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洋八路 发表于 2014-3-25 12:55
Chapter 6
Chapter 7 1/5
Saturday evening marked the passing of a full week since Serena confided her lack of feeling for him. But he still thought of her. During the week, whenever he felt restless and hopelessly alone, he would review the SMS and QQ messages, ruminating over their meetings and chatting like a cow chewing the cud. Sensibly, he knew she was a vain, love-game player, and she had demonstrated few qualities of a ‘good’ girl or a ‘nice’ wife. Of course, her pose was a charm, but her eyes were rather small, dry, and lacklustre. Compared to his exes, either his wife or lovers, with whom he had been deeply involved if not loved for the better part of his life, Serena was the least attractive in both respects of virtues and physicality.
However, he was not a sensible man, the simple fact that he had not yet taken her, who after all, was a new, different person, a girl born after 1980, was enough to stir and disquiet his libido, to provoke his desperation to claw back part of his lost youth. Moreover, in comparison to Linda, who had totally ignored his existence, she had at least communicated quite a bit with him, sharing some fair moments in a social context.
However, he didn’t dare to contact her. He remembered telling her that he wouldn’t bother her any more except for seasonal greetings. Nonetheless, as he thought this matter over, he came to realize that, though she did express her lack of attraction towards him, she had not told him not to contact her; rather, it was himself who had made such a decision out of his hurt pride.
Therefore, as he pondered it over and again in his loneliness, he speculated that the possibility of keeping a friendly basis of contact was positive, so long as he did not do anything as frequently and stupidly as before. The best guess was that he could contact her after an interval of at least two weeks, which would agree well with his self-respect, and at the same time avoid the risk of losing her altogether.
But why not once a week? Even one week would be painfully long to him. What would be the harm of contacting her right now, instead of stretching the time for another seven days? What if she was unoccupied and rather lonely at this moment, and even expecting something from him?
Fancying and reckoning, he felt his blood beating faster in his veins. Once the impulse was unleashed, he found his resistance impossible.
He opened QQ, and double-clicked Serena’s Bow-Tie icon.
He typed, ‘There?’ and after a deciding moment of suspension in the air, dropped his finger on ‘ENTER’ key. The time was 5:05pm.
No response. A feeling of dejection washed him down.
Then ten minutes later, her reply of ‘En’ was lively on the little dialogue window, lightening him, gratifying the base of his framework.
‘Did you have to work this morning?’ he asked, remembering the day being Saturday.
‘No, rest at home.’
‘Whole day?’
‘Sleep, sleep…’
‘You couldn’t sleep this long, could you?’
But she didn’t reply to this specific question, instead she said, ‘You didn’t go out?’
‘Just came back from a little shopping.’ He lied to her, and hastened to change to a topic he thought would maintain the communication, ‘I went to see the “doctor” yesterday, are you interested in hearing about it?’
‘I am actually about to go out for shopping, but yes, I want to know.’
‘Then wait until you come back.’ He felt slightly disappointed in her passionless response.
‘Well, you can tell me first.’
‘She is a very interesting person.’ He grabbed the chance.
‘Doctors are always interesting.’
‘She has a strong egoism, utterly self-centred.’
‘Even more than yourself?’
In his hasty story-telling, he failed to grasp what her message was really about, and even mistook ‘yourself’ as ‘myself’, which caused his pointless reply, ‘No, you are not self-centred, you have a personality,’ then, he set to resume his narrative, ‘all evening she talked about her troubles at her workplace, afraid of losing her job. And in her highly absorbed mind, I was as if nonexistent.’
‘Well, it was the first time, she might not know what to say.’
‘Maybe, but she was so talkative.’
‘But you were also very talkative, weren’t you?’
This time, he did not miss the derisive edge in her tone, and as he habitually scrolled up a bit to review their former messages, he came to his realization of the explicit mockery of ‘Even more than yourself?’
Ah, what the hell! She had tried to say he was no less egoistic and self-centred than Linda. How stupid that he had not detected her contemptuous hint in the first place. What kind of woman was she? Why did she have to ridicule him in such an open, vicious way?
Momentarily he was seized with indignation. ‘Me? Talkative?’ he sent, shedding his temper by striking hard on the keyboard.
‘So you forgot how much you had talked on the first time we met?’
‘… was I so stupid in your eyes?’
‘You really need to see more people, so as to know what a silly person really likes,’ she sent, now with more cutting sarcasm in her message. He read it twice, feeling the bitterness she had mercilessly inflicted upon him. Why didn’t she directly tell him he was just silly, a fool, an imbecile, as much as Linda? Ah, what a cunning woman!
Rather embarrassed, he stood up from his seat, paced two turns in his little den, with his heart in near fury. Then he eased a bit and got himself under control, and without resorting to any retaliating words, he sent, ‘Hehe, no more, it was just waste of time.’
‘Is there no goodness in the girl?’ her shameless interest hung on.
‘Don’t know, maybe.’
‘You won’t obtain an objective viewpoint from only one meeting,’ she sent. ‘Honestly, I think a doctor girl is more suitable to you.’
Ah, she was such an idiot!
‘How?’ in spite of himself, he protested weakly. ‘You have such a misunderstanding about me.’
In China, a girl with a doctor’s degree was often considered as having a prim, inflexible personality, high IQ but low EQ. So her last message was deciphered as her belief that he belonged to the odd stereotype of ‘doctor.’
‘Yes, I really don’t understand you!’ She put her words emphatically, yet in no less a caustic tone.
‘I think you are the kind of person who likes jumping to conclusions.’ He fought back. ‘You are very, very clever.’ His real words in his brain were ‘mean’, ‘wicked’, ‘false’, ‘malicious’, ‘poisonous’, ‘snake’...
‘Well, one needs to make a quick judgment at dating, given the limited time,’ she went on.
‘You can’t get to know a person properly from a small number of meetings,’ he returned. ‘And under pressure, one’s true nature can be easily distorted.’
‘At this age, if distorted so easily under a bit of pressure, then it is just one of his shortcomings.’ She was doubtlessly alluding to his poor performance in her presence, especially his driving skills.
‘Nobody can be completely confident about oneself. The past experience may often lead to a presumptuous bias,’ he sent, but his fighting energy seemed dwindling.
‘I think, after a couple of meetings, one can find out something that you absolutely don’t want in a person.’
‘Well, people may have to spend an entire life to get to that point,’ he sent, obstinate in the waning heat of his debating. ‘Are you so sure and clear of your wants and needs? Dating is not just a primitive survival competition.’
‘We are not doing a choice quiz where you can compare and pick the best, instead, it is a blank field requiring a desperate fitting.’
‘Fitting?’
‘Yes, fill the loneliness and emptiness of my life.’ Upon this message, he felt his dejection was blended with a measure of pity for her. But he replied, ‘The point is that your fitting ought to be ideal to which you have a certain emotional attachment, not like a dumb piece of furniture, or a nice and cool but heartless mobile phone.’
‘Yes, I know it is very hard,’ she replied. ‘Frankly speaking, if comparing apples – the pros and cons in physical terms, you are a very good candidate for a husband,’ she was obviously referring to his website profile, ‘even if you are a very, very different person.’
‘Yes, I am sillier and more stupid than others,’ he spoke out the unsaid words for her.
‘I just think you are not a practical person, very strange,’ she sent. Then as if bored with the topic at last, she added abruptly, ‘Well, I need to go out for dinner, chat another time.’
‘All right.’
‘I’m bored, I need to go out with some female friends,’ she was lingering.
‘I may also go to the city tonight,’ he sincerely wished to end the sour conversation with her. ‘Bye.’
The time displayed in QQ was exactly 5:42pm.
Bing didn’t pay a trip to the city as he mentioned to her. Instead, he stayed in his home, having a number of drinks with David, his landlord.
David knew only a little Mandarin, so their talk was chiefly done in English, with bits and tones assisted by jumbled Chinese or Cantonese. He was a couple of years Bing’s junior, a sales manager in a company located in Bella Vista. He had two boys, one eleven years old, the other nine. His wife Jane worked in a primary school, as an office administrator. On the surface at least, it must be a happy family.
David was an amiable and smiling man. Indeed, he appeared to be so happy that Bing sometimes suspected its credibility. As more a pessimist than otherwise, Bing had never denied the existence of occasional happiness in life, but he had never believed in its stability, and durability. In his own life, poor and disorderly though it may be at present, he had enjoyed a great deal of such happiness in the past, which he believed was more intensive, more qualitative and quantitative than what David had seemed to show off from time to time.
Short, less than 165cm, and with a face round and fleshy, David should look considerably younger than his thirty-seven years of age, if one didn’t try to notice a little bald patch in the middle of his head. But, regrettably, David made it ever more noticeable by his habitual brushing the surrounding hair to cover it, attracting one’s attention more to it as well as the thinning hair that seemed rather helpless in fulfilling such a coverage, than his plump face. And oftentimes, especially in the mornings, his hair was shining, nicely combed, as seen to be necessary in his career; but that was only before he managed to ruffle or comb them by his own fingers.
‘So how is everything, good?’ David smiled, with a little humour in his tone, which was his usual way of starting a conversation.
‘Just so and so, hehe..’ Bing answered lightly, after taking a mouthful of beer from a bottle of a lager he was not particularly fond of. His favourite, more because of habit than the taste, was VB, which was the first beer he had had in Australia, when he landed in Melbourne many years ago.
‘How is your daughter? She is nine, isn’t she?’ David broached a topic, which was only too natural.
‘Yes, she’ll be ten next month. She’s fine. I took her to movie last Sunday,’ Bing replied. His daughter Adina was born on 6 Nov 2002.
Adina had visited the place only once. She had an active and outgoing personality, spent the whole day with David’s two boys, chasing and screaming and babbling within the house and without. And David’s wife, Jane, seemed particularly adoring her, pampering her all around, calling her name all the while.
‘Bring her over to play, when you get a chance,’ David said, as he had said many times. ‘She is such a lovable girl.’
‘Hehe. I will, next time,’ Bing smiled, knowing the fact his ex-wife didn’t favour the idea in the least, who had demanded him, on his visiting day in the week, to take Adina to the beach, or the cinema, or the museum. Why was she unwilling for her daughter to stay in David’s house and play with his two boys he didn’t exactly know. But since the first time Adina told her about playing with the boys, she had called him to specifically express her unexplained opposition.
‘So still good being single?’ David grinned, patronizingly, brushing his hair.
‘So far so good, I’ve seen a number of girls, but no-one in particular.’
‘Have you ever considered re-marrying your ex-wife?’ he asked a question he had asked several times.
‘Some of my other friends said so also, but I don’t think it possible.’
‘Well, I have a colleague, an Aussie, who has just re-married his ex-wife, after four years of divorce.’
‘Really? Do they have kids?’
‘Yes. They have two.’
‘That is interesting.’
‘I don’t know much about their story. But it seemed to me it is not entirely impossible to live together again.’
‘Maybe, but unlikely in my case,’ Bing said, reluctant to reveal the fact that even he had wanted to, his wife would snub the idea at its budding. David only knew he was divorced three years ago, but did not know why.
Then Jane was coming out of her room. She nodded to Bing with a smiling ‘Nihao’ in more Cantonese than Mandarin, and went straight into the computer room, where the two kids were quietly playing the games.
‘Andrew, and Daniel, time is up. You have already been in here for more than two hours.’ Bing heard her speaking to the kids.
‘Just a minute…’ a voice protested, must be Andrew, the elder son.
‘One minute? Your one minute is infinite. Stop now,’ Jane increased her voice to a near shout.
‘Okay, okay, but I have to save it first,’ Andrew was grumbling and grudging.
At this time, Daniel, who didn’t say much, came out of the room. His face was drawn, weary, sullen, and unhappy.
‘Hehe, kids, games, an impossible thing.’ David sighed, shaking his heavy head. ‘Does your daughter play games?’
‘Only a little bit. She doesn’t show much interest in computer games. She sometimes plays a little with the mobile, but seldom with the computers.’
‘You are lucky. Boys are invariably addicted to games. Almost every parent I know is struggling with it, and I often wonder why society doesn’t regulate the game industry as it has done with the drugs or alcohol.’
‘Are you serious?’
‘Of course, you may not know how serious it is. Once they get stuck into it, there is no means in the world of getting them out of it. So frustrating and hopeless. So bad to their health and eyes. Frankly, I wish some game designers would be jailed for designing such drug-like stuff to ruin the vulnerable kids,’ David aired his view vehemently. ‘There are so many things for kids to do. Andrew is about to do the Selective in just four months’ time, and Daniel has to also prepare for his Opportunity Class.’
‘My daughter did the OC three months ago.’
‘Oh, yes, how did she do?’
‘Well, she was not very good at study. Just give her a chance to try. But I don’t have much expectation.’
In the state of NSW, the selective schools were the type of high schools, year 7 to year 12, which would enrol the students who had passed the designed test after primary school. And the OC was for year 5, providing a special class for presumably talented pupils. However, since both selections were largely based on the test scores, many parents, predominately of Chinese and Indian background, sent their kids to tuition after school, creating a competitive environment that overly emphasised the academic results, although not as extreme as the Chinese educational system. The tuition was very expensive, but the parents seemed to have no other choice if they wanted to better the future of their kids. And moreover, apart from the academic subjects such as English, Maths and Science, parents were also very keen for other areas, such as music, dancing, etc. His daughter Adina went to piano lessons, dancing, and drawing class, in addition to her three hours Saturday academic class. The monthly cost could amount to nearly $500 for one child, which was not a light drag on a household budget, especially for those with only one salary earner, and more so if one had a sizable mortgage to service.
With his wife also working, David shouldn’t feel much of the pressure in financial terms. Their concern seemed to be more about the kids’ obsession with games, and their delay in finishing their homework. Scolding, reproaching, threatening, defying and protesting were the chief sounds coming from the comfortable-looking house, and the issue was invariably about games and homework. David, who usually had a gentle and pacific temperament, would oftentimes lose his temper, joining his wife, becoming as fierce and frustrated in their parenting exercise and exertion.
Bing, after giving himself another mouthful of lager, decided to ingratiate himself with David, ‘You are a happy man, having two boys.’
Though the proudness and satisfaction in his eyes were perceptible, David commented, ‘But honestly, a daughter seems better in treating the parents. Don’t you think?’
‘Yes, it may be true, and at least true in my situation. I have a sister, in Mianyang, Sichuan, who looks after my mother. But as a boy, I am here, far away, selfish, can’t even look after myself. Over the years, my mother has been worrying more about me than me her,’ Bing said regretfully and wistfully, for a moment, the faces of his mother and her sister, flashed before his eyes. ‘I can’t imagine how I could have handled it, without my sister.’
‘How is your dad?’ David asked.
‘He passed away,’ Bing replied. ‘Five years ago.’
‘Oh… sad,’ David wavered. ‘I didn’t know that.’
Bing drank his beer. Jane came out, followed by Andrew, whose face was seething with cold exasperation. Jane was a thin, kind and obliging woman, a good, dutiful and dedicated wife and mother. As much as David, her smiles were never exhausted in public. It was only when disciplining her boys, her voice and manner and expression were rendered rough and coarse and almost hysterical.
‘Any plan to go back China soon?’ David invented a new topic.
Bing took another sip, smiled, ‘Not yet on the agenda.’
‘You? Back to Hongkong?’
‘No, we don’t plan on taking any trips until the kids have taken their Selective and OC tests, perhaps the year after the next.’
‘I understand.’
Bing drained the last of the beer, and feeling the topic drying out between the two, he rose and said, ‘Thank you for the beer, time for bed.’
‘With pleasure, Bo Ke Qi,’ David said in half Mandarin, remained seated, and continued his drink.
Bing went back his own room, and out of habit checked QQ, unexpectedly receiving a number of Serena’s messages,
‘Are you now in the city?’ and, ‘There seemed some events going on in city,’ and, ‘But it should have already finished.’ The time stamp was 8:44pm, two hours ago.
Bing was buoyant with delight, especially now with the intoxication caused by the beer. He replied, ‘I am in a German country bar, in the Rocks, some short distance away from the Opera House.’ He was telling a story that had happened in the past. ‘Have you tried the famous Pig Knuckle?’
No reply, obviously she was not online.
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