: Chapter 14
If You Could See the Sun
After we arrive in Suzhou, sleep deprived and starving from the long train ride, the first thing the teachers do is take us out to eat.
Itâs warmer here in the south, humid, like the inside of a sauna, and most of us are sweating by the time our rented bus pulls up outside some fancy restaurant that ranked first on Dazhong Dianping. As the only teacher here who can speak Chinese, Wei Laoshi quickly assumes the role of tour guide. We watch through the tinted windows as he approaches the waitress out front, gesturing to his school ID and then to us (a few students in the front seats wave; the waitress frowns).
Then the waitress and Wei Laoshi seem to get into a heated argument, both of them shaking their heads and fanning their faces, and even though we canât hear a single word theyâre saying, the message is clear: there arenât enough tables in the restaurant for all of us.
âWell, fuck me,â Jake Nguyen grumbles from the row behind me. âIâm starving.â
âLanguage, Mr. Nguyen,â Julie Walsh says sharply.
âShitâmy bad,â Jake says.
âLanguage!â
âRight, got it, Mrs. Walsh.â
âItâs Dr. Walsh.â
âYeah, whatever,â he mutters.
Someone snorts.
âDidnât the school think to reserve us a few baojian?â Vanessa demands, standing up suddenly in her seat. Her long French braid almost whacks me in the face.
âNot all restaurants have private rooms, you know,â someone elseâit sounds like Peter Ohâpoints out.
âWhat?â Vanessa whips her head around with a look of genuine shock. Even her cheeks go pink. âYouâre kidding.â
âDonât be such a snob.â
âIâm notââ
Beside me, Henry sighs. Itâs a soft sound, barely audible over Vanessaâs complaints and Jakeâs cursing, butâI kid you notâeveryone quietens down at once.
Then Henry asks, âThe restaurantâs name is Dijunhao, right?â
âYeah,â I say, squinting at the golden calligraphy written backward over the restaurantâs double door. âWhy?â
But Henry doesnât respond; heâs already on the phone. I listen to him greet whoever heâs calling in flawless Chinese, ask politely if theyâve eaten lunch yet, rattle off his fatherâs name, two other names I donât recognize, confirm the location of the restaurant, and hang up.
A few minutes later, the manager himself comes out to greet us with a smile so wide it looks physically painful.
âOf course thereâs space for you! Youâre our most honored guests,â he says, when Wei Laoshi questions the sudden change. He shoots the waitress a pointed look, and the waitress scurries off as if her life depends on it, returning with menus and five more waitresses who ask to help carry our bags.
Weâre given the best tables with the fancy chopstick holders and red tablecloth and stunning window view of the lakes outside, and offered free jasmine tea (handpicked from the mountains, the manager tells us) and prawn crackers, and even the teachers are looking at Henry in openmouthed awe, like heâs glowing.
âI wonder how that feels,â I murmur, when Henry comes over to sit down beside me and Chanel.
âPardon?â Henry says.
âNothing.â I take a long swig of tea, letting the hot liquid scorch my tongue. âNever mind.â
Chanel, who doesnât look quite as impressed as the othersâprobably because sheâs used to receiving similar treatment herselfâpokes her head between us and asks, âHow was the train ride Henry? Did you sleep well?â
âI did, thank you,â Henry replies mildly, with a stiff half smile. Iâm so used to seeing the side of Henry that laughs aloud, that teases me and challenges me and listens to Taylor Swift on repeat that I keep forgetting how distant he is with everyone else, even people he knows.
âMmm, thatâs what I figured,â Chanel says. Thereâs a glint in her eyes. âSince Alice never returned to our compartment.â
I almost choke on my tea.
âWe didnâtâI wasnâtââ I splutter, so loud that the conversation at the neighboring table stalls, and the waiters stop setting down dishes to look at me. I flush and continue in a whisper, âWe were only going over business details. Seriously.â
Chanel just winks at me, while Henry stares down with extreme focus at the single sesame bun on his plate, the tips of his ears pink.
More waiters soon step forward bearing trays of popular local dishes: deep-fried fish glazed with a thick tomato sauce, the meat so tender it slides off naturally from the bones; delicate red date paste cakes cut into the shape of diamonds; round wontons floating in bowls of golden broth.
Itâs all mouthwatering, but across the table, Julie Walsh wrinkles her nose at the fish and asks, very slowly, âWhatâ¦is that?â
A pause. No one seems to want to answer, but when the silence drags on too long, Chanel rolls her eyes and says, âItâs Mandarin Squirrel Fish.â
Julieâs hand flies to her chest. âSquirrelââ
âNot actual squirrel,â I canât help interrupting. âItâs just the name.â
âOh. Well, good,â Julie says, though she still makes no move to touch the dish. Instead, to my utter disbelief, she retrieves a packet of trail mix from her handbag and dumps the contents out onto her plate.
Irritation flares up inside me, and I realize that Henry was right the other day: my anger does make me brave.
âExcuse me, Dr. Walsh,â I say, raising my voice a little. âI thought this was an Experiencing China trip?â
Julie blinks at me, a salted almond half lifted to her painted lips. âYes?â
âThen surely eating the local cuisine is part of the experience, is it not? Especially when the teachers are expected to lead by example?â Without giving her a chance to protest, I go on, âAnd werenât you saying just the other day, in our social ethics class, that world harmony could be achieved if only people were willing to practice empathy and explore new cultures?â
The almond drops soundlessly and rolls over the tablecloth. Julie doesnât pick it up; sheâs too busy staring at me like Iâm a bug she wants to squash.
I donât think a teacher has ever looked at me with anything other than affection or concern before. Then again, I canât recall ever talking to a teacher like this before either.
Then Mr. Murphy stands up at the next table and claps twice to get everyoneâs attention, snapping the thread of tensionâand conveniently saving Julie from having to respond.
âListen up, guys,â he booms, using his presenter-at-assembly voice. âSince we have a very full afternoon planned out, and wonât be in the Autumn Dragon Hotel until late evening, weâve decided to save some hassle and give you your hotel room numbers and cards now, all right?â He peers around at us as if weâre really all sitting down before a stage. âIs that something I can trust you guys to keep safe for eight hours?â
He receives only a few lackluster nods in response, but seems to deem this good enough.
âGreat.â He takes out a crumpled paper folder not unlike the one I stole the history exam answers from. Guilt lifts its head, and I quickly stomp it back down. âIâll call your names one by one, and if you or your roommate can just come up in an orderly fashion⦠Letâs see⦠Scott An.â
Thereâs an evident discrepancy between Mr. Murphyâs idea of âorderly fashionâ and our interpretation of the words, because soon everyoneâs standing up and jostling each other trying to get to the front.
âOrderly!â Mr. Murphy cries over the squeak of chairs and the countless voices talking at the same time. âI said orderly!â
In the chaos, I manage to squeeze close enough to get a view of the paper in Mr. Murphyâs outstretched hand, the tens of names printed in tidy rows across it. But itâs not my name Iâm searching for.
Peter Oh and Kevin Nguyen: Room 902.
I carve the number into my memory. If everything goes well, this is the room Iâll end up in tonight.
Once weâre all back in our seats and our plates are scraped clean, Wei Laoshi takes over, leading us out to the bus again. I think heâs really starting to embrace his tourist guide role, because he puts on a red bucket hat, waves a little flag with the school logo on it high over his head and says, with sincere enthusiasm, âNowâwhoâs ready for some sightseeing?â
The old districts of Suzhou are beautiful.
Like a magical secret kept safe and hidden from the outside world. A soft, milky fog spills across the winding waterways, the crooked, crowded alleys and faded white houses, blurring the lines between land and sky. There are women wringing out their laundry by the banks, leathery-skinned men hauling nets of fish from the murky green canals, college-aged girls posing and snapping photos by the willow trees, pretty oil paper umbrellas rested over their shoulders.
âOhâoh, itâs like the Chinese version of Venice!â Julie Walsh gasps when we step out of the bus, her high heels clacking against the century-old pavement.
But the place doesnât look like Venice to me. It doesnât look like anywhere else in the world.
We start walking down the side of a canal, with Wei Laoshi leading the way. Every now and then, he stops to point at thingsâa statue of a solemn-looking official, a slanted inn, a boat drifting atop the watersâand call out random facts, saying how the Qianlong emperor once stayed in Suzhou for ten days and couldnât bear to leave, even reciting a few lines of the emperorâs poetry.
Iâm sure Qianlongâs poem is great, but all I can get out of it is something about a bird and a mountain and bloodâno, snowânoâ
âWait, Wei Laoshi,â Chanel ventures. âI keep forgettingâwhich one was Qianlong and which one was Qin Shihuang again? Like, who was the dude that buried scholars alive?â
Wei Laoshi halts in his tracks and turns, fixing Chanel with a look that quite clearly implies:Â you uncultured swine.
âWhat?â Chanel says, defensive. âI used to go to school in Australia. Itâs not like they teach you much about Chinese history there.â
Wei Laoshi just sighs and casts his eyes heavenward, like he might be apologizing to the spirit of the Qianlong emperor himself.
The bus ride took twice as long as the teachers predicted, thanks to peak-time traffic, and soon everyoneâs hungry again. Wei Laoshiâs tour is cut short as a result, and with another long-suffering look, he abandons his lecture on the history of paper umbrellas to take us all on a spontaneous trip to the night market.
The market teems with life, and everything feels sharper here. Brighter.
Children chase each other over the steep steps and arched bridges, skirt around the canal edge, flirting with the danger and thrill of it all while their parents yell at them to be careful. A woman lifts the lid off a giant wok, white steam rising from the braised meats and sizzling fried buns. Neon lights flicker over endless displays of food, some laid out in bamboo baskets and others in deep, sauce-filled trays: grilled lamb and quail egg skewers, green sticky rice cake stuffed with sweet bean paste and glazed, flaking mooncakes stamped with red characters. Little discount labels and QR codes are printed beneath them, likely for people using WeChat Pay.
âPe-ter, what are you doing?â
Wei Laoshiâs voice cuts through the vendorsâ calls and the distant splash of oars in water.
I whirl around.
A beggar who looks at least seventy years old has latched onto Peter Oh, her wrinkled hands seizing the fabric of his new Supreme hoodie. I wouldâve expected Peter to shake her offâBabaâs always warning me about how some beggars are really just scammers hiding iPhones under their ragsâbut to my surprise, heâs holding out a crisp 100 RMB note. I search his expression; thereâs no trace of mockery or malice in his eyes, only sincerity. Even a hint of shyness.
The old womanâs eyes widen, like she canât believe what sheâs seeing either. It makes my heart hurt. But before she can take the money from him, Wei Laoshi steps in between them and drags Peter away by the sleeve, ignoring his spluttered protests.
âDonât be so naive,â Wei Laoshi scolds, grabbing the shiny pink note and tucking it firmly into Peterâs pocket.
âItâs not naive,â Vanessa says as she paces forward suddenly, matching her steps to Peterâs. Somehow, that girl manages to appear everywhere. Or maybe Iâve just been noticing her a lot more ever since the art scandal. âHe was just being nice. Right, Peter?â
I donât stick around to hear the rest of their conversation. I donât want to hear it, to start thinking of Peter as the nice boy who trusts strangers and gives money to those who need it. He is a target for tonight, and nothing else.
My heart cannot soften.
âYou all right?â Henry asks, slowing down near a small bridge. I realize then that the whole time I was watching Peter and Wei Laoshi, Henry was watching me.
âSure,â I say. Try to smile. âI guess⦠I just want to get it over with, you know?â
Thereâs no need to elaborate; he nods.
Wei Laoshi calls for everyone to stop, tells us weâre free to wander around and buy whatever snacks we want, but weâll be meeting back here in two hours so please be punctual and donât get kidnapped in the meantime. Everyone laughs at that, but my throat seizes up, and it takes three attempts before I can remember how to swallow again.
When the crowd disperses, Henry and I stay near the bridge, eventually finding an old bench to sit on. For a while, we simply look out at the canals and crowded alleys in silence. Then he shifts closer toward meâonly by an inch, maybe less, yet it somehow makes all the difference in the worldâand the silence changes, crackles with electricity, demanding to be filled. His lashes lower. His eyes flicker to my lipsâ¦
I panic and blurt out the first thing I can think of: âYour dad.â
He pulls back with a frown. âI beg your pardon?â
âYour dad,â I repeat slowly. Too late to go back now. âUmâ¦you never finished your story. On the train. About how things turned out with him.â
Even as Iâm saying the words, I want to kick myself. What kind of person ruins a potentially romantic moment by bringing up childhood trauma?
But Henry looks more surprised than offended. âYou really want to know?â
âYeah,â I tell him, and even though this isnât the conversation I expected to have with him tonight, I mean it.
He doesnât reply at first. His gaze travels to a rowboat gliding out from under the bridge, a family of four huddled together on the seats, the youngest child squealing every time they bounce over a small wave. Then he sighs. Says, âI told you about how things were when I was around five. But shortly after I turned ten, during another long study session, I sort ofâ¦â He tilts his head, like heâs recalling vocabulary from a foreign language. âWhatâs that term again? When your emotions overpower rational thought and all regard for etiquette?â
âExploded?â I offer, struggling to picture Henry doing such a thing. âSnapped? Totally lost your shit?â
He gives me a small, sheepish smile that makes my heartbeat spike. âWell, yes. Something to that effect. My father was shocked, of course, but he actually ended up apologizing. Promised he would never use suchâ¦extreme measures again.â He glances back down at the family in the boat, their faces bright with moonshine and laughter. âAnd he never did.â
âWow.â I shake my head. âJust like that?â
âIt probably helped that I was doing so well at school, and that I already showed interest in running the company. But I also imagine that he simply hadnât realized there were alternative ways of effective parenting. His father had been even stricter with him about his studies, and so when he got into Harvard and founded SYS and became successfulââ
âThe results seemed to validate the process,â I finish for him, remembering our earlier conversation.
âExactly.â
Henry rubs his eyes, and for one bizarre moment, I think heâs crying. But then he lets his hands fall back down in his lap, the lantern light from the shops around us throwing his features into sharp relief, and the truth dawns on me, so simple I almost laughâheâs tired.
He had been lying today, when Chanel asked him if heâd slept well. Neither of us had slept at all on the train; weâd stayed up finalizing our plans, then the backup plans, and then one of usâI canât remember whoâgot sidetracked and we justâ¦talked. About school, about his brief time in England, about the games his sister used to invent when they were kids, the Shanghainese dishes his mother made him whenever he was sick. About everything and nothing all at once, laughter and half-coherent thoughts spilling out of my lips before I could stop them. I donât think either of us had been expecting the night to go as it did.
âYou can sleep now, you know,â I tell Henry.
âWhat?â Bemusement draws his eyebrows together, and he juts his chin outâa familiar movement Iâd once mistaken for arrogance, but have come to recognize as only a trick to mask his confusion.
âI mean itâyou should get some rest,â I say. âYouâre obviously exhausted, and who knows when weâll be able to sleep at the hotel?â If we can fall asleep at all, I add silently, a bolt of guilt striking through me.
Henry searches my face for a beat, his eyes narrowed. âYouâre being too nice,â he says finally. âItâs suspicious.â
âIâm being practical. I need you alert and awake for the job tonight.â
Still, he hesitates. âYouâre absolutely certain this is not part of some elaborate scheme to take unflattering photos of me sleeping and blackmail me with them?â
âIf I wanted to do that,â I point out, âI could literally just sneak into your bedroom when Iâm invisible and snap as many photos of you as I want.â
âThatâs very comforting.â
But he does close his eyes, though his head remains propped up in such an uncomfortable position I offer him my shoulder as a pillow. Within only a few minutes, his breathing slows. The muscles in his body relax.
I smile and look up. Streaks of dark, wet pink and glistening blue seep through the sky like spilled watercolor, while floating lanterns rise gently over the horizon like ghosts. A soft breeze drifts over my skin, carrying with it the fragrance of chrysanthemums and fresh-baked pastries from the snack stalls below.
Then thereâs Henry.
Henry, whose head is resting against my shoulder, the soft curls of his hair brushing my cheek, his features smooth and unguarded in sleep. And everything about this moment is so lovely and so fragile in its loveliness that Iâm almost afraid to hold it. Afraid that the spell will break.
If not for the kidnapping, I think to myself, today mightâve been a perfect day.