shower off to one side. Do my business. Thereâs another door on the other side, and I decide to go out that way, just because. Iâm thinking about a Percocet. Iâm thinking about a beer. Iâm thinking, What do I have to do here before I can leave?
Find Tiantian, I guess. He wasnât in the first hall, so maybe heâs in this one up ahead: the north hall, the main house. I mean, thatâs where the lord of the manor is likely to hang out, right?
The second door opens onto the side courtyard, a narrow rectangle between the west house and the north house. The smaller wing of the north house is closed up, though I can see lights inside. Iâll have to go over to the main entrance if I want to go in and check it out.
âHello!â
I flinch a little, but everything has me jumpy tonight. A young woman with pigtails, wearing a sort of designer baby-doll outfit. She looks familiar, but I canât quite place her.
âFrom Guguâs party,â she supplies. âI am Celine.â
âRight. You have a website.â The one she said I should read to learn something about modern Chinese culture. I think she was giving me shit, but Iâd actually meant to check it out.
âYes. And I hear some things about you.â She gives me a look. I think sheâs amused, but Iâm not sure why. Just âcause Iâm funny, I guess. âI hear you work with artists,â she says. âSome interesting ones.â
âYeah,â I say. âAre you interested in art?â
âRecently I become more and more interested. I even work in a gallery sometimes. Artists say fascinating things about society. Donât you think?â
âI do,â I say. I have to admit, not what I expected from a twenty-something club kid. Is she talking about Lao Zhang?
I try to think of something to say, something to ask about what artists she finds particularly fascinating, but she beats me to the next question.
âDo you like this house?â she asks.
âSure. Itâs pretty. I mean, itâs traditional Chinese, right?â
âYes. Tiantian likes such styles. He always says China culture is over five thousand years oldâwhat does rest of the world have to compare?â She giggles. âBut he likes some modern things, too.â
Am I supposed to ask? Ever since I started hanging out around the younger Caos, I feel like everyoneâs speaking in some kind of code all the time and Iâm not really deciphering it.
âLike what?â I ask. âFancy cars? New plumbing?â
She leans forward. âModern girls,â she says, peering at me through her eyelashes. âDid you see Mrs. Cao just now?â
âTiantianâs wife?â I think about it. The only person Iâve seen just now was the angry and/or crying woman in the bathroom. âMaybe.â
âShe is unhappy with Tiantian, because he has this modern taste,â she says, fumbling a cigarette pack out of her tiny purse. âAnd she is hong er dai , so it is better if she is happy.â
Hong er dai. Second-generation red. The sons and daughters of the revolution, born into privilege.
She taps out a cigarette. âSmoke?â
I shake my head. I havenât smoked since the Sandbox. Though I still get the itch sometimes.
âThey are Panda.â She shows me the pack. Two pandas on a sea-foam green background. âDeng Xiaopingâs favorite.â
âIs that why you smoke them?â
âNo. Itâs because I like pandas. Zhen ke ai. â She flicks her lighter and inhales, then blows out a dainty cloud. âVery cute.â
I donât really want to make small talk with this girl, but itâs not clear to me what else I should be doing, other than organizing a museum or something.
âYouâre here with Gugu?â I ask.
She lifts one shoulder. âHe is here, and I am here.â
âOh. I havenât seen him
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