âRight, how long will you be here for?â the president asked, wheeling himself back to the table and flipping through some files.
âIâll be here for a month,â I answered.
He smiled. âWhat are you studying in school? Are you going to be a doctor?â
âNo, no. Iâm studying marketing and I donât have any experience in dealing with patients. Will it be difficult?â
âWhenever an intern comes along, we will train him for three months and put him through a test. He can only start officially if he passes the test. Since youâll only be here for a month, the training program isnât going to work,â he said, pulling out a form from a file.
It was my application form.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âIs it going to be that difficult? Canât I just help out in other ways like sweeping and cleaning? Iâll assist with the basics. Iâm not afraid of hard work and I wonât slack off.â
âThe process here is... unique. You do understand that weâre taking care of special patients and there will be times when they require emergency care, donât you? What if a patient under your care gets injured and there are no other employees around? Itâs going to be difficult for us to accept you if you donât know basic first aid,â he explained before throwing the form into the rubbish bin.
I nodded. âSo thereâs no chance for me?â
âNot exactly. You learned some math, didnât you?â
I nodded again. âYes, when I was young. But you threw my form away, doesnât that mean that Iâm out?â
âI have another job for you. Youâll take care of and play with that girl Xiaoyu for a month. It should be simple, right?â he said before pulling out a new form, filling a few blanks and handing it to me.
âYes, that shouldnât be a problem,â I agreed and received the form.
It was a contract.
3,000 dollars for a month.
I was overjoyed, but I was also a bit uneasy.
âIâm here to volunteer, sir. I shouldnât take this money.â
âYes, youâre a volunteer to those outside, but in here, it is our obligation to pay you. Youâll still be paid even if youâre a doctor volunteering with us, so donât worry about it. Youâre not receiving any special treatment,â he reassured me.
I nodded and filled up the form. âBut to take money for taking care of a child...â
âIâm not asking you to just play with her. Youâll need to educate her as well,â he clarified.
âWhat can I teach her? She seems to know more than I do,â I protested.
âDo you know the head of the millennium problems?â he asked.
âThe seven unsolved problems? Solve any and get 1,000,000? Post the solution on the magazine and succeed if there are no challengers within two years? One has already been solved, right?â
âYes, Henri Poincaréâs conjecture has been solved. There are six more and I hope to train Xiaoyu for her to be able to solve them someday. I was convinced that no one would ever be able to before I met her. She has a special kind of magic. What she understands as math isnât just math. Itâs purer and more instinctive.â
âSpeaking of which, President, is it true? The bus driver mentioned that she can predict lottery numbers.â
âThat is true. Itâs her power.â
âHe even said that Xiaoyuâs never been to school. Sheâs 12, right? Why wonât you send her to school?â
Since the moment we met, this was the only time that he looked at me properly.
He sighed. âWe brought her to school when she was eight, but because sheâs an orphan and in an unusual situation, she got bullied by the other kids. I had no choice but to withdraw her application. Sheâs not exactly in a normal mental state as well.â
âNot in a normal mental state?â I repeated.
âItâs better if I explain it to you now, although youâll only be taking care of her for a month. She was born here from a pair of mentally ill parents.â
I nodded. âTheyâre both mentally unstable?â
He shook his head. âNot really. Itâs my fault.â
A tear rolled down his cheek and his voice started to tremble.
âDonât rush, take your time,â I encouraged.
âHave a seat. Itâs a little long,â he said, pointing at the sofa not far away.
âHave you heard of Pang Dahai? A murderer from 14 years ago?â
âIsnât that the serial killer that shook the nation? Five victims. I was still in elementary school then, and our school principal had parents pick their kids up personally after class. No one dared to go out alone at night that month. Everyone was living in fear. Wait, heâs Xiaoyuâs father?â I asked, wide-eyed.
âYouâre right, but the whole process might be a little different from what people had imagined,â he answered.
I was in shock.
I was also extremely curious.
âPang Dahaiâs family looked for me 14 years ago. They offered 150,000 for me to forge a report, claiming that Pang Dahai is mentally ill and should receive treatment in the institution.â
âAnd... you agreed?â
âThe eastern face of the mountain we are located on collapsed that year and we had no funds to fortify the groundwork so I had to agree. I diagnosed him and placed him under the most severe patient category. He was under sedation and nursesâ care 24/7. He didnât serve his sentence, but his ward was like a prison.â
âThen something happened...â I guessed.
He pulled the blanket on his lap, revealing only a left leg.
âHe did that?â I asked, pointing at his missing right leg.
âYes. Someone named Xiaowen was involved, too, but I deserved it. Itâs not her fault,â he responded.
âPang Dahai? Xiaowen?â
âXiaowen is a female patient. Extremely beautiful. His ward was beside Xiaowenâs. Stockholm Syndrome... heard of it?â
âWhen a victim develops feelings for his or her captor? Itâs a legitimate condition?â I was in disbelief.
âXiaowen was brought in as a severe patient. Throughout that two years, she would enter Dahaiâs ward through the window. She prepared a knife for him as he plotted his attack. I was the main doctor in charge of Dahai since I brought him in.â
âWhat happened next?â
âLuckily, the other staff arrived to save my life. I wrote another evaluation report and he was sentenced to death. I was supposed to be fired, but the committee decided to let me stay on as the president since they knew the reason behind it all. Plus, Iâve paid the price. No one had expected, however, that Xiaowen would get pregnant.â
âXiaoyu?â I asked.
âYes. Xiaowen tried killing herself six times during the pregnancy, but luckily, she was stopped. We thought about abortion but she was against it. The child is innocent and we did not have the right to take its life.â
âI donât know much about mental health, but was Xiaowen still suffering from Stockholm Syndrome at that point?â
After a short pause, he nodded. âWe thought that was it, but after giving birth to Xiaoyu, she tried to end both their lives.â
âWhy didnât she try that when Xiaoyu was still in her tummy?â
âShe wanted to but she decided to wait for the gender reveal. Perhaps she felt the need to let Dahai know so they can reunite in the netherworld.â
âAnd then?â I asked again.
âShe jumped off the building, but she kept Xiaoyu tight within her embrace. Perhaps she changed her mind at the last second, but whatever the case, that allowed Xiaoyu to survive the fall. Xiaoyu got her name from her mom. Word spread that Xiaowen was an undergraduate from a prestigious university before she entered our institution. Xiaoyuâs name is very artistic and sheâs an obedient child. We discovered her gift soon after, which is why Iâm planning to tap into it.â
âWhat a story...â I sighed.
âI donât feel that I owe anyone anything, but I am worried about Xiaoyu. I hope youâll help me since youâre better in math as compared to the other employees. Is that fine with you?â he asked.
I nodded. âSheâs only 12. I can handle her.â
âThank you. You can start today. Teach her in a fun way or she wonât listen. Get her to write down the whole of Eulerâs equation and sheâll be done for the day. She should be in the staff canteen now. Take my meal card and go ahead. Yours will come tomorrow and Iâll keep that for myself then. Youâll start at 8 AM and knock off at 8 PM daily. Two-hour lunch break. You only need to take care of Xiaoyu, you donât have to get involved in other things. I thank you again,â he finished with a smile.
I accepted his meal card and nodded.