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I was still jiggling the key. It was stuck and time was slipping away. Suddenly, I heard footsteps outside. They stopped at the door. Then the jangle of keys. Something was being inserted into the lock. The outer metal door clanged. I continued jigging until I realised with a pulse of frustration, pulling at it wildly, that I couldn’t get it out. It broke. Auntie was now opening the inner door and I just managed to flip the cloth back over the safe in time, pulling the corner straight. She closed the doors as I put the old magazines and vase back on top. They weren’t in the right position, so I shuffled them around before lifting the flowerpot up off the floor. My hands were shaking so violently I nearly dropped it. The curtain was pulled across the doorway, thank God.

A second later, Auntie switched the light on and made for my room. I was lying on the floor, breathing heavily, counting out loud: ‘Forty-four, forty-five.’ She scooped the curtain up in her hand and poked her head through, not seeing my foot pushing the cardboard box back into place.

‘Why have you got the light off?’

She pulled the curtain back, letting the yellow glow flood in.

‘I’m doing my push-ups.’

‘Wasting your time instead of studying, in other words.’

She forced me to my feet and appeared to be looking for something. Then she casually pushed aside the cardboard box and grabbed the vase. She was probably about to move the flowerpot and magazines, pull off the cloth and check inside the safe. I needed to say something urgently, anything.

But at that moment she turned and said, ‘What’s the matter? Didn’t I tell you to go and study?’

At once my face turned red, but I didn’t move.

‘Go.’

The order had been issued and I left, wet with sweat. I sat on the edge of the sofa like a prisoner with his head laid out on the guillotine, waiting for her to storm back out and let me have it.

I imagined choking her to death. I wasn’t yet sure who I was going to kill, but if anyone, why not her? It would be too easy, though, too expected. I hated her. But she wasn’t worth the energy.

When she emerged she was merely stuffing some old clothes into a bag.

‘I’m going to visit your uncle and mother tomorrow. Do you need me to bring back some money?’ she asked.

‘No,’ I said.

I collapsed and she left. For a long time afterwards it felt as if she was still there. I went to my room, but it didn’t look as if the cloth had been touched.

Prelude

The next morning I checked again on the key broken off in the lock. It looked like a little dick caught in the jaws of a vagina. It struck me that I needed a pair of pliers. I’d buy some on the way back from school.

Today we were having our graduation pictures taken.

The light was soft and dappled, which made the campus look cleaner than usual, cheerful even. The pictures were being done under a row of trees. Everyone was gathered together, chatting. I stood by myself. First we were to have our individual shots, then the group photo. I watched my classmate Kong Jie. She was wearing one of her stage outfits, made from white silk, a pink skirt and a blue necktie. She kept running her hands through her sweaty hair. The sun was beating down on us, making her look even whiter, as if she was being photographed in a winter wonderland.

When Kong Jie wasn’t in school, her mother followed her everywhere like a pathetic mutt. At least, that’s what she told me. After her father died, she became her mother’s sole property, locked up indoors, made to repeat scales on the piano like on a production line. Her mother installed herself in the front row of Kong Jie’s every performance, examining the audience’s reaction at the end before leading her daughter away. Until one time when the entire audience gave Kong Jie a standing ovation and her mother finally pulled her into her arms and wept with happiness.

The only secret Kong Jie ever kept from her mother was the purchase of a little puppy. Or at least it was while she tried to find a way to broach the subject with her. But by the next morning she realised she was never going to be allowed to keep it. Every day she gave it to a different friend to look after, until she came to me. My aunt was away so much she’d barely notice. It was perfect. That is, until I ended up killing it. I got so mad I kicked it, and it died in Kong Jie’s arms. She dug it a grave using a spoon, the tears dribbling down her cheeks. I told her someone else did it.

Just then she caught me looking at her and came over, thinking I wanted to speak to her. There was a sweet empathy in her eyes, like a mute gazing on another mute, a deaf person gazing on another deaf person. We’d both lost our fathers. Maybe that was it.

‘You look unhappy,’ she said.

‘It’s my aunt.’

I imagined her laid out in the snow, legs open, me hovering over her. My heart thumped. I couldn’t bear to look straight into her charcoal eyes, but I tried to stay casual.

‘I can’t take it any more,’ I said, then I walked off.

They’d tacked up some white cloth where the photos were being taken and put a chair in front of it. Someone would sit down and everyone saluted them with their eyes. Then it was my turn. I was already feeling pretty awkward when the photographer looked up over the camera and said, ‘You need to brush your hair. It’s a mess.’

Laughter erupted around me. My lip quivered, my cheeks flushed, but I straightened up and pointed my chin fuzz right at the lens, clenched my cheeks and stared it down, cold and mean. I wanted this to look like a mugshot. I wasn’t trying to look good, this was going to be the image everyone would remember me by. The picture that would be plastered all over the papers. For my aunt and my mother.

When they were done I walked away. I was never going to see this place again.

I had a hundred yuan left after buying the pliers. Might as well buy the rope and knife while I was at it. You had to get a certificate to buy a combat weapon, so at first I thought of purchasing a fruit knife, but the shopkeeper gave me a conspiratorial smile and I realised I needn’t be so careful. He led me into the back room and took out a box of army switchblades. I chose the cheapest one. I was going to strangle my victim with the rope, but if they fought back I might need a knife. Plus, a switchblade would lend the whole event a ceremonial feel.

I hid it in my bag and threaded my way through the crowds. As I walked I couldn’t resist the temptation to slip my hand back into my bag and push the button. Click, it flipped out; click, back in. It made me feel dizzy. I’m the Angel of Death. I could kill any one of these people. The way I saw it, those who get killed are the ones who are worth the effort. These people weren’t right. The spindly man walking towards me, combing his hair? No, he wasn’t right. None of them were right.

Back at home I used the pliers to pinch hold of the broken-off key, but no matter how hard I tugged and yanked, it just wouldn’t budge. After an hour, I was furious and began attacking the safe with the pliers instead, until the bit between my thumb and forefinger started throbbing and tears started rolling down my cheeks. I had to keep at it. I couldn’t go through with it without money.

At 1.30 the neighbour’s door banged shut. It was Old He, heading out. Things may not have been going well, but my plan wasn’t ruined yet. I grabbed my bag and opened the door. I was going to follow him.

Mr He had a worn-out hunting dog who walked by lifting his legs in a languid, funny way, like a dignified mare. Every once in a while they stopped, Mr He to scratch his arm while the animal smeared his flea-infested back all over his master’s leg. He lay down periodically, refusing to continue, to which the old man responded with a gob full of phlegm and a kick to his stomach: ‘Useless dog, hurry up and die.’ He snorted a response and Mr He whipped the sorry mutt with his leather belt before he pulled himself up onto his unsteady feet. Mr He had to keep throwing biscuit crumbs onto the road ahead just to get him to walk on.