: Chapter 12
If You Could See the Sun
The next week, a teacher asks me to stay behind after class, but itâs not Mr. Murphy, as I fearedâitâs Mr. Chen.
His expression is stern as I approach his desk, a faint wrinkle appearing in his forehead, the way it does when heâs going over a particularly difficult passage in our texts. Fear pulses through me.
âI wanted to talk to you about your English essay, Alice,â he says.
âMy essay?â I repeat, like an idiot.
âYes. From your midterms.â
âWhy? Was itâwas it bad?â The words tumble out of my lips before I can stop them, like water gushing from a broken dam. I hate that this is always my first instinct: self-doubt, anxiety, the nagging feeling that I did something wrong.
But Mr. Chen puts my worries to rest with a firm shake of his head. âOn the contraryâyours was one of the most well-written essays Iâve read in years. And I donât say that lightly.â
âOh,â is all I can think to say as the compliment sinks in. One of the most well-written essays Iâve read. And thatâs coming from Mr. Chen, the same teacher who was invited to speak at Peking University only weeks earlier, who received his education at Harvard. Iâve never had drugs beforeânever plan to in my lifeâbut I imagine this is what the high must feel like. âWow.â
âWow indeed,â he says, but he doesnât smile. âThatâs not the main reason I asked you to stay behind, though.â He taps a finger absentmindedly on his desk like a pen, as if deciding how best to phrase his next question. âDo you remember your main contention for the essay?â
I try not to look too taken aback. âUm, roughly.â
âSo you remember how you positioned yourself inâ¦support of Macbeth and his actions?â
Now I see where this is going.
âIt was only for the exam,â I say quickly. âTo make an interesting argument. I obviously donât believe you should go around killing people to gain powerâor for any reason, really, unless the person youâre killing is about to wipe out the human species or something, but thatâs a whole different topic. And I wasnât saying that he was right either. Justâsympathetic.â
âJust sympathetic.â Somehow, when Mr. Chen repeats something, he sounds all wise and philosophical.
âI mean his ambition,â I say, feeling the need to clarify further, especially as his contemplative silence drags on a beat too long. âThe fact that he goes after what he wants.â
âWell then, Alice.â Mr. Chen clasps his hands in front of him, peers at me across his desk. I feel vaguely as if heâs about to give me a test of some kind. âSince weâre on the topicâtell me. What is it that you want?â
âWhat do I want?â I echo.
He nods, expectant.
But the open-endedness of the question catches me off guard, knocks the air out my lungs as a million answers surge up to meet itâ
I want to be respected. I want to be rich. I want to become an acclaimed civil rights attorney or a business director at a Fortune 500 company or a Pulitzer Prizeâwinning journalist; I want to be a professor at Harvard or Oxford or Yale, to walk those gleaming lecture halls with my head held high and know that I belong; I want to inherit a giant multimillion-dollar company, like Henry, or be bold and gifted and innovative enough to pave my own path in some niche field, like Peter, or to have endless opportunities to stand before thousands of people and be seen, like Rainie; I want my name to be spoken at Airington long after Iâve left, for all my teachers to be proud that they once taught me, to say to future students, âyou heard of that Alice Sun? I always knew she would make itâ; I want glory, recognition, attention, praise; I want to buy my parents a brand-new apartment with floor-to-ceiling windows and a balcony that overlooks a glittering green lake, to earn enough money to treat them to roast duck and fresh fish every day; I want to be great at what I do, no matter what I do; I want, I want, I wantâ
Yet just as quickly as it balloons, the wild longing in my chest deflates.
With a sharp jolt I feel all the way down to my bones, as if Iâve fallen from a great height, I remember who I am, and who I am not. I canât afford to think so far ahead into the future, to be so frivolous with my plans. I should only be focusing on making enough money to cover my school fees and bills for this year, then next year, then the year after thatâ¦
Maybe I was lying just now about why I find Macbeth so sympathetic. Maybe itâs because I understand what itâs like to want things that do not belong to you.
But of course, I donât tell Mr. Chen any of this.
âI want to get good grades. Graduate. Get a job in whichever field my strengths lie.â
His brows furrow, like he doesnât quite believe me. âNot what youâre passionate about?â he asks delicately.
I lift my chin. âIâm passionate about being good at things.â
Thereâs a defensive edge in my voice, and Mr. Chen must hear it. He drops the subject.
âWell, all right then. I suppose I should let you go to lunchâ¦â
âThanks, Mr. Chen.â
But as I turn to leave, he adds, very quietly, âYouâre still a kid, you know.â
I falter. âWhat?â
His eyes are kind, almost sad when he looks at me. âEven if it doesnât feel that way now, youâre still only a kid.â He shakes his head. âYouâre too young to be thisâ¦hardened by the world. You should be free to dream. To hope.â
My conversation with Mr. Chen plays over and over again in my head as I make my way over to the cafeteria. Most people have eaten and left already, and only the Chinese cuisine bar is still open, so I grab a tray of rice and braised pork ribs that have already gone cold and nibble at my food half-heartedly, the chopsticks held loose in my hands.
Youâre still a kid, you know.
Coming from any other adult, the words wouldâve seemed condescending, easy to laugh at and brush off, but I could tell Mr. Chen really meant them. Which is almost worse, somehow. It makes me feel too vulnerable.
Exposed.
Itâs like that time I wrote a poem about my family in Year Eight, thinking it was only for an English assignment, but the teacher insisted on reading it aloud to the whole school at assembly, her voice reaching an emotional crescendo as she described the old callouses on Mamaâs hands, her own hands rising and falling in exaggerated movements. People approached me about it afterward, kind and gushing and sympathetic, and part of me basked in the positive attention, while the other partâa bigger partâwanted nothing more than to flee.
I guess thatâs the thing: Iâve spent my whole life longing to be seen, but Iâve also come to realize that when people look too closely, they inevitably notice the ugly parts too, like how the tiny cracks on a polished vase only become visible under scrutiny. Like Mamaâs callouses, hidden from the world until the teacher had to go and read my poem into the microphone, into the silence of the giant, filled auditorium.
Youâre still a kid, you know.
The back of my neck prickles. Something sharp and hard lodges in my throat, like a shard of bone, even though the pork ribs on my tray are still untouched. I give up trying to eat.
This isnât how itâs supposed to go.
Mr. Chen had said my Macbeth essay was one of the most well-written essays heâd read in years, which is the kind of praise I usually live for, lap up like a starved dog, but he hadnât looked impressed at all.
Only concerned.
âAlice! Hey, girl!â
I jerk my head up and spot Rainie making a beeline for me from the other end of the cafeteria table, a wide grin on her face. Her glossy hair has been tied up in a high ponytail, and it bounces elegantly over her shoulders as she sits down beside me. Another thing I wasnât expecting to happen today.
âSo. What class is next?â she asks cheerily.
âYou have art for fifth period,â I inform her, thinking this must be why she came here. Since Iâve long fallen into the habit of memorizing Henryâs timetable every school year, I know pretty much everyoneâs class schedules by heart. But she just shakes her head and laughs.
âOh my god, Alice,â she says, in that fond, exasperated tone people tend to use around close relatives. âGirl. I know what my class is. Iâm asking about yours.â
I blink at her. âUm⦠I have a spare period. Why?â
âBecause. Iâm trying to be your friend.â She makes this sound like itâs the most natural and obvious thing in the world, when I could easily name at least two thousand other reasons for someone of her social standing to seek out someone like me. But as she continues smiling, not budging from her seat, I realize that more people have been approaching me lately, sometimes waving in the corridors or striking up conversations out of the blue.
I guess hanging around Henry and Chanel so much in public is the real-life equivalent of getting the verified check mark on social media: it sends a clear signal to the world that youâre someone worth paying attention to.
Or maybe itâs also because of Beijing Ghost. Even if no one here knows Iâm the one behind the app, Iâve still spent these past months learning about all their secrets, their greatest fears and desires and insecurities, from Rainieâs photos to Evieâs test scores. Maybe thatâs the kind of thing you feel, instinctively, that draws people together like an invisible string, even if theyâre not aware of the full truth.
In theory, this should make me proud. This is what Iâve always wanted, after all: to be noticed, to be approached. But just like Mr. Chenâs remark, it somehow feels wrong.
If Rainie notices my mini existential crisis, the way Iâm gripping my chopsticks too tight, she doesnât show it. Instead, she leans back and starts scrolling through what has to be at least a hundred new notifications on her phone, pausing and rolling her thick-lashed eyes when she gets to the latest one.
âStill canât believe theyâre raising the prices again,â she says with a snort. âThe sheer nerve.â
My heart seizes. âWait. What?â
âThe school fees,â she says casually. âDidnât you know? They sent out an email about it a few months back.â
âIâI donâtâ¦â All the schoolâs emails go straight to Mama and Baba, but between their long work hours and old phones and the crappy connection in their little flat, sometimes things slip through the cracks. Important things. My heart starts pounding faster.
âHere. This is just a reminder for the upcoming deadline. The original emailâs down below.â She scoots closer, holding her screen up for me to see. I canât read anything at firstâcan only stare at the tiny black numbers, the harsh white light, my stomach writhing. Then the figure comes into painful focus. 360,000 RMB.
No.
Thatâs a 30,000 RMB jump from what it used to be, and thatâs only for one school year. Itâs too much. Itâs more than what I have, what I could possibly earn before the fee deadline in seven days, even if I were to complete another Beijing Ghost taskâ
Iâm only dimly aware of what Rainie is saying. ââ¦first heard about it. Apparently a bunch of the other international schools have raised their prices too, beginning from next semesterâsuch a rip-off. My dadâs company had like, a mini fit when he sent them the receipt.â
âRight,â I manage. The cafeteria suddenly feels too small, or maybe itâs just my lungs that have shrunk. 360,000 RMB. Itâs the kind of number that should be overwhelming, apocalyptic, illegal, that should send everyone at this school into mass panic, but Rainie looks mildly annoyed, at best.
Then again, of course she is. Most of my classmates have their parentsâ companies covering their school fees, their private drivers, their giant condos. Everything. That would explain why I never heard about the raised prices until now, too; this is nothing more than a minor inconvenience to them, hardly worth dwelling on for longer than a few seconds.
Case in point: Rainieâs already launched into another conversation topicâthis time about the midterm exams, and how they should be graded on a curve, and wasnât that English essay question so vague, andâ
âOh yeah, did you hear about Evie?â she asks.
If I wasnât already on edge, I most certainly am now. My spine goes rigid, half my thoughts still stuck on the school fees, trying desperately to calculate how much more money I need to make in the next week. âWhatâwhat about Evie?â
âApparently, she smashed her history midtermsâfor her standards anyway. Got like, eighty percent or something. Pretty impressive, huh?â
I search Rainieâs body language for any hidden, darker meaning behind her words, but she just tightens her ponytail, flips it over her shoulder, and sighs.
âIâm happy for her, honestly,â she continues. âSheâs gone through at least ten different tutors in the past year, and none of them helped. Guess she finally found the right one.â
âMm,â is all I reply, terrified that my voice will break and give me away if I try to speak. What could I possibly say? Yes, I, too, am so glad she found the right tutor. Her final score was definitely because of that, and not because she received the literal answers to memorize days in advance. For sure.
Then my phone buzzes, the vibration almost violent against the thin fabric of my skirt, and all thoughts of Mr. Chen and Evie and the raised school fees are driven away as I read the new message on Beijing Ghost.
âRepeat what you just said.â
Henry is staring at me from the other end of his dorm room, his expression the closest thing to shock Iâve ever witnessed on him. He runs an agitated hand through his hair, shakes his head. Sits down on the edge of his bed, which is perfectly made, as usual. Sometimes I wonder if he even sleeps on it.
âWhich part?â I ask.
He doesnât reply, but his eyes dart to the door. Heâs been doing this a lotâever since I ran in here and shut the door firmly behind me, afraid that people in the hall might overhear our conversation and call the police on us. Heâd flinched as if I were trapping us inside a prison, looking almostâ¦nervous. Tense. His back too straight, his fingers restless. If I didnât know better, Iâd think he was more upset about the closed door than what I just said.
âWhich part?â I say again, when it becomes clear he hasnât heard me.
âAll of it.â
âAre you serious?â
âItâs a fair lot to take in, donât you think?â
I roll my eyes, but heâs right. It is a lot to handle; I wouldnât have come here straight after school otherwise.
So I repeat it all. Everything from the latest Beijing Ghost message.
I tell him about Andrew She and Peter Oh, how their parentsâ rivalry at the same company has been escalating in recent weeks, how one of them is meant to be promoted soon, but the company hasnât reached a decision yet on who is the best pick. All Andrew knows is that whoever gets promoted will be the marketing director for every branch in Eurasia and receive a seven-figure salary each year, and itâs everything his father has been working for since his early twenties, but his father isnât so confident about his chances at winning.
In fact, his father is so uncertain about his chances that heâs willing to use other methods. Simpler, crueler methods that are sure to produce results.
Like kidnapping the other guyâs son.
The Experiencing China trip will be the perfect opportunity, Andrew She had written. He hadnât mentioned his own name, only Peterâs, but Iâd known about them and their parentsâ feud long enough to guess just from the context. Weâll all be staying at the Autumn Dragon Hotel for four nights in a row, and you know how these trips goâthe teachers will have trouble supervising us all at night. The whole process should be smooth. Easy for someone like you. My father will send some of his men over, keep them hidden in a room on a separate floor. All you have to do is ensure Peter makes his way to them, and take his phone. Itâs essential, however, that you create no disturbance whatsoever, so that by the time anyone even notices heâs gone, itâll be too late.
Then, as if he could sense my horror through the phone, heâd added, Donât worry. We wonât cause him physical harm in any way, and when the time comes, weâll release him on our own. What we need is merely for Mr. Ohâs son to go missing during a vital time in his campaign, long enough to distract him, upset him, severely affect his everyday performance. Then the promotions will be announced, and Mr. Oh will have lost but miraculously won his son back, and everyone will be happy.
âDid he actually say that?â Henry asks, incredulity lifting his brows. âThat everyone will be happy?â
I nod.
âGood god,â he says on a drawn breath. Heâs silent for a while, processing, though his eyes still flicker to the door every few seconds. âWas there anything else?â
âNo. Nothing,â I lie quickly. What I donât tell him is that by some awful coincidence, or maybe some twisted sign from the universe, Mama had messaged me right after Andrew did. Sheâd received Airingtonâs reminder email about the change in prices too, having missed the first one.
Have you made your decision yet? sheâd asked, then attached three brochures for cheap, low-tier local schools near our compound, as well as one for a school in Maine. If not, itâs time to start thinking about next step. Airingtonâs fee deadline is in one week. After that, youâll automatically be un-enrolled from school.
In other words: I need to somehow make over 100,000 RMB in the next seven days, or accept that Iâm screwed and start cleaning out my school lockers. But where am I supposed to get that sort of money? Where else, if not from Andrew?
As I fight off another wave of panic, Henryâs voice breaks through my thoughts.
âYou know, I always figured Andrew She was a bit of a snake.â
I frown at him. âReally? But the guyâs soâ¦so nice and scared of everything all the time. He looked close to wetting himself when Mr. Chen called on him in class the other day.â
Henry just nods as if Iâm helping him prove a point. âMakes sense. Itâs usually the cowards who resort to such crude, extreme tactics.â
Or the desperate, I add in my head, but donât say.
âWell, coward or not, heâs definitely not messing around.â I walk over to his bed and show him the last message Andrew sent me. âHeâs offering us one million RMB for this task alone.â When I first saw it, the number didnât even seem real. It still doesnât. âOne million.â
âWait.â Henry turns his full attention to me, and I canât help but shift under the weight of it. âYouâre not really considering this, are you? The plan is absurd. And we both know Andrew isnât very bright.â
But heâs rich, which is what matters.
âI mean, Iâm not saying Iâd be thrilled to get involved in a toxic decade-long intercompany rivalry and kidnap a minorââ
âThatâs a really great way to start a sentence,â Henry says drily.
I glare at him and continue, âBut if you think about it, this one large crime pays the same amount as ten or eleven medium-sized crimes, so weâre actually justâ¦just maximizing profit and minimizing sin.â
He makes a sound caught halfway between a laugh and a scoff. âSo whatâs next, then? Actual murder?â
âObviously notâIâd neverââ
âReally? Never?â
âNo,â I snap. âHow could you even think that? Andrew said himself that Peter wouldnât be harmed. Thatâs completely different fromâfrom taking someoneâs life.â
âI donât know, Alice,â he says, his dark gaze unreadable, pinning me in place. âA few months ago, I wouldnât have thought it possible for you to consider kidnapping your classmate either.â
Anger surges up inside me, hot and sharp and sudden, cutting my words into blades. âOh my god, Henry, donât be such a hypocrite. You didnât say anything when I told you about the exam missionââ
âWell, it was clear youâd already made up your mindââ
âThen itâs all my fault. Is that it?â
âNo.â His voice is infuriatingly calm. It makes my skin itch. âNo, thatâs obviously not what Iâm sayingââ
âOr do you regret it?â
âRegret what?â
âThis.â I point to him, to me. âBecause I made it pretty clear from the beginning that this wasnât going to be a fun charity projectââ
âIf my memory serves me correctly, I signed up for an app, not a criminal organizationââ
âThen quit.â
The words come out harsher than I intended, and my mouth goes dry as they shoot forth to meet their target. Itâs too late to retract them.
A muscle strains in Henryâs jaw; a rare sign of emotion.
âDo you not know me at all?â he says after a long pause. âI never quit anything.â
You quit violin, I almost counter, but the memory of him confiding in me about his lessons, his lovely features illuminated by moonlight, the mottled bruise stretching over his cheek like a shadow, suddenly threatens to overwhelm me. Softens the acid on my tongue.
Even now, I can still make out the faint outline of the bruise on his face.
âI never quit anything either,â is what I say instead. âWhich is why I thinkâI need to see this task through. Iâm so close toâ¦â
To earning enough money for me and my family. To feeling safe for once in my life. To never having to worry about those awful school brochures again. One million RMB. Do you have any idea what that means to me?
But the question sounds ridiculous, even in my head. How could he? Heâs Henry Li.
âIâm just so close.â
âClose to what?â He sounds genuinely confused.
âYou wouldnât get it,â I mutter. I look away before he can question me again, and the vestiges of my anger turn heavy in my stomach, draining all the fight out of me. âI know you think Iâm a bad person,â I say quietly, and without meaning to, I leave an opening at the end of the sentence, room for him to step in and say, thatâs not true.
But he takes a beat too long to respond. ââ¦I donâtââ
âWhatever.â I straighten, stride over to the window. The sky hangs gray and heavy with unshed rain, and from afar, the pale, bare branches of the wutong trees planted around the playground look like bones. âItâs fine if you think that. Really. Iââfor a fraction of a second, my voice cracks, and I force it to hardenââI was never trying to be a hero anyway.â
âYou could be, though,â Henry says quietly.
âDonât be naive.â
âWhy noââ
âBecause,â I snap. âBecause this isnât a Marvel movie. Itâs not about good versus evilâitâs just about survival. And even if it were,â I add, dragging a finger down the cold pane of glass, âIâd rather be the villain who lives to the end than the hero who winds up dead.â
I turn back around, just in time to catch the look on Henryâs face. Itâs not disgust, as I expected, or even shock. His lips are set in a tight, unyielding line, but his eyes are soft. Strangely tender.
As if Iâve given away something about myself without realizing it.
âLook, I donât need your approval, Henry,â I say, determined to ignore that expression, the way it makes my chest ache like a pressed bruise. âI just need to know if youâre fully prepared to do this mission with me.â
Seconds tick by.
Minutes.
A century of him sitting there, not saying anything, killing me with his silence. But just when Iâm about to give up and walk out the door and pretend all of this never happened, he nods, yes.
âGood,â I say, and itâs not until the word leaves my lips that I realize the extent of my relief. It startles me. Unsettles me. Maybe I care about this partnership more than I want to admit.
I quickly push the thought aside.
âAll right then. Letâs start brainstorming how weâre going to do this whole kidnapping thing now, hmm?â I retrieve a pen from my pocket, and point at the calendar hung up over his desk, a colored sticky note marking every important event. Written in his handwriting, so neat it looks as if itâs been typed up and printed, are the words Experiencing China trip. Only three days away. âWe donât have much time to waste.â