Radish
Chapter Five
Juzi and the mason appeared to forget about Hei-hai over the next couple of weeks, and even stopped going to the bridge to see him. At noon and night, he heard meadowlark songs in the jute field, which always brought a cold grin to his face, as if he knew what the bird was saying. The blacksmith did not notice the meadowlark’s call until several days after Hei-hai. From his place under the bridge he discovered the woman and the mason’s secret by careful observation. Whenever the meadowlark call sounded, the mason was absent from the worksite. The young woman, beset with anxiety, would look around before laying down her hammer and walking off. Not long after she left, the meadowlark stopped singing. Then an awful look would disfigure the blacksmith’s face, and he would be spoiling for a fight. He began drinking. Hei-hai bought him a bottle of potato spirits every day from the little shop across the bridge.
On this night, waves of moonlight cascaded down like water as the meadowlark sang. A warm and tender southerly breeze wafted from the jute field to the worksite. The blacksmith grabbed a liquor bottle and downed half of it in one go, drawing tears from his good eye. Deputy Director Liu Taiyang had gone home for his son’s wedding, and the workers were slacking off. Masons scheduled to work at night lay under the bridge and smoked, and with no chisels to repair, the forge fires all but died out.
‘Hei-hai, go get me some radishes . . .’ The alcohol burned in the blacksmith’s stomach; he was nearly breathing fire.
Hei-hai stood by the bellows, stiff as a post, staring at him.
‘Are you waiting for me to give you a beating?’
Hei-hai walked into the moonlight, skirted the jute field with its many mysteries, and walked through the multi-hued sweet potato field to reach the radish field, which teemed with mirages. By the time he returned with a radish, the blacksmith was snoring loudly in bed. Hei-hai laid the radish on the anvil and stirred the fire with tremulous hands, but was unable to make those blue and yellow flames dance again. He changed angles, glancing at the radish on the anvil. It seemed wrapped in a dark red cloth, tattered and ugly. He hung his head in dejection.
Hei-hai slept badly that night, tossing and turning under the bridge. Now that Director Liu was gone, all the workers went home to sleep, leaving nothing but a thin layer of straw under the bridge. Moonbeams slanted into the openings, filling them with a cold glint that was accompanied by the sounds of flowing water, rustling jute plants and the snores of the blacksmith, who slept under the westernmost arch. There were other, more puzzling sounds as well, all of which found their way into his ears. He was mesmerised by the shimmering straw spread on the stone floor, so he stacked it and burrowed in. When the wind still found its way into the pile, he curled up and stopped moving. He wanted to sleep, but sleep eluded him. He could not stop thinking about that radish. What kind was it? Golden, yet transparent. One moment he was standing in the middle of the river, and the next in the radish field. He was searching, searching everywhere.
The next morning, before the sun was up and when the moon still showed weakly in the sky, a panicky flock of crows flew over from the worksite, cawing loudly. Their dirty feathers dotted the floodgate. A dozen grey clouds stood on the eastern horizon like tall trees, tattered streamers dangling from their branches.
When he crawled out from under the bridge, Hei-hai was freezing, shivering as he had a few days earlier during an attack of the shakes. Director Liu had returned the day before, and was furious with what he found. He’d fulminated against the workers, who had showed up early on this day to work extra hard. The constant sound of hammering was like the croaking of pond frogs. There were many chisels to repair, and the blacksmith attacked them with great industry, turning out beautiful work. The masons who came to exchange the worn chisels praised his work, saying he’d surpassed the old blacksmith; the chisels tore through the rocks.
As the sun climbed into the sky, the mason came with two chisels to be repaired. Newly purchased, they were worth four or five yuan apiece. As the blacksmith glanced at the spirited mason, a cold ray of light shot from his good eye. The mason was unmindful of the man’s expression – the eyes of the very happy only see happiness. Hei-hai knew that the blacksmith was going to try to make a fool out of the mason, and that frightened him. The blacksmith heated the two chisels until they were white as silver, laid them on the anvil and hammered the ends into points. Then he dunked them all at once in the bucket.
The mason walked off with the chisels. The grinning blacksmith eyed Hei-hai. ‘What makes that asshole think he’s good enough to use my chisels?’ he said. ‘What do you think, son?’
Hei-hai cowered in a corner. Before long, the mason returned with the chisels and flung them at the blacksmith’s feet. ‘One-eye,’ he growled, ‘what kind of work is this?’
‘What are you shouting about, asshole?’
‘Open that eye of yours and take a look.’
‘They must be flawed chisels.’
‘Bullshit! You did this to make me look bad.’
‘So what if I did? Just looking at you makes my blood boil!’
‘You, you . . .’ The mason was white with rage. ‘Come over here if you’ve got the balls!’
‘I’m not scared of you.’ The blacksmith untied his oilcloth apron, baring his back, and moved toward the mason like a brown bear.
After taking off his jacket and red athletic shirt, the mason stood on the sandy ground in front of the floodgate in his undershirt. He was tall and husky, with a student’s face, solid as a tree. The blacksmith’s feet, still covered with oilcloth to protect them from the hot metal, scraped noisily along the rocky ground. He had long arms, stumpy legs and a muscular chest.
‘Do we talk it out or fight it out?’ the blacksmith asked scornfully.
‘Up to you,’ the mason said in the same contemptuous tone.
‘Then you’d better go home and have your father sign a guarantee that he won’t come to me for a new son after I beat you to a pulp.’
‘And you’d better go home to prepare your coffin.’
After a spate of insults, the two men drew closer. Hei-hai remained cowering in the corner. He watched the first exchange, which was comical. The mason spat in the blacksmith’s face. Then the blacksmith swung at the mason, who stepped back, the fist missing its mark. More spit, more swings, another retreat, another miss. But before the mason could spit a third time, the blacksmith hit him on the shoulder, spinning him around.
A crowd gathered, amid startled cries. ‘Stop fighting,’ they shouted. ‘Stop it!’ But no one broke it up, and the shouts soon died out. Everyone held their breath and watched wide-eyed as the two combatants, utterly unlike in physique, pitted strength against strength. Juzi, her face white with fear, gripped the shoulders of the woman next to her. Each time her lover was hit, she moaned, the area around her eyes like dark chrysanthemums.
As they traded punch for punch, neither appeared to be winning. The mason’s height served him well, but his showy punches lacked steam, and he could not put his opponent down. The blacksmith’s movements were slow, but his powerful fists landed with authority, and spun the mason around. Then one of the mason’s punches connected, rocking the stunned blacksmith. Seeing an opening, the mason attacked, raining punches on the blacksmith, who hunched over, stuck his head under the mason’s arms and wound his arms around his waist. The mason held the blacksmith in a headlock, and they began wrestling, advancing and retreating, back and forth, ending with the mason flat on his back on the sandy ground.
Shouts erupted from the crowd.
The blacksmith stood up, spitting blood and tilting his head, like the winner at a cockfight.
The mason got up off the ground and charged. Two bodies, one light, the other dark, were once again entwined. This time the mason stayed low to protect his belly, crotch and thighs. Four arms grappled. The mason was sometimes able to pick the blacksmith up and whirl him around, but could not throw him down. He was panting heavily and sweating from head to toe; ther
e was not a drop of sweat on the blacksmith. The mason’s strength was ebbing, his movements were erratic and he was seeing double. As he slackened, the blacksmith broke his hold and wrapped his arms around the man’s waist so tightly he couldn’t breathe. He was back on the ground again.
The mason lost the third round badly. The blacksmith crouched down, lifted him up on his shoulders and flung him at least two metres.
Juzi, weeping, rushed over to help the mason to his feet. The pleasure vanished from the blacksmith’s face as he heard her cry, replaced by a look of misery. As he stood there blankly, the mason got to his feet, pushed Juzi’s hands away, scooped up a handful of sand and flung it into the blacksmith’s face, temporarily blinding him. The blacksmith roared like a wild animal and frantically rubbed his good eye. The mason charged, throttling the blacksmith and forcing him to the ground, where he pummelled him as if he were beating a drum.
At that moment, a dark figure burrowed out from between the legs of the crowd. It was Hei-hai. He flew like a bird onto the back of the mason, grabbed his cheeks with hands like black claws and pulled with all his might. The man bared his teeth, parted his lips and screamed – ‘Ow, ow!’ – before thumping to the sandy ground again.
The blacksmith struggled to sit up and began feeling around on the ground for rocks, picking them up and flinging them in all directions. ‘Bastard! Lousy dog!’ Curses flew with the rocks, landing on the onlookers like a hailstorm. They scattered. Juzi screamed, and the blacksmith’s hand stopped dead. Tears had washed the sand out of his eye, which could now see, though not clearly. He saw a white sliver of stone lodged in Juzi’s right eye, as if she’d grown a fungus. With a screech, he covered his eye and fell to the ground, where he writhed in agony.
Hei-hai’s hands relaxed the moment he heard her scream. His fingers had dug two bloody, coal-smeared gouges in the mason’s cheeks. In the midst of chaos, he slinked over to a spot under the bridge and squatted down in the darkest corner he could find to watch the pandemonium at the worksite, his teeth chattering.
Chapter Six
There was no sign of the mason or Juzi the next day at the worksite, which was shrouded in gloom. Overhead the sun seemed to be convulsing, while below a bleak autumn wind raised waves in the jute field, over which flocks of sparrows cried out fearfully. The wind raised dust as it passed under the bridge and coloured much of the sky yellow. It did not die down until after nine o’clock, when the sun returned to normal.
When Deputy Director Liu Taiyang, who had returned from his son’s wedding, learned what had happened, he seethed. Standing in front of the forge, he tore into the blacksmith, threatening to gouge out his good eye and give it to Juzi in exchange for the one she’d lost. The blacksmith said nothing in his defence. The pimples on his dark face had turned red. He took in big gulps of air and swallowed big gulps of alcohol.
The masons, driven by demonic energy, worked feverishly. Dull chisels piled up by the forge, waiting to be repaired. The blacksmith lay curled on his bed, swigging alcohol, the bridge opening reeking of it.
Director Liu kicked him furiously. ‘Scared? Or faking it? Do you think playing dead will solve your problem? Get your ass up and repair those chisels. Maybe that will make up for what you did.’
The blacksmith flung his bottle up onto the bridge, where it shattered and rained shards of glass and drops of alcohol onto Director Liu’s head. The blacksmith jumped up and ran out, listing sideways as he shouted, “What am I afraid of? The heavens don’t scare me, death doesn’t scare me either, so what’s there to be afraid of?’ He climbed up to the floodgate. ‘No man scares me!’ He banged into the stone railing and staggered.
‘Watch out, blacksmith,’ people below shouted. ‘You’ll fall.’
‘Me, fall?’ He laughed loud and hard as he climbed onto the railing. Then he let go and stood precariously. The people watching below were frozen, entranced, barely breathing.
He stretched out his arms, flapping them as if they were wings, and started walking along the narrow railing, swaying from side to side. A walk became a saunter, a saunter became a trot. Down below, the people covered their eyes with their hands, but only for a moment.
He wobbled as he ran across the railing. His distorted image was reflected on the surface of the blue water below. He ran from west to east and back, singing.
From Beijing to Nanjing I’ve never seen anyone string up an electric light in their pants, tada, tada, tadac, from Nanjing to Beijing I’ve never seen anyone pull a slingshot out of their pants . . .
Some intrepid masons ran up to bring the blacksmith down. He fought them. ‘Don’t fuck with me! I’m a champion acrobat. Who’s better, those girls who walk tightropes in movies or me on this railing, tell me that.’ The masons were breathing hard by the time they got him back down under the bridge, where he collapsed onto his bed, foaming at the mouth. He tore at his own throat. ‘Mother!’ he shouted. ‘I can’t take it anymore. Hei-hai, my apprentice, save your master, dig me up a radish . . .’
The sight of Hei-hai in a coat that reached his thighs surprised the people. It was made of new heavy canvas, durable enough to last five years or more. So little of his shorts showed they could have been mistaken for the hem of the coat. He was wearing a new pair of sneakers that were too big for him, tied so tightly it looked like he was wearing fat-headed catfish on his feet.
‘Did you hear that, Hei-hai? What your master told you to do?’ said an old mason as he poked him in the back with the stem of his pipe.
Hei-hai walked out from under the bridge, clambered up the levee and slipped into the jute field, through which a little path had been worn; plants on both sides leaned away. He walked and walked, stopping next to a spot where the plants had been flattened, as if someone had rolled over them. He rubbed his eyes with the backs of his hands, sobbed briefly, then continued on. A bit farther, he lay on the ground and crawled into the radish field. There was no sign of the skinny old man, so he stood up, walked into the middle of the field and crouched down.
Purple shoots had grown from the wheat seeds sown in the furrows. He fell to his knees and dug up a radish. There was a sound like a bubble popping as the thin roots parted from the earth. Hei-hai raptly followed the sound as it rose into the sky. There were no clouds to impede the falling rays of the bright, glorious autumn sun. He held the radish up to examine it in the sunlight, hoping to see again the strange sight he’d witnessed on the anvil that night; he wanted the sunlit radish he was holding to take on a glittering transparency and emit a golden halo, like the radish now hidden in the river. It disappointed him. It was not transparent, and it was not exquisite. It had no golden halo, much less silvery liquid inside. Again he dug up a radish and held it up to the sun, and again he was disappointed. Things were simple after that: he crawled on his knees, dug up radishes and raised them up to the sun. Tossed them away, crawled some more, dug, raised, examined, tossed.
The eyes of the old man in charge of the field were like pools of murky water. He was crouched in a cabbage patch picking caterpillars. He picked one and pinched it between his fingers, then picked another. It was nearly noon when he got to his feet to wake up the brigade commander, who was sleeping in the watchman’s shed. Unable to sleep the night before, he had chosen the shed for a nap, as the village would be too noisy; the shed was perfect, with its murmur of autumn insects. The old man’s vertebrae cracked as he straightened up. His attention was caught by a red nimbus over the sunlit radish field, as if it were aflame. Shading his eyes, he started walking, quickly arriving at the radish field. There he discovered that the red nimbus came from immature radishes that had been pulled out of the ground.
‘Hey, you!’ he bellowed, spotting the boy kneeling on the ground and holding a large radish up to the sun. His eyes, so big and bright, made the old man uneasy, but that did not stop him from grabbing the boy, jerking him to his feet and dragging him over to the watchman’s shed, where he awakened the brigade commander.
‘We’ve
got a problem, brigade commander. This bear cub has dug up half our radishes.’
The sleepy man ran to the radish field to see for himself; he returned with murder in his eyes and gave Hei-hai a swift kick. Hei-hai rose slowly, but the man slapped him while he was still dizzy.
‘What village are you from, you little prick?’
Hei-hai’s disoriented eyes clear as tears.
‘Who sent you to sabotage us?’
Hei-hai’s eyes were filled with water.
‘What’s your name?’
The water in Hei-hai’s eyes sparkled.
‘What’s your father’s name?’
Two lines of tears rolled down Hei-hai’s face.
‘Damned if he isn’t a mute.’
Hei-hai’s lips quivered.
‘Give him a break, brigade commander, let him go.’
‘Let him go?’ He smiled. ‘I will.’
The brigade commander stripped Hei-hai of his new coat, his new sneakers, even his shorts. He wadded them all up and tossed them into a corner. ‘Go home and tell your father to come claim your clothes. Now get out of here!’
Hei-hai turned to leave. At first he shyly covered his privates with his hands, but dropped them after a few steps. The old man sobbed at the sight of the dirty, naked boy.