men stood up with a murmuring and an exchange of cigarettes. They nodded goodbye to Mae.
She was left standing alone in the courtyard.
The screen showed nothing but a door.
Mae sat in front of the screen. She touched the door. It creaked, it opened.
There were pictures with words underneath. Mae couldn't read. On the screen was a picture of an hourglass with running sand, like her life draining away, and there were rows of pictures: books and magnifying glasses and things that had no meaning for Mae at all. Mae saw a drawing of a newsreader. News would be good. She touched the newsreader and up came a screen of words.
Too many words, too complicated. It assumed so much, this machine – that you understood what the signs meant, that you could read, that you could guess what lay behind each door or each word. Her heart was sinking.
Then she saw a picture of an ear.
'Touch the ear,' said a woman's voice: Kwan, behind her.
Kwan was wearing a folded headdress, the peasant dress of her ethnic minority. She had never done that before. She stood over Mae.
'Go on,' she said.
Mae did.
The TV replied,
'It is good you are learning,' said Kwan, suddenly relaxing. 'It is good you are not afraid of it.'
Afraid? Well, yes, this was new stuff.
The TV kept talking.
'Fashion,' said Mae.
And for some reason, as if on impulse or from affection, Kwan had taken hold of the muscles between Mae's neck and shoulder and given them a squeeze.
'So you are going to fight,' said Kwan.
Mae paused. 'You know,' she sighed.
'In this village? There is nothing to do but talk.'
Mae was ashamed, fearful, and angry. 'There is everything to do!'
Mae amazed herself again with the passion, almost the frenzy, that welled up inside her. 'The village is like a goose without a head when the legs keep twitching. The whole world has died, and we have a year to learn how to live all over again!'
She spun around to look at Kwan. Kwan was blinking in surprise.
The television said in a honeyed voice,
'I do not need to be beholden to that dog of a man now! I need to be doing this!'
'Pause,' Kwan said once, to the machine. It whirred in place. 'Mae, we could loan you the money to pay him back. What is the interest?'
'Joe was so drunk, he did not even ask!' Mae swayed under the weight of it all.
'We would not charge interest,' murmured Kwan.
Mae felt many things, all at once – gratitude, relief, and wariness. She feared that they would end up replacing one loan with another. You and Wing make yourselves rich the same way Haseem does, she thought, only, you are more polite. Though she loved Kwan, Mae did not entirely trust her.
'We would stand in an echoing corridor of loans,' Mae said quietly.
'That is true,' said Kwan, calmly. 'But the offer will stay open, if you need it.'
'Thank you, Wing's-wife, ma'am.'
'Don't be silly,' said Kwan, for Mae had addressed her as an employer.
Mae sighed. 'Until we have money, I am everyone's servant,' she said. 'The offer is kind and will be remembered. Paris,' she told the television. 'Show me Paris.'
'I will leave you to it, then,' said Kwan. She turned and walked away.
She has changed, too, thought Mae. We will all change.
So Mae looked at the ghosts of Paris, and they were no help. These were clothes that no human being could wear, let alone farming women in the Happy Province. The television talked and talked. It explained why it was such a revolution that long flaps of cloth hung uselessly down to the knees from the shoulders, or that someone called Giannini had gone for splashes of colour.
Mae already knew. It is just a special way of talking. It sounds grand, but it offers nothing to actually do.
What… she asked herself, what actually am I trying to do?
I am trying to find something that will make me money. I think if I spend more time at this machine, then I can stay ahead of my clients, find something to sell them. But they are ahead of me…
Paris fashion kept parading, as if to say, look, peasant, look what you cannot afford to even look at. Look at what your world could never have in it. Learn the lesson of your poverty and your distance and your unimportance.
She looked around. Two little village girls stood in Kwan's courtyard, twisting in place with coy naughtiness.
'Who told you you could come to Mrs Wing's house? Go on, go away.'
'We want to watch the television,' one of them said – determined to stay, hopeful of being allowed to.
'You should be in school,' Mae said.
They said nothing, but their eyes and smiles grew brighter. A little boy ran up to them and stopped, dead, to see an adult by the television. The girls burst into fits of naughty giggles.
Then An, Kai-hui's daughter, sauntered in. Her eyes widened, she bowed briefly towards Mae. 'Children,' said An, newly graduated. 'You should be in school.'
More giggles.
Mae reached up, to find some way to turn it off, to hoard the fashion information. How had Young Mr Doh done it? Mae touched something and another screenful of words appeared.
An said, 'No, no, don't change it for my sake.' Then she used a new word. 'Undo,' she said, and they went back to the fashion show.
The sun kept rising, the courtyard kept filling. An's friend Ling-so walked in as well. Ling-so said that she had preferred the Singapore fashion show last week. But then she said, 'Eastern couture suits our tastes better.'
Mae felt like she had swallowed an ice cube whole. While she had been ill and wasting time, all the village had been watching television. Mae felt a kind of hungry panic. She had fallen so far behind!
In desperation she turned around. 'What do the children want?' she asked.
She knew the answer: kung fu. She knew also that the children would run forward and push the button for themselves.
The children sat open-mouthed as the kung fu hero met a man whom they all knew was a dragon in disguise. The secret dragon breathed out fire. For some reason he could fly, with a sound like a sliding whistle. Even An and Ling appeared to be content. This confirmed Mae's suspicion that people would watch anything so long as it was on TV.
Mae didn't watch. She sat thinking over and over, What do I do? What can I do?
At high noon, Mr Shen arrived from the school.
He was shaking with rage. 'All of you, back into class. All of you, what are you doing, when you should be at your lessons!' He cuffed the boys about the head. They ran off giggling.
Mr Shen glared at Mae. 'You have let this sickness take you over!'
Mae was shocked to have Teacher Shen, of all people, be angry with her.
'I was trying to use it for information…' she began. Her voice sounded weak, even to her.
'Oh, yes, it looks like it! Hong Kong indulgence. This whole country is sinking into it.' He spun on his heel and marched to the television set. He pulled out its plug. In a fury, he pulled at the plug until, by adrenaline strength,