CHAPTER 3
The Woman with No Surname
LUO FAN
When I opened my eyes, I saw a shadow looming over me. It was a familiar scene.
âLi Yao?â I whispered faintly.
âMy name is Jinjing,â a female voice replied.
I froze.
A woman?
It was the first time I had come this close to a woman, and I was even in bed. It was very inappropriate.
I tried to get up but my chest tightened.
âLie down,â the woman said. âDonât get up. Youâre still weak.â
I lay back down and tried to relax. âForgive me. It's inappropriate of me to meet you in such a way.â
âWhat do you mean?â
I did not know how to explain. I had been told by the elders in Frost Mountain that when meeting a woman, I should be dressed well and greet her with a confident stance. In short, I should display the demeanor and appearance of a real gentleman.
âHow do you feel?â the woman asked, forgetting about her previous question.
âIâm fine,â I replied, even though I felt like vomiting still. I didnât want to manifest any sign of weakness. It wasnât appropriate. A man should be strong in the presence of a woman and not frail.
âAre you hungry?â she asked again.
I was starving, but I did not think I was capable of taking in any food, not while I felt like throwing up.
âYou should try to eat something,â she said without waiting for my answer. âLetâs start with soup.â
I watched her shadow move away and disappear. When she returned, she sat at the side of the bed, facing me.
I flushed. I did not think it was appropriate for a man and a woman to be this close and alone in a room, but how should I say it?
âYou have been unconscious for two days,â she said.
I almost gasped in surprise. âItâs that long?â
âYes. I found you on the street on my way home the other night. You had nothing with you, so I supposed youâve been robbed.â
I did not answer. It was embarrassing to admit that they had stolen away the only money I had and now I had nothing to fend for myself with.
âHere,â she said and I caught the smell of corn soup right before my nose. She was trying to feed me. âOpen your mouth.â
I was too embarrassed to oblige. âIâll try to eat on my own.â
This content has been misappropriated from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.
âThe physician told me to keep you flat on the bed for one more day,â she replied. âYou cannot eat on your own while in that position. I can only feed you.â
âItâs not proper.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âItâs not proper for a man to be fed by a woman who is not his wife. Itâs degrading to a manâs pride, and Iâm afraid I might taint your good reputation.â
She laughed. âDonât worry, I donât have any good reputation. Iâm just a prostitute.â
I was dumbfounded.
âOr does that degrade your manâs pride even more?â
âI didnât mean it that way,â I quickly replied. âThe pride I meant was a manâs pride against weakness.â
âAlright. If you really donât mind a prostitute feeding you, open your mouth.â
Although it felt even more awkward, I obeyed and she gently thrust the spoon into my mouth. As the warm fluid flowed down my throat, I coughed.
âAre you alright?â she asked anxiously.
âIâm fine,â I replied and coughed again.
Eventually, I stopped coughing and she continued to feed me.
âThere you go,â she said after a few more spoonfuls.
âThank you,â I whispered. It was not much, but it was all that my stomach could handle for now.
âYouâre welcome.â
âYou said earlier that your name is Jinjing? What about your surname?â
âI donât have a surname. My father had disowned me when he learned about my job, so I had dropped my surname off so as not to give further shame to my family.â
âIs that really your job? Are you not just humoring me?â
She laughed. âWhy should I humor you? Why should I lie?â
âBecause youâre very nice to me. Youâre the only person who has bothered to give me a hand, while the rest had just passed by me as if they had not noticed anything. Youâre a good person.â
She sighed. âDo you think that prostitutes are not good persons?â
I was unable to answer at once. âMy apologies. Maybe I lacked some understanding of life in the city. I was raised in a remote place where women are scarce, so forgive my lack of sensibility.â
âI see. So youâre one of those naïve young men who have come to the city in hope of a better life.â
It wasnât exactly like that, but I could not tell her the truth. I had promised myself that once I arrived here, Iâd forget about my past. âI should have known better.â
She sighed again. âI understand. I had that same notion when I arrived here. I thought life here would be a lot easier than in the province. I ended up being a prostitute instead. I learned the hard way.â
âYou can always go back.â
âEven if I want to, my family will no longer accept me.â
âIâm sorry.â
âIâve actually stopped being a prostitute three years ago already, but you know, once you become one, thereâs no escaping it. People will always see me as a prostitute no matter how many years pass.â
âI donât see you as one. I see you as a noble woman.â
She laughed, and then she cried, which made me confused. If only I could see the expression in her eyes, then I would probably understand what she really felt. I donât regret taking you in. Whatâs your name, by the way?â
âYou may call me Fan.â
âFan⦠What about surname?â
âLike you, I had also dropped my surname.â
She laughed again, louder this time. âAlright. Since I didnât tell you my surname, I will not insist on asking yours. But itâs good to meet a good man like you. Itâs really rare nowadays.â
âIâm pleased to meet a nice woman too. Youâre the first woman I had a conversation with⦠honestly.â
She gasped, and then she laughed again. âYoung man, you have a lot of things to get used to if you want to make it in this city. Donât worry, when you get better, Iâll show you around.â
âI canât possibly bother you that long.â
âDonât worry about it. Itâs not like you have anywhere to go anyway.â
Hot flushes crept all over my face.
She was right. Where else could I go?
âYouâve probably spent a lot for me,â I said. âIâll make it up to you when I get better.â
âIâll be expecting that, so youâd better recover quickly so you can make it up to me, okay?â
I forced out a smile. I really wished I could see her face. âYou must be very beautiful.â
âMe? No, no. Iâm too plain to look at. Youâre way more beautiful than I am.â
âHow could you call a man beautiful?â
âBut you are beautiful. You have a very gentle face. Calling you handsome does not give you justice.â
I had more to tell her, but then suddenly, I vomited again. I quickly turned to the side so I would not dirty the bed.
All the soup that Jinjing had so patiently and carefully fed me ended up splattered down the floor.
âIâm sorry,â I whispered as I lay on my back.
âThatâs alright.â She wiped the corners of my mouth with a cloth. âTake this medicine.â She placed the medicine inside my mouth. I even felt her finger lightly touch my lip.
It briefly froze me, but then I shouldnât put any malice into it, not while she was doing her best to help a stranger like me, even if she knew she had nothing to get in return.
But I was relieved. This city was not as bad as I had initially thought it was.
As long as there were people like Jinjing, there was still hope for humanity.