Saturday 26 July 2014

China by Angelina Bong

It was summer 1999. I never thought life could be like this. A slave like me could never want something more from life. Besides, I was never truly alive. I was a tool to be used and confiscated when all was said and done. I should never question what I was born to be, for it was all laid out for me. I was bought for a price. If anyone should remain silent for the rest of her life, it should be me.  What happened must have been a stroke of luck or some mighty invisible hands at work.

In a cold winter’s night of 1987, a Chinese baby girl with shining eyes was born. Her cries filled a small corner of a city in the province of Anhui. She was a pretty sight to behold. Her mother looked at her with terror in her eyes and refused to hold the baby born of her flesh. Her father came in, saw the baby, held her in his arms and quickly fled the room. It was too much of a risk to keep the baby. The one child policy meant they could only have one kid and it would have to be a boy. The boy could help with the laborious business and would be able carry the surname of the family. A girl would be of no use to them. The father passed this crying baby bundled in rags to a red-haired foreigner waiting near the dock and she was never to be seen again in China. That baby was me.


I grew up not knowing who my parents were. I always thought Master was my father but aged six, it finally dawned on me that my siblings were all tanned. I was the only fair child. At first, I thought I was special and then realised the colour of my skin was a curse. They would all make fun of me and said Master picked me from the rubbish bin and bleached me till I was pale yellow because the stench on me was so horrible that no one could bear to be near me. I ran to Master asking him who my parents were and how I ended up in a land where no one else looked like me and was reprimanded with six harsh beatings from a rattan rod. From that day onwards, I never questioned Master again. Nor would I ask anyone where I came from. 


It was never easy to please my Master. I tried singing but I sounded like a grasshopper creaking in the woods. I practiced dancing again and again but my clumsy feet prevented me from swinging the graceful hips I never had. I never excelled at any of the performances my siblings could do so easily. They all seemed like a chore to me. I wondered why I did not possess any talents worth pursuing. How was I going to help Master make money? Would he throw me out because I could not contribute anything to make a living? All I could do was sit and beg but that was not helping much.


One day while I was begging, a beautiful lady with long blonde hair and clear blue eyes came to me. She gave me a chapatti with some hot dhal. She told me I was pretty. My heart almost stopped in disbelief. I wondered if she was just complimenting me out of pity for my kind who had to sit and beg. I smiled graciously at her and she patted my head gently. No one had ever touched me like that before. I did not know whether to cry, to run or to laugh. Instead, I stared at her blankly till she left. That night, I could not sleep at all thinking of the gorgeous maiden sent from heaven and her soft hands.  


The next day, I saw her again. She was passing the dusty streets of Pink City. Clad in a blue kurta and jeans, she came over and handed me a McDonald’s vegetarian burger. I was too stunned to speak. I had always seen teenagers and families enjoying Happy Meals in the yellow, red and white restaurant and could only dream that one day some angel would bring the burgers to me. My angel arrived in the form of a lady with sparkling eyes, which spoke of love when she gazed into mine. This time, I thanked her in English. I knew a few words of English from my older siblings who picked it up in the streets from the foreigners who came to visit Jaipur. From that day onwards, I saw my angel every day without fail. She would bring me food to eat and thanks to her I learnt a lot more English, although our conversations were always brief. I looked forward to our meetings every day and for the first time in my life, I felt happy. I loved her so much and I swore I would die for her. 


This angel of mine gave me a present. It had attractive women with long flowing dresses stuck on papers. Each paper had different pictures, which were delicately drawn with meticulous details. There were some words at the bottom of each piece. My angel told me that my present was a book. I was mesmerized by it. I started looking at my book every night and imagined that I could be one of those graceful ladies wearing striking gowns. It was a consoling dream every night where I could escape from my life. Master saw me one night clutching my book and took it away from me. He tore the pages in front of me as I choked back tears of grief. He made me promise never to touch a book again for it would spoil my pure mind. I nodded in silence.


One cloudy day, this angel of mine stopped coming. I waited till sunset but she still did not come. I was heartbroken. I asked the shopkeepers and stall owners who might have known her. One of them told me that she had flown back to the United States. My heart was torn. My angel left and betrayed me. My only source of joy had been taken away.  She did not even say goodbye. I was left alone again in the slums I did not even belong to. I was from a different planet and it hurt so badly. I could not cry for crying was forbidden. Master would strike us with a stick so hard until we were so bruised that we could not walk for days. I sucked all the pain into my soul and grew quiet. I vowed never to smile again unless it was to seduce and tempt, never to let anyone into my heart again. I became silent and only spoke when it was absolutely necessary. 


My heart cried till it cried no more. I was turning twelve and Master was preparing me for something huge. I was no longer allowed to go and beg. I was to take care of my skin and make sure I did not do anything to hurt myself. There were no more beatings or slappings. I was to make sure I knew how to walk properly. I had to take dancing lessons every day, although it was difficult as I was never cut out to be a dancer. Master told me someone would visit me and make me a woman. That person was of great honour and would bring great wealth to our home. He told me that I would never be the same childish and foolish person I was before. I was to become a mature, wise and refined lady once this honourable person paid his visit and made me one. I was delighted and made all my preparations with care. I would finally bring admiration and riches to Master. I would be the best slave anyone could ever have. I was born to be that.


The day finally came when the honourable person arrived. He wore a bright orange turban and his beard was so long you could weave it into braids. He introduced himself as Mr. Jee. After I performed a dance, Master took us into a room filled with all things shiny and gold. The bed was covered in silky red sheets with golden embroidery. I would never have dreamed of sleeping in a bed as heavenly as this. Although everything looked like dreamland, I felt strange at the thought of a bed as a meeting place. Mr. Jee looked at me intensely and switched off the lights. I was afraid of the dark and wanted to say something but I remained silent. Within seconds and swift like the lightning, his fat hairy hands reached for my golden saree and tore all my clothes off. He started touching me all over but something in my heart told me that this was not right. How could such horror make me a woman? I panicked and kicked him with all my strength, I fled the room and for fear of Master’s disappointment, I ran with all my might away from his home. I ran till I could run no more and slept in the corner of a street. I was covered only by the torn saree cloth I had managed to grab.


I woke up in broad daylight with noisy kids roaming around the sandy alleys. No one seemed to notice me. Everyone seemed engaged in their own daily routines. There were a few camels strutting slowly across from me. I was hungry, thirsty and scared. I was afraid Master might send people to look for me. The last time someone tried to run away, Master found him and chopped his arms off. This armless boy grew into a man who would beg for the rest of his life with a paper cup as his companion. I feared that would happen to me. I gathered up my saree and wrapped myself properly and started to move. I walked till my feet bled and my toes blistered for I was without shoes when I left that shameful chamber. It was soon midnight. There was not a soul to be seen along the highways of the desert. I took my slumber on the roadside until I heard the honking of cars. It was still dark but fear took hold of me again and pushed me to get up and walk.


On the fourth day, I was drained of all my energy by the terrible scorching heat of the desert. My head was spinning and my steps became slower and slower. I was dying for water. I did not dare ask anyone for fear of them recognizing me as Master’s slave. I continued to trudge along the rough roads dragging my painful feet. Alas, I could take it no more. I slumped against a tractor like a huge rock thrown at a wall and slept. I slept for hours. Not even the sound of honking trucks could wake me up. I lay at the roadside like a dead log.


I was awakened by some foreign music, which was new to my ears. I opened my eyes and sat up. I felt like I was in a room on another planet. There were none of the shiny decorations so loved by the Indians. The blanket covering me was filled with puffy cotton and it was satin white. The whole room was white, except for the mahogany chairs and tables. Even the wardrobe was white. It was peculiar but very clean. Nothing like the home I had slept in. I jumped out of bed and ran out of the room. An old man and a young woman looked at me. I stared at them for I was startled to see people of different colours than I was used to. The young woman had features similar to mine. She had long straight silky black hair and pale yellow skin.  She began to explain to me that she saw me on the roadside when they were passing by; they were tourists in Jaipur and they were on their way back to Delhi. She thought it was a rare to see a fellow Chinese sleeping on the streets and so she saved me.


I finally found out one piece of information about myself. I was Chinese. How odd. I had never heard of that word. Whatever it meant, I must be part of it or it must be part of me. I started to sob and tears flowed out like rivers of water penned up in my years of silence. I told them in my broken English about what happened and the woman held me in her arms like a baby. She assured me she would help me in whatever way she could. 


The air was clean and there were different types of big tree lining the tar roads. There was no honking from the cars that passed us and there were no beggars in sight. We reached a huge mansion with brown window panes, surrounded by a blooming garden with magical flowers I had never seen before. The young lady grasped my hand, walked me into the house and led me up the stairs to my room. I could hardly breathe when she told me the room belonged to me. It was fit for a princess.


The room was painted pink and I had a queen size bed with quilted covers all to myself. There was a desk next to it with a table lamp so exquisite I could only imagine seeing it in a palace. I leapt for joy as I looked at the shelves and saw hundreds of books waiting for me. I could escape into different imaginations at different times. I reached out for a book and flipped through the pages. I saw weird organic shapes with words all over them and there were lines in each shape. I wished I could read them. 


The young lady pointed at the shapes and told me that those were the maps of the world. She explained that we were all living on this planet named Earth and it consisted of various countries. It took her and her husband one year to sort out paperwork to get me from India to the United States. She even went on a search to discover how I reached India. She finally pointed to a huge part of a shape and told me, “That’s China. That is where you were born.”


My eyes moistened with tears as I finally understood the meaning of my name. I am China.


Angelina Bong is a poet, writer, artist and fashion professional from Malaysia who is currently working on her first novel. She finds beauty in all things as she randomly blogs about them while sipping her favourite cup of coffee. This piece has previously been published on angelina-bong.blogspot.com


Thursday 24 July 2014

Editor's Pick of July: The Usurper by Ariel Bernstein

There are times, usually when I’m not even trying to remember, that I think back to the days when I awoke and knew I’d have the whole day to be myself. The memories aren’t always clear of course, as I must have been only five or so at the time.

I didn’t understand then why it had to change but now that I have time to think things over, I'm pretty sure her concern really started when the subject of red-shirting came up.  I was only four, but I remember the look on my mother's face when my pre-school teacher asked if she'd thought about it.  Nora is one of the youngest and still a bit immature isn't she? the gray-haired teacher with lots of experience with these types of situations said, either oblivious or resilient to my mother's contempt. Still has trouble recognizing all of her letters and often trips up on the days of the week. She's only four, but still, maybe she'd do better to wait a year. She said all this in front of me as though I couldn’t understand.

We left that day and I don't know what else happened with the teacher. I do know I started kindergarten with everyone else and stayed one of the youngest. You just need help mom told me. She decided to help me some days and I'd remember to water the plants and feed our cat Fifi. But it turned out to mostly be okay in kindergarten. I really liked the music class and painting and somehow figured out that a d was not a b and got almost every day right, except Saturdays and Sundays took a while to fit correctly into my head. I was better with the other kids at that age too, which was a big plus for my kindergarten teacher Mrs. Krause, so mom let me go in most days.

Maybe her help picked up around second grade when we got a lot more homework and tests and all that. I think I did okay but certainly not the top of the class. When she helped and she got to tell my friend Janie's mom that I tied for first place in the second grade spelling bee, I could see we'd continue this way for a while at least. I tried to make the best of it on those days and watch a lot of TV and find the hidden chocolate bars but sometimes I was just bored. Not as bored as I am now of course, but you never know how good you have it at the time.

I liked going to school and sometimes even doing things like squash practice, because the top schools like students who play squash-and piano lessons of course, so I tried as hard as I could. I figured that might be her strategy for a while. If I couldn't do well enough, she'd announce that I needed her help and I'd sit that day out, so it was all about motivation. But sometimes I did okay or even better but she said it still wasn't good enough.

One time when I was eight I remember I threw a fit. We'd just had three snow days in a row and I didn't want to stay home anymore. But I was supposed to read a report aloud to the class the day we finally got to go back to school and mom said I didn't look up enough during practice or enunciate a lot of the big words and she just knew I'd be too nervous standing in front of the whole class. I didn't care that she was right; I just wanted to go and feel badly during the report and then eat my cheese crackers and yogurt for lunch in the cafeteria. So I screamed I was going but she was too quick for me and I never knew how she did it. You are my flesh and blood, she would say and give me a kiss at night because she knew things I didn't and that was that.

When she came home to see the mess I'd made she said it didn't matter, that I got an A for the report and now I needed to clean to feel good about accomplishing something on my own. I didn't clean very well and she knew and said it was okay because it wouldn't affect my future.

At night she came into my room and held my face in her hands and looked sad. Don't you know how lucky you are? she asked me and I know I was supposed to say yes but I stayed silent, which she was okay with. Some parents think they do everything for their child, she said. They think activities and tutors and the best best best are enough but I know I'm the one giving you the best. All the advantages I could ever have to offer, you get to have.

When I was younger I used to imagine it would end one day. I'd finally catch up to where she wanted me to be. The marker kept changing though and getting pushed further and further back and her help only increased until I didn't even remember days where I was me. She sometimes mentioned how ungrateful I was because she always made sure I was at the top of my class, even when it got a lot harder in tenth grade and she started using tutors too.

She says she wants me to go to medical school because she always thought she'd do well, so she's having me take all the pre-med required courses in college now. The coursework is beyond her and now she's the one catching up but that's nothing I can help with.

I sit and watch TV and read graphic novels and look up anything on the computer to make me forget how I used to be me. It's her life now and she says she's going to make the best life for me. Sometimes I look through her work and find a grade that's not the top and I ask her about it over dinner. She doesn't like to talk then and sulks in her room and then I go online and decide who I want to be for the day.

Ariel Bernstein was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She is currently a stay-at-home mother to two young children in Livingston, New Jersey. She writes a blog, “How to Raise Benevolent Dictators,” at: a3bernstein.wordpress.com




Tuesday 22 July 2014

Born With a Baby in My Tummy by Simone King

That one day called me mummy-
the feeling of life inside of me
when I was still a teen
a baby having a baby.
I accidentally nearly drowned my baby whilst giving him a bath-
life's simplest task was nearly my baby's last-
trial and error as I came to know better
learning the life of a teenage mother.
My breast, still undeveloped, now filled with milk,
skin soft as silk
I chose to read -
for every antenatal class I was late-
the only one I attended was high stake.
I learned the power of breath,
death was near in my despair-
no cheers, but the sounds of people moving their chairs.
 
Tiger claws over my once smooth tummy,
the after-marks of becoming a mummy
as the baby grew bigger inside of me.
Swollen feet, a new way to eat, no longer in the mood to meet and greet-
the baby's tears blew my mind,
a little ball of sunshine labelled mine for a life time.

The responsibility of having to name,
a symbol that this was no game.
I was never ashamed and held my head high-
unfamiliar footsteps, followed by emotional threats, a walk I would live to never forget

Simone King started writing poetry and short stories/films in 2011. She writes about her truth and the many questions that plague her mind.

Sunday 20 July 2014

Valerie by Jennie Campbell

The buzzing fan behind the counter made Mary reminisce about the cicadas singing their mating song during the humid summer months in her native Texas.

Summers in Los Angeles weren’t sticky, but just as hot if not hotter. Fortunately, the diner she worked in was on the shady side of Spring Street. The pale concrete government buildings imposed dark shadows upon the asphalt.

The tiny diner was peppered with a few regulars, not busy for a Tuesday, but it wasn’t lunch time yet either.

Mary rubbed her back through her periwinkle uniform as she wiped the worn countertop with a rag. As she stretched her neck and head, with its loosely bundled ginger hair, she inhaled a waft of coffee and griddle food.

Her half-closed, green eyes filled with light that bounced from the shades worn by the woman who walked through the door. The tan fabric of her high-waisted skirt and pale-rose colored chemise complemented and contrasted against her dark chestnut skin. In the sunlight, she radiated like an angel, making Mary’s freckled cheeks flush a scarlet red.

She’d seen Valerie, the lawyer, often. The prim and proper counselor was much kinder than she looked. On a few occasions, they had chatted at length about scripts Mary had submitted; and though Valerie specialized in criminal law, she offered to look over any contracts Mary might be offered.

It both excited and made Mary uneasy to think that she’d lived in L.A. for over three years and hadn’t sold a single story. She feared she may be doomed to die working at the diner.

“Hola, Mari,” Valerie smiled as she approached the counter.

“Hello, Valerie,” Mary greeted her, shyly pushing her black rimmed glasses up the bridge of her nose.

Valerie made her way to her usual booth and proceeded to plop her Michael Kors bag on the seat.

“I think I’ll get the Pig n’ a Poke today. I’ve been good all weekend,” she smiled up at Mary as she removed her sunglasses and pulled some legal files from her bag.

“Sure thing,” Mary smiled, scribbled a note and handed it to Tony, the cook.

“Here you go.” Mary sought an open spot for a coffee mug on what quickly became Valerie’s desk.

Valerie reached out and took it from her and in doing so brushed Mary’s hand.

A twinge of heat spread out from Mary’s stomach.

She fantasized about taking Valerie on a picnic to an open green space with a blanket. She’d bake her grandmother’s famous apple pie. They’d joke about how Mary was trying to fatten her up and Mary would compliment her perfect thick, hourglass figure.

Valerie would find an excuse to bring Mary close and gently place her smooth lips on hers because Mary would be too petrified to initiate anything.

“Mari,” she could faintly hear Valerie saying, “You OK?”

Shaking out of her daydream, Mary smiled at her through the painful realization that her illusion would never become a reality.

“Yes…yeah,” Mary laughed nervously.

Valerie smiled up at her as she shook her head a bit, “How’ve you been? Written any good movies lately?”

There it is again, she thought, that feeling of failure.

“Actually,” Mary hesitated, “…I have. It’s more of a passion project, but I’ll be wrapping it up soon.”

“It’s occurred to me, I’ve never read any of your work. If you don’t mind, I’d like to read it,” Valerie offered before taking a sip of coffee.

“Wow, really? Yeah. Sure. Please, I would love that. I could always use feedback,” Mary replied.

“Of course,” Valerie smiled and placed her hand, with its freshly manicured nails, over Mary’s, with its short, clean nails, “Maybe after I read it, we can get a cup of tea and chat about it.”

Mary was sure she was red as a beet.

“That would be lovely,” Mary Anne smiled as they locked eyes.

“Order up!” Tony shouted causing the women to break their stare.

“I’ll bring you your order,” Mary gently pulled away and grinned like a hopeful idiot.

If that’s not motivation to write, then I don’t know what is, she thought.

Jennie Campbell is a Latin-American author residing in the Los Angeles, CA region, who identifies as bisexual and seeks to increase the visibility of LGBTQ and ethnic minority characters through her writing. 

This story has previously been published on jenniecblogs.wordpress.com and thetsuruokafiles.wordpress.com