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Chapter 63 2/2
But she was not following him. In a pair of high-heeled sandals, she was walking by his side. He turned to her, giving her a smile that must be very humorous and meaningful, and she caught his smile with her smile, which must be also very humorous and meaningful.
‘You are still very beautiful,’ he said, telling a truth. ‘More so than before.’
‘Is it a surprise to you?’ He felt her hands brushing against his. ‘Or did you expect me to be old and ugly?’
‘Hehe, you have sharp words, like a teacher.’ Seeing her easy and affable smile, his hand ventured to seek her fingers.
‘I am a teacher, not just like one,’ she said, submitting her hand to his. ‘I have to talk every day.’
‘Well, I used to be a teacher as well,’ he said, upgrading his mood from good to better. ‘But not as sharp as you.’
They walked further in the direction of Darling Harbour. Then she asked, ‘Where to go?’
‘Go to a hotel, make love,’ he said.
Her hand flinched, as if scorched, away from him. ‘What did you say? ’ she glared at him, her eyes huge, mightier than what was in his memory.
If only he dared to kiss her now!
Abashed, and disconcerted, but not without a measure of amusement, he said, ‘Vivian, do you have to be so scared?’
Her rigid face began to thaw, slowly. ‘You did scare me. How could you say that?’
‘Sorry.’ His apology was honest. ‘I didn’t intend to say that.’
‘Promise, you won’t say that again,’ she said seriously, but resumed her step.
‘I promise.’ He was relieved.
From then on, they no longer touched each other. His plan was go to a bar or a restaurant around the Opera House. So a taxi would be more convenient.
‘How did you come here?’ she asked.
‘By car, my car is parked at Darling Harbour,’
‘Then why not just drive your car to the Opera House?’
‘Too much trouble, also more expensive parking over there than taking a taxi,’ he said. ‘Unless you are interested in my car, a luxurious car.’
‘Luxurious?’ she said, ‘then I am interested.’
‘Yes, it is a Toyota Camry, shining like a moon, very young, only six years old.’
She was chuckling. ‘You are a different person.’
What she said seemed to have been said to him many years ago. ‘Different?’
‘Yes, you used to be a very shy, and reserved.’
‘I reckon you have forgotten the chief part of me.’
‘Have I?’
‘Yes, do you still remember,’ he hesitated, ‘remember, the Great Wall? On the train?’
‘Of course.’
‘On the Great Wall, you said I was different, in this way.’
‘Did I?’ she said, ‘so long ago.’
‘Yes.’
Now a taxi pulled to a stop at the curb near where they stood. A man trotted towards it, but seeing them also approaching it, he gave them the way. Bing said, heartily, ‘Thank you, mate!’
The taxi moved slowly, like a snail. People were crowding both sides of the street. Some walked very fast, as if they were already intoxicated by some substance, but wanted more. The dusk, with the lights spilling out of the skyscrapers’ windows, was alluring, so that people’s souls began to creep, out of the disguise of their skin, at the effect of colours, or alcohol, or drugs.
On the back seat, between Vivian and him, there was a gap, a distance that is reserved for friendship. He turned to look at her. The side of her breast, contained by a tight undershirt and a loose muslin, looked fuller than its younger shape. She was far better than his prediction. How could she maintain her elegance and pride, over the years? The days and nights seemed to have only added an extra womanhood into her blossom. Her waist had expressed not much fat, even in her now folding position.
They didn’t talk much, for there was no privacy in the taxi. The taxi driver had a Chinese face, whose eyes and ears were supposed to be as smart and watchful as theirs.
They got out of the taxi, at the last roundabout in Macquarie Street. He paid the fare of $15; the driver took the cash, expressionless, as if he had not earned enough.
Then all at once Vivian appeared to be very happy. She tossed her mane twice, and then combed it with her fingers. Bing came to her. ‘Your hair is still long and black,’ he said.
‘Long and black?’ She returned, ‘whose hair is not long and black?’
‘Okay, so your hair is tumbling like a waterfall, and,’ he was thinking in Chinese, but said in English, or vice versa, ‘and velvety like…’ he couldn’t find the word for the simile.
‘What?’ Her eyes were as keen as her nose. ‘Lost words?’
‘Well, you are an English teacher; you find the word for me.’
‘Why? You started it, so end it well.’
‘But the fact is,’ he scratched his head, ‘I can’t find anything as velvety as your hair.’
Her eyes, looking at him, were tinged with the petals of Opera House. She was satisfied by his answer, for she held his hand.
He embraced her to kiss her cheek, and whispered, ‘I thought you didn’t want me.’
‘Who said I want you?’ she replied in the negative, but her body leaning against him spoke the opposite.
The air was fresh; the moon was only half, but emitting a light that in its power softened the world. No longer were the lamps and poles man-made; in the setting, they were as natural as the heaving water.
‘See that red light glowing in the forehead of the Harbour Bridge?’ he said.
She raised her head, ‘Yes, what is it?’
‘It is a light.’
‘I know it is a light, but why is it glowing like that?
‘I don’t know. Every time I came here at night, it is just glowing like that.’
‘Do you often come here at night?’
‘No, not often.’
‘With whom?’
‘Myself.’
‘I don’t believe you.’
‘I came here after I had quarrelled with her.’
‘With your wife?’
‘Yes.’
‘Do you often quarrel with her?’
‘Of course not, otherwise I would have come here more often.’
‘Why did you quarrel with her?’
‘Well, domestic friction, universal, nothing major.’
They came to the elevator and down to the porch, and were at once welcomed by the smell of alcohol. Drinkers were noisy, most standing, claiming the spaces between the stools and the tables laid on the cascading pavement, outwards to the stone seats that as a bank curved along and over the sea.
Bing led the way into a bar in the middle of the veranda. At the counter the customers queued, or knotted, or huddled, to be served by tireless bartenders with quick hands.
‘What would you like to drink?’ he asked her, who was behind him.
‘Whisky.’
‘Whisky?’
‘Yes, beer fills my stomach,’ she said.
‘Okay, I will also drink whisky.’
The bartender asked him what mix he preferred. He didn’t know, so he asked Vivian, who came forward and answered the bartender herself, ‘Just with Coke, please.’
The glass-walled room was furnished with red couches, red ottomans, and low tables, on which a small candle in a glass cup was burning; its mini tongue licked, slightly, but the scent of romance was rich.
‘Maybe we can sit there? We can go outside later,’ he said, holding two glasses of whisky.
‘Okay.’
She took the seat, and put down her pouch on the table. On her wrist was a jade bracelet.
He raised the glass, ‘Cheers.’
She smiled, and lifted her glass for a contact, and sipped.
Bing had a mouthful, ‘Well, it tastes just like Coke.’
‘Careful, the alcohol in the glass is no less than in a bottle of beer,’ she warned. ‘You don’t often drink whisky, do you?’
‘Rarely, I can’t remember my last time,’ he said. ‘How about you? Do you often go to bars in Shanghai?’
‘Once every week or two, is that often?’
‘Yes, far oftener than me.’
Then he was attracted to her necklace. ‘Oh, the pendant looks beautiful, what is it?’
Caressing it with her fingers, she said, ‘You just noticed it?’
He caught her undertone. ‘Well, I have only two eyes, so many things in you are demanding their service.’
‘It is an opal, blue,’ she said, proudly. ‘It well matches my skirt, doesn’t it?’
He extended his hand over to feel it, or weigh it. ‘It has an eye shape, with the opal as the pupil.’
‘That is obvious.’
Then the watch on his wrist drew her attention. ‘What watch is it? It looks so old-fashioned.’
‘Mechanical, but it works well,’ he took his drink, as if brushing off the topic. ‘Very old, more than twenty years.’
‘You are kidding,’ she said, then pulled his hand, ‘let me have a look.’
It took her many seconds for her mind to break the surface of her memory. ‘Oh, my god, is this the one I gave to you?’
He grinned.
‘Are you wearing it all these years?’ she asked, her hand loving it, like a heart.
‘No,’ he finished the glass in one gulp. ‘Actually I’m wearing it for the first time.’
‘Only today?’ her astonishment was as wide as her eyes.
‘Yes, it has been saved till today,’ he said. ‘Amazing, isn’t it? It is still ticking.’
Her eyes blinked, in her effort to recall the past, or doubt the present. Then she gave it a kiss, ‘Thank you,’ she said, and drank.
He said, ‘Finish your drink, while I go and fetch another.’
In a minute he returned, when he sensed the changed air. Vivian sipped quietly, without even raising her eyes to him.
‘Vivian?’ he asked, with a concern searching her eyes.
Her eyes lifted from the glass, ‘Yes?’
Her eyes had a liquid twinkle as if she had just cried.
‘Are you okay?’ He reached his hand to cover hers.
‘Yes,’ she smiled a little, pitifully, like a girl suddenly grown mature, and remote. The intimacy he had enjoyed with her a while ago seemed to have gone. For the time, silence enfolded the air between them. Both of them minded only their own drinks, in which their separate lives swam. Then remembering something he said, ‘I’ll go and get something to eat, a sandwich maybe, do you need anything?’
‘No, I am fine.’ This time her smile became natural, more like the one in his memory.
Some time later, he bit his supper. ‘I should treat you to a good dinner in Sydney.’
‘Good dinner?’ she sounded interested, smiling with humour. ‘Australian lobster?’
‘Well, if you like it, after all, it is a sort of Australia’s speciality.’
‘Better not,’ she said. ‘Since I gave birth to my child, I have somehow become allergic to prawns and lobsters.’
‘Really?’ he said, ‘how could pregnancy have such impact?’
‘I don’t know,’ she replied, ‘I can’t even eat my favourite Shanghai big-crabs any more. It causes a rash on my skin.’
‘So,’ he shrugged an ostentatious shrug, imitating the gesture of westerners, ‘tell me how I am to treat you, as a classmate.’
‘Well, you are treating me now, and I appreciate it, dearly.’
‘Dearly?’
‘Yes, dearly,’ she raised her glass. ‘Cheers.’
And they drank more, up to their third glass. She was more relaxed, fondling her pendant, and her pearl-like eardrops. She wanted love. And he wanted to touch her face, and her breasts.
Then they went out. He sat down on the stone bench, which reminded him of the wet one in Lu Xun Park. ‘The stone is a little cold, are you okay?’ he asked.
‘I am not as vulnerable as you may think,’ she laughed, and gathered her skirt, and sat close to him, and looked around, and made a sigh, ‘Ah it is so nice.’
‘Yes,’ he sat back, stretching his legs forward, pressing his back hard on the stone. ‘It is always nice, even if when it is raining.’
‘Have you ever come here when it rains?’
‘I have come here according to my mood, not to the weather,’ he said. ‘The raindrops dance on the Opera House.’
‘But tonight is perfect,’ she was watching. ‘The pale light on the petals, and the moon, and streaks of clouds in the sky, and the dark bridge, with its glowing eye, and the swelling water.’
‘You have missed something,’ he said, grabbing his whisky glass.
‘Something?’ she wondered, then began again, like a little girl counting stars. ‘Then the majestic ship, the buildings, the neon lights, and, yes, the seagulls that fly like insects.’ She paused to sip her drink.
‘Finished?’
‘Well, I have done mine, now it is your turn.’
‘But you have done the most, just missed one or two, essentials.’
‘Essentials?’ she leant closer to him, so that he felt her warmth.
‘Yes.’
‘What?’ she said, ‘tell me, don’t play at guessing as you used to do.’
‘Used to do?’
‘Yes.’
‘So you remember me well, the past me.’
‘Come on, tell me what.’ She was a wild child, perhaps because of the whisky.
He kissed her on the lips, and said, ‘You have missed You and Me.’
Then they stuck to each other tasting their whisky-heated tongues. Her breasts swept against his chest, her necklace brushing his neck. Then as if she was tired and sleepy, or drunk, she rested her head on his lap.
Now his eyes were drinking the world. He had caught the moon.
Then a man came over, his face Asian but his accent Australian. ‘Excuse me,’ he said, intruding.
‘Yes?’ Bing wondered, calm but offended. Vivian was also disturbed, and sat up.
‘Is this lady okay?’
‘Of course.’
But the man was unsatisfied, for he talked directly to Vivian, ‘Madam, are you okay?’
‘Yes.’ She was puzzled.
‘All right then, that is what I want to know.’ The man left.
Bing was thinking the man must be like a guard in a Chinese park, disciplining lovers’ behaviour. But they had not done anything indecent. Then he got the idea, ‘Now I know.’
‘What?’ Vivian’s eyes were yearning.
‘The man must have suspected you had been drugged, and seduced by me,’ he answered, proud of his discovery. ‘That is why he had to confirm it by asking you directly.’
‘Haha, but you did have seduced me,’ she said. ‘Interesting, are the people here taking drugs?’
‘Well, some people may feel their lives too dull not to do that sort of thing, you know.’
Some time later, they strolled in the grounds of the Opera House, which was now a teethed mouth of a crocodile, or of a menacing shark. All beauty has an ugly side, he thought.
Along the sidewalk, they began their formal kiss. The size of her eyes, and the shape of her nose, remained, with a mellowed pride. But like her breasts, her hips were soft and bigger.
She said, ‘Bing, do you really still love me?’
‘Yes,’ he replied, without a thought. ‘Do you love me?’ he asked, as a follow-up.
She only questioned, ‘Why didn’t you contact me for twenty years?’
He couldn’t find an answer that was good enough, so he said, ‘Because I love you.’ Though he felt his love had already gone through summer, its green stripped, and left only with a longing for her flesh, or her soul, that mirrored his. So he probed, ‘Can we go to your hotel?’
‘No,’ she said, ‘I have a female colleague with me.’
‘Then can we go to the bench?’
‘Which bench?’
‘Haven’t you seen a few benches over there?’
‘No, people are there wandering about,’ she declined, not because of her lack of desire.
So their energy retreating to nowhere, they moved on.
A dock was above the water, rhythmically bobbing against the banks, and the stumps. The lamplight glistened with ghosts, screeching. There was another bench, isolated, that seemed to belong to them, where the wooden wharf shook, and chafed their love, and its decades of loneliness.
--End of Chapter 63--- |
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