American Panda

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American Panda Page 14

by Gloria Chao


  “No, please. I’m sorry—I was in the middle of a problem set and it’s just still on my mind. I want to go write everything down before I forget, but I don’t want to be rude because I so appreciate you coming all the way here.”

  The door closed again. “It was nothing, Mei. Of course we came. We’re your parents.”

  “I love you.” I barely got the words out I was so choked up.

  They nodded at me and drove away without saying it back. I wasn’t surprised, but I had never needed to hear those words more.

  I retreated to my hideaway for the saddest, slowest dance session Mr. Porter had ever seen.

  Incoming text from Darren

  Konichiwa

  Me

  Ni hao

  Someone told me today that at MIT the odds are good but the goods are odd. Do you think that refers to guys or girls?

  after an hour of hemming and hawing

  There’s only one odd good I’m interested in . . .

  immediately

  I’d say your odds are good there.

  CHAPTER 19

  CLASH OF CULTURES

  AN ENVELOPE JUTTED OUT OF my dusty mailbox—a red flag. I never got mail.

  My Chinese and English names were scrawled in calligraphy on the front, revealing what was inside without my opening it.

  I slipped my finger beneath the flap and tore it open quickly before I could convince myself otherwise. The paper sliced through my flesh, and a drop of blood soaked into the ebony cotton. It’s a cautionary sign from the ancestors, Nǎinai warned in my head. Previously, I would have laughed, but in this moment, her words sent a tremor through me.

  The wedding invitation was red and gold (the Chinese celebratory colors) with half the text in English, half in Mandarin. I ran my fingertips over the embossed characters. My parents’ names were glaringly absent.

  How far we had come from my childhood days, when my father would run around the house with me on his back as the xiao jī, Xing and my mother chasing behind as the laoyīng, the eagles trying to catch the little chicken. I would squeeze my father close, especially when he rounded the corners at full speed. Xing would squeal as he ran, one of the few times he didn’t have to be the responsible eldest son.

  My chest ached with a mix of nostalgia, longing, and pain, and I had to remind myself to breathe.

  For the first time at Chow Chow, I didn’t notice the stinky tofu smell. I was too focused on the sweat pooling in my pits and hands. There was too much weighing me down. Death by secrets or death by my parents.

  A vaguely familiar middle-aged Chinese woman approached our table. My mother took over pleasantries, bowing and gushing over the friend’s haircut and outfit. “Goodness, we haven’t seen you in ages. When did you move back to town? Mei, you remember Joyce Āyí, of course.”

  Joyce smiled at me. “Hello, Mei. It was a pleasure to see you that day at dim sum.”

  With the words “dim sum,” I realized she had been the “stranger” staring at me from across the restaurant. Before I could protest, she continued, “I waved to you and Xing, but you must not have seen me.”

  My father’s rice bowl, which had been against his lips moments before, fell to the table. If he were a cartoon, steam would have been coming out of his ears.

  Joyce backed away slowly, then scampered back to her table.

  My parents began yelling at the same time, their words mixing into chaos. I opened and closed my mouth a few times but couldn’t come up with a single thing to say.

  Their voices crescendoed, each one trying to be heard over the other. I grasped my head with my hands, partly to cover my ears and partly because I felt like it was going to explode.

  My father threw his chopsticks to the ground, and an eerie silence followed.

  “I’m sorry,” I said sincerely. But sorry about what, I didn’t know. There was too much. Sorry we’re so different. Sorry you don’t understand. Sorry I hurt you when I didn’t mean to.

  “Did Xing pressure you to see him?” my mother asked, her face so creased with distress I wanted to do whatever it took to fix it. “Did you need help with something and didn’t feel comfortable coming to us? Did you bump into him?”

  I could lie. Say our meeting was an accident. Say he came looking for me.

  I could agree to stop seeing Xing and Darren, try harder in biology, stop teaching dance. . . . Except I couldn’t. I had already tried. And failed. If I lied, the real me would disappear. I’d become that hollow shell, nothing but the emptiness I saw in Dr. Chang.

  I couldn’t keep the secrets anymore. They were already exploding around me. And now that one was out, it felt like the rest of the biānpào were set to blow regardless of what I wanted, regardless of what I did.

  I gripped my glass so hard my knuckles turned white. “I saw Xing. On purpose. I reached out first.”

  My father shook his head. “That can’t be.”

  My mother’s voice was frantic. “Did you need to ask him about medical schools? Did you want advice on how to improve your application? Did you want to visit him at work so you could get excited about your future?” She was so desperate to find an excuse for me that I almost let her.

  Almost.

  She looked at me, and even though I was using all my energy to keep my face neutral, I knew she could sense my inner turmoil. “What is it, Mei? Just tell us.”

  I opened my mouth and my tongue touched the tip of my teeth, my palate, my lip, but no words came out.

  “You can tell us,” she repeated, softly this time.

  I took a breath. “I reached out to Xing because I miss him. He’s my brother. I just wanted to see how he was doing, make sure he was okay. It had nothing to do with your conflict or taking sides or disrespecting you.” I paused. “I did also visit him at work, but . . . it was really hard. I wanted it to make me excited about my future. . . . I wanted that so much, but it did the opposite. I’m sure you’ve noticed how I have trouble with germs and—”

  My father slapped the table. “Mei, this isn’t up for discussion.”

  “Bǎbá’s right. We laid out your future because we only want the best for you. You haven’t even given it a try. A few hours doesn’t count.”

  I shook my head. “But I have tried, and I know I can’t do it.”

  My father straightened his spine. His voice was gravelly as he said, “Can’t? That’s not the daughter we raised. You can do anything. Where’s that passion you once had? You used to be just like Nǎinai. A hard worker. What happened? Mǎmá and I didn’t come to this country and work like dogs, giving up everything we wanted, just so you could throw it all away.”

  The wave of guilt hit me full-on, wrapping around and restricting like a straitjacket. I had to muster all my strength to continue down this traitorous path. “I know you sacrificed so much, and I appreciate it. I’m not throwing anything away. I’m still going to have an MIT degree, just like you wanted. I’ll be able to get a good job. Please, just listen to me. I’m trying to tell you how I feel.”

  “Stop talking.” His grating tone made me flinch.

  But I ignored his command. “I just want to talk, like adults.”

  “You’re a child.”

  I squeezed my eyes shut so I wouldn’t have to see his sneer as I spoke. “I’m in college. I may be young, but it’s only because you pushed me and pushed me, making me skip a grade without asking what I wanted. I’m seventeen only when it suits you.”

  “Have you no respect?” my mother whispered, aghast. “Haven’t we taught you better than this? You’re Chinese. Act like it.”

  “I’m Chinese-American. America has culture too. Why can’t I identify with that also? What if I identify with it more?”

  My mother’s usually poised face turned down, revealing the wrinkles she normally worked so hard to hide from the world.

  Look, I told myself. Look at Mamá’s sad, pained eyes, the utter disappointment in the frown on her face. You caused that.

  But why did I hav
e to bear this burden? Why was I destined to be unhappy?

  Life wasn’t fair.

  My mother shook her head, eyes closed. “Mei, people need to know where they come from. They can’t know who they are without that. And traditions must be kept alive. Otherwise they die.”

  “It makes sense that you and Bǎbá care about keeping traditions alive since you were born in Taiwan. But it’s different for me, for my generation. We were born here, live here. It’s Chinese culture at home, American culture everywhere else. Do you know how hard that is? Can’t we keep the traditions we like and alter the ones we don’t agree with? Don’t we get to choose who we are?”

  Instead of answering my questions, my mother said, “First the boy and the”—she peered at my father—“candy bar wrapper, and, Mei, I found your ballet shoes and ribbons in your dorm room! And now this? Seeing your brother? Talking back to us? What’s gotten into you? You used to tīnghuà.”

  I closed my eyes briefly to collect myself. “I can’t ignore what I want anymore. I can’t do whatever job you pick, marry whoever you choose, or cut my own brother out because of an outdated tradition I don’t agree with. That’s not who I am.”

  The silence that followed was the heaviest and most painful of my life.

  My father cleared his throat. His tone was even and practiced as he said, “Mei, you are not the daughter we raised you to be. I no longer claim you as my child. We will no longer be paying your tuition unless you come to your senses.”

  I grabbed the edge of the table as a wave of vertigo hit. My vision obscured and I swayed side to side. My breath hitched, and my reply tumbled out, unguarded. “Please don’t do this. I’m trying. I’m doing the best I can. Can’t you see what this is doing to me? Please!”

  My father stood. “You, you? What about the damage your words have done to us? When you stop thinking about only yourself, we’ll be here.”

  I wanted to shove all the secrets back in. Back where they couldn’t hurt anyone except me. But the dumpling had exploded—meat, veggies, and secrets everywhere, unable to be gathered up and shoved back into hiding. And a tiny part of me was glad. I hated that piece of me. It was selfish, just like my father had said. It wanted the secrets out because I couldn’t handle it anymore.

  My mother’s sobs shook her entire body, but her face was to the wall so our gazes wouldn’t meet. My father looked past me. To him, I didn’t exist anymore. As they left—my father confidently and my mother reluctantly—I prayed they would stop. Turn around. Tell me they love me, were willing to compromise, and that I wasn’t alone.

  But, of course, they didn’t.

  I was going to be sick. I fled from the restaurant, rounded the corner into the alley, and slumped against the brick wall, completely spent from the exchange. As my body curled into a ball, my mind removed me from reality to make it bearable.

  I didn’t comprehend the magnitude of my actions until the SUV’s tires screeched down the street. How could they leave me here? Memories of Xing packing his suitcase at various ages surfaced. That’s right, my parents were experts at abandoning their children.

  The ache of loneliness ballooned outward, engulfing every thought, a black hole. Eventually, the smell of the Dumpster and the creaking of the chain-link fence snapped me out of my haze, hitting me with another wave of dizziness as I transitioned back to the real world too quickly. I had forgotten my location (an abandoned alley) and my immediate surroundings (graffitied walls, decrepit furniture, and piles of rotting trash). But now aware of my horror-movie scenario, I hurried to the busy street. A screech of tires sparked a flicker of delusional hope, but it was merely a Porsche showing off, not my parents returning.

  I jammed my palms into my eyes and told myself to get it together. I had to find a way home. Public transportation didn’t extend this far, and I didn’t have enough money for the long cab ride back.

  Aren’t you an adult? I could hear my father sneer.

  I called Xing.

  He answered with a worried, “Is everything okay?”

  I took a shaky breath. “No, I, uh, had a fight with . . . them . . . and now I’m, uh . . .”

  “Where are you? I’ll come get you.”

  I didn’t need to ask how he knew what had happened. And it made the tears stream down again.

  After what felt like hours, Xing pulled up in his navy Corolla—the one my parents had bought for him. Had they asked for their money back? Did I have to start cataloging all the tuition and fees they’d shake me down for even though they knew I had nothing?

  I looked from the sympathetic smile on Xing’s face to the stuffed Doraemon doll in the passenger seat for me to hug. When I slid in and pulled the periwinkle cartoon cat into my lap, I traveled back in time to green-tea parties and make-believe—when I was young, naive, and happy. The weight on my chest lightened and I breathed easier.

  “They’re supposed to love me,” I whispered.

  “They do,” Xing said, his eyes not leaving the road.

  When I didn’t respond, he sighed, then said gently, “I don’t want to push you. It’s been years for me, and I still don’t really want to hear it most of the time. You get to be sad because this sucks. It hurts like hell, and there really isn’t anything I can say to make it better.”

  I faced him. “Do you ever wish we had parents like the ones in sitcoms? The ones who manage the perfect balance between discipline, trusting their child, and defending them? Ones who apologize?”

  He let out a mix between a laugh and a grunt. “They don’t exist. It’ll be easier once you accept that.”

  “Do you miss them?” My voice was as small as I felt.

  “Every day.”

  “Does it get easier?”

  “Every day.”

  The rest of the car ride was silent as I pressed my forehead to the window. The chill of the glass was refreshing, a contrast to the hot tears coursing down my cheeks.

  That night, Nicolette’s ringing phone jolted me from sleep. As soon as I woke, the disownment was on my mind, having never left.

  In the light of day (well, technically it was still night, but I had been asleep the past seven hours), I realized the disownment was just the tip of the Culture Gap Iceberg. That fight may have been small in the grand scheme of things, but it represented a whole lot more. There would always be another decision, bigger than the last, to fight about. And there was no compromising. I couldn’t become a semi-doctor or marry half of Eugene Huang or have part of a kid to please them.

  There was no right or wrong here. No morality. Just two roads, leading in different directions but both ending in heartbreak. Life was, as I was finding out, Choose Your Own Adventure with most of the fun stripped away.

  I didn’t move as Nicolette shut her phone off. I didn’t want to talk to anyone, especially her.

  But she chose this moment to speak to me for the first time in who knows how long. “Hey, roomie.” I was going to feign sleep, maybe even fake snore, but then she said, “Stop pretending already. I know you’re up. You’re not doing that weird half-snore, half-gasp thing you do.”

  I turned to glare at her and was met with a yelp.

  “Holy shit, girl, what happened to you?”

  I used my phone as a mirror. Tangled hair, puffy eyes, tear-stained cheeks—my appearance reflected the mess I was inside. I threw a slipper at her, then immediately regretted it, not because it pathetically settled halfway between our beds, but because my slippers were so freaking dirty. As I broke out the sanitizer (yes, I keep some nearby at all times), I retorted, “At least I’m not a poster for the walk of shame.” Her smeared eyeliner and clumpy mascara were way worse than the bags under my eyes.

  To my shock, Nicolette laughed—deep and jolly, not at all what I expected.

  She sat up in bed. “Hello Kitty has claws!” Rude. Even if I did own maybe too much Hello Kitty apparel. “So? What happened? Gave it up for some guy only to have him dump you?”

  I rolled over, facing the wall.
“Not even close.”

  “Oh, come on, it can’t be worse than chlamydia.” Her voice wavered on the last word, and I wondered if her overconfident aura was just an act.

  “Are you okay?” I asked, still staring at the wall. I didn’t want to embarrass her any further.

  “Yes.” A pause. “I don’t know what you think of me, but it’s probably wrong, just so you know.”

  “I don’t think anything about you, good or bad.”

  “Flatter me more, please. I just mean . . .” Her breathing deepened and she tossed in her sheets. “I was kind of a nerd in high school . . . and . . . no one ever looked at me. Then I got here, and I was cool somehow. Guys wanted to talk to and hang out with me. So I did, with most of them because I thought, Hey, I’m young, may as well get to know everyone before committing. But then, before I knew it, I had a bit of a reputation. So I played the part. I don’t really know why.”

  I rolled back, and we faced each other across the room from our recumbent positions in bed. If the Goddess of Confidence had insecurities, then, jeez . . . maybe I wasn’t as much of an outsider as I originally thought. “It makes sense. If you own it, then you’re less of a target. Except people will still find a way to make fun of you.”

  She pulled her covers up to her chin. “You had a hard time in high school, too, huh?”

  “Not just high school. Always. I wore neon leggings and sweatshirts with misspelled English for the first ten years of my life. Bums Bunny and Butman made me a target no matter what I did.”

  Nicolette laughed so hard our neighbor banged on the wall.

  I glowered at her. “Thanks. I see you would’ve been one of my bullies.”

  “Sorry, but come on, Butman? That’s hilarious!” She continued laughing, and I eventually joined in, but only for a second.

  She flapped her comforter open, revealing a flash of navy-blue pajamas. “So I showed you mine; now show me yours. What happened last night?”

 

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