by Geling Yan
Just then, a couple of dozen Japanese soldiers burst through the entrance doors and rushed towards the church.
Father Engelmann hurried after them. ‘There are absolutely no Chinese soldiers here. Please get out.’
Fabio strode off to the far end of the compound without bothering to examine his wound.
In the printing workshop, Li and Dai had prepared themselves for a fight. Li stood behind the door, holding a mallet which he had found in the workshop toolbox. He would first let them come in, then club them from behind and seize a gun. Then he and Major Dai would engage them in pitched battle using any arms they were able to seize from the Japanese.
Major Dai was squatting behind a table turned on its side to face the door. He was holding a pick used to break up lumps of coal. If he and Li let two soldiers in and then shut the door on them, they could attack, the advantage (their only one) being that they would take the Japanese unawares.
Then Dai realised the import of the priests’ denial that there were Chinese soldiers in the compound.
Taking his shoes off, he said in low tones to Li: ‘Put the mallet down.’
‘Aren’t we going to put up a fight?’
‘We can’t fight. Just think about it. The moment we do, we’re proving that the Father has been sheltering soldiers.’
‘So what?’
‘So the Japs will search all the church buildings from cellar to attic, and they might even burn them to the ground. What will happen to the girls and women then?’
‘So what do we do?’
‘Take off our clothes and go to sleep. Pretend we’re civilians.’
Sergeant Major Li threw down the mallet and was just groping his way to the makeshift bed when the door was flung open and torch beams flashed around the room.
He almost picked up the mallet again.
‘They’re members of our congregation. Their house was burned down and they had nowhere to go so they sought refuge with us,’ said Father Engelmann imperturbably.
‘Out!’
The Japanese officer’s yell was translated by the interpreter in a perfect mimicry of his tone of voice.
Dai slowly got to his feet, with the grumpy air of someone whose sleep has been disturbed.
‘Hurry up!’
Dai put on Fabio’s old coat which, like the pullover he had on underneath, was obviously not his. It hung far too long and loose on him.
Sergeant Major Li was wearing an old padded coat belonging to George, which was too short, reaching only to his knees. He had one of Fabio’s hats on too. It came down over his eyebrows.
‘Who’s that?’
The torch beam settled on Wang Pusheng, lying on his makeshift bed.
‘My nephew,’ said Sergeant Major Li. ‘He’s seriously ill. He’s had a high fever for days –’
Before he had finished speaking, two soldiers dragged the boy from under his quilt. Wang Pusheng sagged insensibly between them. But his breath came hoarse and rapid, as if the rough treatment they were giving him had restored some life to his frail young body.
‘He’s only a child, and he’s seriously ill!’ Father Engelmann protested.
The soldiers paid no attention, and dragged Wang Pusheng out into the courtyard. The priest followed behind, hoping to plead the boy’s cause, when the swish of a bayonet stopped him in his tracks. Slashes appeared in his padded coat, releasing a cloud of white goose down which danced in the torchlight. Just a little deeper and the bayonet could have pierced his heart. The slash seemed intended as a warning: the bayonet was sharp enough, wasn’t it? A thrust to the heart would be just as easy. The heart was defenceless against a sharp blade like this; there was nowhere for it to hide. The bayonet challenged him, teasing his priest’s dignity. Why else should it make such a skittish gesture? However, the priest was not deterred. He continued to follow them, shouting, ‘Put him down!’
His violent movements released more goose down from his coat, and a veritable snowstorm formed in his wake.
‘For God’s sake, put him down!’
He managed to get in front of them, and they finally put Wang Pusheng on the ground, where he lay gasping desperately for breath. Father Engelmann pulled off his coat and laid it over the boy.
The Japanese officer prodded the boy with the toe of his boot and said something. The interpreter said in Chinese: ‘He’s got a bayonet wound.’
‘That’s right,’ said Father Engelmann.
‘Where did that happen?’
‘In his home.’
‘No, it happened on the execution ground. He’s an escaped POW. He was rescued and brought here.’
‘What execution ground?’ asked the priest.
‘The place where we’ve been executing Chinese POWs,’ said the officer, and the interpreter rendered his barely suppressed indignation as well as the words.
‘What? You’ve been executing Chinese POWs?’ exclaimed Father Engelmann. ‘Forgive my ignorance. I didn’t know that the Japanese Army had exempted itself from the Geneva Convention.’
The officer was momentarily silenced by Father Engelmann’s words. Then he spoke to the interpreter.
‘The officer says it’s obvious you’ve been sheltering Chinese soldiers. You can’t deny it, can you?’
‘How can they possibly be soldiers?’ exclaimed the priest, gesturing to Dai and Li.
At that moment, one of the Japanese pushed a middle-aged Chinese man forward. The interpreter said, ‘This is one of the burial team hired by the Japanese Army. He says that two POWs who weren’t killed were brought here.’ He turned to the man. ‘Do you recognise them?’
‘Of course I do!’ said the man enthusiastically. ‘He’s one,’ and he pointed at Dai.
Fabio swore violently at him. ‘You scum of the earth!’
Two of the soldiers fell on Dai and seized him by the arm. Dai submitted as they twisted his arms behind his back, although this caused an excruciating stab of pain to the wound in his left side.
Father Engelmann confronted the gravedigger. ‘You’re lying! This is the first time you’ve set eyes on this man.’
‘Are you sure you recognise him?’ asked the Japanese officer through the interpreter.
‘Does he hell!’ shouted Fabio. ‘He’s just trying to save his own skin.’
The officer ordered the two soldiers to escort Dai away. Father Engelmann tried again to intervene but the officer slapped him across the face and the priest staggered.
‘You’ve got the wrong man!’ Sergeant Major Li suddenly spoke. He was leaning on his makeshift crutch, dragging his wounded leg, but struggled to draw himself up to his full height. He turned to the gravedigger. ‘Look at me! Aren’t I the one you rescued?’
‘I never rescued anyone!’ shouted the gravedigger, panic-stricken.
‘Didn’t you say you recognised two people? Then what about me?’ said Li, cocking his thumb at himself in a ruffian-like fashion.
‘They’re both ordinary civilians!’
Engelmann knew this was his last chance to save them. Come what may, he would protect Dai. His conversations with this young soldier had drawn the pair of them close. He wanted to carry on talking to him … Then the Japanese officer balled his hand into a fist, gave an almighty swing, and Engelmann felt another stinging blow on the face.
At this point, George emerged from behind the kitchen as if he were going to wipe the blood from the priest’s nose and mouth. When the Japanese had forced their way in, George had crept towards the courtyard and ducked down behind a pile of firewood to watch. George did not believe in heroics. He would prefer a rascally life to a good death. Especially now that he and Hongling were getting on so well, a rascally life seemed to offer countless pleasures. But as he saw Father Engelmann’s coat slashed, and the priest beaten about the face, he instinctively grabbed a stick of firewood. How could these Jap scum treat the Reverend Father like this? They were not good enough to empty the Father’s chamber pot! Then he put the stick down again; there was no poi
nt tangling with twenty Japs armed with loaded rifles. He stayed crouching where he was, bolstered in his belief that it was best not risk his life, although also berating himself for disloyalty. Father Engelmann had looked after him since he was a boy of thirteen, feeding and clothing him and teaching him to read and write. He had persisted with his education even after it became clear that he was not convert material. True, the Father was rather a dull man (though that was not his fault), and did not seem fond of him, rather the reverse. In fact, the Father was more affectionate to the pony that had turned the water wheel at their well. Still, without Father Engelmann, George would have gone from being a child beggar to a grown-up beggar until finally, if luck was on his side, he died an old beggar. Without the dry-as-dust old priest, George would never have become a church cook. He could never have swaggered round with the key to the food store hanging from his waistband, and had the delectable Hongling running after him. He was thinking these thoughts when he saw the officer slap Engelmann round the head for the second time, so hard that the priest must have lost some teeth. His own teeth ached in sympathy.
As he ran to help the priest, he was collared by one of the soldiers.
‘He’s the church cook!’ said Fabio.
‘Do you recognise this man?’ the Japanese officer asked the gravedigger.
The gravedigger scrutinised George’s face, pallid in the torch beam. He looked as if he was going to identify him, but then gave an evasive grunt by way of an answer.
Father Engelmann spat the blood from his mouth through loosened teeth. ‘He’s an orphan. I adopted the boy seven years ago.’
The officer asked the gravedigger again: ‘Who else is a Chinese soldier here?’
The gravedigger took a torch from one of the soldiers and scanned the faces of all the Chinese men.
‘I’ve already told you, any men I’ve taken in are ordinary civilians, and members of our congregation,’ said Father Engelmann.
The gravedigger shone his torch into Li’s face. ‘I recognise him. He’s one,’ he said.
‘You fool!’ shouted Fabio at the gravedigger. ‘You’ve just made it all up! You’re even saying our cook’s a soldier!’
George, grown a little paunchy from the perks of his kitchen job, stood stock-still, not daring even to blink. Only his eyes flickered shiftily back and forth.
The Japanese officer took off one white glove and traced a circle on George’s forehead with his forefinger. He was feeling for the slight indentation made by an army cap, but George thought he was marking the best place to shoot him and instinctively ducked out of the way. Infuriated, the officer drew his sword with a swish. George covered his head with his hands and made a run for it. There was a shot, and he fell to the ground.
‘Leave him alone, he’s innocent!’ shouted Major Dai. ‘I’m a Chinese soldier. Take me away!’
Fabio tried to help George up. The cook was jerking spasmodically, although increasingly feebly. The bullet had hit him in the back and come out of his chest, piercing his windpipe. With each breath, the air wheezed through the bullet hole and his plump body gradually deflated.
George’s thrashings brought him up against one of the ventilation shafts. Shujuan pressed the back of her hand to her mouth, to stop herself crying out as Sophie had. One of the other, more courageous girls held Sophie tightly in her arms and gently stroked her as if she were her mother.
The Japanese officer looked intently at Dai. A professional soldier could always smell another professional. He felt this Chinese man did indeed seem to have the bloodthirsty air of a good soldier.
He turned to Father Engelmann and said complacently through the interpreter: ‘So, Father, don’t talk to me about American neutrality here. Do you still maintain that you are not sheltering enemies of our army?’
‘I didn’t ask his permission when I broke in. Leave the Father out of it,’ said Dai.
‘He’s not an enemy of the Japanese Army,’ said Father Engelmann. ‘He’s completely unarmed now, so of course he counts as an innocent civilian.’
But the officer signalled abruptly with one white-gloved hand, ordering his men to take the three surviving Chinese men away.
‘You said you were only taking two away!’ shouted Fabio. ‘You’ve already killed one of our employees!’
‘If we discover we’ve got the wrong men, we’ll return them to you,’ replied the officer.
‘And if you kill them in error?’ said Fabio.
‘In a war, there are always many people killed in error.’
Father Engelmann stood in front of the Japanese officer. ‘I’m warning you one more time, this is American territory. You’ve killed a man here and are taking innocent men into detention. Have you thought of the consequences?’
‘And do you know how our superiors evade those “consequences”? They maintain they are only the uncontrolled actions of individuals within the armed forces, and those individuals will be subjected to military discipline, although in fact no individual is ever investigated. Do you understand, Father? Individuals lose control all the time in wartime.’ The officer spoke easily and, just as easily, the interpreter rendered his words into Chinese.
Father Engelmann was silent. He knew the officer was telling the truth.
Major Dai spoke up. ‘I must apologise, Father, for trespassing and causing you unnecessary trouble.’ He raised his right arm in a salute.
A Japanese soldier started kicking Wang Pusheng and shouting, ‘Get up! Get up!’
The boy moaned in agony.
‘I’ve never seen soldiers behave as brutally as you!’ Father Engelmann protested, attempting to pull off the soldier whose foot was poised to kick Wang Pusheng in the belly. ‘For God’s sake, spare this child’s life!’
The officer brandished his sword to keep Father Engelmann at arm’s length. At this, Sergeant Major Li, who was standing close by, was suddenly galvanised into action. He hurled himself on the officer, his left arm hooked around the other’s neck, his right hand reaching for the officer’s windpipe. For a moment, no one moved. The Japanese soldiers dared not fire in case they hit their commanding officer. Then they launched themselves at Li with their bayonets. Again and again, the officer’s subordinates twisted their bayonets in Li’s guts, but with each terrible stab, his grip on the officer’s neck tightened. The officer was crumpling, almost unconscious, but this climactic effort was Li’s last—then it was over.
His hands stiffened, and his eyes glazed over. Only his teeth were still bared, the strong, uneven teeth of a Chinese peasant used to coarse, humble fare. The sort of teeth which, clenched on a curse, were enough to make the officer quail.
The officer gave a hoarse command and his soldiers began a search. The compound was filled with criss-crossing torch beams. Father Engelmann remained where he stood uttering a passionate, silent prayer. Fabio watched panic-stricken as the beams searched the printing workshop. Upstairs, sixteen beds all stood in place, and they, as well as sixteen choir robes, would all offer clues to the Japanese. If they made the connection between these black gowns and the young bodies which they clothed, the consequences would be unimaginable.
It was not hard for the searchers to spot the trapdoor to the attic, and Fabio soon saw the torch beams filter through the gaps between the blackout curtains.
The soldiers who went to search the kitchen and refectory had returned empty-handed. Fabio sighed in relief. He had placed a brazier over the cellar entrance and jammed all their cooking implements into the kitchen so there was scarcely room to move.
In fact, the soldiers had been distracted by something else: they had broken open George’s locked store cupboard and pulled out a bag of potatoes and half a bag of flour. Hundreds of thousands of the invading forces had endured hunger and thirst along with the Chinese, so there were cheers when they found the food.
* * *
Down below, eyes of all shapes and sizes stared unblinking at the ceiling, and watched the torchlight which filtered down through
the edges of the trapdoor.
Several of the girls were moaning in terror. Yumo hissed in her fiercest voice: ‘If you young misses make another sound, I’ll come over and kill you!’
Nani smeared her face with coal dust. Jade looked at her, then groped around until her hands too were covered in cobwebby dust, which she smeared all over her face. Yumo smiled wryly to herself. Had they not heard that the Japs were making ‘comfort women’ out of seventy-year-old grannies? Only Hongling ignored the light coming through the trapdoor. She sat staring into the darkness, giving occasional sobs. She could hardly believe that George had just been transformed from a living being to a bloody lump of flesh. She had been with countless men, but only this one, with whom she had snatched a few moments of pleasure amid the horrors of war, had aroused such tenderness in her. And now George, with his protruding ears and his wordless smiles, was gone. It was too much for her to take in. George used to say: ‘Better a rascally life than a good death.’ But now not even this cheerful, obdurate and single-minded ‘rascal’ was to be granted his desire. My poor George, Hongling thought numbly.
Yumo’s heart was pounding for Major Dai. The night before, she had climbed the church’s ruined bell tower with him. They had scrambled up the bomb-damaged steps with Dai stretching out his hand to steady her in the darkness, saying, ‘Let’s explore as if they were ancient ruins.’
The wind up in the tower was different, colder, but somehow freer. The destruction had created a jagged space into which humans had to mould themselves. Dai brought out a pair of pocket binoculars. He looked around, then passed them to her. In the moonlight, she could see the dark streets; alleyways branched off them, sprouting with dwellings like leaves. All these houses looked as if they were burned out. It was only the intermittent gunfire that told them this was not some desolate, long-abandoned city devoid of human habitation, and that there were armed prowlers on the hunt out there.