later, walking back to Crockerâs through the quiet streets, heâd whispered the word to himself over and over, as if correcting her:
Pardners.
Â
7.
Â
He was improving his English, training his tongue to roll his
r
âs so that
Crocker
didnât sound like
Clocker.
He lingered at the door when the little CrockersâMaster Fred, Miss Harriet (his favorite: she was fascinated by his queue.
How long did it take to grow?
she asked once, wide-eyed), and little Williamâwere at their lessons, and forced himself to practice his English when on errands, wincing to hear other Chinese with their accented
Engrish
and
Melican.
Several times he leaned in to âinterpretâ between a countryman and a white, easing the way, as he saw it, and setting a good example.
But one morning he came across a stooped Chinese in a standoff with a blowzy ghost woman. She was barring his way on the boardwalk, a knot of passersby tangling around them.
âGo on!â the woman was demanding, her face ruddy. âCat got your tongue?â
âMore like tâother way round,â someone hollered from the crowd.
It was the laughter that made Ling worm his way to the front.
âMay I be of assistance?â he offered soberly, but the woman regarded him with frank repugnanceâââarken to âim!ââfanning herself with her hand as if to shoo him away.
Up close, she reminded him of Bridey, albeit much reduced, hair wild beneath her bonnet, face chapped and wan. He almost called her by name, yet she didnât seem to know him, and he thought he must be mistook.
Instead he quietly asked the other fellow in Cantonese what was going on, but the wretch only shrugged. âThe mistress turned her down for a job. Now she blames me!â
âWâas he say?â the woman demanded of Ling, lurching between them. âWâas âis answer?â
âLet it be,â the other Chinese muttered, eyes down.
âSing-song,â the woman jeered. âBing-bong, ning-nong-nang!â
âWhat is it you wish to know?â Ling asked punctiliously.
âJust this! Whatâs so blasted special about him, eh? About your lot, that they hire you afore me and mine?â
Ling stared at her blankly, as if it were a trick question, as if she couldnât see they were Chinese. He remembered how Uncle Ng dealt with untoward customers, giving no indication of understanding, smiling and chattering away in Chineseâinsults mostlyâuntil they threw up their hands. Ling regretted it was too late for him to take the same tack.
He tried to leave instead, turning away from her, and she yanked his queue, snapping his head back so hard he bobbled the package he was holding. But it was the laughterâeven the other Chinese smirkedâmore than anything that set him off. He whirled on her, snatching his hair away, causing her to fall back.
âUnhand me, you trollop!â
There was an appalled hush, broken only by the womanâs choked sob.
âCouldnât even get hired for
that,
damn you!â Too late he grasped how drunk she was. âChinks even got that market cornered.â
The other Chinese made to bolt, there was a scuffle of boots on boards, and Ling felt hands laid on him. He struggled, but then he heard the cold snick of a blade being drawn, felt the bright line of it at his throat, and went limp.
âWhat do you want us to do with them, darling?â he heard someone drawl over his head, but the young woman was inconsolable, hurrying off in tears.
The tears were coming to Lingâs eyes too. A hand was pulling his head back by the queue so that his neck was bared, the knife so hard against his Adamâs apple he didnât think he could swallow. The pain from his scalp was excruciating. He felt a fumbling behind him and then he was released, the knife scraping his chin as it withdrew so that he touched the spot at once, as if feeling
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