AMERICAN AIRCRAFT
“THE WAR’S going to be over soon, Basie. I’ve seen American planes, Curtis bombers and Boeings . . . .”
“Boeings? Jim you’re—”
“Don’t talk, Basie. I’m working for you now, just like Frank.”
Jim squatted by the American sailor, trying to remember the amahs of his early childhood. He had never looked after anything before, except for an angora rabbit that had died tragically within a few days. He tilted the mess tin and tried to pour a little water into Basie’s mouth, then dipped his fingers in the murky fluid and let Basie suck them.
For three weeks Jim had devoted himself to the cabin steward, bringing his ration of boiled rice and sweet potatoes, fetching water from the tap in the corridor. He sat for hours beside Basie, fanning the sailor as he lay on his mat below the transom window. The stream of fresh air soon revived him, and one by one he pulled away the paper bandages fluttering on his face and wrists. Helped by Jim, he moved his mat from the English soldier dying against the wall. Within a week he had recovered enough of his strength to keep an eye on the Japanese guards and the comings and goings of the Eurasian woman who cooked for the prisoners.
As he cleaned Basie’s mess tin, Jim wondered if the sailor really recognized him. Did he know that Jim had managed to trick him? Perhaps he would report Jim to the other prisoners, but there was little that they could do. Relieved that at last he had an ally in his struggle with the Eurasian women, Jim rested his head on his knees.
He felt Basie nudge him with the mess tins.
“Chow time, Jim. Get in line.” As Jim sat up, hoping that he had not talked in his sleep, Basie wiped some of the dirt from his cheek. The steward’s canny eyes took in every detail of Jim’s shabby state. “Make yourself useful to Mrs. Blackburn, Jim. Ingratiate yourself a little. A woman always needs help with her fire.”
Somehow, during his visits to the latrine, Basie had learned the Eurasian woman’s name. Jim ran from the storeroom with the two mess tins. The other prisoners followed, the old men stirring from their mats. Mr. Partridge took the mess tin from the hand of the English soldier who sat in a pool of urine by the wall.
Smoke rose from the courtyard behind the ticket kiosk. The Eurasian woman fanned the briquettes in her stove, but the rice and sweet potatoes in the congs had gone off the boil. A Japanese soldier stared gloomily at the tepid swill and shook his head at the hungry prisoners. They shuffled among the teak benches of the cinema, sat down and stared at the smoke drifting across the empty screen.
Holding the mess tins, Jim hovered around Mrs. Blackburn and treated her to his keenest smile. She disliked Jim but allowed him to chop the basket of firewood. Jim pushed the spills into the stove and blew hard to ignite them. He fanned the embers until the briquettes caught light again. Half an hour later, with the Japanese soldier’s approval, Jim was rewarded with his first fair ration.
Basie was satisfied but unimpressed. After finishing his meal, he propped himself on his elbows. He gazed at his fellow prisoners, some too exhausted to eat their rations, and tore the last of the paper bandages from the cuts over his eyes. Whatever had befallen him in Shanghai Central Prison—and Jim never dared to ask about Frank—he had once again become the ex-steward of the Cathay-America Line, ready to assemble a small part of a ramshackle world around himself. He surveyed Jim again, taking in his ragged clothes and scarecrow appearance, his deep-set and yellowing eyes. Without comment, he gave Jim a piece of potato skin.
“Say, thanks, Basie.”
“I’m looking after you, Jim.”
Jim devoured the shred of potato. “You’re looking after me, Basie.”
“You helped Mrs. Blackburn?”
“I ingratiated myself. I made myself very useful to Mrs. Blackburn.”
“That’s it. If you can find a way of helping people, you’ll live off the interest.”
“Like this piece of potato . . . Basie, when you were in Shanghai Central did anyone talk about my mother and father?”
“I think I did hear something, Jim.” Basie cupped his hand conspiratorially. “Good news, they’re in one of the camps and looking forward to seeing you. I’ll find out which one for you.”
“Thanks, Basie!”
From then on Jim regularly helped Mrs. Blackburn. Every morning he was up at dawn to rake the ash from the stove, chop firewood and lay the briquettes. Long before the water in the congs began to boil, Jim had already earmarked the sweet potatoes for Basie and himself, selecting those with the least blight and fungus. He saw to it that Mrs. Blackburn served them the thicker rice, into which, at Basie’s suggestion, he had been careful to stir the minimum of water. After their meal, when the other prisoners rinsed their tins at the latrine tap, Basie always sent Jim to fill their mess tins with the tepid water in the potato cong. Basie insisted that he and Jim drink only this gray, pithy liquid.
Although, like everyone else, Basie was never keen for Jim to come too close to him, he clearly approved of Jim’s efforts. At the end of his second week at the detention center, Basie allowed Jim to move his sleeping mat beside his own. Lying at Basie’s feet, Jim could intercept Mrs. Blackburn on her way to the kiosk.
“Always look light on your toes, Jim.” Basie lay back as Jim fanned him. “Whatever happens, keep moving around the court. Your dad would agree with me.”
“Actually, he would agree with you. After the war you can play tennis together. He’s really good.”
“Well . . . What I meant, Jim, is that I’m trying to keep up your education. Your dad would appreciate that.”
“I think he’ll give you a reward, Basie.” Jim assumed that the notion of a reward would spur Basie in his search for his father. “Once he gave five dollars to a taxi driver who brought me home from Hongkew.”
“Did he, Jim?” At times Basie seemed unsure whether Jim was having him on. “Tell me, did you see any planes today?”
“A Nakajima Shoki and a Zero-Sen.”
“I haven’t seen those again. Not since you came, Basie. I saw them for three days, and then they went away.”
“I thought they had. They must have been a special kind of reconnaissance flight.”
“To see how we all are? Where did they come from, Basie? Wake Island?”
“A long way, Jim. It must have been just about the end of their range.” Basie took the fan from Jim’s hand. An elderly Australian had arrived to talk to Basie about the war. “Go and help Mrs. Blackburn. And remember to bow to Sergeant Uchida.”
“I always bow, Basie.”
Jim hovered around the conversation, hoping to catch the latest news, but the two men waved him away. Basie was surprisingly well informed about the progress of the war: the fall of Hong Kong, Manila and the Dutch East Indies; the surrender of Singapore and the unbroken advance of Japan across the Pacific. The only good news in all this were the flights of American planes that Jim had seen over Shanghai, but for some reason Basie never mentioned them. He liked to talk out of the side of his mouth, telling the old Britishers about the other inmates at Shanghai Central Prison, who had died and who had been handed over to the Swiss Red Cross. Basie even sold information for small scraps of food. Mr. Partridge gave him his potato for news of his brother-in-law in Nanking. Inspired by this, Jim tried to tell Mrs. Blackburn about the American aircraft, but she merely sent him back to the briquettes.
Now that he felt stronger, Jim realized how important it was to be obsessed by food. Shared equally among the prisoners, their daily rations were not enough to keep them alive. Many of the prisoners had died, and anyone who sacrificed himself for the others soon died too. The only way to leave the detention center was to stay alive. As long as he ran errands for Basie, worked hard for Mrs. Blackburn and bowed to Sergeant Uchida, all would be well.
Nonetheless, some of Basie’s ruses unsettled Jim. On the morning Mrs. Partridge died, Basie learned some encouraging news about the brother-in-law in Nanking and soon after was able to sell the old woman’s hairbrushes to Mrs. Blackburn. Whenever anyone died Basie would be on hand with news and comfort, though death was an elastic term for the cabin steward, open to all manner of interpretation. Jim collected Private Blake’s rations for two days after he lay without moving on the storeroom floor, the skin stretched across his ribs like rice paper around a lantern. Jim knew that the private had died of the same fever that he and many of the prisoners had caught. But already Jim was looking at the elderly missionaries with an expectant eye, waiting for fever to recruit the old men. Once he and Basie had admitted their part in this supplementary-ration scheme, all guilt had gone.
Jim noticed how different Basie was from his father in this respect. At home, if he did anything wrong, the consequences seemed to overlay everything for days. With Basie they vanished instantly. For the first time in his life Jim felt free to do what he wanted. All sorts of wayward ideas moved through his mind, fueled by hunger and the excitement of stealing from the old prisoners. As he rested between his errands in front of the empty cinema screen, he thought of the American aircraft he had seen in the clouds above Shanghai. He could almost summon them into his vision, a silver fleet on the far side of the sky. Jim saw them most when he was hungry, and he hoped that Private Blake, who must always have been hungry, had also seen them.