Ying-Ying St. Clair
My daug me in ti of rooms in her new house.
"t bedroom," Lena said in her proud Ameri way.
I smiled. But to C bedroom is t bedroom, ell tomless pond. You tones in and to t refleything.
I to myself even ter. S of is part of mine. But ell my past. It is to pee o where she be saved.
t slope doos to put any babies in t I knoen. S any babies. Soo busy dra someone else say t s is an ugly word.
"Arty-tecky," I once pronou to my sister-in-law.
My daugen for disrespect. But no is too late. Noo my so-so security. So times, I must pull it bato my and keep it inside.
good does it do to dra is useless? My daug everyt even food-looking. Look at table. It is e marble on skinny black legs. A person must al to put a able or it sit on table is a tall black vase. t in. If you sable, the vase and flower will fall down.
All around ter looks but does not see. t o pieces. happens.
ubborn. I oo good to listen. I ty. I i ly imported calfskin stle ogs running across tone courtyard.
I often unraveled my loose. My mot my angles and se: "Aii-ya, Ying-ying, you are like ts at ttom of t;
ted in living peoples o sing despair. My moto t I only giggled as sried to tuck my oo muco get angry. I was like was wion.
e families in usables. On eacable igered Britistes, al amount. Not too muc too little. t for ttes. I t notole a jar and poured ttes out onto treets. e ran doo a large reet, ted along ter. e scooped up cups of dirty er, o find a fisreasure. e found s.
e often, I t jade jar, treasure I did not know I was holding in my hand.
t t house.
I een. It my you aunt got married. Sired to t of her new family.
Many of ting family members li our ting around table in tis, peeling es, and laugoed s neher, so I called him Uncle. his face was reddened from drinking whiskey.
"Ying-ying," o me as ;Maybe you are still it so?"
I looked around table, smiling at everyone because of ttention given to me. I t reat from a large sack o. I ened cookies. But a ermelon and put it on table h a loud pung.
"Kai g;—Open termelon— fruit.
ty puso eet table laug, because at t time I did not uand.
Yes, it is true I I . I did not kno open t ermelon. I did not uand until six monter o me t o kai gwa.
t even today I ot speak after my you aunts o kno happened.
Most of tives t m. And by ters and I ting at table, drinking tea aing roasted ermelon seeds. My ers gossiped loudly, heir flesh in a pile.
My ers o as good as ours. My ers did not knoer of my fathers wife.
"reat you like a servant…" cer upon hers choice.
"A madness on ; retorted ter.
ired of teasing one ao marry.
"I kno; I told tily.
It t boys did not i me. I kract attention and be admired. But I oo vain to think any one boy was good enough for me.
ts in my ts are of t are planted s are planted by ot ermelon seeds I ing: I t of t laug before. And just table split from its stem and fell at my feet.
trut t I t t t I could kno.
And soon I began to ioned by my fats nearing at me across from my uncles courtyard, ;See, s turn away. S;
true enoug turn ao ink of old me my fat likely give to keep s t I fell into a marriage bed h him.
My daug kno I o ty years before she was even born.
S knoy ter, and a large nose like hers.
Even today, my skin is still smoot to , onall and pretty! No t and flas sixteen, are noained, clouded.
But I still see almost everyt to remember, it is like looking into a bo grains of rice you did not finish.
ternoon on tai Lake soon after to love urned my face toe-afternoon sun. roked my g-ying, you iger eyes. t nig;
I did not laug joy. I like a creature to get out and ing to stay in at time. t is o love t is so join t person against your will.
I became a strao myself. I ty for slippers on my feet, it o c I kneimes a nig luck to our marital bed, in hopes of ceiving a son.
t ed t tle boy in my earlobes, and slick rose o reveal a large forehead.
It is because I I came to e. But even arted riger trickled doo my , rue.
My arted to take many busirips to trips began soon after ter t in my t nigs, to blow and back my way.
I did not kno t. It pees t and takes t it ble t from my you aunt t me to live h an opera singer.
Later still, loat aunt told me of otitutes. A girl cousin younger even t mysteriously for er my husband disappeared.
So I ell Lena of my s I y. I oo good for any one man. t I became abandoned goods. I ell at eigtiness drained from my c I t of tell o e this man so much.
I took t could be born. t a bad to do in Co kill a baby before it is born. But even t it errible revenge as tborn son poured from me.
t to like a fis i kno means to not a baby.
er looks at me, s is because sside eyes. Siger lady. And she would have careful fear.
I iger. It o be born, a very good year to be a tiger. t eryside died like c summer day. People in ty became s into t get fatter. they died.
t stayed in t I came from a spirit even stronger, and I lived. t my motold me rong in my ways.
told me s fierce . tands still s gold betrees, seeing and not being seen, ing patiently for to e. I did not learn to use my black side until after t me.
I became like te clot o see my grief. I lost my strengt even lift my o place pins in my ed like a dead leaf on ter until I drifted out of my moto my family home.
I to try outside of So live ayed in try en years. If you ask me ed betrees. I g.
I did not reated me er of ted t a fort to be t is ed. Babies cra like my relatives graceless peasant guests. e all ate in tc t frying grease. And t a bo covered looked like a living bory was.
After ten years, I a strange ill-married to ty onto treets. Everyw unknown women and no one g.
it fresraigs. I y long ylisired of doing noto work. I became a shopgirl.
I did not o learn to flatter ed to iger make a soft prrrn-prrn noise deep s d make even rabbits feel safe and tent.
Even tty again. t. I ter and more expe ore. And t tty as I.
It t, t I met Clifford St. Clair. tores cyle clot t was made me know I would marry him.
"Mista Clair," rodue.
And t C;Like t."
I ractive nor unattractive. But t the black side of me would soon go away.
Saint courted me for four years in raed me, soo long. From er aler ink t ever be washed away.
I unkind. But oo polite. me cs: a glass figurine, a prickly brooc glass, a silver-colored cigarette lig acted as if ts reating a poor try girl to things we had never seen in a.
But I sa sue, t I even imagine.
I aled ts graciously, alesting just enoug too little, not too muce because I kris carefully into a box, someday o see them again.
Lena t saved me from try village t I said I kno Saint o patiently for four years like a dog in front of a butcher shop.
t I finally came out a ing for to until 1946.
A letter came from tientsin, not from my family, aunt. Even before I opeer I kne srong spirit and ried to leave kit knife.
I t t. But n and bitter floiness in a place I didnt knoail.
So I decided. I decided to let Saint marry me. So easy for me. I er of my fatrembly voice. I became pale, ill, and more t myself bee a ter e to me and turo a tiger g. I caused me so much pain.
irees. I became an unseen spirit.
Saint took me to America, s tasks. I learero speak ongue. I raised a daugced her Ameri ways.
it care. I .
I tell my daug I loved at nig I cooked. ly tris I day, ter, a tiger girl.
love t it . Arms t encircled but did not touc my appetite to eat it. No hunger. No fullness.
No is a g. tell my daug ser of a g. Sest s leaving ?
So t I oget and look. I cut my spirit loose. I bees o pee my daugoug iger spirit loose. S me, because ture of tigers. But I er.
I er speaking to airs. t mean not in a room .
I kno able craso tairs and into my room. irees.
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