Part 1 (1/2)

Emerald City Jennifer Egan 78880K 2022-07-22

Jennifer Egan.

EMERALD CITY.

For David Herskovits.

For their guidance and support during the years I spent writing these stories, I am grateful to the following: Tom Jenks, Daniel Menaker, Mary Beth Hughes, Ruth Danon, Romulus Linney, Philip Schultz, Diana Cavallo, Daniel Hoffman, Don Lee, Virginia Barber, Jennifer Rudolph Walsh, Nan A. Talese, Jesse Cohen, Diane Marcus, the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York Foundation for the Arts, and the Corporation of Yaddo.

WHY CHINA?.

It was him, no question. The same guy. I spotted him from far away, some angle of his head or chin that made my stomach jump before I even realized who I was looking at. I made my way toward him around the acupuncturists, the herbal doctors slapping mustard-colored poultices on b.l.o.o.d.y wounds, and the vendors of the platform shoes and polyester bell-bottoms everyone in Kunming was mysteriously wearing. I was afraid he'd recognize me. Then it hit me that I'd still been beardless when he'd ripped me off, two years before, and my beard-according to old friends, who were uniformly staggered by the sight of me-had completely transformed (for the better, I kept waiting to hear) my appearance.

We were the only two Westerners at this outdoor market, which was a long bike ride from my hotel and seedy in a way I couldn't pin down. The guy saw me coming. ”Howdy,” he said.

”h.e.l.lo,” I replied. It was definitely him. I always notice eyes, and his were a funny gray-green-bright, with long lashes like little kids have. He'd been wearing a suit when I met him, and a short ponytail, which at that particular moment signified hip Wall Street. One look and you saw the life: Jeep Wrangler, brand-new skis, fledgling art collection that, if he'd had b.a.l.l.s enough to venture beyond Fischi and Schnabel and Basquiat, might have included a piece by my wife. He'd been the sort of New Yorker we San Franciscans are slightly in awe of. Now his hair was short, unevenly cut, and he wore some kind of woven jacket.

”You been here long?” I asked.

”Here where?”

”China.”

”Eight months,” he said. ”I work for the China Times.”

I stuffed my hands in my pockets, feeling weirdly self-conscious, like I was the one with something to hide. ”You working on something now?”

”Drugs,” he said.

”I thought there weren't any over here.”

He leaned toward me, half smiling. ”You're standing in the heroin capital of China.”

”No s.h.i.+t,” I said.

He rolled on the b.a.l.l.s of his feet. I knew it was time to bid polite farewell and move on, but I stayed where I was.

”You with a tour?” he finally asked.

”Just my wife and kids. We're trying to get a train to Chengdu, been waiting five days.”

”What's the problem?”

”Mei you,” I said, quoting the ubiquitous Chinese term for ”can't be done.” But you never know what, or which factors, if changed, would make that ”no” a ”yes.” ”That's what the hotel people keep saying.”

”f.u.c.k the hotel,” he said.

We stood a moment in silence, then he checked his watch. ”Look, if you want to hang out a couple of minutes, I can probably get you those tickets,” he said.

He wandered off and said a few words to a lame Chinese albino crouched near a building alongside the market. China Times, I thought. Like h.e.l.l. Heroin pusher was more like it. At the same time, there was an undeniable thrill in being near this guy. He was a crook-I knew it, but he had no idea I knew. I enjoyed having this over him; it almost made up for the twenty-five grand he'd conned out of me.

We set off on our bicycles back toward the center of town. With Caroline and the girls I took taxis, which could mean anything from an automobile to a cart pulled by some thin, sweating guy on a bicycle. It p.i.s.sed me off that the four of us couldn't ride bikes together like any other Chinese family. (”Since when are we a Chinese family, Sam?” was my wife's reply.) But the girls pleaded terror of falling off the bikes and getting crushed by the thick, clattering columns of riders, all ringing their tinny, useless bells. Secretly, I believed that what really turned my daughters off were the crummy black bikes the Chinese rode-such a far cry from the s.h.i.+ny five-and ten-speeds Melissa and Kylie had been reared on.

In our previous encounter, his name had been Cameron Pierce. Now, as we rode, he introduced himself as Stuart Peale, shouting over the thunderous racket of pa.s.sing trucks. The names fit him exactly, both times; Cameron had had the impatient, visionary air of a guy who thinks he can make you a s.h.i.+tload of money; Stuart was soft-spoken, a sharp observer-what you'd expect from a reporter. I told him my name-Sam Lafferty-half hoping he'd make the connection, but only when I named the company I traded for did I notice him pause for a second.

”I've taken a leave while they investigate me,” I said, to my own astonishment.

”Investigate you for what?”

”Messing with the numbers.” And unnerved though I was by what I'd revealed, I felt a mad urge to continue. ”It's just internal at this point.”

”Wow,” he said, giving me an odd look. ”Good luck.”

We dismounted in front of a large concrete kiosk teeming with several lines of people all shoving and elbowing one another goodnaturedly toward a ticket counter in a manner I'd decided was uniquely Chinese. Stuart spoke to a uniformed official in vehement but (I sensed) broken Chinese, gesturing at me. At last the official led us grudgingly through a side door and down a dimly lit corridor that had the smudged, inst.i.tutional feel of the public schools I'd attended as a kid and made sure my daughters would never go near.

”Where is it you're headed-Chengdu?” he called.

We had entered a shabby office where a military-looking woman sat behind a desk, seeming thoroughly disgruntled at Stuart's intrusion. ”Yes-for four people,” I reminded him.

Within minutes, I'd handed Stuart a wad of cash and he'd given me the tickets. We reemerged into the tepid, dusty sunlight. ”You leave tomorrow,” he said. ”Eight-thirty A.M. They'd only sell me first cla.s.s-hope that's okay.”

”It's fine.” We always rode first cla.s.s. So had Stuart, I guessed, in his prior incarnation. ”Thank you,” I said. ”Jesus.”

He waved it away. ”They don't want Americans having a lousy time over here,” he said. ”You point out that it's happening, they'll fix it.”

He handed me his card, the address in English and Chinese, the China Times logo neatly embossed. Still a pro, I thought.

”You live in Xi'an,” I remarked. ”We may go there, check out that clay army.”

”Look me up,” he said, clearly not meaning it.

”Thanks again.”

”Forget it,” he said, then mounted his bicycle and rode away.

”A total stranger?” my wife said, back in our hotel room, where I'd surprised her with the train tickets. ”He just did this, for no reason?”

”He was American.” I was dying to tell her he was the c.o.c.k-sucker who'd conned me, but how could I explain having hung out with the guy, having accepted a favor from him? I knew how Caroline would see it: one more incident in the string of odd things I'd been doing since the investigation began, the most recent of which was to beg my family to drop everything and come with me to China. It wasn't depression, exactly; more a weird, restless pressure that made me wander the house late at night, opening the best bottles of wine in our cellar and drinking them alone while I channel-surfed along the forgotten byways of cable TV.

”Where are the girls?” I said. ”I got them each a little knife to peel pears with.”

”You bought them knives?”

”Just little ones,” I said. ”Have you noticed how the old ladies are always peeling pears? I've got a feeling there's something on those skins they shouldn't be eating.”

Caroline had washed her bras and underpants and was hanging them on the open dresser drawers to dry. In the late seventies, before we married, we'd spent a year in Kenya with the Peace Corps. Caroline washed her clothes the same way over there, hanging them on strings she tied across our tiny room. I used to watch her through the web of strings and underclothes-her reddish brown hair and deep, peaceful eyes that made me think of amber. I always liked remembering that time, knowing the money and houses and trips we'd gotten our hands on since hadn't washed it all away. We're still those people, I'd tell myself, who helped the Masai to repair their houses made of cow dung.

Caroline opened a window, and instantly the sour, bodily smell of China poured into the room. ”A perfect stranger,” she mused, smiling at me. ”Must've been that sweet face of yours.”