeking out those with
eyes that see. Twice he’d used the knife because twice he’d been
seized by hands that took Po Chu’s silver. Fever had made his
reactions slow but not that slow. The spiralling strike of his heel
smashing a kidney, a tiger paw punch to the throat, a knife in the
ribs to make sure. But before either of them went to join the
spirits of their ancestors, Chang asked questions. Where was Po Chu
now? His headquarters? His hideouts?
One gave answers and Chang followed the trail, but
it led him into a black alley where only death lingered. Po Chu was
being careful. It seemed he moved around, never long in one place,
flitting at night, as alert as a bat to any threat. Chang couldn’t
get close.
‘Po Chu, I swear by the gods that I will hound you
down and make you eat your own blood-soaked entrails if you harm
one hair of my fox girl.’
He howled it. In the darkened streets of the old
town where guarded eyes watched from hidden doorways but few dared
show a face. There was the stench of blood on him and on his blade,
and they could smell it.
Chang waited for dawn to arrive. His own blood felt
like lead in his veins because he knew he had become a death
bringer. It followed him, padded silently at his heels, its foul
breath cold on his neck, first to Tan Wah and now to Lydia. He knew
she was going to die. Even if Po Chu wanted to recapture him and
was using her as bait, still that devil son of Feng Tu Hong would
delight in killing her. He would slit her throat when he was
finished, to punish Chang for the loss of face. If for one second
he believed that Po Chu would release her in exchange for himself,
he would be there on his knees, his knife tossed to the ground. But
no. Po Chu would kill them both. After his amusements with
them.
Chang seized a handful of brittle icy grass from
the lawn and pulled it out, stuffed it into his mouth to still the
scream of pain that gripped his chest. To love someone. It sliced
open your heart. It made it soft and pulsating when the crows came
to tear it apart with their savage beaks. He dropped his face into
his hands. The bandages had been discarded. Love made you
vulnerable as a kitten asleep on its back, its tender belly exposed
to the world. That’s how he felt. That weak. How could he fight
when all he wanted to do was to protect her? Not China. Just
her.
He bit on the raw place on his hand where his
finger had once been and felt the pain of it dig into his mind, but
still he could-n’t shake free from the hook that held him. He
reminded himself of Mao Tse-tung’s doctrine that the needs of the
Individual must be suppressed in support of the Whole. In his head
he knew it to be the only way forward, but right now his head was
as much use as a donkey in a gambling den.
His was a strong arm in the Communist fight and a
strong mind.
She was one girl. A fanqui girl.
But there was one last way he might find her. Save
her. Though he would certainly die. Would that be too selfish? To
give his life for the girl he loved, instead of the country he
loved.
Lydia, tell them what they want to hear. Don’t
bare your teeth at them.
He spat out the grass. Rose to his feet and loped
into the grey light of morning.