“Ni hao,” I say. I limp on past, not waiting for a response, and push open the Plexiglas doors, heading into the damp cold and the dark.
CHAPTER FOUR
THIS IS SO MESSED up.
I’ve had almost a year of things being pretty good. Okay, better than pretty good. This last year’s been the best year I’ve had… well, in a long time. It’s just that even when things are going great, I’m half expecting something to get FUBAR, so it’s hard for me to realize that things are great until they aren’t again.
I walk down the cracked sidewalk outside the hotel, scanning the street for a taxi. There don’t seem to be many here in Bumfuck South Beijing. So I just keep putting one foot in front of the other, following the trail of yellow pavers with the raised vertical ribs. Almost every sidewalk in every Chinese city I’ve ever been in has these things. Somebody told me they’re for the blind. I’m like, Are there really that many blind people in China? But what else would they be for?
“Yili…”
“Fuck off, John.”
He’s pulled alongside me in a silver car, a new Toyota. “Yili, let me give you a ride home.”
I shake my head and keep walking. I’m so pissed off I don’t trust myself to speak.
“Please,” he says. “I need to talk to you.”
I halt in my tracks. Throw up my hands. “Okay.”
Because I guess I should hear what he has to say. It’s probably all bullshit, but I’m better off knowing whatever lie he’s going to tell me this time around.
We drive for a while in silence. I stare out the window, at the trucks heaped with vegetables trundling down the road to the big gate.
“They go to Xinfadi Agricultural Products Wholesale Market,” he says. “This one market has seventy percent of vegetables for Beijing. Eighty percent of fruit.”
“Thanks for sharing.”
“Yili, you know I couldn’t tell you the truth before.”
“What I know is that you lied to me. You pretended to be my friend, you pretended to be Lao Zhang’s friend. And the whole time you’re just some… some fucking nark, with your fake tragic-dissident sister and your lies about giving a shit and wanting to change things.”
He gives me his squinty-eyed, puzzled look, which I have seen many times, only a few of which when he was actually confused. “Nark?”
“Spy. You’re a spy. For a bunch of… of…”
I let my head fall against the seat back. What’s the point of even caring? It’s not like this is some big surprise.
“It’s not so simple,” he mumbles.
“Oh, really? You spied on me for the DSD. How fucking complicated is that?”
His hands grip the steering wheel until the knuckles whiten, then relax.
“I don’t tell them everything.”
You know, I’d like to believe him. I really would. He saved my ass on the road that time-tried to anyway-and got the shit kicked out of him for his trouble. That means something, right?
I wish I knew what.
By now we’re approaching the Second Ring Road. Funny, where they took me wasn’t as far away as I’d thought. It was just the traffic that made it seem like another city.
“So let’s hear it,” I finally say. “Your story, whatever you’re going to tell me.”
He slowly nods.
“They worried about Zhang Jianli and Mati Village. That maybe this place can form the basis of some opposition. Cause some troubles. So, they have people watching them, for a long time. Then, you. They know you spend time with Zhang Jianli. They know about your husband, about the people he works for. They think, maybe the US government helps Zhang Jianli, to do things against China.”
“But none of that’s true!” I protest. “Lao Zhang’s not involved with the American government. And he isn’t political.”
“Doesn’t matter,” John says quietly. “He thinks political thoughts, maybe he expresses them in his work, and he brings people together with different kinds of ideas. Maybe this frightens them.”
I want to laugh. “Frightens the big bad Party? Really? A bunch of artists doing performance pieces about… about stacking up bricks? Walking cabbages on a dog leash?”
“Maybe it’s something that they don’t understand. And they are nervous.” John sighs. “Many things going on right now. The change in party leadership happens next year. They worry, too, about the economic situation. The prices of things, food and houses, the unemployment. The… the laobaixing, the common people, might get angry.”
Food’s gone way up the last couple of years, and it doesn’t seem to matter how many houses they build, how many apartment blocks; there are entire empty cities of new houses that no one lives in and hardly anyone can afford to buy.
Yeah, people might get angry.
“Then…” And here John’s voice drops down a notch. “There are the Jasmine movements.”
I’m not surprised to hear him mention them. Ever since people started taking to the streets in the Middle East and overthrowing governments and all, the government here’s been a little on edge. China’s not Egypt, everyone says, but they’re still nervous about it. Especially since someone or a bunch of someones started tweeting and posting, “We want food, we want jobs, we want houses!” And called for people to protest by “taking a stroll” on Sunday afternoons around places like the McDonald’s at Wangfujing. Don’t carry signs, don’t chant slogans, just smile and “take a stroll.” And maybe buy a burger.
So the last couple of Sundays, the police have been out en masse, trying to shut down a protest, and then not knowing if one is actually happening, with a bunch of journalists and cameras documenting the whole thing. It’s kind of funny in a way: The government freaking out about protests that might not be protests. Chasing ghosts.
A little like performance art, when I think about it.
I feel a shiver, all the way down to my bones.
“Okay, the government’s nervous. So you spied on Lao Zhang, and you spied on me. What did you tell your bosses? That we’re plotting to overthrow the party? That I’m some kind of spy?”
“No,” John says quietly. “I tell them you just wanted to help your friend. That’s all.”
By this point we’ve reached the little alley where my apartment complex is. Of course John doesn’t need to ask directions.
“What happens now?” I ask.
“Maybe nothing.”
We turn into the hutong. Get about halfway to my place and have to stop because a guy with a bicycle cart full of bricks and scrap blocks the road. John hits the horn, a flash of the anger he usually hides coming to the surface.
“Nothing?”
“Maybe they believe you. And me.”
“If they don’t?”
“Maybe they want to talk to you again.”
“Great.”
The bicycle cart still hasn’t moved, its driver leaning against it, talking to another worker who’s loading a couple more bricks on the bed. John lays on the horn, rolls down the window. “Ni xia ya?” he yells. Are you blind?
“Cao ni ma de bi,” the cart driver says. In other words, “Your mama.” He doesn’t move.
“Look, you can drop me here,” I say, my hand already on the door handle.
“I think I should come up to your apartment. Just to… to check things.”