He wakes up at four the next morning, unable to sleep even though his flight does not leave until the evening. He knows without looking that his one small suitcase is downstairs by the
front door, that all he has to do is put in his dentures and get dressed. Really, what could be easier? Perhaps he will grow to love Toronto as he grew to love Vancouver. And maybe, this time, it won’t take so long.
If someone were to ask Seid Quan about his dreams, he would say that he doesn’t have them. All his life, when he woke up in the morning, a pleasant blackness blanketed the events of the night. He went through his days—working, reading, eating—unburdened.
Tonight, he is on an airplane for the first time, hurtling through the darkness. He sits upright, staring at the small reading light above his seat. Min Lai sits beside him, her mouth slightly open as she sleeps. She shifts in her seat, draws the thin airline blanket to her chin. The cabin is quiet (human noise dwarfed by the constant roar of the engine, the hiss of stale air circulating through vents) and his eyes close.
He runs his hands through Pon Man’s hair, through the thick tuft at the top, the wispy hairs at the base of his neck. Seid Quan cannot see his son’s face, only the black hair, his thin shoulders. He is unsure whether this is the young Pon Man, the small fifteen-year-old boy, or the older, sick Pon Man, the one who lost so much weight he was like a heron, all joints and bones. He decides that it doesn’t much matter; as long as it truly is his son, he is happy.
As he trims the hair around the ears, he listens for the sounds of Pon Man’s breathing. He can hear the snip of the scissors, even the plop of the damp hair when it hits the floor. But Pon Man remains perfectly still.
It is only now that Seid Quan realizes he is cutting the hair of a dead man; worse, his dead son. But he finds he cannot stop,
and he goes on, his hands shaking as the hair drops on his wrists, sticks to his sleeves.
He hears Shew Lin. “It’s over now. You can stop.”
He looks for her but cannot see her.
How is it that I can see only my son and hear only my wife?
He turns around, and there is nothing but a deep darkness.
“Father? Wake up. They’re serving breakfast now.” Min Lai pats Seid Quan on the shoulder.
He rubs his eyes and stares blearily at the tray in front of him.
“We’ll be home in an hour and a half,” says Min Lai, peeling open the top of Seid Quan’s apple juice. “And then you can have a really good sleep.”
The windows across the street glow amber, the setting sun giving the otherwise expressionless houses an air of mystery, of kept-back knowledge. Seid Quan walks back to his daughter’s house in Toronto after a day of walking around a different Chinatown.
Only five months since his son’s death.
It was beyond him, then, to imagine the things he would want to say to his son, the kinds of things he would want to ask forgiveness for. Now, as he shivers in the sharp and dry autumn air, his mind will not stop. Even though his feet propel him slowly forward, his memories, the snapshots in his head, keep his thoughts circling endlessly. He walks through a pile of dead leaves and does not notice the crunch, the sound of withering, of dryness.
It was simple; he wanted his son to love him.
A father has a right to his own son.
He feels so far away, farther away than when he lived in Canada alone and could only return to the village every four or five years. Vancouver calls to him (he swears he can hear the
ocean even from here, while he walks up and down Spadina, fingering the slippers and fans and lanterns), and his face is always turned west. Here, in this strange city, he has begun to forget what Shew Lin looked like; Min Lai has never had time to organize her photos, and they sit somewhere in her attic in an unmarked box. When he wants to remember, he shuts his eyes and remains perfectly still for several minutes. Even then, he can see only a shadowy outline, a fuzzy version of his wife, as if he is looking through a dirty window.
He is so frustrated that he could scream. But he does not.
He looks up and sees that he has walked two blocks out of his way. He turns around to retrace his steps, hoping that no one is looking out a window and feeling sorry for the addled old man wandering the streets.
Such small trees here,
he thinks.
Like starved children.
His daughter’s house is brightly lit, and he can see the shadows of her family moving from room to room. Her sons are good boys and often drive him around the city, showing him the things they think he might be interested in: the CN Tower, Maple Leaf Gardens. They laugh loudly, slap each other on the shoulders, play cards at night in the basement. He is grateful for all the noise.
His son who had no sons himself.
As he walks in the door, his daughter peers out from the kitchen and smiles at him. “I’m so glad you’re home,” she says. “I’ve made your favourite dish.”
Outside, the wind picks up the fallen leaves and throws them at the house. Seid Quan turns around. “Like dead fingers tapping on the window,” he whispers.
Outside, the cars on Queen Street speed past, kicking up
fragments of dead leaves. Inside, Seid Quan lies in a hospital bed. He has had a ruptured brain aneurysm and is dying quickly and quietly. He is not conscious.
He hears the shuffling of his daughters, grandsons and nurses around him and their soft murmurings; it is as if they think that loud words will frighten him into death. He can see nothing except the differently coloured stars underneath his eyelids. He is dizzy. Faces spin, lopsided. He sees Lim slowly cracking in two, blood pouring from the split. He sees Shew Lin’s brown, lined skin. Babies. Little girls. Heads of hair.
He wonders if that sound is breaking glass, or if it is simply the sound of his hearing splintering off before it stops working entirely.
He has not moved and has no wish to. There are many things he has outlived, and ninety-four is too old to want to remember. When he sleeps, he dreams as he never has before.
On the last day of his life, when, to everyone else, it seems that nothing has changed, Seid Quan sees his son as he was when he first arrived in Vancouver in 1951. His boyish face smiles; as he turns to walk away, Seid Quan’s eyelids flutter and he goes to follow.
Seid Quan and Shew Lin walk together in a park not far from their house, taking a break from their son’s growing and noisy family. As they hold each other’s hands and look north toward the mountains, they both tuck the minutes away inside their minds. These are moments not to be forgotten.
It is so easy,
she thinks
, to forget, to wake up in the morning and see nothing but the old man beside me.
Those trees are so green,
he thinks
, and the mountains so blue, the colour of truth, if we could but see it.