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Chapter 38 2/2
One Saturday morning, he decided to climb a hill. He had often been intrigued by it when he took his evening walk in the Mirror Late Hill where his dormitory was built.
With four bottles of beer, a bag of peanuts, a can of sardines, all packed into a cloth-bag, and together with his guitar, he set off.
Rice fields covered with green stalks like the ones in his village cascaded down the lower part of the hill. Taking the small path uphill, he had soon left them behind, and followed a little track bordered with flourishing thickets. The track was narrow, the leaves protruding the road, brushing his guitar to make a sound queer and alien in the hill’s tranquillity. Birds were singing liquidly, and the melancholy three-toned calling of a cuckoo seemed to reach him from so far away that he felt he was entering a forest of a magnificent depth and breadth.
But the hill didn’t have many the tall trees and wilderness a forest ought to have. In fact, he found himself quickly arriving at the high point of the hill, which had very much confused him. Then he realised that his original target was supposed to be the top of the next higher hill across by a little valley. In his former perception, the two separate hills had been beheld as one, when the valley was invisible.
So, he took his steps down, through the valley, and climbed uphill again. Narrow as the track was, it was still able to guide his advance, although the leaves and twigs were now rubbing more forcefully at his arms and instrument. Then, sweating and panting, he had finally got to the summit of the hill he had thought to be his target, for the little track began to descend again. But, again, he was not at all convinced this was the one he had initially intended to reach, because, from where he stood, he saw another, even higher hill linked again by a valley.
He stood there perplexed: where was the vantage point he had wanted to go at the very beginning? Looking further up, now there were at least three more rolling hills, each of them appearing more majestic than the one under his feet.
Turning and looking around a number of times, he couldn’t work this out. He had thought he would be able to sit on the top of the hill, from where to overlook the other lower objects. Now it struck him clear that his original vision had been a mere illusion, and he had to determine his next move in this unexpected situation.
Well, he wouldn’t mind sitting somewhere lower than his former object, so long as the grass and trees wouldn’t obscure the immediate vista. Even if he chose to make a spot where he was now standing, it would still be an acceptable reality under the new circumstances. Indeed, he could see, in the far west and amidst the hazy hue of sky, the strip of cloud girdling the Emei Mountain. Snow white, it was like a glimpse of a temple built in the white-clouded heaven as illustrated in some tales of the legend.
However, feeling his reserve energy was still sufficient to make another climb, he decided to conquer the next hill but one, before he was ready to claim his final destination.
So he trudged upwards, and soon found the road more and more treacherous. The track was thinning, his own body becoming less and less distinguishable from the mess, until he was almost swallowed by the towering ferns and thickets, reminding him of his dismal experience ten years before, when he went with Dan cutting the tree on the side of a steep hill.
Now, it appeared to him, he was in no way able to reach the peak of the hill, putting him in a situation far worse than the lower yet clearer points of achievement. Even if he could in theory get to the point, the trees and dense undergrowth would smother his fancy imagination that had driven him to this far.
Therefore, he was forced to make another compromise. At this moment, his desire was no more than finding a clear place to sit down, to halt his disappointing adventure. But how? Should he go uphill further, which might make his vision only worse and worse? If not, then the only sensible move was to retreat and descend to the previous clearer points.
But he was very much exhausted, he didn’t think he had the energy to pierce through the downward mess again.
After hesitating a while in his dilemma, he simply threw down his bag and guitar on the thick cushion of grass, which had been such a burden chafing and straining his journey. Then he began to tramp on the grass, in the same manner as the hero in the movie Red Sorghum had cleared the sorghums in order to make love with the heroine he had seized from a donkey’s back.
And before long, he had made a small circle for his secluded picnic.
Sitting down, he took one bottle of beer, prying it open with his teeth. Since he learnt the method of opening a beer from Kang, he had done it all the time. And as soon as the cap was lifted a crack, his face welcomed a rush of spilling foam. He moved the nozzle away to let the bubbling caused by the brisk shaking during his trip quiet down. Then he began to drink; the liquid was warm and frothy. He was thirsty, and the beer was the only liquid for relief. When he put the bottle down, half of it had already found its way into his system.
He took out the bag of peanuts and the can of sardines, placing them on the grass. Then with an exertion of near violence, he tore open the bag of peanuts. He didn’t think he was angry or frustrated with his failed adventure, nor had he any other ill emotion to affect him. All he had wanted was a quick intoxication that could be obtained as cheaply as he could. And in less than one minute, he finished the rest of his first bottle.
Now his feeling was wonderful. The rustling of the trees, the drawling whistles of the birds, and the shrilling of the cicadas were all so much fanciful.
Then he wanted to open the can of fish. There was a lid on the top of it, which he lifted it as carefully as he could. But it snapped off soon after he had begun, leaving no slit for further prying. Now, like a monkey who has to study a nut to find a way to crack it, he speculated a long time on the tin-container that looked to him so formidable and inaccessible, before he thought he could at least use a twig for the job.
However, the sticks he sought from the trees kept breaking, and the cover, stubborn and tight as it looked, refused to budge.
Getting more and more frustrated, his determination to open it was more and more severe. He tried to use his teeth in various possible ways, then gave up; he tried to use some thin and long stone as an aid, then gave up; he banged it against the bough of a tree hoping to make a crack, then gave up. In doing such a job, his gestures proved to be so pathetic and hopeless. Even a monkey might have already succeeded with the length of time and the level of talent he had been passionately expending.
In the end, he placed the can on the surface of a flat stone, and furiously hammered on its cover with another stone. The metal wall was a ghastly mess of denting and disfigurement, but thankfully revealing at last a little crack along the edge.
Now with the little hole of hope, he used a stick and a stone alternatively, slowly and patiently making progress, little by little. The stick was, in the process, breaking up and dirtying the fish in the can, but he couldn’t have cared less.
Then, growing more impatient with the hopeful but slow advancement, he whimsically tried his fingers to pull it open. The edge was sharp, so he used his shirt cuffs for a cushion. And doing so, he was making progress. Bit by bit, the hole was opening. The patience in his application was really second to none.
With his coming triumph in his mind, he was encouraged to speed it up with more power, and then suddenly, the can lost its balance, tilting over, and the sharp edge cutting the back of his hand.
Only numbness he was feeling, but the bleeding was remarkable.
He put up the can to prevent the fish soup from leaking out, and inspected the closely. The cut, about two centimetres long, was lividly horrific, with the shining blood seeping out from it. But strangely enough he didn’t feel much pain but a tickling sensation. He checked inside his bag, and found nothing there usable to stop the flow. He then thought of using leaves for assistance, and gave it up; he thought of using his shirt, then gave up; he thought of using his right hand to press the wound, then gave up. Running out of ideas, he was watching the free flow of blood, which was behaving like the little rivulet of a spring.
In a while, the flow began to slow and congeal. Nature displayed its magic healing process.
Carefully he rested the hand on the ground, laying there motionless lest the process be disturbed, until he felt it safe to move the hand, which he did. Only then did he begin to feel the pain, so sharp that he could even feel in his ear the frantic throbbing along the wound. This was more than comparable to the pain he had felt on his chin in the fishing incident that had happened so many years before.
But he didn’t cease his moments of indulgence. Using his good hand and his teeth, he opened his second beer; and using his good hand and his teeth, he cracked and ate the peanuts; and using his good hand and his teeth, he made two chopsticks from the twigs, and dug out fish from the blood-stained can for his consumption.
It was all delicious and sensational. The beer bottle was emptying fast, and the moment of intoxication seemed to be the best he had ever felt. It was a pity he couldn’t play his guitar, otherwise his vehement outburst would be just phenomenal.
For the next hour or two, gazing at his wounded hand, feeling an absolute part of nature, he let his musing go far and fanciful, self-ridiculed, and melancholy.
True, he had lost some blood, but that was nothing. Women, as he knew, lost quite an amount of blood every month, and they were still very healthy, and more beautiful than men. The key to life, it seems, is that the faster the blood-cycling and the higher the rate of metabolic progression, the fresher and healthier a body becomes.
Then, suddenly, he was feeling a fit of excitement. Whether it was due to the thought of women, or the red blood, or the throbbing pain, or a combination of them all, he didn’t know. But in his present mind, the figure of Fang, the Chongqing girl with whom he had made his virgin love, and whose blood had once stained him, and who seemed to have effaced from his memory even since, came to visit him. Oh, what conduct against the trunk of the Wuton tree! What a struggle had it used to be! Where is she now? Well, of course, she is still in school, she is one year his junior. And then a moment later, Vivian was coming to him. But Vivian was not a virgin when he did it with her on the train, or was she? Oh, no, it couldn’t be, then to whom had Vivian given herself first?...
In his intoxication, he dazed like an old man recalling his terrific old times.
Thinking of them, he felt his penis, which was very much constrained by his sitting posture, was carried away and worked up tirelessly at its station. So he straightened his legs, rising to his feet in order to grant more room to the nastiest part of a man. However, with more room given to it, it seemed to more earnestly, more happily arouse itself, until it had claimed a good fighting and threatening stance.
But without a woman, there was only one way to humble it. So using his good hand, he pushed down his pants, then using his good hand again, he worked to serve it, marvelling at its jerking head that looked so angry and rebellious.
At its peak, behind his closed eyes an image of Vivian’s face flared, and worse, her image with that man.
Then he took some leaves to clean up, of which process seemed to slow its retreat.
Then he resumed his picnic, consuming his great solitary loss, for how long he was rather oblivious. But he had finished all the four bottles, all the fish inside the can, and all the peanuts in the bag.
He lay on his back and slept.
His return trip took him less than an hour. He went to his room first, putting away the guitar, disposing of the collected rubbish, before heading to the Medical Centre of the university.
--End of Chapter 38-- |
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