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No​ ​Name​ ​Woman​ ​–​ ​​by​ ​Maxine​ ​Hong​ ​Kingston "You​ ​must​ ​not​ ​tell​ ​anyone,"​ ​my​ ​mother​ ​said,​ ​"what​ ​I​ ​am​ ​about​ ​to​ ​tell​ ​you.​ ​In​ ​China​ ​your​ ​father​ ​had​ ​a​ ​sister​ ​who​ ​killed​ ​herself.​ ​She​ ​jumped into​ ​the​ ​family​ ​well.​ ​We​ ​say​ ​that​ ​your​ ​father​ ​has​ ​all​ ​brothers​ ​because​ ​it​ ​is​ ​as​ ​if​ ​she​ ​had​ ​never​ ​been​ ​born. "In​ ​1924​ ​just​ ​a​ ​few​ ​days​ ​after​ ​our​ ​village​ ​celebrated​ ​seventeen​ ​hurry-up​ ​weddings-to​ ​make​ ​sure​ ​that​ ​every​ ​young​ ​man​ ​who​ ​went​ ​'out​ ​on​ ​the road'​ ​would​ ​responsibly​ ​come​ ​home-your​ ​father​ ​and​ ​his​ ​brothers​ ​and​ ​your​ ​grandfather​ ​and​ ​his​ ​brothers​ ​and​ ​your​ ​aunt's​ ​new​ ​husband​ ​sailed for​ ​America,​ ​the​ ​Gold​ ​Mountain.​ ​It​ ​was​ ​your​ ​grandfather's​ ​last​ ​trip.​ ​Those​ ​lucky​ ​enough​ ​to​ ​get​ ​contracts​ ​waved​ ​goodbye​ ​from​ ​the​ ​decks. They​ ​fed​ ​and​ ​guarded​ ​the​ ​stowaways​ ​and​ ​helped​ ​them​ ​ofT​ ​in​ ​Cuba,​ ​New​ ​York,​ ​Bali,​ ​Hawaii.​ ​'We'll​ ​meet​ ​in​ ​California​ ​next​ ​year,'​ ​they​ ​said. All​ ​of​ ​them​ ​sent​ ​money​ ​home. "I​ ​remember​ ​looking​ ​at​ ​your​ ​aunt​ ​one​ ​day​ ​when​ ​she​ ​and​ ​I​ ​were​ ​dressing;​ ​1​ ​had​ ​not​ ​noticed​ ​before​ ​that​ ​she​ ​had​ ​such​ ​a​ ​protruding​ ​melon​ ​of​ ​a stomach.​ ​But​ ​I​ ​did​ ​not​ ​think,​ ​'She's​ ​pregnant,'​ ​until​ ​she​ ​began​ ​to​ ​look​ ​like​ ​other​ ​pregnant​ ​women,​ ​her​ ​shirt​ ​pulling​ ​and​ ​the​ ​white​ ​tops​ ​of​ ​her black​ ​pants​ ​showing.​ ​She​ ​could​ ​not​ ​have​ ​been​ ​pregnant,​ ​you​ ​see,​ ​because​ ​her​ ​husband​ ​had​ ​been​ ​gone​ ​for​ ​years.​ ​No​ ​one​ ​said​ ​anything.​ ​We did​ ​not​ ​discuss​ ​it.​ ​In​ ​early​ ​summer​ ​she​ ​was​ ​ready​ ​to​ ​have​ ​the​ ​child,​ ​long​ ​after​ ​the​ ​time​ ​when​ ​it​ ​could​ ​have​ ​been​ ​possible. "The​ ​village​ ​had​ ​also​ ​been​ ​counting.​ ​On​ ​the​ ​night​ ​the​ ​baby​ ​was​ ​to​ ​be​ ​born​ ​the​ ​villagers​ ​raided​ ​our​ ​house.​ ​Some​ ​were​ ​crying.​ ​Like​ ​a​ ​great saw,​ ​teeth​ ​strung​ ​with​ ​lights,​ ​files​ ​of​ ​people​ ​walked​ ​zigzag​ ​across​ ​our​ ​land,​ ​tearing​ ​the​ ​rice.​ ​Their​ ​lanterns​ ​doubled​ ​in​ ​the​ ​disturbed​ ​black water,​ ​which​ ​drained​ ​away​ ​through​ ​the​ ​broken​ ​bunds.​ ​As​ ​the​ ​villagers​ ​closed​ ​in,​ ​we​ ​could​ ​see​ ​that​ ​some​ ​of​ ​them,​ ​probably​ ​men​ ​and​ ​women we​ ​knew​ ​well,​ ​wore​ ​white​ ​masks.​ ​The​ ​people​ ​with​ ​long​ ​hair​ ​hung​ ​it​ ​over​ ​their​ ​faces.​ ​Women​ ​with​ ​short​ ​hair​ ​made​ ​it​ ​stand​ ​up​ ​on​ ​end.​ ​Some had​ ​tied​ ​white​ ​bands​ ​around​ ​their​ ​foreheads,​ ​arms,​ ​and​ ​legs. "At​ ​first​ ​they​ ​threw​ ​mud​ ​and​ ​rocks​ ​at​ ​the​ ​house.​ ​Then​ ​they​ ​threw​ ​eggs​ ​and​ ​began​ ​slaughtering​ ​our​ ​stock.​ ​We​ ​could​ ​hear​ ​the​ ​animals​ ​scream their​ ​deaths-the​ ​roosters,​ ​the​ ​pigs,​ ​a​ ​last​ ​great​ ​roar​ ​from​ ​the​ ​ox.​ ​Familiar​ ​wild​ ​heads​ ​flared​ ​in​ ​our​ ​night​ ​windows;​ ​the​ ​villagers​ ​encircled​ ​us. Some​ ​of​ ​the​ ​faces​ ​stopped​ ​to​ ​peer​ ​at​ ​us,​ ​their​ ​eyes​ ​rushing​ ​like​ ​searchlights.​ ​The​ ​hands​ ​flattened​ ​against​ ​the​ ​panes,​ ​framed​ ​heads,​ ​and​ ​left​ ​red prints. "The​ ​villagers​ ​broke​ ​in​ ​the​ ​front​ ​and​ ​the​ ​back​ ​doors​ ​at​ ​the​ ​same​ ​time,​ ​even​ ​though​ ​we​ ​had​ ​not​ ​locked​ ​the​ ​doors​ ​against​ ​them.​ ​Their​ ​knives dripped​ ​with​ ​the​ ​blood​ ​of​ ​our​ ​animals.​ ​They​ ​smeared​ ​blood​ ​on​ ​the​ ​doors​ ​and​ ​walls.​ ​One​ ​woman​ ​swung​ ​a​ ​chicken,​ ​whose​ ​throat​ ​she​ ​had​ ​slit, splattering​ ​blood​ ​in​ ​red​ ​arcs​ ​about​ ​her.​ ​We​ ​stood​ ​together​ ​in​ ​the​ ​middle​ ​of​ ​our​ ​house,​ ​in​ ​the​ ​family​ ​hall​ ​with​ ​the​ ​pictures​ ​and​ ​tables​ ​of​ ​the ancestors​ ​around​ ​us,​ ​and​ ​looked​ ​straight​ ​ahead. "A~​ ​that​ ​time​ ​the​ ​house​ ​had​ ​only​ ​two​ ​wings.​ ​When​ ​the​ ​men​ ​came​ ​back,​ ​we​ ​would​ ​build​ ​two​ ​more​ ​to​ ​enclose​ ​our​ ​courtyard​ ​and​ ​a​ ​third​ ​one​ ​to begin​ ​a​ ​second​ ​courtyard.​ ​The​ ​villagers​ ​pushed​ ​through​ ​both​ ​wings,​ ​even​ ​your​ ​grandparents'​ ​rooms,​ ​to​ ​find​ ​your​ ​aunt's,​ ​which​ ​was​ ​also​ ​mine until​ ​the​ ​men​ ​returned.​ ​From​ ​this​ ​room​ ​a​ ​new​ ​wing​ ​for​ ​one​ ​of​ ​the​ ​younger​ ​families​ ​would​ ​grow.​ ​They​ ​ripped​ ​up​ ​her​ ​clothes​ ​and​ ​shoes​ ​and broke​ ​her​ ​combs,​ ​grinding​ ​them​ ​underfoot.​ ​They​ ​tore​ ​her​ ​work​ ​from​ ​the​ ​loom.​ ​They​ ​scattered​ ​the​ ​cooking​ ​fire​ ​and​ ​rolled​ ​the​ ​new​ ​weaving​ ​in it.​ ​We​ ​could​ ​hear​ ​them​ ​in​ ​the​ ​kitchen​ ​breaking​ ​our​ ​bowls​ ​and​ ​banging​ ​the​ ​pots.​ ​They​ ​overturned​ ​the​ ​great​ ​waist-high​ ​earthenware​ ​jugs;​ ​duck eggs,​ ​pickled​ ​fruits,​ ​vegetables​ ​burst​ ​out​ ​and​ ​mixed​ ​in​ ​acrid​ ​torrents.​ ​The​ ​old​ ​woman​ ​from​ ​the​ ​next​ ​field​ ​swept​ ​a​ ​broom​ ​through​ ​the​ ​air​ ​and loosed​ ​the​ ​spirits-of-the​ ​broom​ ​over​ ​our​ ​heads.​ ​'Pig.'​ ​'Ghost.'​ ​'Pig,'​ ​they​ ​sobbed​ ​and​ ​scolded​ ​while​ ​they​ ​ruined​ ​our​ ​house. "When​ ​they​ ​left,​ ​they​ ​took​ ​sugar​ ​and​ ​oranges​ ​to​ ​bless​ ​themselves.​ ​They​ ​cut​ ​pieces​ ​from​ ​the​ ​dead​ ​animals.​ ​Some​ ​of​ ​them​ ​took​ ​bowls​ ​that were​ ​not​ ​broken​ ​and​ ​clothes​ ​that​ ​were​ ​not​ ​torn.​ ​Afterward​ ​we​ ​swept​ ​up​ ​the​ ​rice​ ​and​ ​sewed​ ​it​ ​back​ ​up​ ​into​ ​sacks.​ ​But​ ​the​ ​smells​ ​from​ ​the spilled​ ​preserves​ ​lasted.​ ​Your​ ​aunt​ ​gave​ ​birth​ ​in​ ​the​ ​pigsty​ ​that​ ​night.​ ​The next​ ​morning​ ​when​ ​I​ ​went​ ​for​ ​the​ ​water,​ ​I​ ​found​ ​her​ ​and​ ​the​ ​baby​ ​plugging​ ​up​ ​the​ ​family​ ​well. "Don't​ ​let​ ​your​ ​father​ ​know​ ​that​ ​1​ ​told​ ​you.​ ​He​ ​denies​ ​her.​ ​Now​ ​that​ ​you​ ​have​ ​started​ ​to​ ​menstruate,​ ​what​ ​happened​ ​to​ ​her​ ​could​ ​happen​ ​to you.​ ​Don't​ ​humiliate​ ​us.​ ​You​ ​wouldn't​ ​like​ ​to​ ​be​ ​forgotten​ ​as​ ​if​ ​you​ ​had​ ​never​ ​been​ ​born. The​ ​villagers​ ​are​ ​watchful." Whenever​ ​she​ ​had​ ​to​ ​warn​ ​us​ ​about​ ​life,​ ​my​ ​mother​ ​told​ ​stories​ ​that​ ​ran​ ​like​ ​this​ ​one,​ ​a​ ​story​ ​to​ ​grow​ ​up​ ​on.​ ​She​ ​tested​ ​our​ ​strength​ ​to establish​ ​realities.​ ​Those​ ​in​ ​the​ ​emigrant​ ​generations​ ​who​ ​could​ ​not​ ​reassert​ ​brute​ ​survival​ ​died young​ ​and​ ​far​ ​from​ ​home.​ ​Those​ ​of​ ​us​ ​in​ ​the​ ​first​ ​American​ ​generations​ ​have​ ​had​ ​to​ ​figure​ ​out​ ​how​ ​the​ ​invisible​ ​world​ ​the​ ​emigrants​ ​built around​ ​our​ ​childhoods​ ​fits​ ​in​ ​solid​ ​America. The​ ​emigrants​ ​confused​ ​the​ ​gods​ ​by​ ​diverting​ ​their​ ​curses,​ ​misleading​ ​them​ ​with​ ​crooked​ ​streets​ ​and​ ​false​ ​names.​ ​They​ ​must​ ​try​ ​to​ ​confuse their​ ​offspring​ ​as​ ​well,​ ​who,​ ​I​ ​suppose,​ ​threaten​ ​them​ ​in​ ​similar​ ​ways-always​ ​trying​ ​to​ ​get​ ​things​ ​straight,​ ​always​ ​trying​ ​to​ ​name​ ​the unspeakable.​ ​The​ ​Chinese​ ​1​ ​know​ ​hide​ ​their​ ​names;​ ​sojourners​ ​take​ ​new​ ​names​ ​when​ ​their​ ​lives​ ​change​ ​and​ ​guard​ ​their​ ​real​ ​names​ ​with silence. Chinese-Americans,​ ​when​ ​you​ ​try​ ​to​ ​understand​ ​what​ ​things​ ​in​ ​you​ ​are​ ​Chinese,​ ​how​ ​do​ ​you​ ​separate​ ​what​ ​is peculiar​ ​to​ ​childhood,​ ​to​ ​poverty,​ ​insanities,​ ​one​ ​family,​ ​your​ ​mother​ ​who​ ​marked​ ​your​ ​growing​ ​with​ ​stories,​ ​from what​ ​is​ ​Chinese?​ ​What​ ​is​ ​Chinese​ ​tradition​ ​and​ ​what​ ​is​ ​the​ ​movies? If​ ​I​ ​want​ ​to​ ​learn​ ​what​ ​clothes​ ​my​ ​aunt​ ​wore,​ ​whether​ ​flashy​ ​or​ ​ordinary,​ ​1​ ​would​ ​have​ ​to​ ​begin,​ ​"Remember​ ​Father's​ ​drowned-in-the-well sister?"​ ​I​ ​cannot​ ​ask​ ​that.​ ​My​ ​mother​ ​has​ ​told​ ​me​ ​once​ ​and​ ​for​ ​all​ ​the​ ​useful​ ​parts.​ ​She​ ​will​ ​add​ ​nothing​ ​unless​ ​powered​ ​by​ ​Necessity,​ ​a riverbank​ ​that​ ​guides​ ​her​ ​life.​ ​She​ ​plants​ ​vegetable​ ​gardens​ ​rather​ ​than​ ​lawns;​ ​she​ ​carries​ ​the​ ​odd-shaped​ ​tomatoes​ ​home​ ​from​ ​the​ ​fields​ ​and eats​ ​food​ ​left​ ​for​ ​the​ ​gods. Whenever​ ​we​ ​did​ ​frivolous​ ​things,​ ​we​ ​used​ ​up​ ​energy;​ ​we​ ​flew​ ​high​ ​kites.​ ​We​ ​children​ ​came​ ​up​ ​off​ ​the​ ​ground​ ​over​ ​the​ ​melting​ ​cones​ ​our parents​ ​brought​ ​home​ ​from​ ​work​ ​and​ ​the​ ​American​ ​movie​ ​on​ ​New​ ​Year's​ ​Day-0h,​ ​You​ ​Beautiful​ ​Doll​ ​with​ ​Betty​ ​Grable​ ​one​ ​year,​ ​and​ ​She

Wore​ ​a​ ​Yellow​ ​Ribbon​ ​with​ ​John​ ​Wayne​ ​another​ ​year.​ ​After​ ​the​ ​one​ ​carnival​ ​ride​ ​each,​ ​we​ ​paid​ ​in​ ​guilt;​ ​our​ ​tired​ ​father​ ​counted​ ​his​ ​change on​ ​the​ ​dark​ ​walk​ ​home. Adultery​ ​is​ ​extravagance.​ ​Could​ ​people​ ​who​ ​hatch​ ​their​ ​own​ ​chicks​ ​and​ ​eat​ ​the​ ​embryos​ ​and​ ​the​ ​heads​ ​for​ ​delicacies​ ​and​ ​boil​ ​the​ ​feet​ ​in vinegar​ ​for​ ​party​ ​food,​ ​leaving​ ​only​ ​the​ ​gravel,​ ​eating​ ​even​ ​the​ ​gizzard​ ​lining-could​ ​such​ ​people​ ​engender​ ​a​ ​prodigal​ ​aunt?​ ​To​ ​be​ ​a​ ​woman, to​ ​have​ ​a​ ​daughter​ ​in​ ​starvation​ ​time​ ​was​ ​a​ ​waste​ ​enough.​ ​My​ ​aunt​ ​could​ ​not​ ​have​ ​been​ ​the​ ​lone​ ​romantic​ ​who​ ​gave​ ​up​ ​everything​ ​for​ ​sex. Women​ ​in​ ​the​ ​old​ ​China​ ​did​ ​not​ ​choose.​ ​Some​ ​man​ ​had​ ​commanded​ ​her​ ​to​ ​lie​ ​with​ ​him​ ​and​ ​be​ ​his​ ​secret​ ​evil.​ ​I​ ​wonder​ ​whether​ ​he​ ​masked himself​ ​when​ ​he​ ​joined​ ​the​ ​raid​ ​on​ ​her​ ​family. Perhaps​ ​she​ ​had​ ​encountered​ ​him​ ​in​ ​the​ ​fields​ ​or​ ​on​ ​the​ ​mountain​ ​where​ ​the​ ​daughters-in-law​ ​collected​ ​fuel.​ ​Or​ ​perhaps​ ​he​ ​first​ ​noticed​ ​her in​ ​the​ ​marketplace.​ ​He​ ​was​ ​not​ ​a​ ​stranger​ ​because​ ​the​ ​village​ ​housed​ ​no​ ​strangers.​ ​She​ ​had​ ​to​ ​have​ ​dealings​ ​with​ ​him​ ​other​ ​than​ ​sex.​ ​Perhaps he​ ​worked​ ​an​ ​adjoining​ ​field,​ ​or​ ​he​ ​sold​ ​her​ ​the​ ​cloth​ ​for​ ​the​ ​dress​ ​she​ ​sewed​ ​and​ ​wore.​ ​His​ ​demand​ ​must​ ​have​ ​surprised,​ ​then​ ​terrified​ ​her. She​ ​obeyed​ ​him;​ ​she​ ​always​ ​did​ ​as​ ​she​ ​was​ ​told. When​ ​the​ ​family​ ​found​ ​a​ ​young​ ​man​ ​in​ ​the​ ​next​ ​village​ ​to​ ​be​ ​her​ ​husband,​ ​she​ ​had​ ​stood​ ​tractably​ ​beside​ ​the​ ​best​ ​rooster,​ ​his​ ​proxy,​ ​and promised​ ​before​ ​they​ ​met​ ​that​ ​she​ ​would​ ​be​ ​his​ ​forever.​ ​She​ ​was​ ​lucky​ ​that​ ​he​ ​was​ ​her​ ​age​ ​and​ ​she​ ​would​ ​be​ ​the​ ​first​ ​wife,​ ​an​ ​advantage secure​ ​now.​ ​The​ ​night​ ​she​ ​first​ ​saw​ ​him,​ ​he​ ​had​ ​sex​ ​with​ ​her.​ ​Then​ ​h​ ​left​ ​for​ ​America.​ ​She​ ​had​ ​almost​ ​forgotten​ ​what​ ​he​ ​looked​ ​like.​ ​When she​ ​tried​ ​to​ ​envision​ ​him,​ ​she​ ​only​ ​saw​ ​the​ ​black​ ​and​ ​white​ ​face​ ​in​ ​the​ ​group​ ​photograph​ ​the​ ​men​ ​had​ ​had​ ​taken​ ​before​ ​leaving. The​ ​other​ ​man​ ​was​ ​not,​ ​after​ ​all,​ ​much​ ​different​ ​from​ ​her​ ​husband.​ ​They​ ​both​ ​gave​ ​orders:​ ​she​ ​followed.​ ​"If​ ​you​ ​tell​ ​your​ ​family,​ ​I'll​ ​beat you.​ ​I'll​ ​kill​ ​you.​ ​Be​ ​here​ ​again​ ​next​ ​week."​ ​No​ ​one​ ​talked​ ​sex,​ ​ever.​ ​And​ ​she​ ​might​ ​have​ ​separated​ ​the​ ​rapes​ ​from​ ​the​ ​rest​ ​of​ ​living​ ​if​ ​only she​ ​did​ ​not​ ​have​ ​to​ ​buy​ ​her​ ​oil​ ​from​ ​him​ ​or​ ​gather​ ​wood​ ​in​ ​the​ ​same​ ​forest.​ ​I​ ​want​ ​her​ ​fear​ ​to​ ​have​ ​lasted​ ​just​ ​as​ ​long​ ​as​ ​rape​ ​lasted​ ​so​ ​that the​ ​fear​ ​could​ ​have​ ​been​ ​contained.​ ​No​ ​drawn-out​ ​fear.​ ​But​ ​women​ ​at​ ​sex​ ​hazarded​ ​birth​ ​and​ ​hence​ ​lifetimes.​ ​The​ ​fear​ ​did​ ​not​ ​stop​ ​but permeated​ ​everywhere.​ ​She​ ​told​ ​the​ ​man,​ ​"I​ ​think​ ​I'm​ ​pregnant!'​ ​He​ ​organized​ ​the​ ​raid​ ​against​ ​her. On​ ​nights​ ​when​ ​my​ ​mother​ ​and​ ​father​ ​talked​ ​about​ ​their​ ​life​ ​back​ ​home,​ ​sometimes​ ​they​ ​mentioned​ ​an​ ​"outcast​ ​table"​ ​whose​ ​business​ ​they still​ ​seemed​ ​to​ ​be​ ​settling,​ ​their​ ​voices​ ​tight.​ ​In​ ​a​ ​commensal​ ​tradition,​ ​where​ ​food​ ​is​ ​precious,​ ​the​ ​powerful​ ​older​ ​people​ ​made​ ​wrongdoers eat​ ​alone.​ ​Instead​ ​of​ ​letting​ ​them​ ​start​ ​separate​ ​new​ ​lives​ ​like​ ​the​ ​Japanese,​ ​who​ ​could​ ​become​ ​samurais​ ​and​ ​geishas,​ ​the​ ​Chinese​ ​family, faces​ ​averted​ ​but​ ​eyes​ ​glowering​ ​sideways,​ ​hung​ ​on​ ​to​ ​the​ ​offenders​ ​and​ ​fed​ ​them​ ​leftovers.​ ​My​ ​aunt​ ​must​ ​have​ ​lived​ ​in​ ​the​ ​same​ ​house​ ​as my​ ​parents​ ​and​ ​eaten​ ​at​ ​an​ ​outcast​ ​table.​ ​My​ ​mother​ ​spoke​ ​about​ ​the​ ​raid​ ​as​ ​if​ ​she​ ​had​ ​seen​ ​it,​ ​when​ ​she​ ​and​ ​my​ ​aunt,​ ​a​ ​daughter-in-law​ ​to​ ​a different​ ​household,​ ​should​ ​not​ ​have​ ​been​ ​living​ ​together​ ​at​ ​all.​ ​Daughters-in-law​ ​lived​ ​with​ ​their​ ​husbands'​ ​parents,​ ​not​ ​their​ ​own;​ ​a synonym​ ​for​ ​marriage​ ​in​ ​Chinese​ ​is​ ​"taking​ ​a​ ​daughter-in-law!'​ ​Her​ ​husband's​ ​parents​ ​could​ ​have​ ​sold​ ​her,​ ​mortgaged​ ​her,​ ​stoned​ ​her.​ ​But they​ ​had​ ​sent​ ​her​ ​back​ ​to​ ​her​ ​own​ ​mother​ ​and​ ​father,​ ​a​ ​mysterious​ ​act​ ​hinting​ ​at​ ​disgraces​ ​not​ ​told​ ​me.​ ​Perhaps​ ​they​ ​had​ ​thrown​ ​her​ ​out​ ​to deflect​ ​the​ ​avengers. She​ ​was​ ​the​ ​only​ ​daughter;​ ​her​ ​four​ ​brothers​ ​went​ ​with​ ​her​ ​father,​ ​husband,​ ​and​ ​uncles​ ​"out​ ​on​ ​the​ ​road"​ ​and​ ​for​ ​some​ ​years​ ​became​ ​western men.​ ​When​ ​the​ ​goods​ ​were​ ​divided​ ​among​ ​the​ ​family,​ ​three​ ​of​ ​the​ ​brothers​ ​took​ ​land,​ ​and​ ​the​ ​youngest,​ ​my​ ​father,​ ​chose​ ​an​ ​education.​ ​After my​ ​grandparents​ ​gave​ ​their​ ​daughter​ ​away​ ​to​ ​her​ ​husband's​ ​family,​ ​they​ ​had​ ​dispensed​ ​all​ ​the​ ​adventure​ ​and​ ​all​ ​the​ ​property.​ ​They​ ​expected her​ ​alone​ ​to​ ​keep​ ​the​ ​traditional​ ​ways,​ ​which​ ​her​ ​brothers,​ ​now​ ​among​ ​the​ ​barbarians,​ ​could​ ​fumble​ ​without​ ​detection.​ ​The​ ​heavy, deep-rooted​ ​women​ ​were​ ​to​ ​maintain​ ​the​ ​past​ ​against​ ​the​ ​flood,​ ​safe​ ​for​ ​returning.​ ​But​ ​the​ ​rare​ ​urge​ ​west​ ​had​ ​fixed​ ​upon​ ​our​ ​family,​ ​and​ ​so my​ ​aunt​ ​crossed​ ​boundaries​ ​not​ ​delineated​ ​in​ ​space. The​ ​work​ ​of​ ​preservation​ ​demands​ ​that​ ​the​ ​feelings​ ​playing​ ​about​ ​in​ ​one's​ ​guts​ ​not​ ​be​ ​turned​ ​into​ ​action.​ ​Just​ ​watch​ ​their​ ​passing​ ​like​ ​cherry blossoms.​ ​But​ ​perhaps​ ​my​ ​aunt,​ ​my​ ​forerunner,​ ​caught​ ​in​ ​a​ ​slow​ ​life,​ ​let​ ​dreams​ ​grow​ ​and​ ​fade​ ​and​ ​after​ ​some​ ​months​ ​or​ ​years​ ​went​ ​toward what​ ​persisted.​ ​Fear​ ​at​ ​the​ ​enormities​ ​of​ ​the​ ​forbidden​ ​kept​ ​her​ ​desires​ ​delicate,​ ​wire​ ​and​ ​bone.​ ​She​ ​looked​ ​at​ ​a​ ​man​ ​because​ ​she​ ​liked​ ​the way​ ​the​ ​hair​ ​was​ ​tucked​ ​behind​ ​his​ ​ears,​ ​or​ ​she​ ​liked​ ​the​ ​question-mark​ ​line​ ​of​ ​a​ ​long​ ​torso​ ​curving​ ​at​ ​the​ ​shoulder​ ​and​ ​straight​ ​at​ ​the​ ​hip. For​ ​warm​ ​eyes​ ​or​ ​a​ ​soft​ ​voice​ ​or​ ​a​ ​slow​ ​walk-that's​ ​all-a​ ​few​ ​hairs,​ ​a​ ​line,​ ​a​ ​brightness,​ ​a​ ​sound,​ ​a​ ​pace,​ ​she​ ​gave​ ​up​ ​family.​ ​She​ ​offered​ ​us up​ ​for​ ​a​ ​charm​ ​that​ ​vanished​ ​with​ ​tiredness,​ ​a​ ​pigtail​ ​that​ ​didn't​ ​toss​ ​when​ ​the​ ​wind​ ​died.​ ​Why,​ ​the​ ​wrong​ ​lighting​ ​could​ ​erase​ ​the​ ​dearest thing​ ​about​ ​him. It​ ​could​ ​very​ ​well​ ​have​ ​been,​ ​however,​ ​that​ ​my​ ​aunt​ ​did​ ​not​ ​take​ ​subtle​ ​enjoyment​ ​of​ ​her​ ​friend,​ ​but,​ ​a​ ​wild​ ​woman,​ ​kept​ ​rollicking company.​ ​Imagining​ ​her​ ​free​ ​with​ ​sex​ ​doesn't​ ​fit,​ ​though.​ ​I​ ​don't​ ​know​ ​any​ ​women​ ​like​ ​that,​ ​or​ ​men​ ​either.​ ​Unless​ ​I​ ​see​ ​her​ ​life​ ​branching into​ ​mine,​ ​she​ ​gives​ ​me​ ​no​ ​ancestral​ ​help. To​ ​sustain​ ​her​ ​being​ ​in​ ​love,​ ​she​ ​often​ ​worked​ ​at​ ​herself​ ​in​ ​the​ ​mirror,​ ​guessing​ ​at​ ​the​ ​colors​ ​and​ ​shapes​ ​that​ ​would​ ​interest​ ​him,​ ​changing them​ ​frequently​ ​in​ ​order​ ​to​ ​hit​ ​on​ ​the​ ​right​ ​combination.​ ​She​ ​wanted​ ​him​ ​to​ ​look​ ​back. On​ ​a​ ​f​ ​arm​ ​near​ ​the​ ​sea,​ ​a​ ​woman​ ​who​ ​tended​ ​her​ ​appearance​ ​reaped​ ​a​ ​reputation​ ​f​ ​or​ ​eccentricity.​ ​All​ ​the​ ​married​ ​women​ ​blunt-cut​ ​their hair​ ​in​ ​flaps​ ​about​ ​their​ ​ears​ ​or​ ​pulled​ ​it​ ​back​ ​in​ ​tight​ ​buns.​ ​No​ ​nonsense.​ ​Neither​ ​style blew​ ​easily​ ​into​ ​heart-catching​ ​tangles.​ ​And​ ​at​ ​their​ ​weddings​ ​they​ ​displayed​ ​themselves​ ​in​ ​their​ ​long​ ​hair​ ​f​ ​or​ ​the last​ ​time.​ ​lit​ ​brushed​ ​the​ ​backs​ ​of​ ​my​ ​knees,"​ ​MY​ ​mother​ ​tells​ ​me.​ ​"It​ ​was​ ​braided,​ ​and​ ​even​ ​so,​ ​it​ ​brushed​ ​the​ ​backs​ ​of​ ​my​ ​knees!' At​ ​the​ ​mirror​ ​my​ ​aunt​ ​combed​ ​individuality​ ​into​ ​her​ ​bob.​ ​A​ ​bun​ ​could​ ​have​ ​been​ ​contrived​ ​to​ ​escape​ ​into​ ​black​ ​streamers​ ​blowing​ ​in​ ​the wind​ ​or​ ​in​ ​quiet​ ​wisps​ ​about​ ​her​ ​face,​ ​but​ ​only​ ​the​ ​older​ ​women​ ​in​ ​our​ ​picture​ ​album​ ​wear​ ​buns.​ ​She​ ​brushed​ ​her​ ​hair​ ​back​ ​from​ ​her forehead,​ ​tucking​ ​the​ ​flaps​ ​behind​ ​her​ ​ears.​ ​She​ ​looped​ ​a​ ​piece​ ​of​ ​thread,​ ​knotted​ ​into​ ​a​ ​circle​ ​between​ ​her​ ​index​ ​fingers​ ​and​ ​thumbs,​ ​and​ ​ran the​ ​double​ ​strand​ ​across​ ​her​ ​forehead.​ ​When​ ​she​ ​closed​ ​her​ ​fingers​ ​as​ ​if​ ​she​ ​were​ ​making​ ​a​ ​pair​ ​of​ ​shadow​ ​geese​ ​bite,​ ​the​ ​string​ ​twisted together​ ​catching​ ​the​ ​little​ ​hairs.​ ​Then​ ​she​ ​pulled​ ​the​ ​thread​ ​away​ ​from​ ​her​ ​skin,​ ​ripping​ ​the​ ​hairs​ ​out​ ​neatly,​ ​her​ ​eyes​ ​watering​ ​from​ ​the needles​ ​of​ ​pain.​ ​Opening​ ​her​ ​fingers,​ ​she​ ​cleaned​ ​the​ ​thread,​ ​then​ ​rolled​ ​it​ ​along​ ​her​ ​hairline​ ​and​ ​the​ ​tops​ ​of​ ​her​ ​eyebrows.​ ​My​ ​mother​ ​did​ ​the same​ ​to​ ​me​ ​and​ ​my​ ​sisters​ ​and​ ​herself.​ ​I​ ​used​ ​to​ ​believe​ ​that​ ​the​ ​expression​ ​"caught​ ​by​ ​the​ ​short​ ​hairs"​ ​meant​ ​a​ ​captive​ ​held​ ​with​ ​a​ ​depilatory string.​ ​It​ ​especially​ ​hurt​ ​at​ ​the​ ​temples,​ ​but​ ​my​ ​mother​ ​said​ ​we​ ​were​ ​lucky​ ​we​ ​didn't​ ​have​ ​to​ ​have​ ​our​ ​feet​ ​bound​ ​when​ ​we​ ​were​ ​seven. Sisters​ ​used​ ​to​ ​sit​ ​on​ ​their​ ​beds​ ​and​ ​cry​ ​together,​ ​she​ ​said,​ ​as​ ​their​ ​mothers​ ​or​ ​their​ ​slaves​ ​removed​ ​the​ ​bandages​ ​for​ ​a​ ​few​ ​minutes​ ​each​ ​night and​ ​let​ ​the​ ​blood​ ​gush​ ​back​ ​into​ ​their​ ​veins.​ ​1​ ​hope​ ​that​ ​the​ ​man​ ​my​ ​aunt​ ​loved​ ​appreciated​ ​a​ ​smooth​ ​brow,​ ​that​ ​he​ ​wasn't​ ​just​ ​a​ ​tits-andass man.

Once​ ​my​ ​aunt​ ​found​ ​a​ ​freckle​ ​on​ ​her​ ​chin,​ ​at​ ​a​ ​spot​ ​that​ ​the​ ​almanac​ ​said​ ​predestined​ ​her​ ​for​ ​unhappiness.​ ​She​ ​dug​ ​it​ ​out​ ​with​ ​a​ ​hot​ ​needle and​ ​washed​ ​the​ ​wound​ ​with​ ​peroxide. More​ ​attention​ ​to​ ​her​ ​looks​ ​than​ ​these​ ​pullings​ ​of​ ​hairs​ ​and​ ​pickings​ ​at​ ​spots​ ​would​ ​have​ ​caused​ ​gossip​ ​among​ ​the​ ​villagers.​ ​They​ ​owned work​ ​clothes​ ​and​ ​good​ ​clothes,​ ​and​ ​they​ ​wore​ ​good​ ​clothes​ ​for​ ​feasting​ ​the​ ​new​ ​seasons.​ ​But​ ​since​ ​a​ ​woman​ ​combing​ ​her​ ​hair​ ​hexes beginnings,​ ​my​ ​aunt​ ​rarely​ ​found​ ​an​ ​occasion​ ​to​ ​look​ ​her​ ​best.​ ​Women​ ​looked​ ​like​ ​great​ ​sea​ ​snails-the​ ​corded​ ​wood,​ ​babies,​ ​and​ ​laundry they​ ​carried​ ​were​ ​the​ ​whorls​ ​on​ ​their​ ​backs.​ ​The​ ​Chinese​ ​did​ ​not​ ​admire​ ​a​ ​bent​ ​back;​ ​goddesses​ ​and​ ​warriors​ ​stood​ ​straight.​ ​Still​ ​there​ ​must have​ ​been​ ​a​ ​marvelous​ ​freeing​ ​of​ ​beauty​ ​when​ ​a​ ​worker​ ​laid​ ​down​ ​her​ ​burden​ ​and​ ​stretched​ ​and​ ​arched. Such​ ​commonplace​ ​loveliness,​ ​however,​ ​was​ ​not​ ​enough​ ​for​ ​my​ ​aunt.​ ​She​ ​dreamed​ ​of​ ​a​ ​lover​ ​for​ ​the​ ​fifteen​ ​days​ ​of​ ​New​ ​Year's,​ ​the​ ​time​ ​for families​ ​to​ ​exchange​ ​visits,​ ​money,​ ​and​ ​food.​ ​She​ ​plied​ ​her​ ​secret​ ​comb.​ ​And​ ​sure​ ​enough​ ​she​ ​cursed​ ​the​ ​year,​ ​the​ ​family,​ ​the​ ​village,​ ​and herself. Even​ ​as​ ​her​ ​hair​ ​lured​ ​her​ ​imminent​ ​lover,​ ​many​ ​other​ ​men​ ​looked​ ​at​ ​her.​ ​Uncles,​ ​cousins,​ ​nephews,​ ​brothers​ ​would​ ​have​ ​looked,​ ​too,​ ​had they​ ​been​ ​home​ ​between​ ​journeys.​ ​Perhaps​ ​they​ ​had​ ​already​ ​been​ ​restraining​ ​their​ ​curiosity,​ ​and​ ​they​ ​left,​ ​fearful​ ​that​ ​their​ ​glances,​ ​like​ ​a field​ ​of​ ​nesting​ ​birds,​ ​might​ ​be​ ​startled​ ​and​ ​caught.​ ​Poverty​ ​hurt,​ ​and​ ​that​ ​was​ ​their​ ​first​ ​reason​ ​for​ ​leaving.​ ​But​ ​another,​ ​final​ ​reason​ ​for leaving​ ​the​ ​crowded​ ​house​ ​was​ ​the​ ​never-said. She​ ​may​ ​have​ ​been​ ​unusually​ ​beloved,​ ​the​ ​precious​ ​only​ ​daughter,​ ​spoiled​ ​and​ ​mirror​ ​gazing​ ​because​ ​of​ ​the​ ​affection​ ​the​ ​family​ ​lavished​ ​on her.​ ​When​ ​her​ ​husband​ ​left,​ ​they​ ​welcomed​ ​the​ ​chance​ ​to​ ​take​ ​her​ ​back​ ​from​ ​the​ ​in-laws;​ ​she​ ​could​ ​live​ ​like​ ​the​ ​little​ ​daughter​ ​for​ ​just​ ​a while​ ​longer.​ ​There​ ​are​ ​stories​ ​that​ ​my​ ​grandfather​ ​was​ ​different​ ​from​ ​other​ ​people,​ ​"crazy​ ​ever​ ​since​ ​the​ ​little​ ​Jap​ ​bayoneted​ ​him​ ​in​ ​the head."​ ​He​ ​used​ ​to​ ​put​ ​his​ ​naked​ ​penis​ ​on​ ​the​ ​dinner​ ​table,​ ​laughing.​ ​And​ ​one​ ​day​ ​he​ ​brought​ ​home​ ​a​ ​baby​ ​girl,​ ​wrapped​ ​up​ ​inside​ ​his​ ​brown western-style​ ​greatcoat.​ ​He​ ​had​ ​traded​ ​one​ ​of​ ​his​ ​sons,​ ​probably​ ​my​ ​father,​ ​the​ ​youngest,​ ​for​ ​her.​ ​My​ ​grandmother​ ​made​ ​him​ ​trade​ ​back. When​ ​he​ ​finally​ ​got​ ​a​ ​daughter​ ​of​ ​his​ ​own,​ ​he​ ​doted​ ​on​ ​her.​ ​They​ ​must​ ​have​ ​all​ ​loved​ ​her,​ ​except​ ​perhaps​ ​my​ ​father,​ ​the​ ​only​ ​brother​ ​who never​ ​went​ ​back​ ​to​ ​China,​ ​having​ ​once​ ​been​ ​traded​ ​for​ ​a​ ​girl. Brothers​ ​and​ ​sisters,​ ​newly​ ​men​ ​and​ ​women,​ ​had​ ​to​ ​efface​ ​their​ ​sexual​ ​color​ ​and​ ​present​ ​plain​ ​miens.​ ​Disturbing​ ​hair​ ​and​ ​eyes,​ ​a​ ​smile​ ​like no​ ​other,​ ​threatened​ ​the​ ​ideal​ ​of​ ​five​ ​generations​ ​living​ ​under​ ​one​ ​roof.​ ​To​ ​focus​ ​blurs,​ ​people​ ​shouted​ ​face​ ​to​ ​face​ ​and​ ​yelled​ ​from​ ​room​ ​to room.​ ​The​ ​immigrants​ ​1​ ​know​ ​have​ ​loud​ ​voices,​ ​unmodulated​ ​to​ ​American​ ​tones​ ​even​ ​after​ ​years​ ​away​ ​from​ ​the​ ​village​ ​where​ ​they​ ​called their​ ​friendships​ ​out​ ​across​ ​the​ ​fields.​ ​1​ ​have​ ​not​ ​been​ ​able​ ​to​ ​stop​ ​my​ ​mother's​ ​screams​ ​in​ ​public​ ​libraries​ ​or​ ​over​ ​telephones.​ ​Walking​ ​erect (knees​ ​straight,​ ​toes​ ​pointed​ ​forward,​ ​not​ ​pigeon-toed,​ ​which​ ​is​ ​Chinese-feminine)​ ​and​ ​speaking​ ​in​ ​an​ ​inaudible​ ​voice,​ ​1​ ​have​ ​tried​ ​to​ ​turn myself​ ​American-feminine.​ ​Chinese​ ​communication​ ​was​ ​loud,​ ​public.​ ​Only​ ​sick​ ​people​ ​had​ ​to​ ​whisper.​ ​But​ ​at​ ​the​ ​dinner​ ​table,​ ​where​ ​the family​ ​members​ ​came​ ​nearest​ ​one​ ​another,​ ​no​ ​one​ ​could​ ​talk,​ ​not​ ​the​ ​outcasts​ ​nor​ ​any​ ​eaters.​ ​Every​ ​word​ ​that​ ​falls​ ​from​ ​the​ ​mouth​ ​is​ ​a​ ​coin lost.​ ​Silently​ ​they​ ​gave​ ​and​ ​accepted​ ​food​ ​with​ ​both​ ​hands.​ ​A​ ​preoccupied​ ​child​ ​who​ ​took​ ​his​ ​bowl​ ​with​ ​one​ ​hand​ ​got​ ​a​ ​sideways​ ​glare.​ ​A complete​ ​moment​ ​of​ ​total​ ​attention​ ​is​ ​due​ ​everyone​ ​alike.​ ​Children​ ​and​ ​lovers​ ​have​ ​no​ ​singularity​ ​here,​ ​but​ ​my​ ​aunt​ ​used​ ​a​ ​secret​ ​voice,​ ​a separate​ ​attentiveness. She​ ​kept​ ​the​ ​man's​ ​name​ ​to​ ​herself​ ​throughout​ ​her​ ​labor​ ​and​ ​dying;​ ​she​ ​did​ ​not​ ​accuse​ ​him​ ​that​ ​he​ ​be​ ​punished​ ​with​ ​her.​ ​To​ ​save​ ​her inseminator's​ ​name​ ​she​ ​gave​ ​silent​ ​birth. He​ ​may​ ​have​ ​been​ ​somebody​ ​in​ ​her​ ​own​ ​household,​ ​but​ ​intercourse​ ​with​ ​a​ ​man​ ​outside​ ​the​ ​family​ ​would​ ​have​ ​been​ ​no​ ​less​ ​abhorrent.​ ​All the​ ​village​ ​were​ ​kinsmen,​ ​and​ ​the​ ​titles​ ​shouted​ ​in​ ​loud​ ​country​ ​voices​ ​never​ ​let​ ​kinship​ ​be​ ​forgotten.​ ​Any​ ​man​ ​within​ ​visiting​ ​distance would​ ​have​ ​been​ ​neutralized​ ​as​ ​a​ ​lover-"brother​ ​...​ ​..​ ​younger​ ​brother,"​ ​"older​ ​brother"--one​ ​hundred​ ​and​ ​fifteen​ ​relationship​ ​titles.​ ​Parents researched​ ​birth​ ​charts​ ​probably​ ​not​ ​so​ ​much​ ​to​ ​assure​ ​good​ ​fortune​ ​as​ ​to​ ​circumvent​ ​incest​ ​in​ ​a​ ​population​ ​that​ ​has​ ​but​ ​one​ ​hundred surnames.​ ​Everybody​ ​has​ ​eight​ ​million​ ​relatives.​ ​How​ ​useless​ ​then​ ​sexual​ ​mannerisms,​ ​how​ ​dangerous. As​ ​if​ ​it​ ​came​ ​from​ ​an​ ​atavism​ ​deeper​ ​than​ ​fear,​ ​I​ ​used​ ​to​ ​add​ ​"brother"​ ​silently​ ​to​ ​boys'​ ​names.​ ​It​ ​hexed​ ​the​ ​boys,​ ​who​ ​would​ ​or​ ​would​ ​not ask​ ​me​ ​to​ ​dance,​ ​and​ ​made​ ​them​ ​less​ ​scary​ ​and​ ​as​ ​familiar​ ​and​ ​deserving​ ​of​ ​benevolence​ ​as​ ​girls. But,​ ​of​ ​course,​ ​1​ ​hexed​ ​myself​ ​also-no​ ​dates.​ ​I​ ​should​ ​have​ ​stood​ ​up,​ ​both​ ​arms​ ​waving,​ ​and​ ​shouted​ ​out​ ​across​ ​libraries,​ ​"Hey,​ ​you!​ ​Love me​ ​back."​ ​I​ ​had​ ​no​ ​idea,​ ​though,​ ​how​ ​to​ ​make​ ​attraction​ ​selective,​ ​how​ ​to​ ​control​ ​its​ ​direction​ ​and​ ​magnitude.​ ​If​ ​1​ ​made​ ​myself American-pretty​ ​so​ ​that​ ​the​ ​five​ ​or​ ​six​ ​Chinese​ ​boys​ ​in​ ​the​ ​class​ ​fell​ ​in​ ​love​ ​with​ ​me,​ ​everyone​ ​else-the​ ​Caucasian,​ ​Negro,​ ​and​ ​Japanese boys-would​ ​too.​ ​Sisterliness,​ ​dignified​ ​and​ ​honorable,​ ​made​ ​much​ ​more​ ​sense. Attraction​ ​eludes​ ​control​ ​so​ ​stubbornly​ ​that​ ​whole​ ​societies​ ​designed​ ​to​ ​organize​ ​relationships​ ​among​ ​people​ ​cannot​ ​keep​ ​order,​ ​not​ ​even when​ ​they​ ​bind​ ​people​ ​to​ ​one​ ​another​ ​from​ ​childhood​ ​and​ ​raise​ ​them​ ​together.​ ​Among​ ​the​ ​very​ ​poor​ ​and​ ​the​ ​wealthy,​ ​brothers​ ​married​ ​their adopted​ ​sisters,​ ​like​ ​doves.​ ​Our​ ​family​ ​allowed​ ​some​ ​romance,​ ​paying​ ​adult​ ​brides'​ ​prices​ ​and​ ​providing​ ​dowries​ ​so​ ​that​ ​their​ ​sons​ ​and daughters​ ​could​ ​marry​ ​strangers.​ ​Marriage​ ​promises​ ​to​ ​turn​ ​strangers​ ​into​ ​friendly​ ​relatives-a​ ​nation​ ​of​ ​siblings. In​ ​the​ ​village​ ​structure,​ ​spirits​ ​shimmered​ ​among​ ​the​ ​live​ ​creatures,​ ​balanced​ ​and​ ​held​ ​in​ ​equilibrium​ ​by​ ​time​ ​and​ ​land.​ ​But​ ​one​ ​human​ ​being flaring​ ​up​ ​into​ ​violence​ ​could​ ​open​ ​up​ ​a​ ​black​ ​hole,​ ​a​ ​maelstrom​ ​that​ ​pulled​ ​in​ ​the​ ​sky.​ ​The​ ​frightened​ ​villagers,​ ​who​ ​depended​ ​on​ ​one another​ ​to​ ​maintain​ ​the​ ​real,​ ​went​ ​to​ ​my​ ​aunt​ ​to​ ​show​ ​her​ ​a​ ​personal,​ ​physical​ ​representation​ ​of​ ​the​ ​break​ ​she​ ​had​ ​made​ ​in​ ​the"roundness." Misallying​ ​couples​ ​snapped​ ​off​ ​the​ ​future,​ ​which​ ​was​ ​to​ ​be​ ​embodied​ ​in​ ​true​ ​offspring.​ ​The​ ​villagers​ ​punished​ ​her​ ​for​ ​acting​ ​as​ ​if​ ​she​ ​could have​ ​a​ ​private​ ​life,​ ​secret​ ​and​ ​apart​ ​from​ ​them. If​ ​my​ ​aunt​ ​had​ ​betrayed​ ​the​ ​family​ ​at​ ​a​ ​time​ ​of​ ​large​ ​grain​ ​yields​ ​and​ ​peace,​ ​when​ ​many​ ​boys​ ​were​ ​born,​ ​and​ ​wings​ ​were​ ​being​ ​built​ ​on many​ ​houses,​ ​perhaps​ ​she​ ​might​ ​have​ ​escaped​ ​such​ ​severe​ ​punishment.​ ​But​ ​the​ ​men-hungry,​ ​greedy,​ ​tired​ ​of​ ​planting​ ​in​ ​dry​ ​soil-had​ ​been forced​ ​to​ ​leave​ ​the​ ​village​ ​in​ ​order​ ​to​ ​send​ ​food-money​ ​home.​ ​There​ ​were​ ​ghost​ ​plagues,​ ​bandit​ ​plagues,​ ​wars​ ​with​ ​the​ ​Japanese,​ ​floods.​ ​My Chinese​ ​brother​ ​and​ ​sister​ ​had​ ​died​ ​of​ ​an​ ​unknown​ ​sickness.​ ​Adultery,​ ​perhaps​ ​only​ ​a​ ​mistake​ ​during​ ​good​ ​times,​ ​became​ ​a​ ​crime​ ​when​ ​the village​ ​needed​ ​food. The​ ​round​ ​moon​ ​cakes​ ​and​ ​round​ ​doorways,​ ​the​ ​round​ ​tables​ ​of​ ​graduated​ ​sizes​ ​that​ ​fit​ ​one​ ​roundness​ ​inside​ ​an

other,​ ​round​ ​windows​ ​and​ ​rice​ ​bowls-these​ ​talismans​ ​had​ ​lost​ ​their​ ​power​ ​to​ ​warn​ ​this​ ​family​ ​of​ ​the​ ​law:​ ​a​ ​family​ ​must​ ​be​ ​whole,​ ​faithfully keeping​ ​the​ ​descent​ ​line​ ​by​ ​having​ ​sons​ ​to​ ​feed​ ​the​ ​old​ ​and​ ​the​ ​dead,​ ​who​ ​in​ ​turn​ ​look​ ​after​ ​the​ ​family.​ ​The​ ​villagers​ ​came​ ​to​ ​show​ ​my​ ​aunt and​ ​her​ ​lover-in-hiding​ ​a​ ​broken​ ​house.​ ​The​ ​villagers​ ​were​ ​speeding​ ​up​ ​the​ ​circling​ ​of​ ​events​ ​because​ ​she​ ​was​ ​too​ ​shortsighted​ ​to​ ​see​ ​that​ ​her infidelity​ ​had​ ​already​ ​harmed​ ​the​ ​village,​ ​that​ ​waves​ ​of​ ​consequences​ ​would​ ​return​ ​unpredictably,​ ​sometimes​ ​in​ ​disguise,​ ​as​ ​now,​ ​to​ ​hurt​ ​her. This​ ​roundness​ ​had​ ​to​ ​be​ ​made​ ​coin-sized​ ​so​ ​that​ ​she​ ​would​ ​see​ ​its​ ​circumference:​ ​punish​ ​her​ ​at​ ​the​ ​birth​ ​of​ ​her​ ​baby.​ ​Awaken​ ​her​ ​to​ ​the inexorable.​ ​People​ ​who​ ​refused​ ​fatalism​ ​because​ ​they​ ​could​ ​invent​ ​small​ ​resources​ ​insisted​ ​on​ ​culpability.​ ​Deny​ ​accidents​ ​and​ ​wrest​ ​fault from​ ​the​ ​stars. After​ ​the​ ​villagers​ ​left,​ ​their​ ​lanterns​ ​now​ ​scattering​ ​in​ ​various​ ​directions​ ​toward​ ​home,​ ​the​ ​family​ ​broke​ ​their​ ​silence​ ​and​ ​cursed​ ​her.​ ​"Aiaa, we're​ ​going​ ​to​ ​die.​ ​Death​ ​is​ ​coming.​ ​Death​ ​is​ ​coming.​ ​Look​ ​what​ ​you've​ ​done.​ ​You've​ ​killed​ ​us.​ ​Ghost!​ ​Dead​ ​ghost!​ ​Ghost!​ ​You've​ ​never been​ ​born."​ ​She​ ​ran​ ​out​ ​into​ ​the​ ​fields,​ ​far​ ​enough​ ​from​ ​the​ ​house​ ​so​ ​that​ ​she​ ​could​ ​no​ ​longer​ ​hear​ ​their​ ​voices,​ ​and​ ​pressed​ ​herself​ ​against the​ ​earth,​ ​her​ ​own​ ​land​ ​no​ ​more.​ ​When​ ​she​ ​felt​ ​the​ ​birth​ ​coming,​ ​she​ ​thought​ ​that​ ​she​ ​had​ ​been​ ​hurt.​ ​Her​ ​body​ ​seized​ ​together.​ ​"They've​ ​hurt me​ ​too​ ​much,"​ ​she​ ​thought.​ ​"This​ ​is​ ​gall,​ ​and​ ​it​ ​will​ ​kill​ ​me."​ ​With​ ​forehead​ ​and​ ​knees​ ​against​ ​the​ ​earth,​ ​her​ ​body​ ​convulsed​ ​and​ ​then relaxed.​ ​She​ ​turned​ ​on​ ​her​ ​back,​ ​lay​ ​on​ ​the​ ​ground.​ ​The​ ​black​ ​well​ ​of​ ​sky​ ​and​ ​stars​ ​went​ ​out​ ​and​ ​out​ ​and​ ​out​ ​forever;​ ​her​ ​body​ ​and​ ​her complexity​ ​seemed​ ​to​ ​disappear.​ ​She​ ​was​ ​one​ ​of​ ​the​ ​stars,​ ​a​ ​bright​ ​dot​ ​in​ ​blackness,​ ​without​ ​home,​ ​without​ ​a​ ​companion,​ ​in​ ​eternal​ ​cold​ ​and silence.​ ​An​ ​agoraphobia​ ​rose​ ​in​ ​her,​ ​speeding​ ​higher​ ​and​ ​higher,​ ​bigger​ ​and​ ​bigger;​ ​she​ ​would​ ​not​ ​be​ ​able​ ​to​ ​contain​ ​it;​ ​there​ ​would​ ​no​ ​end to​ ​fear. Flayed,​ ​unprotected​ ​against​ ​space,​ ​she​ ​felt​ ​pain​ ​return,​ ​focusing​ ​her​ ​body.​ ​This​ ​pain​ ​chilled​ ​her-a​ ​cold,​ ​steady​ ​kind​ ​of​ ​surface​ ​pain.​ ​Inside, spasmodically,​ ​the​ ​other​ ​pain,​ ​the​ ​pain​ ​of​ ​the​ ​child,​ ​heated​ ​her.​ ​For​ ​hours​ ​she​ ​lay​ ​on​ ​the​ ​ground,​ ​alternately​ ​body​ ​and​ ​space.​ ​Sometimes​ ​a vision​ ​of​ ​normal​ ​comfort​ ​obliterated​ ​reality:​ ​she​ ​saw​ ​the​ ​family​ ​in​ ​the​ ​evening​ ​gambling​ ​at​ ​the​ ​dinner​ ​table,​ ​the​ ​young​ ​people​ ​massaging their​ ​elders'​ ​backs.​ ​She​ ​saw​ ​them​ ​congratulating​ ​one​ ​another,​ ​high​ ​joy​ ​on​ ​the​ ​mornings​ ​the​ ​rice​ ​shoots​ ​came​ ​up.​ ​When​ ​these​ ​pictures​ ​burst, the​ ​stars​ ​drew​ ​yet​ ​further​ ​apart.​ ​Black​ ​space​ ​opened. She​ ​got​ ​to​ ​her​ ​feet​ ​to​ ​fight​ ​better​ ​and​ ​remembered​ ​that​ ​old-fashioned​ ​women​ ​gave​ ​birth​ ​in​ ​their​ ​pigsties​ ​to​ ​fool​ ​the​ ​jealous,​ ​pain-dealing gods,​ ​who​ ​do​ ​not​ ​snatch​ ​piglets.​ ​Before​ ​the​ ​next​ ​spasms​ ​could​ ​stop​ ​her,​ ​she​ ​ran​ ​to​ ​the​ ​pigsty,​ ​each​ ​step​ ​a​ ​rushing​ ​out​ ​into​ ​emptiness.​ ​She climbed​ ​over​ ​the​ ​fence​ ​and​ ​knelt​ ​in​ ​the​ ​dirt.​ ​It​ ​was​ ​good​ ​to​ ​have​ ​a​ ​fence​ ​enclosing​ ​her,​ ​a​ ​tribal​ ​person​ ​alone. Laboring,​ ​this​ ​woman​ ​who​ ​had​ ​carried​ ​her​ ​child​ ​as​ ​a​ ​foreign​ ​growth​ ​that​ ​sickened​ ​her​ ​every​ ​day,​ ​expelled​ ​it​ ​at​ ​last.​ ​She​ ​reached​ ​down​ ​to touch​ ​the​ ​hot,​ ​wet,​ ​moving​ ​mass,​ ​surely​ ​smaller​ ​than​ ​anything​ ​human,​ ​and​ ​could​ ​feel​ ​that​ ​it was​ ​human​ ​after​ ​all-fingers,​ ​toes,​ ​nails,​ ​nose.​ ​She​ ​pulled​ ​it​ ​up​ ​on​ ​to​ ​her​ ​belly,​ ​and​ ​it​ ​lay​ ​curled​ ​there,​ ​butt​ ​in​ ​the​ ​air,​ ​feet​ ​precisely​ ​tucked​ ​one under​ ​the​ ​other.​ ​She​ ​opened​ ​her​ ​loose​ ​shirt​ ​and​ ​buttoned​ ​the​ ​child​ ​inside.​ ​After​ ​resting,​ ​it​ ​squirmed​ ​and​ ​thrashed​ ​and​ ​she​ ​pushed​ ​it​ ​up​ ​to​ ​her breast.​ ​It​ ​turned​ ​its​ ​head​ ​this​ ​way​ ​and​ ​that​ ​until​ ​it​ ​found​ ​her​ ​nipple.​ ​There,​ ​it​ ​made​ ​little​ ​snuffling​ ​noises.​ ​She​ ​clenched​ ​her​ ​teeth​ ​at​ ​its preciousness,​ ​lovely​ ​as​ ​a​ ​young​ ​calf,​ ​a​ ​piglet,​ ​a​ ​little​ ​dog. She​ ​may​ ​have​ ​gone​ ​to​ ​the​ ​pigsty​ ​as​ ​a​ ​last​ ​act​ ​of​ ​responsibility:​ ​she​ ​would​ ​protect​ ​this​ ​child​ ​as​ ​she​ ​had​ ​protected​ ​its​ ​father.​ ​It​ ​would​ ​look​ ​after her​ ​soul,​ ​leaving​ ​supplies​ ​on​ ​her​ ​grave.​ ​But​ ​how​ ​would​ ​this​ ​tiny​ ​child​ ​without​ ​family​ ​find​ ​her​ ​grave​ ​when​ ​there​ ​would​ ​be​ ​no​ ​marker​ ​for​ ​her anywhere,​ ​neither​ ​in​ ​the​ ​earth​ ​nor​ ​the​ ​family​ ​hall?​ ​No​ ​one​ ​would​ ​give​ ​her​ ​a​ ​family​ ​hall​ ​name.​ ​She​ ​had​ ​taken​ ​the​ ​child​ ​with​ ​her​ ​into​ ​the wastes.​ ​At​ ​its​ ​birth​ ​the​ ​two​ ​of​ ​them​ ​had​ ​felt​ ​the​ ​same​ ​raw​ ​pain​ ​of​ ​separation,​ ​a​ ​wound​ ​that​ ​only​ ​the​ ​family​ ​pressing​ ​tight​ ​could​ ​close.​ ​A​ ​child with​ ​no​ ​descent​ ​line​ ​would​ ​not​ ​soften​ ​her​ ​life​ ​but​ ​only​ ​trail​ ​after​ ​her,​ ​ghostlike,​ ​begging​ ​her​ ​to​ ​give​ ​it​ ​purpose.​ ​At​ ​dawn​ ​the​ ​villagers​ ​on​ ​their way​ ​to​ ​the​ ​fields​ ​would​ ​stand​ ​around​ ​the​ ​fence​ ​and​ ​look. Full​ ​of​ ​milk,​ ​the​ ​little​ ​ghost​ ​slept.​ ​When​ ​it​ ​awoke,​ ​she​ ​hardened​ ​her​ ​breasts​ ​against​ ​the​ ​milk​ ​that​ ​crying​ ​loosens.​ ​Toward​ ​morning​ ​she​ ​picked up​ ​the​ ​baby​ ​and​ ​walked​ ​to​ ​the​ ​well. Carrying​ ​the​ ​baby​ ​to​ ​the​ ​well​ ​shows​ ​loving.​ ​Otherwise​ ​abandon​ ​it.​ ​Turn​ ​its​ ​face​ ​into​ ​the​ ​mud.​ ​Mothers​ ​who​ ​love​ ​their​ ​children​ ​take​ ​them along.​ ​It​ ​was​ ​probably​ ​a​ ​girl;​ ​there​ ​is​ ​some​ ​hope​ ​of​ ​forgiveness​ ​for​ ​boys. "Don't​ ​tell​ ​anyone​ ​you​ ​had​ ​an​ ​aunt.​ ​Your​ ​father​ ​does​ ​not​ ​want​ ​to​ ​hear​ ​her​ ​name.​ ​She​ ​has​ ​never​ ​been​ ​born."​ ​I​ ​have​ ​believed​ ​that​ ​sex​ ​was unspeakable​ ​and​ ​words​ ​so​ ​strong​ ​and​ ​fathers​ ​so​ ​frail​ ​that​ ​"aunt"​ ​would​ ​do​ ​my​ ​father​ ​mysterious​ ​harm.​ ​1​ ​have​ ​thought​ ​that​ ​my​ ​family,​ ​having settled​ ​among​ ​immigrants​ ​who​ ​had​ ​also​ ​been​ ​their​ ​neighbors​ ​in​ ​the​ ​ancestral​ ​land,​ ​needed​ ​to​ ​clean​ ​their​ ​name,​ ​and​ ​a​ ​wrong​ ​word​ ​would incite​ ​the​ ​kinspeople​ ​even​ ​here.​ ​But​ ​there​ ​is​ ​more​ ​to​ ​this​ ​silence:​ ​they​ ​want​ ​me​ ​to​ ​participate​ ​in​ ​her​ ​punishment.​ ​And​ ​I​ ​have. In​ ​the​ ​twenty​ ​years​ ​since​ ​I​ ​heard​ ​this​ ​story​ ​I​ ​have​ ​not​ ​asked​ ​for​ ​details​ ​nor​ ​said​ ​my​ ​aunt's​ ​name;​ ​1​ ​do​ ​not​ ​know​ ​it.​ ​People​ ​who​ ​can​ ​comfort the​ ​dead​ ​can​ ​also​ ​chase​ ​after​ ​them​ ​to​ ​hurt​ ​them​ ​further-a​ ​reverse​ ​ancestor​ ​worship.​ ​The​ ​real​ ​punishment​ ​was​ ​not​ ​the​ ​raid​ ​swiftly​ ​inflicted​ ​by the​ ​villagers,​ ​but​ ​the​ ​family's​ ​deliberately​ ​forgetting​ ​her.​ ​Her​ ​betrayal​ ​so​ ​maddened​ ​them,​ ​they​ ​saw​ ​to​ ​it​ ​that​ ​she​ ​would​ ​sufFer​ ​forever,​ ​even after​ ​death.​ ​Always​ ​hungry,​ ​always​ ​needing,​ ​she​ ​would​ ​have​ ​to​ ​beg​ ​food​ ​from​ ​other​ ​ghosts,​ ​snatch​ ​and​ ​steal​ ​it​ ​from​ ​those​ ​whose​ ​living descendants​ ​give​ ​them​ ​gifts.​ ​She​ ​would​ ​have​ ​to​ ​fight​ ​the​ ​ghosts​ ​massed​ ​at​ ​crossroads​ ​for​ ​the​ ​buns​ ​a​ ​few​ ​thoughtful​ ​citizens​ ​leave​ ​to​ ​decoy her​ ​away​ ​from​ ​village​ ​and​ ​home​ ​so​ ​that​ ​the​ ​ancestral​ ​spirits​ ​could​ ​feast​ ​unharassed.​ ​At​ ​peace,​ ​they​ ​could​ ​act​ ​like​ ​gods,​ ​not​ ​ghosts,​ ​their descent​ ​lines​ ​providing​ ​them​ ​with​ ​paper​ ​suits​ ​and​ ​dresses,​ ​spirit​ ​money,​ ​paper​ ​houses,​ ​paper​ ​automobiles,​ ​chicken,​ ​meat,​ ​and​ ​rice​ ​into eternity​ ​essences​ ​delivered​ ​up​ ​in​ ​smoke​ ​and​ ​flames,​ ​steam​ ​and​ ​incense​ ​rising​ ​from​ ​each​ ​rice​ ​bowl.​ ​In​ ​an​ ​attempt​ ​to​ ​make​ ​the​ ​Chinese​ ​care​ ​for people​ ​outside​ ​the​ ​family,​ ​Chairman​ ​Mao​ ​encourages​ ​us​ ​now​ ​to​ ​give​ ​our​ ​paper​ ​replicas​ ​to​ ​the​ ​spirits​ ​of​ ​outstanding​ ​soldiers​ ​and​ ​workers,​ ​no matter​ ​whose​ ​ancestors​ ​they​ ​may​ ​be.​ ​My​ ​aunt​ ​remains​ ​forever​ ​hungry.​ ​Goods​ ​are​ ​not​ ​distributed​ ​evenly​ ​among​ ​the​ ​dead. My​ ​aunt​ ​haunts​ ​me-her​ ​ghost​ ​drawn​ ​to​ ​me​ ​because​ ​now,​ ​after​ ​fifty​ ​years​ ​of​ ​neglect,​ ​I​ ​alone​ ​devote​ ​pages​ ​of​ ​paper​ ​to​ ​her,​ ​though​ ​not origamied​ ​into​ ​houses​ ​and​ ​clothes.​ ​1​ ​do​ ​not​ ​think​ ​she​ ​always​ ​means​ ​me​ ​well.​ ​I​ ​am​ ​telling​ ​on​ ​her,​ ​and​ ​she​ ​was​ ​a​ ​spite​ ​suicide,​ ​drowning herself​ ​in​ ​the​ ​drinking​ ​water.​ ​The​ ​Chinese​ ​are​ ​always​ ​very​ ​frightened​ ​of​ ​the​ ​drowned​ ​one,​ ​whose​ ​weeping​ ​ghost,​ ​wet​ ​hair​ ​hanging​ ​and​ ​skin bloated,​ ​waits​ ​silently​ ​by​ ​the​ ​water​ ​to​ ​pull​ ​down​ ​a​ ​substitute.