Grandma
by Tammy Ho Lai-ming
My grandma was toothless for as long as I could remember. She carried a
pair of
sharp scissors whenever she went to a restaurant to mince food into
suitably
tiny pieces: steamed chicken breast, fried broccoli, curry squid, etc.
One
afternoon, when she was preparing dinner in the kitchen, grandma
accidentally
chopped off her right index finger. How that happened was now
unimaginable. She
managed to call an ambulance quickly; but the finger could no longer be
redeemed. After the event, grandma was physically weak. She refused to
cook
again and claimed that her world was now monochromatic. Her six
children, my
mom included, came to a consensus to send her to a home for the
elderly. They
said that was only a temporary measure. Like many other 'temporary'
decisions,
the arrangement became permanent.
The home for the elderly was near where I worked and lived. Therefore,
I was
able to visit grandma everyday. Even in the first week, grandma's hair
was more
unkempt than before. She also gave up dying her hair and putting
different
kinds of lotion on her face. Within a month she had a full head of wild
pearly
strands like a mermaid who asked for immortality with eagerness but
unwittingly
forgot to demand perpetual youth. She was still beautiful, I thought,
for an
eighty-year-old woman, even though she seemed to have grown weary of
her looks
and was no longer proud of her tailor-made flower-pattered cheongsams.
I was twenty-two years old that year, and worked full-time in a
day-care centre
looking after young kids when their lower-middle-class parents went to
battle
in brightly-lit and dully-decorated offices. It was a huge consolation
to just
sit there with grandma in almost absolute quietness after prolonged
exposure to
shrieks and screams and loud giggles. Grandma's room was neat, carpeted
and had
mullioned glass windows that generously absorbed the scene of a small
street
outside. Every now and then there was a pleasant whiff of fresh bread
and
chocolate cookies. Her six children were not thrifty about their
mother's final
earthly lodging.
Grandma started talking about her lost finger the following year. It
was one
gloomy Saturday, a typhoon irresponsibly left behind a cracked grey sky
featuring kaleidoscopic lightning and a massive amount of rain that
smelt
strangely of animals' blood. I peeled an orange for grandma after she
had
finished an early dinner of cut spring rolls and lukewarm pork congee.
She
extended her right hand, ambidextrous as she was, and tried to fetch
that slice
of juicy orange with her thumb and index finger, obviously forgetting
that the
latter was no more than a sprout of human flesh, its development
brutally
arrested by her own momentous wrongdoing. The slice dropped onto the
floor
before I could catch it.
Grandma lost appetite for the orange and asked for Oolong tea instead.
As if I
was the culprit of the mild fiasco, I felt inexplicably guilty and
became
speechless. Perhaps I was also a little bit angry. Why was she so
incompetent?
I really thought after one year grandma should have already grown
accustomed to
the finger's absence.
An embarrassing fifteen minutes passed, she sitting upright and I
standing next
to her like an intimidated maid in her probation period. Then grandma
asked if
I thought losing a finger was similar to losing a child. Baffled, I
expressed
ignorance by knitting my eyebrows and producing lots of wrinkles on my
forehead. Grandma pointed at the empty space between her thumb and
middle
finger and swore there existed a ghost finger, haunting her, just like
her
ghost first child. She must have lost her mind, I thought. Her first
child was
my mother! She gave birth to her in the toilet of the village hospital
in Hubei
when she was twenty-one. That was the most well-known joke in the
family. My
mom's younger sisters and brothers each had more elegant ways to make
their
first appearance in this clumsy world.
Grandma said enormous years kept sliding out of her grip, and that she
was
referring to the first child, the aborted one, not my mother. She got
pregnant
in the same year when she started having her menstruation. The bleeding
crotch
was warm and dripped patterns on her underwear. The father of the
unborn baby
was her then best friend's farmer brother, all sweaty and stiff
muscles. I felt
extremely uncomfortable with this piece of information she had just
irrevocably
fed me. Why me? Why was I chosen to bear her secrets? Because I was her
eldest
grandchild? Once started, grandma would not stop recounting her past.
Like the
rain outside, her tale was persistent and passionate, forming small
streams of
freckled mirrors and roadside dust.
She was only fourteen years old. Her hair was tied up in her favourite
gingerly
pony tail, and her legs smooth with unshaved fine hairs. She enlisted
the best
friend to help with the abortion while the baby's father was 'kept
inside a
drum', as the Chinese idiom graphically goes. The scene was not very
bloody,
grandma boasted, and continued to talk about long ropes and blunt
knives. I
told her I was not interested in the details, too disgusted about the
whole
affair. Grandma and her best friend, due to shame or maturity, could
not speak
to each other anymore after the 'surgery'. That friendship was gone; so
vulnerable was the teenage bond. Grandma compared the boyfriend and
herself to
two trains going in opposite directions on parallel tracks but meeting
instantaneously to produce electric sparks in their vicinity.
The lost finger reminded grandma of that ghost child, now resurfaced
after being
absent for almost half a century. The unborn baby had also conjured up
the
involuntary memory of other children she had selfishly abandoned before
coming
to Hong Kong, she said. Without them, her life was now incomplete. They
were
like holes in a supposedly perfect quilt. I was shocked: what 'other'
children?
'Children'? Was there more than one?
Grandma embarked the fishing boat for Sha Tau Kok with a cast of
villagers who
were in their twenties and thirties. The year was 1957 -- everyone was
starving
and shooting hostile gazes at those who were fortunate enough to have
food and
did not resemble skeletons. The night before, she had sent her two
daughters to
a distant aunt's house on a hillside; the house was partly made of
straw and
cow dung, looking west. Grandma never considered retrieving the girls,
even
though the whole time when she was on the cramped boat saturated with
an
agglomeration of hope and loss she was thinking of their long eyelashes
like
their dead father's. She held her cloth bag tightly on her lap -- inside, the
remains of some summer clothes and a few broken jewellery her mother had
endowed
to her.
The suppressed past was ripped up, grandma said. About five years ago,
the two
daughters who were still living in Hubei sent her a handwritten letter,
asking
for some money so that they could travel to Hong Kong and reunite with
their
biological mother. The letter weighed so lightly and yet so heavily in
grandma's palm. Out of horror, fear and self-condemnation, she wrote
back to
tell them there was no need to meet, since her entire happy family was
now in
Hong Kong. Perhaps she wanted only to be known by this invented and
partial
identity ¡V a mother of six and grandmother of seven. She had no
strength to
cling to the past; instead, she was to purge it. Grandma also cruelly
asked
the
two daughters not to contact her again or beg for money. She said she
burnt the
letter; snuffed fire was the sad heart.
I was utterly confused. One of these daughters must be my mother.
According to
the family legend that was often repeated at festival gatherings, my
mom was
born in a village hospital, the year before grandma was illegally
tossing and
turning -- swimming like a butterfly -- in the formidable Hong Kong
waters.
Grandma said she gave birth to a stillborn, the first child of the
nameless man
with unforgettable eyelashes, in the toilet of their house. In a
toilet, but
not in a hospital toilet. A baby, but not my mother. The anecdote was
misunderstood and misattributed to my mom after several retellings.
Does she know? I asked. Grandma beckoned me to refill her cup with some
more
Oolong tea. The sky was completely dark outside, more apparitions were
hauling
up. She said not only did my mom know that she was not born in a
toilet; she
also knew that she was only a half-sister to her siblings. The three of
them:
my mother, her father (it should be 'step-father' ¡V my beloved
grandfather who
died when I was fifteen), and grandma had kept this secret for their
whole
life, lest if her brothers and sisters knew about the truth they would
not
respect my mom as much. I always wondered why my mom did not have the
Chinese
character, Lai, in her name. My aunts were called Lai-Fan, Lai-San and
Lai-Lan;
my uncles were called Lai-Man and Lai-Dan. The word 'Lai' is a noun, it
means
'encouragement'. My mom's name was 'Yan-Hong', a red swallow, a swallow
soaked
in blood.
That perhaps was a more appropriate name for grandma. Like a swallow
she flew
from one place to another either for escape or for livelihood. And she
had
blood on her hands in her teenage days when she ultimately rejected a
baby's
entrance to life. In her old age, she regretfully dismissed and
humiliated her
own blood.
A handful of children: some male, some female; some tall, some short;
some
older, some younger; some dead, some living; some in Hubei, some had
planted
themselves in Hong Kong; some probably loved grandma, some didn't. Ten
of them
in total, all of them were once in her womb with great expectations.
Now,
except those who died prematurely, everyone had a different destiny,
adding new
branches and new secrets to the same family tree forked like meandering
rivers.
Grandma died the month before she turned eighty-five. Her
openly-acknowledged
children and grandchildren were all by her bed when she lay dying. I
imagined
in her last waking moments she touched the ghost finger and apologized.
A week later, grandma was buried with her right index finger which had
been
preserved in the hospital.
Tammy Ho Lai-ming, aka Sighming, is a Hong Kong-born writer. She is the
editor
of Hong Kong U Writing: An Anthology (2006), a co-editor of Word Salad
Poetry
Magazine and a co-founder of Cha: An Asian
Literary
Journal. More at sighming.com and at her
writer's profile.
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