My departure was the next day. Wei-Wen had to stay behind. Later I might be allowed to give him a burial. But that wasn’t important. The tiny, cold body covered with a layer of frost was not him. That face wasn’t his, not the one I tried to remember all the time.
I pushed the bowl towards the boy.
“It’s for you.”
He gave me a questioning look.
“Aren’t you going to eat anything at all?”
“No. I bought it for you.”
He stood there jiggling one foot.
“Have a seat.” I heard the pleading in my voice.
He quickly pulled out the chair and drew the bowl towards him, looked at it for a moment with something like happiness, before he raised it to his mouth and started shoveling in rice.
It was good to see him eat. To see him keep himself alive. I just sat there studying him while he shoved the rice into his mouth, barely taking time to chew before the next mouthful was on its way.
When the worst of his wolfish hunger was sated, he calmed down, concentrated on guiding the chopsticks more slowly towards his lips, as if an inner etiquette teacher had suddenly reminded him of his manners.
“Thank you,” he said softly.
I smiled in response.
“Do you know anything more?” I asked after allowing him to chew for a bit.
“About what?”
“About your family. Will you stay here?”
“I don’t know.” He looked down at the tabletop. “I just know that Dad has regrets every single day. We thought we were safe here, that this was where we should be, but then everything changed. We’re just a nuisance now.”
“Can’t you leave?”
“Where to? We have no money, nowhere to go.” The feeling of impotence crept through me again. Yet another thing I couldn’t do anything about.
No. This was not insurmountable. This was something I could manage, somebody I could help.
I raised my head.
“Come with me.”
“What do you mean?” He looked at me in astonishment.
“Come back with me.”
“Are you going home?”
“Yes. Now I’m going home.”
“But we aren’t allowed—they’ll refuse. And what about work? Is there work for us there?”
“I promise that I’ll help you.”
“What about food?”
“There is even less here.”
“Yes.” He put down his chopsticks. The bowl of rice was empty. Only a single grain of rice remained on the bottom. He noticed it, picked up the chopsticks to get hold of it, but quickly put them down again when he saw that I was observing him.
“You have to,” I said softly. “If you stay here, you’ll die.”
“Maybe that’s just as well.”
There was something savage in his voice and he avoided my gaze.
“What do you mean?” I forced the words out, I couldn’t take this. Not in him, someone so young.
“It doesn’t make any difference what happens to us,” he said with his head bowed. “To Dad and me. Where we live. Here. Together. Or alone. It’s not important.” His voice became hoarse suddenly. He cleared his throat, removing the huskiness. “Nothing matters anymore. Don’t you see that?”
I couldn’t muster a reply. His words were distortions of Li Xiara’s. Each and every one of us is not important. But she was talking about community; he was talking about loneliness.
I stood up abruptly. I had to make him stop talking. The fragile hope I was clinging to was on the verge of being crushed. I looked in all directions except at him as I walked towards the door.
“You have to pack,” I said in a low voice. “We leave tomorrow.”
Back at my room, I quickly pulled out the bag. It didn’t take long to gather up the few things I had with me. The clothes, some toiletries, an extra pair of shoes. I searched the entire room, wanting to be sure I hadn’t forgotten anything. And then I discovered them. The books. They’d been there all along, but I hadn’t seen them, they’d become a part of the room. They lay in a pile on the nightstand, I hadn’t touched them since the guard came to get me, hadn’t taken them out to read them, not once, knowing that the words would probably have as little meaning as everything else.
I had to return them, perhaps I could still make it to the library. But I just stood there holding them. I could feel the smooth protective plastic on the book cover at the bottom of the pile sticking to my hands.
I put them down on the bed and picked this one up. It was The History of Bees. I’d never had the chance to finish reading it. But I opened it now.
Chapter 60
GEORGE
Emma was crying again. She stood with her back to me, peeling potatoes and crying. She let her tears flow freely, made no attempt to stop them, regularly releasing small sobs. The tears came often these days. She cried as if she were at a funeral, anywhere and at any time, over washtubs, while making dinner or brushing her teeth. Every time it happened, I just wanted to get away. I couldn’t handle it, tried to find excuses to leave.
Luckily I wasn’t inside very often. I worked from morning till night. I had hired Rick and Jimmy full-time. The money, the loan, poured out of the account. Eventually I couldn’t be bothered to check. Couldn’t bear to see the ever-diminishing bank balance. It was a matter of working now. Just working. Without work, no income. I could still save some of the harvest. Make enough money to service the loan.
The pounds melted off my body, ounce after ounce. Day after day. And night after night, because I was sleeping poorly. Emma looked after me, served me, decorating my food with cucumber slices and strips of carrots, but it didn’t help. There was no taste to it; it hit my palate like sawdust. I ate only because I had to, to get the strength to go out again. I knew Emma would have liked to prepare steak every day, but she, too, was trying to save money. We didn’t talk about it, but I’m sure I wasn’t the only one observing the shrinking bank balance.
In fact we didn’t say anything about anything these days. I didn’t know what had happened to us. I missed my wife. She was there, but at the same time, she wasn’t. Or maybe it was actually me who wasn’t there.
She sniffled. I wanted to hold her, the way I always had. But my body resisted. All of her tears collected in this huge pond that separated us.
I backed out of the kitchen, hoped she wouldn’t notice.
But she turned around. “You do see that I’m crying.”
I didn’t answer.
“Come here, won’t you?” she said quietly.
It was the first time she’d asked me. I remained standing where I was all the same.
She waited, still holding the potato peeler in the one hand, a potato in the other. I waited, too. Hoping, I guess, that I could wait the whole thing out. But not this time.
She whimpered softly. “You don’t care.”
“Of course I care,” I said, but couldn’t bear to meet her gaze.
She raised her arms a little more.
“Crying doesn’t help,” I said.
“It doesn’t help that we don’t comfort each other, either.”
She twisted my words around, as she often did.
“We won’t get more hives by my standing here and comforting you,” I said. “No more queens, no more bees. No more honey.”