: Chapter 13
If You Could See the Sun
Thereâs a strange hum of energy in the air as we board the train at Beijing Railway Station.
Itâs not just because of the enormous crowd moving with us, pushing past and into the narrow compartments: young, sunburnt workers heaving pots and plastic duffel bags over their shoulders, eager to return to their hometown over the weekend; mothers clutching their purses tight to their chests, yelling and gesturing wildly for their children to follow; gray-haired businessmen negotiating deals on the phone at the top of their voices as they fumble around for a charger.
Itâs excitement, anticipation, wholly unique to Airington students alone. Everyone knows that Experiencing China trips are where Things Happen. After all, the combination of long train and bus rides, luxurious hotels in a foreign place, and nonschool-related activities completed in close proximity of one another seems almost intended to create drama. Friendship circles are broken and rearranged. Long-time couples split and exes hook up again. Secrets are revealed, scandals are made. Like when Vanessa Liu lost her virginity behind a Buddhist shrine on our Year Nine trip to Guilin, or when Jake Nguyen managed to sneak his way into the hotel bar during our Year Ten trip and got so drunk he launched into an hour-long monologue about how he felt inferior to his brother, while Rainieâwho was still his girlfriend at the timeâstroked his hair and fed him sips of water.
But the same scandals that shocked me this time last year now seem so small, so trivial. So normal.
Compared to what Iâm meant to pull off in the days ahead, they feel almost like a joke.
âThis should be our compartment,â Chanel tells me when we reach the middle of the carriage, shoving her giant suitcase through the opened doors with surprising ease. âI travel alone a lot,â she explains, catching the look on my face, and without another word, helps me roll my suitcase inside as well.
âOhâthank you.â
I wonder if itâs obvious to Chanel that I donât travel a lot at all. In fact, apart from my plane ride in and out of America, and the previous Experiencing China tripsâand only because the school fees cover themâI havenât gone anywhere outside of Beijing.
So itâs with fascination that I take in our tiny train compartment: the kettle set out on a folded table, the identical bunk beds sticking out from the walls, the space in between them so narrow only one person could possibly stand there at a time.
âNot a great place for the claustrophobic,â Chanel remarks as she squeezes her way through behind me, plopping down on one of the lower beds. âOr for anyone, really.â
Itâs still bigger than my parentsâ bedroom. A faint pang twists through my stomach at the thought, but I just smile and nod. I was prepared for this to happen, after all; within the Airington school gates, itâs still fairly easy to pretend that everyoneâs the same. But out here, wellâ¦
âQiqi! Guolai, kuai guolaiâzai zheâer!â
The loud, rapid Mandarin exclamations cut through my thoughts, and I turn toward the noise.
A short, middle-aged woman is wheeling two suitcases into our compartment, one of which is covered in a bright pink Barbie design that makes Chanelâs eyes twitch.
Seconds later, a little girl no older than six comes skipping into the compartment, a doll clutched to her chest, her high pigtails bouncing with her every step. This, I assume is the Qiqi the woman was yelling for.
âOh!â The little girl stops short at the sight of me and Chanel. Then she breaks into a wide grin, pointing at us with her free hand. âJiejie! Da jiejie!â
The woman glances in our direction for the first time and pauses too. I wait for the flash of surprise that usually arises when strangers see our uniforms, but then I remember weâre in casual clothes: Chanel, wearing a lacy blouse that rises just above her pale, flat midriff, and me, in a faded sweater and jeans Mama bought at Yaxiu Market a few years ago.
Instead of surprise, a crinkle appears between the womanâs drawn-on brows, like sheâs not sure if Chanel and I are traveling together or not.
âJiejie hao,â Chanel greets politely, and only then do the womanâs features smooth out, her lips lifting into a smile at the subtle flattery; being called jiejie, older sister, instead of ayi, for older women.
I quickly copy Chanelâs greeting, but the woman is already preoccupied, her gaze fixed on Chanel as if they mightâve met somewhere before. Then, in that same brisk, accented Mandarin, she says: âIâm not sure if anyoneâs ever told you this, but you look a lot like that famous modelâwhatâs her name againâ¦â
âCoco Cao?â Chanel offers.
âYes!â The woman claps her hands together and beams. âYes, exactly!â
âOh, right, wellâ¦â Chanel tucks a strand of hair behind her ear, and with a practiced air of nonchalance, says, âThatâs my mother.â
The womanâs eyes widen. âReally?â
âReally.â
âQiqi!â the woman suddenly calls her child, whoâs busy tucking her doll into bed, her little face puckered in concentration. âQiqi, guess what? This is a real model. Isnât she pretty?â
âModelâs daughter,â Chanel corrects, but she looks a little pleased at all the attention, the evident awe awash over the womanâs face.
And Iâm happy for her too. Of course I am. But as the train lurches into motion and the woman sits down beside Chanel as if theyâre old friends and starts gushing about her motherâs latest appearance on Happy Camp, I get that feeling extras must have on large movie sets: like my presence might count for something, but it doesnât really make that much of a difference.
Watching them out of the corner of my eye, I make a silent vow to myself that one day, strangers like that will notice me as well. I will not stay in the corners, feeling sad and silly and small, my pride eating away at itself.
No, I will do something great, and they will all know my name.
But until then, I decide to put my time to better use than listening to Chanelâs incredibly detailed skincare advice. Retreating to the very end of my bunk bed, I take out the printed, annotated map of the Autumn Dragon Hotel from my bag and force myself to study it.
Iâve already spent the previous two days memorizing every possible route to the twentieth floorâwhere Andrew Sheâs men will be waitingâand marking out the busiest spots, the corridors and corners where thereâll likely be the least number of security cameras. And still, I retrace the routes over and over again with my fingertips, try to visualize how the night will go in my head, prepare for the worst-case scenariosâwhere to stop, where to flee, where to hide.
The world around me starts to fade, as it always does when I enter this zone of intense concentration; in fact, if I forget about the whole illegal aspect of the mission, itâs almost like studying for an exam.
At some point, the air conditioner kicks on at full blast, and I shiver in the sudden, unforgiving cold, hugging the blankets tight around my body with numb fingers. But the cold only grows, the temperature dropping by what feels like ten degrees per second, and as my teeth start chattering violently, I remember, dimly, that itâs late autumn. Thereâs no reason for the trainâs air conditioning system to be on at allâ¦
I recognize the exact moment I turn invisible.
I recognize it, because the little girl, Qiqi, happens to be looking in my direction, and her eyes go rounder than her dollâs. She brings a small hand to her opened mouth, then frantically pats her motherâs shoulder.
âMama! Mama!â she cries. âNikan! Kuaikan ya!â
Look.
But of course, thereâs nothing for her mother to see. Iâve stuffed the map deep into my pocket and leaped out of bed, erasing all evidence that I might still be in the compartment.
Qiqiâs mother makes a small noise of exasperation. âLook at what? I told you not to interrupt me when Iâm having a conversation, Qiqi.â
âTaâta shizong le!â Qiqi insists, pointing at the spot I was in just now.
She disappeared.
âYes, I know, the other girl left the room,â Qiqiâs mother says impatiently, then shoots Chanel an apologetic look. âSorry, my daughter likes to talk a lot when sheâs bored. Says all sorts of nonsense.â
Qiqiâs face scrunches up, her frustration rivaling her motherâs. âMama, ta zhende⦠Qiqi meiyou hushuoâ¦â
I can still hear her arguing with her mother as I creep out of the compartment, into the crowded corridor.
Passengers are pacing back and forth, grabbing packets of instant noodles and chocolate pie from the train vendors or filling up their water kettles. After a woman trips over my foot and nearly spills boiling water all over me, it becomes quite apparent that I canât just hang around here until my invisibility turns off again.
Without consciously making a decision about where to go next, I end up outside Henryâs compartment.
To save the teachers time and energy, our train compartments and hotel roommates have been arranged based on our dorms, which means Henry is in there, alone.
The thought scares me a little.
But when another passenger barges right into me from behind, swearing and yanking at my hair with excruciating force as they try to regain their balance, my nerves quickly still. I slide the door wide open and step in.
I was wrong, in a wayâHenry is the only Airington student here, but he isnât alone alone. There are two businessmen snoring on the upper bunks, one using their suit as a blanket, the other half propped up against the wall, his head lolling back and forth every time the train jolts.
Beneath them, Henry is sitting upright, hands folded in his lap, gaze fixed on the opposite wall. Itâs strange seeing him like this: out of his school uniform and in a plain white V-necked shirt instead, his dark hair falling over his brows in soft, unbrushed waves.
He looks really, infuriatingly good.
He also looksâ¦tense.
As I draw closer, I notice the uneven rhythm in his breathing, the muscle straining in his arms, as if ready for combat or to jump out of the train at a momentâs notice.
Then he turns toward me, some emotion I canât quite decipher flickering in his eyes. âAlice?â
He says my name like a question.
âYou can see me?â I ask in surprise.
âNo. I sensed your presence.â
I frown. âWell, thatâs not good. If people can sense when Iâm here, Iâll need to fix that before tomorrow. Work on masking my steps better, or moving more slowly, orâ¦â
But heâs shaking his head before Iâve even finished my sentence. âThatâs not what I meant,â he says, then pauses, seemingly searching for the right words. âItâitâs only because⦠Iâm around you so often. I highly doubt anyone else would be able to.â
âAh,â I say, though Iâm still unsure what he really means. All I know is that if Henryâs being this ineloquent, maybe heâs even more stressed than I realizedâbut about what, I have no clue either. âWell, then. Seeing as I came all the way here from my carriage, are you going to be a gentleman and offer me a seat or what?â
âOhâyes. Of course.â
He moves over to make room at once, and I sit, but alarm flashes through me. Iâve never known him to be this compliant before. Somethingâs definitely wrong.
Still, we are both silent for a while, listening to the steady snores of the two businessmen and the creak of the train tracks below, before I finally muster the courage to point out the obvious. âNot to sound like the school counselor or whatever, but you donât seem like your usual self today.â
âMy usual self?â he repeats, eyebrows rising.
âYou knowâyour superpretentious, unnecessarily formal, annoyingly arrogant, walking-advertisement-for-SYS self.â The intended insult comes out sounding much more affectionate than I wanted, so I add for good measure, âYou even stumbled over your words when you were talking just now.â
Horror clips his tone. âI did not.â
âYou did,â I say, mock-serious. Then, with sincerity: âSo. Do you see my cause for concern now?â
âI suppose. I justâ¦â He smooths out a nonexistent crease in his shirt, then says, with all the tones of someone making a terrible, humiliating admission: âIâmâ¦not exactly a big fan of enclosed spaces.â
âOkay,â I say slowly, trying hard to think of what to say next. Because if this really is an admission, it means heâs trusting me with something private, something precious. And god help me, for whatever reason, the last thing I want is to ruin it. âOkay,â I repeat. âDo you want to talk about whyâ¦?â
âNot in particular, no.â
âOh.â I clear my throat. âWell, all right then.â
A long, awkward silence ensues, and Iâm starting to worry this conversation is overânot that I enjoy talking to Henry Li or anything, itâs more the principle of the matterâwhen he sucks in a tight breath, the way you would before ripping off a Band-Aid, and says, âItâsâ¦quite silly, really. And it was a very long time agoâI couldnât have been more than four or five. Butâ¦â
I wait.
âAt our old house in Shunyi, there was this room in the basementâwell, not so much a room as a closet. There were no windows, nothing except a door you could only open from the outside. I remember⦠I just remember it was always cold in there, and dark, like the mouth of a cave. My mother wanted to leave it for the ayi to store her cleaning supplies, but Father thought itâd be put to better use as aâ¦study space.â His jaw tightens. âSo every day, at precisely five in the morning, heâd leave me in there with only a book of practice questions and a pencil for hours.â
He pauses, rubs the back of his head. Forces out a hollow laugh. âOf course, it wasnât quite as terrible as it must sound. Not at first. Hannahâmy older sisterâwould sneak me snacks and books when my father was busy working, or simply sit outside the door to keep me company⦠But then her own grades started slipping, and she was sent off to school in America, and it wasâit was just me in that room for hours on endâ¦â His voice grows quieter and quieter with every word, until itâs swallowed completely by the rattle of the train and the shrieks of a baby in another compartment.
And I know I should say something at this point. I know. But all that comes out of my mouth is, âOh my god.â
âYes.â He shifts position slightly, so I can no longer see his face. Only the pale curve of his neck. âIndeed.â
âIâm so sorry,â I whisper. âI honestlyâI canât imagine how hard that mustâve beenâ¦â
I mean this as more than just a phrase. Despite what everyone likes to assume based on my scores and general personality, Mama and Baba have never pressured me to study. If anything, theyâre always the ones to tell me to relax, to put the textbook down and watch some TV, go outside more.
And when I was five, Mama made it clear that she only ever wanted two things from me: for me to be a good person, and for me to be happy. That was also why she and Baba decided to sell their car, their old apartment, and use all their savings to send me to Airington, even if they knew Iâd resist the idea at firstâthey hoped to protect me from the intense pressure of the gaokao.
âItâs fine now. Really,â he says, voice rough. âAnd I wouldnât be where I am withoutââ
âNo.â Anger cuts through me like a knife: anger at his father, for doing this to him; anger at the universe, for letting it happen; anger at myself, for assuming his competence was rooted in an easy childhood, a painless childhood. âI hate that. I hate when people justify a clearly inhumane process and use it as some kind of model for success just because the results are to their likingââ
âIs that not what youâre doing, though? With Beijing Ghost?â
âIââ I falter, caught off guard not just by the question, but the truth of it. My stomach twists. âI guess youâre right. But the thing is⦠I donât know any other way to live.â
Quietly, he says, âI donât either.â
Then he turns back to me, the space between us narrowing to only a few dangerous inches. His eyes lock on mine, and something else locks into place in my chest. âYouâre visible again.â
âReally,â I say, but neither of us move.
Weâre sitting close, I realize. Too close.
Not close enough.
I draw in a shaky breath. He smells expensive, like the unopened boxes of designer shoes Chanel keeps piled up in our dorm. But beneath it thereâs another scent, something crisp and faintly sweet, like fresh-cut grass in spring or clean sheets warmed by sun.
We could kiss like this. The treacherous thought floats, unbidden, to the surface of my consciousness. I know, of course, that we wonât. That heâs too disciplined, and Iâm too stubborn. But the possibility still hangs thick in the air, in the spaces we do not touch, the thought written all over his face, his half-parted lips, his black, burning gaze.
âAlice,â he says, and his accentâ
God, his accent. His voice.
Him.
And Iâm about to say something clever, something that will not betray the mad fluttering in my chest or how distracted I am by the beads of sweat on his neck but still make him want me, when a heavy hand slaps my shoulder. Hard.
I jerk back with a startled yelp and look up.
The businessman still snoring away above us has shifted position in his sleep, one arm now dangling innocently over the bed rails.
âAre you quite all right?â Henry asks, sounding a little choked upânot out of concern, but badly suppressed laughter. Itâs incredible how fast I can vacillate between wanting to kiss this guy and kill him.
I shoot him a withering glare, rubbing the sore spot on my shoulder. âCould you maybe act a little more concerned? I couldâve gotten hit in the head. I couldâve been concussed.â
âFine, fine, Iâm sorry,â he says, though the corners of his lips continue to twitch upward. âLet me rephrase: Would you like me to fetch some ice for your potentially mortal wound? Perhaps some painkillers? Give you a massage?â
âShut up,â I grumble.
He grins at me then, and despite my annoyance, despite my throbbing shoulder, I am relieved. I would rather spend the rest of this train ride fighting with him than let him be trapped alone with his thoughts and fears again.