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'Thank you, Mr Willoughby. For searching for me.'
'Poof, what kind of words are those? He deserves better than that. He risked his life.'
Lydia shivered. Then she smiled and something seemed to open up in her, letting out a young eagerness for a moment. She offered him her hand.
'I am grateful, Mr Willoughby, really I am.'
'It's your Russian bear you should be thanking. He was the one who did the dirty work.'
'Liev,' she said.
She raised the gla.s.s of lime juice in her hand and turned to where Liev Popkov was slumped in an armchair. He was peering with his one eye into the depths of a gla.s.s of vodka that was swallowed up in his great paw, but when he saw her look across he shook his black curls at her and showed his teeth. It made him look ready to take a bite out of someone. Valentina glared at him and muttered something under her breath in Russian.
'And Chang An Lo?' Theo asked.
'He's in prison.'
'I'm so sorry, Lydia.'
'So am I.'
She went over and stood beside the big Russian, her knee only an inch from his elbow, and went back to staring out the window. They didn't speak, but Theo could sense the connection between those two. Odd that. He could sense Valentina's disapproval too. Obviously the invitation to Popkov had not been her idea. She moved off in the direction of the vodka bottle.
'Sounds like bad news for Chang,' Theo said in an undertone to Alfred, who was looking particularly smart in a new charcoal suit. Valentina had worked wonders with the old chap.
'I'm afraid so.'
'Execution?'
'Inevitable, it seems. Any day now.'
'Poor Lydia.'
Alfred took out a large white handkerchief and wiped his mouth as if to scoop up the words. 'It might be for the best in the long run.' He shook his head unhappily. 'If only she would find herself a nice young English boy at that school of yours.'
'Why so glum, my sweet angel?' Valentina said with a laugh.
She'd returned to slide an arm around her husband's waist. Theo was amused that his friend managed to look so pleased, yet at the same time so embarra.s.sed by Valentina's open display of affection. But the way Alfred looked at her, so much love in one small smile, it haunted him afterward.
The next hour blurred in Theo's mind. But he knew the reason for that. It was shock. At what followed. It acted like a gla.s.s of water spilled over a page of writing, smearing all the words and making them run into each other like tears. So quite how he found himself walking into the driveway behind Valentina, he wasn't sure. Something to do with cigarettes. That was it.
'Oh d.a.m.n,' she'd exclaimed. 'I'm out of smokes.'
'Here, try one of mine,' Theo offered.
'Good G.o.d, no. They smell lethal.'
So he'd offered to drive her to the shop that sold her foul little Russian cigarettes and she'd been delighted. She'd gone over to her daughter, spoken softly in her ear, stroked her hair, obviously explaining why she was skipping off. Lydia nodded but made a face. Not happy. But in the drive he'd opened the pa.s.senger door for Valentina, that much he did remember. And the kiss. Her soft lips on his cheek and the smell of her scent, the light touch of her hand on his chest. She was so happy it was infectious, so brimful of life. It bubbled out of her. Her daughter was safe from both Po Chu and Chang An Lo, while Alfred lay curled in the palm of her hand. What more could she want?
As Theo climbed into the driving seat he saw two things that surprised him. One was Lydia standing in the doorway of the house. He couldn't imagine why she'd come to see them drive off. The other was the Chinese woman, the one who'd thrust the cat into his arms on the junk and who'd been hanging around his gates for the last two days. What the h.e.l.l was she doing here? The foolish woman placed her stubby body directly in front of the car. He hooted the horn. Her broad face and narrow eyes twisted into an expression of hatred and she spat at the windshield.
'Aah, this crazy town is full of mad creatures,' Valentina complained, but she wasn't alarmed. Nothing could dent her good humour today.
'I'll get rid of her.' Theo jumped out, and that was when everything went wrong.
The woman swung back her arm and threw something under the car. He started to run at her, but she was already racing out of the drive at an astonishing pace. Theo put a spurt on and had made it as far as the gate when the world cracked right down the middle. He could think of no other explanation. The noise was like the roar of the devil. He was hurled across the road and felt his wrist snap as he landed. His ears seemed to implode. He couldn't hear.
He dragged himself off the tarmac and looked behind him. The Morris Cowley was gone. In its place was a crater and a few grotesque pieces of twisted metal. Behind it Alfred's Armstrong Siddeley was all hunched over as if it had been kicked in the teeth. Broken gla.s.s trickled down from the sky like razor-sharp rain. Ten yards away on the scorched lawn lay the tattered remains of Valentina's body. Her flesh turned to raw meat. Lydia was kneeling beside it, her mouth open wide in a scream that Theo couldn't hear, her hands cradling her mother's shattered face.
It was then that shock shuffled the images in his head and sent him spinning down into a cold black pit.
62.
The funeral was a ghastly affair. Theo almost didn't go but knew he had to face it. He could have used his injuries as an excuse. Not deep injuries. But showy. Cuts and bruises on his face, a broken wrist in plaster. A strip of flesh missing from one ear. But he went. If it hadn't been for him, there would be no need of a funeral and he was going to have to learn to live with that fact. He honestly couldn't understand why Alfred and the Russian girl didn't whip him out of the church. But they didn't. Both wore severe black. And faces as grey as the earth that would soon swallow up Valentina. Theo took a place in the back pew, and beside him Li Mei sat with curious eyes and the white flower of mourning in her hair.
'Dear friends, let us give thanks for the life of Valentina Parker, who was a joy to us all.' Standing in the pulpit with a wide smile was the old missionary, the one who was at the wedding, with hair as white as Abraham's. 'She was one of our dear Lord's bright lights that sparkle in this world. And He gave her the gift of music to delight us.'
Theo had no stomach to listen. He disliked churches. He didn't like the intimidation woven so skilfully into their magnificent architecture, all designed to make you feel a worthless sinner. But if Valentina was really one of this awesome G.o.d's bright lights, why extinguish her so brutally? Why make Alfred, who was one of G.o.d's most devoted servants, suffer this agony? It made nonsense of the concept of a loving G.o.d. No, the Chinese knew better. Bad things happen because the spirits are angry. It made sense. You have to appease them, which was why Theo had decided to follow Chang's advice and build a shrine in his house to the spirits of his father, his mother, and his brother. He would give them no excuse to harm his Li Mei the way they'd harmed Valentina. This was China. Different rules applied.
The Chinese boat woman with her grenade knew that. She had blamed him for the execution of her husband and for the suicide of her daughter in Feng Tu Hong's bed, and ended by blowing herself up with a second grenade. But that didn't mean she was no longer a threat. Theo had made Li Mei promise to speak kindly to the cat Yeewai in future, just in case. Spirits were unpredictable.
When the congregation rose to sing 'Onward Christian Soldiers,' Theo remained seated and closed his eyes. His hand held Li Mei's tight.
The funeral reception was worse. But Theo was pleased to see Polly standing firmly beside Lydia the whole time, caring for her friend, warding off well-wishers. Alfred held himself together too well. It was heartbreaking to watch.
'If I can help out in any way, Alfred . . .'
'Thank you, Theo, but no.'
'Dinner one evening?'
'That's kind. Not yet. Maybe later.'
'Of course.'
'Theo.'
'Yes?'
'I'm thinking of applying for a transfer. Can't stay here. Not now.'
'Understandable, my dear fellow. Where would you go?'
'Home.'
'England?'
'That's right. I'm not cut out for these heathen places.'
'I'll miss you. And our games of chess.'
'You must come and visit.'
'But what about the girl? What will you do with Lydia?'
'I'll take her with me. To England. Give her a good education. It's what Valentina wanted.'
'That's quite a responsibility to shoulder. She knows nothing of England, don't forget. And you can't say she's . . . well . . . tame enough. To fit in, I mean.'
Alfred removed his spectacles and polished them a.s.siduously. 'She's my daughter now.'
Theo wondered whether the girl would see it like that.
'I'm sorry, Alfred,' he said awkwardly. 'I can't tell you how bad I feel that the hand grenade was meant for me. Not for Valentina.'
Alfred's mouth went awry. 'No, it's not your fault, Theo, don't blame yourself. It's this d.a.m.n country.'
But Theo did blame himself. He couldn't help it. He chose to walk home instead of hopping into one of the rickshaws that clattered through the streets, though it would certainly have eased the aches in his legs. But he needed to walk. Had to stride out. To drive the demon of guilt from his soul.
He was in no doubt that it would return time and again for years to come, and he would have to learn to find room for it in his heart. But in his clearer moments of mind he knew Alfred was right. It was this country. China had a history of thousands of years of violence, and even now its exquisite beauty was again being trampled underfoot in the stampede for power. They called it justice. A fight for equality and a basic wage. But really it was just another name for the same yoke around the necks of the people of China. They deserved better. It seemed to Theo that even the boat woman who threw the grenade deserved better. What kind of justice system served up freedom in exchange for your daughter's young body in bed? Or sold children into slavery?
'Willbee, you will put the other arm in plaster if you do not take more care.'
Theo jerked back from the road where a flurry of wheels was speeding past, a noisy never-ending stream of motorcars and bicycles, rickshaws and wheelbarrows. Even a boy on a scooter hooted a klaxon at him.
'Good day to you, Feng Tu Hong.'
The black Rolls-Royce was murmuring at the kerbside with the rear window down, but the man inside was not the one who had radiated so much strength and power only days before. One look at Feng Tu Hong's face and Theo saw the bewildered eyes of a father who has lost his son. He was wearing a white headband.
'I have been searching for you, Willbee. Please, honour me with a moment of your time. A brief ride in my worthless motorcar might ease the burden of the wounds you bear.'
'Thank you, Feng. I accept.'
They rode in silence at first, each man too full of his own thoughts to find the words to form a bridge. The streets were thronged with people going about their business in the bright winter sunshine, but the car attracted attention as it pa.s.sed and several Chinese men lowered their foreheads to the pavement. Feng did not even notice.
'Feng, I offer you sympathy for your loss. I am sorry I was not able to help the situation, but the farmhouse was already empty when I arrived.'
'So I learned.'
'Your daughter also sends her father sympathy for his sorrow.'
'A dutiful daughter would be at my side.'
'A dutiful father would not threaten his daughter so savagely.'
Feng refused to look at Theo but stared straight ahead in his own black world, his broad chest expanding as he took a deep breath to hold hard on his temper. It suddenly dawned on Theo that this man wanted something. It was not hard to guess what.
'Feng Tu Hong, you and I have a history of discord and it saddens me that we cannot put aside our differences for the sake of your daughter whom we both love. At a time like this when you are overflowing with grief for your last son . . . ,' he lingered on those final two words, ' . . . I invite you to my home.'
He heard the big man's sharp intake of breath.
'Your daughter will be honoured to serve you tea, though what we offer is meagre compared to your own lavish table. But at this moment of sadness, Feng, there must be no raised voices.'
Feng turned slowly. His bull neck hunched defensively. 'I thank you, Willbee. It would please my heart to set eyes once more on my daughter. She is my only child now and I wish to cause her no distress.'
'Then you are welcome.'
Feng leaned forward, pushed the gla.s.s part.i.tion aside, and gave his driver new instructions. When he slid the gla.s.s back into place, he shifted uneasily on the leather seat and gave a deep cough in the back of his throat, preparing himself.
Theo waited. Wary.
'Tiyo Willbee, I have no son.'
Theo nodded but remained silent.
'I need a grandson.'
Theo smiled. So that was it. The old devil was begging. It changed everything. Li Mei now held the power.
'Come,' Theo said courteously as the car pulled into the Willoughby Academy's courtyard. 'Drink tea with us.'
It was a start.
63.
'Lydia!'
Lydia was in her bedroom. She had been staring out at blackness and rain. In a chasm of loneliness for so many hours, her mind had escaped the present. She was way back on a day when her mother had danced into the attic with a small square loaf of something she called malt bread in one hand and a whole block of bright yellow b.u.t.ter in the other. Lydia had been so excited by the strange new smell and squidgy texture of the loaf that didn't look a bit like bread, she had scrambled up on a chair to watch as Valentina spread great wedges of the b.u.t.ter on the bread. Then Valentina had fed the fruity slices piece by piece into Lydia's open mouth. Exactly as if she were a baby bird. They had laughed so hard they cried. And now it twisted something inside her as she recalled how her mother had eaten so little of their meal herself, but licked the last sc.r.a.ps of b.u.t.ter off the knife and rolled her eyes in delicious ecstasy.