“No Name Woman”
"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-thebroom 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-Ameri cans, 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 hadtaken 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 ng couples snapped off the
future, "roundness." Misallyi 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 eternityessences 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.