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Chapter 49 2/2
Later in the year, he moved to a unit located on Whitehorse Road, just a few blocks away from the one on Bank Street. It had six people in a two-bedroom unit, four boys in one room, two girls in the other. Needless to say, the rooms were much cleaner and better maintained. The weekly rent was $55, five dollars more than his previous rent. Furthermore, each boy agreed to pay five dollar extra to the two girls who would assume the role of housekeeping, and also of cooking on some occasions.
The six members of the new society were joyful, less stressed and worried, for unlike the new starters who had to struggle through the first phase of putting down roots, all of them had established a life with relatively sufficient income earned one way or another. Almost every Sunday, which was the only day Bing had the chance to have supper at home, was a time of bachelor-style gathering. The two girls would collect the money from their male roommates, and drag at least one of them to go shopping and return home with chicken feet or wings, or beef or lamb at a special price.
Beer was expensive, but it didn’t prevent them from indulging themselves with it once a week. And in respect of the cost share for the beer, Bing had a slight advantage, for he was often rewarded with beer after helping his roommates with their essay assignments.
‘Cheers, Wang Teacher,’ toasted David, from Hangzhou, on a Sunday evening, when Michael was on a night shift and only five of them were around the dinner table. ‘Thank you for your help.’
‘My pleasure,’ Bing said, gleefully, ‘thank you for your VB.’
There were a pack of six bottles of VB. David bought four, two of which were supposed to be his token of thanks to Bing; Joe, who studied in Monash University, bought the other two. The two girls said they didn’t like drinking, but Bing suspected they just wanted to be frugal. When every dollar had to be earned with the wear and tear of one’s own hands, with the soreness so sensational in bones and muscles, the notion of expense was curiously changed and money was given a new judgement of value. The food, the beer, and the chicken feet and wings, everything that needed to be purchased seemed to weigh heavier, becoming more valuable and more measurable in one’s economic eyes. Most Chinese knew a poem by Lishen, a Tang Dynasty poet, which bespoke the hardship of peasants in growing rice.
‘Hoeing in the height of sun,
Sweat drops into the soil;
Who says the grains on the plate,
Is not each the toil.’
So, with each sip he was having at dinner, he felt the hardship of earning it. Indeed, in the moments of his excitement affected by the beer, he imagined the bending of David’s back, moving the cartons up and down the racks in a supermarket. Suddenly, a feeling of shame intruded into his mind: how could he enjoy so carelessly and guiltlessly this liquid, a product of David’s labour? A little bit of help he gave them, and ungenerously expected compensation! Ah, since when, and how was he reduced to such meanness?
Impulsively he fished out a fifty dollar note from his wallet, and said to Joe, expansively, ‘Joe, I am very happy today, and want to drink a bit more, can you run down the street and buy two packs of VB for us?’
‘What? Two packs, 12 bottles?’ Joe was wide-eyed, so was David’s. The mouths of the girls were also gaping for explanation.
‘Well, such small bottles,’ his hand was caressing the surface of the short, fat and dark bottle, his eyes frowning, casting a scornful glance at the label, ‘and today I want all of us, including Jessica and Sue, to drink.’
A guffaw broke out; his graciousness and his assuring tone as a teacher had aroused their enthusiasm.
‘Okay, I’ll go.’ Joe rose and turned on his heels and dashed out.
But in a while, Bing through of something. ‘Joe, wait, wait,’ Bing went to the window and called, ‘Joe…’
Joe, who had just slipped out of the building, looked up, ‘What?’
‘Can you also get two bags of peanuts?’
‘All right.’
‘Thanks.’
Joe was in his early twenties, from Beijing, with a thin and short and bony physique as lithe as a cat. In less than fifteen minutes he was back, his hands full, as cheerful as if he had just won a handsome quantity from a poker machine. Bing had heard of the Melbourne Crown Casino, where quite a number of Chinese students were said to have gambled their little resources into wretchedness, becoming no better than a beggar on the street. Some day he would definitely pay a visit to the Crown Casino, but only acting like a discreet tourist, never playing his hard-earned dollars through the ‘Tiger Machine’.
‘Joe, the peanuts are raw,’ said David, ‘you should have bought the cooked ones.’
‘Really? Sorry, I thought they are ready to eat.’
‘Easy, let’s fry them in the wok.’ Jessica got up, intending to cook it at once.
‘Wait, Jessica,’ Bing said. ‘Do you know you can also fry the peanuts in a microwave?’
‘Microwave? No, never heard of it.’
‘It is nearly the same, but quicker,’ Bing twisted the cap of a bottle in his hand and sipped and explained, ‘put the peanuts onto a platter, mix them well with oil and salt, and within three minutes of cooking, it will be done.’
However, seeing the uncertainty in her eyes, Bing rose from the chair, and, not forgetting to bring his beer with him, went together with Jessica into the kitchen. There, after putting down his VB on the bench, he took out a platter from the overhead cabinet, and poured the peanuts to fill half full the platter. Then, he sprinkled oil and salt on the top and used a pair of chopsticks to mix the contents until each peanut a thin sheen. This done to his satisfaction, he opened the door of the microwave, and placed the plate into the chamber.
He set three minutes, pressed the start button; the machine began its job.
He clasped the VB, and drank. Now and again he would peer at the glass door, listen contentedly to the hiss and crackle of the peanuts.
‘Wang Teacher,’ Jessica, who had been closely studying his cooking skill, found a chance to talk, ‘Where did you learn to fry peanuts this way?’
‘In Jiaoda, when I was in the mood for drinking,’ his voice had a good measure of pride. ‘I don’t like the cold, cooked peanuts purchased from the shop. I prefer the hot ones, just out of the wok. One day an idea came to me that using the microwave might be handy and less time consuming, without the trouble of using a wok,’ he paused to sip the beer. ‘So, I did an experiment like a scientist, working out the amount of oil and salt, as well as the length of cooking time for the best result.’
Just then a loud crackling in the microwave attracted his attention. Like a girl doing window-shopping, he turned to look through the microwave door at the slowly moving plate, his mind digesting the hot flavour of the sizzling nuts.
When he turned back to resume his conversation with Jessica, he caught her thoughtful eyes gazing at him, with a meaning he was inclined to interpret as admiration. Curiously he held her gaze a second longer than the eye contact average between friends. To his amazement, he thought he detected her blush.
The awareness of the brief exchange made her quickly move her eyes from his. And, just in time, the microwave was beeping, perhaps giving them both an excuse to dismiss whatever had just occurred between them.
He opened the door, and for a moment of distraction, forgot the burning temperature of the plate and touched it with his bare hand. He flinched, flinging his fingers with a low cry. Jessica, expressing more than the legitimate share of care to an ordinary roommate, stepped over, extending her hand to hold his with audible concern, ‘Are you burned? Are you okay?’
‘It is all right,’ he withdrew his hand from her, gingerly, not to show the haste of doing so. ‘No big deal, see, no colour or bruise; the contact was less than a second.’
Jessica then used a rag to handle the plate and, followed by Bing, went out of the kitchen to continue their little banquet. As soon as she put down the plate onto the table, David’s impatient fingers set pecking at the peanuts. Immediately Bing warned him, ‘Hang on, David, it is extremely hot. Let it cool for at least a minute.’
‘Hehe, it looks good, smells excellent,’ David’s eagerness was apparent in his eyes.
Bing sat down, and opened two more bottles, passed one to Jessica, another to Sue, ‘Hehe, today, don’t say the negative.’ In a while, five bottles, as one of the happiest Chinese formalities, collided together into a single clank, loud enough to cheer up all the spirits and even the lingering ghosts if any in the room. It was such a feast of beer in the city of Melbourne. Jessica had finished two; Sue, a very slow drinker had one, and three men equally snatched up all the rest. In absolute terms, the total amount of liquid in five small bottles that each male member had taken was only equivalent to that of three bigger ones in China. But just the same, they enjoyed wonderfully their little intoxication. And Jessica, as if still affected by the minor incident in the kitchen, was coloured even more, and seemed to exercise some vague, covert but pointed expression towards him, either in her words or by wordless eye contact. Bing didn’t believe he had in any way encouraged her in her directed, half-flirting efforts, excepting that he would, politely and plainly, respond to her glance by his glance, to her toast by his toast. But the sober state didn’t last long before he began to wonder if he had already slid into a seductive mood and lost his control over his libido’s exertion, which had been quite rare since he landed in the country.
Jessica, no more than twenty-five, was from Suzhou, where more beautiful women were said to be possibly bred than other parts of China. But she might be an exception; she was not up to the definition of beauty in his mind; he didn’t even think she was better looking than the average; her brows and lips were both too thick. However Jessica had a good skin, unblemished, smooth, youthful, fresh and kissable, especially when she had a colour like that, although she hadn’t seemed to have attracted him at all until this very evening.
Yes, at this moment, she showed her best charm; her eyes seemed to be opening wider, with a spark of light twinkling more frequently. And the lock of her hair on her forehead that she had fondled all the evening was lustrous and slender. People said a woman falling in love was always beautiful. Was it possible Jessica was showing love for him?
‘Well, no…’ the thought of love seemed to scare him a trifle, and he had to absorb a larger amount of beer to guise his romantic musing, which in spite of himself didn’t stop, ‘but she is a girl, face and skin kissable, and she has a pair of breasts, not big, nor small, and she has the… well…’
His fancy had peaked at this very point, yet his physicality had just begun to stir, to stretch harshly in his vault. ‘Oh, such a thing,’ he cursed fervently his stray conscience, wishing to subdue its creepy activity.
Then his fancy, having overcome the first peak, climbed again to the next. He grasped a handful of peanuts, and pondered them for a second in his hands, and then two at a time throwing them into his mouth, that had to be escorted by a mouthful of drink. Neither he looked at the others around the table, nor did he attend to their words.
At its extremity, he moved his legs to relax a man’s desire. At this point of time he looked at Jessica again, checking a moment her features, her eyes, her nose, and her lips, then he dissuaded himself. ‘No, no, this is impossible, I can’t make love with her. She is not the type...’
He then decided to discipline both his soul and body, and thanking paradise, he had succeeded in cooling it substantially, after many mouthfuls of the chill and bitter VB. And towards the end of the banquet, he thought he was sober, callously receiving more of her coquettish exhibition for him.
On Saturday morning of the following week, by chance Bing and Jessica were alone in the unit. Jessica was displaying her charm again, talked to him, asked him in an intimate way about the universal troubles of learning English, and left her door ajar after throwing a meaningful look in his direction. What could he do? There was indeed an urge to jump and lay his body on top of her. But, no, this was ridiculous, this was utterly against his conscientious capital; this was a sort of beast, a sort of condemned infidelity, an absolutely ghastly conduct which would be definitely jeered at by his wife, who had a much better face, much better fingers, long, slender and fantastic. And also - now somehow Vivian was stealing into his mind - how would she laugh at him? What a contempt would her speaking and enchanting eyes throw at him? Ah, you are such a man!
-- End of Chapter 49 --
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