Ricepaper 19, no. 3 (2014)
Eric Choi
Fénshū carefully studied the boy with the book.
The youth looked to be in his early teens, but it was difficult to tell. Contemporary Běiměizhōu children always looked much older than their years. This one resembled a skeleton, more bone than flesh, with grimy bug-bitten skin, laddered ribs, twig-thin arms and legs, and bloodied, swollen feet. His face was gaunt, topped by a tangled, greasy mess of long black hair. He also stank, reeking like an oily, salty fish.
Fénshū looked into the boy’s green eyes, and while it was impossible to get a sense of the boy’s soul, she could discern a certain fire—perhaps of intelligence, certainly of strength.
“Nǐ jiào shén ma míng zì?” she asked. The boy was silent.
“Nǐ míngbái ma?”
Still no response.
“What is your name?” she said at last in English.
“Wu,” the boy said. His yellowish-brown teeth were chipped and twisted.
“Hello Wu, I am Dr Fénshū Zhèng”, she continued. “I am … an historical archaeologist. Do you know what that is?”
The boy fell silent again.
“How are you, Wu?”
The boy did not answer, looking instead at his inquisitor and returning the question: “How are you?”
Definitely intelligence. The boy’s verbal language skills, at least in English, were excellent. Fénshū was quite impressed.
“I am sixty years old!” Fénshū cackled in a high-pitched voice, trying to smile.
Wu simply stared.
“Do you have something for me?”
Wu nodded, his calloused hands reverently handing over the book.
“Thank you, Wu.” Fénshū gestured to the floor of the tent. “Please, sit down. My colleague will be back for you shortly.”
Wu hesitated for a moment, then sat on the ground as instructed.
Fénshū pushed her spectacles up the bridge of her nose and examined the book. It was a brownish-black hardcover, about sixteen by twenty-four centimetres and perhaps three centimetres thick, enclosed within a clear sealable plastic bag of the type that had once been a common means of storing food in pre-Fall Běiměizhōu civilization. The book was in fairly good condition, except for a serrated gash that penetrated the pages from cover to cover. Also inside the plastic bag, collected mostly along the spine, were clumps of a white powdery residue. She held the book up to her nose and sniffed. Through the punctured plastic, it smelled faintly of camphor and another odd odour she could not immediately identify.
“Where did this come from?” Fénshū asked. “Where did you find this?”
The boy looked up.
“Where did you find this?” she repeated.
“In the old shit and piss!”
Over and over again, Wu’s mother would ask him the same thing.
“What do you do if you see a Jiangshi?”
“Run,” Wu would answer.
“Why?”
Sometimes Wu would hesitate, and his mother would insist.
“Come on. Why?” she would repeat.
“Because a Jiangshi will hurt you, kill you, eat you.”
The road upon which Wu walked was wrinkled and cracked like the skin of an old man. Weeds and wild flowers sprouted from every fissure, heaving apart the decaying asphalt. With slow certainty over the long years since the Fall, the pavement was being reduced to the constituent stone, gravel, and bitumen from which it had been formed.
For much of this day, Wu had been fortunate in his solitude. It was not to last.
Wu stopped in his tracks and squinted. In the far distance, a Jiangshi came into view. He recognized the brainfrizzed monster immediately, a stained and filthy figure slowly shambling in his direction with that distinctive jerky, unsteady gait.
He didn’t think he had been spotted, but he wasn’t about to stick around to find out.
Wu ran off the road, through the tall grasses, into the trees. Twigs and branches lashed his body and stones cut his bare feet, but neither slowed his flight. Deeper and deeper into the woods he ran, until his lungs heaved, and his heart felt like it would burst from his chest.
Finally, he stopped … and stared.
Before him was a ruin of the old world. A house had once stood here, but it had long ago collapsed and been assimilated by the living woods. Only the chimney remained standing, but Wu could see that its bricks were dropping and breaking, little by little, as the mortar crumbled and powdered. Some kind of vine grew everywhere, climbing through the broken windows and up the bars and grillwork.
Wu circled about the stone tower, fascinated.
There was a shallow hill across from the remnants of the foundation. He walked to the hill and climbed. Suddenly, he stopped and looked down.
He had run over something.
Tracing back a few steps, he spotted a patch of dead leaves and twigs collected within a rough square. Resting on his knees, Wu swept away the detritus with his hands. A grey slab with a square metal handle imbedded on top appeared before him.
Wu stared in wonder, uncertain of what to do next. Finally, he reached down and grasped the handle with his small, bony hands.
Nothing happened.
He extended his legs and dug in his feet for leverage, pulling harder with all his strength, but still it did not budge. Exhausted, he released the handle and fell backwards, his legs splayed.
Something moved in the bushes.
Wu turned in the direction of the rustling noise, his eyes wide. He pulled a slingshot out of his pouch, his other hand frantically sweeping the ground for a suitable projectile. Grasping a stone, he loaded the pocket and pulled back the bands with trembling hands.
The leaves rustled again.
Wu drew back the bands a little further, then released.
The happiest times were when his mother told him stories about the things from before, the old world prior to the Fall.
“People flew?”
“Yes. In flying machines. Anywhere in the world, without fear.”
And she would tell him about the music that came from a box smaller than your hand, and the heat and light and clean water that came with a touch, and the pictures that moved, and the buildings as high as mountains, and the places with piles of fresh food, and the artificial stars that let people talk to one another across the world, and most wonderful of all, the bound volumes upon whose pages were recorded the knowledge and beauty of Běiměizhōu civilization at its height.
“Books.”
“Books,” Wu repeated.
The boy emerged from the bushes a split second after Wu launched the projectile. Eyes wide, he instinctively ducked. The stone whizzed over his head, striking the trunk of a tree just behind him.
“What are you doing?” shouted the boy indignantly.
Wu grabbed another stone and reloaded his slingshot, drawing back the band and keeping it trained on the stranger.
The pale, skinny boy looked to be about Wu’s age. With the exception of his short curly brown hair, Wu could have been looking at a reflection.
“What are you doing?” Wu challenged. He studied the stranger. The boy, though as emaciated as he was, did not slur his words, and he stood firm without the jerky twitches that were the stigmata of those who consumed the flesh of others.
“Are you a Jiangshi?” Wu asked rhetorically.
“Are you a Jiangshi?” the boy echoed in retort.
Slowly, Wu lowered his slingshot. “I am Wu.”
“I’m Vancott,” the boy said. He pointed at the crumbling chimney. “What’s that ruin?”
Vancott walked up the shallow hill to join Wu, and the boys found themselves looking at the slab and handle in the ground. They took hold of the handle together and managed to lift the grey slab. Putting the lid aside, they went to the opening and peered down into the darkness.
Wu squinted. “Something’s in there!”
A very faint odour wafted out of the opening. Vancott sniffed.
Recognition came to both of them at the same time.
“Stupid!” Vancott shoved Wu, sending him sprawling to the ground. “This is—”
“Old shit and piss,” Wu said. He remembered his mother’s words. “Skeptic tank.”
The two boys sat silently, pondering their next move.
Suddenly, a flock of dark birds took flight from the trees, swirling noisily into the sky. Wu and Vancott turned.
There was a rustling in the bushes.
Vancott grabbed Wu’s arm. “I saw a Jiangshi today!”
Wu shot Vancott a fearful glance. “I saw a Jiangshi too,” he hissed. “On the road.”
The boys looked about, knowing they were badly exposed atop the shallow hill. At once, the same desperate idea occurred to both. They got up quickly.
Vancott slid the concrete lid partially over the opening, while Wu gathered up some dead leaves and twigs and piled them on top. It wasn’t much in the way of camouflage, but it was better than nothing. Vancott squeezed inside first, followed by Wu. With great effort, they managed to get the lid almost closed except for a thin sliver.
Wu peered through the narrow slit, and before long saw the monster stumble out of the woods. The gangly, twitching figure, no longer really human, was the same one Wu had seen on the road.
Quietly, the boys drew the lid fully closed, and darkness enveloped them.
Wu and Vancott waited silently in the musty dark for a sound, a voice, a sign … something.
They were sitting on a pile of flat rectangular objects. Wu felt around with his hands. The objects were all roughly the same shape but in different sizes. He remembered seeing something when they first opened the lid, but without light he could do nothing to identify the objects even while sitting among them.
Breathing was difficult, and the boys were getting sleepy. The stale air would not sustain them much longer.
Cautiously, they pushed the lid and opened up a small crack to look around. The brief inrush of fresh air hit their lungs with an almost icy sharpness, and it took all of Wu’s willpower to not dash out right away.
Finally, they pushed the lid all the way open and climbed out. Wu moved to follow, but on sudden impulse grabbed one of the rectangular objects on his way up. Outside, the boys collapsed onto the sweet long grass of the shallow hill, lying on their backs, lungs heaving as they gulped fresh air, their mouths open and trembling like those of fish out of water.
After a long moment of rest, Wu rolled onto his side and saw the flat rectangular object lying on the grass. He sat up and took it with both hands, bringing it up to his eyes.
Wu stared at the object for a moment before recognizing it. “A book!”
“What?” Vancott asked.
Wu turned the book about, examining it from all sides.
It was brownish-black in colour and sealed in a transparent pouch, probably made of the material that Wu’s mother had called plastic. A hard seam ran along one side. Wu examined the seam and eventually figured out how to pull the pouch open. There was a faint medicinal smell, and clumps of a white powder fell out.
With deliberate care, Wu reverently extracted the book from the plastic pouch. There were symbols on the cover that he recognized as words, but like all contemporary teenagers he didn’t read. He slowly flipped through the yellowish pages, each dense with indecipherable text.
“What is it?” Vancott asked again.
“A book,” Wu repeated. “From the old world, before the Fall.”
Vancott’s eyes widened.
Wu was illiterate, not stupid. He had the sense to know, on an instinctive level, the importance of what he and Vancott had found. Somebody had done this on purpose, creating an improvised library—a túshūguăn—either before or shortly after the Fall, in the hope that someone like Wu might find the treasure.
Wu put the book back into the pouch and resealed it. The boys covered up the hatch again with leaves and twigs before setting off. They would need to find a person who could read.
Wu and Vancott wandered aimlessly for days. Sometimes, they would walk for hours in one direction when Vancott would suddenly change his mind, and then they would turn about and retrace their steps. On other occasions, they seemed to be walking in circles. Wu began to doubt whether Vancott had any idea where they were going.
Beside him, Wu heard Vancott’s stomach growl. His companion always seemed to be hungry. For such a thin little guy, he ate an awful lot. Not for the first time, Wu wondered how Vancott had managed to survive on his own for this long.
A feral rakunk bounded out of some shrubbery a short distance ahead. Vancott had seen the black-masked, fluffy-tailed animal first, putting out his hand to stop Wu and signalling for silence. If nothing else, Wu was grateful for Vancott’s sharp eyes. His companion might eat too much food, but at least he was good at spotting it.
Wu slowly knelt to pick up a rock, quietly pulling out his slingshot at the same time. He steadied himself, drew back the band, took aim, and fired.
Killing the game turned out to be the easy part. Starting the fire to cook it proved much more difficult. It had rained earlier in the day, and the boys had trouble finding dry grass and leaves for tinder. More than once, Wu saw Vancott eyeing the book. He pulled it closer.
Night had fallen by the time they got the fire going and cooked the rakunk. In the chilly dark, Wu and Vancott managed to find some comfort in the warming flames and meat. When they had finished eating, they lay on their backs and gazed up at the twinkling tapestry of stars above. Wu thought about his mother’s stories of people in flying machines, soaring amongst the clouds and even out to the dark heavens beyond.
Wu closed his eyes, and as sleep came, the book slipped quietly from his arms and fell to the ground.
He dreamed.
It was a strange dream, the kind Wu knew was only a dream even while he was dreaming it, because he was seeing things that he could not possibly have known or remembered. He was in a vast cavern, within which were rows upon rows of shelves, each packed end-to-end with books. The volumes were all of different sizes, thicknesses, and colours, with incomprehensible words along the spines. There must have been hundreds, if not thousands, of books stretching further into the depths of the cavern than Wu could see.
He reached out to a book at random and tried to take it off the shelf. The book came out about two-thirds of the way and then abruptly jammed.
Wu pulled harder, to no effect. He grabbed the book with both hands and yanked with all his strength.
The entire bookshelf began to fall towards him.
Wu let go of the book and stepped back. The bookshelf was still falling.
Walking backwards, he tried to quicken his pace. He looked up and saw that the bookshelf appeared to be of infinite height, stretching upwards without end. There was nothing he could do to avoid getting crushed.
The bookshelf came down.
There was a scream.
Wu woke with a start. The scream had not been his.
Beside the smouldering remnants of the fire, Vancott was locked in a desperate struggle with a monster. His attacker had pinned him to the ground. Vancott squirmed, kicked, and punched, frantically trying to free himself. The Jiangshi was as emaciated as the boys, but he was taller and armed with two lethal weapons—madness and a knife.
Wu was frozen in momentary fear. He tried to yell, but no words came.
The Jiangshi brought the knife down—once, twice—
Before there was a third stroke, Wu sprang forth and launched himself at the monster. He ran into the Jiangshi’s back and pounded the smelly, sore-ridden flesh with both fists. The Jiangshi grunted and took a swing, sending Wu sprawling to the ground.
Lying on his back, Wu looked up at the looming monster’s gnarled, weathered face with its long, filthy tangled hair, twitching unfocused eyes, and rotting yellow-brown teeth. Wu backed away on his elbows like a crab.
He hit something on the ground.
The Jiangshi raised his knife to strike.
Wu grabbed the rectangular object and brought it up with both hands. The knife plunged into the book, piercing it from cover to cover, its point protruding out the back.
Grunting, the Jiangshi twisted and pulled on the knife, finally extracting it from the book but stumbling backwards a few steps.
Wu threw the damaged book at the Jiangshi, hitting the monster on the side of the head. Already off balance, the Jiangshi fell onto his haunches. It didn’t take long for the monster to get up again, but the delay gave Wu just enough time to load his slingshot and fire.
The mote scored a direct hit into the Jiangshi’s left eye.
Screaming and clutching the bleeding eye with both hands, the Jiangshi dropped to the ground. The monster rolled side to side, shrieking and twitching uncontrollably as blood and vitreous fluid oozed between his fingers.
Wu got up and walked over to where Vancott’s lifeless body lay in a pool of his own blood. Vancott was on his back, mouth and eyes still wide open. In silence, Wu simply stared at his dead companion with a lack of emotion that would have shocked his pre-Fall ancestors. He left Vancott where he lay, picked up the book, and simply walked away.
Behind him, the Jiangshi’s screams went on and on, the cries of a wounded animal. Wu kept walking, book in hand, until he could not hear the inhuman noises anymore.
“I am sorry about your friend,” Fénshū said when Wu finished his story.
Wu said nothing more.
“You are a brave young man,” she continued, “and extremely lucky as well. We are the first expedition to work in the Vancouver ruins for years, and it is only possible because we were able to afford the armed guards to protect us from the Jiangshis.” She put the book on the ground. “Did you see anything else down in that … um, ‘skeptic’ tank?”
The boy fell unhelpfully silent, once again.
A young woman entered the tent, carrying a small bundle of clothes.
Fénshū pointed. “Wu, please go with my colleague. She will give you some food. You need to rest, and when you are better, we will need you to take us back to this place you found. Do you understand?”
Wu nodded.
“Gēn wǒ lái,” the young woman said, taking Wu’s hand and leading him out of the tent.
Fénshū waited a moment, then picked up the book and took it outside. Near the centre of the expedition encampment, a small fire burned. She walked towards the campfire, and without a second thought, casually tossed the book into the flames.
The plastic wrap melted quickly, evaporating like water on a hotplate. Then the flames attacked the book itself, consuming it from the outside edges in. The words on the cover—A Novel, Oryx and Crake, Margaret Atwood—were legible for a few moments until the dust jacket blackened and crumbled away. Acrid smoke billowed briefly when the white residue ignited, causing Fénshū to cough and blink. The spine was the last to endure, but eventually it, too, yielded to the flames.
When the book had been reduced to ash, Fénshū returned to the tent and settled back in her chair. Pre-Fall Běiměizhōu texts were of academic interest and had some nominal value on the antiquities market, but her backers in Běijīng and Clavius had little interest in them. Excavating the Vancouver II site was a costly and very risky venture. Her expedition would need to find something of much greater value, and soon. The boy would take them back to the other site. For her sake—and to some degree, the boy’s—she truly hoped that artifacts of real value were still out there, somewhere in the ruins of the old shit and piss.
AUTHOR COMMENTARY
The central idea in “Túshūguăn” of someone trying to preserve books before the fall of civilization by storing them in an underground septic tank, was taken from Lucifer’s Hammer, a post-apocalyptic novel by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle, in which someone in the Los Angeles area does exactly that just before a comet hits the Earth. I moved the action two thousand kilometres north and introduced the Chinese archaeological team excavating the ruins of Vancouver as a parable of Western fears about the re-emergence of China. My main character was named for Louis Wu, the protagonist in the Ringworld series of books, also written by Larry Niven (whose middle name is van Cott). Some of the imagery of the post-apocalyptic world was inspired by the nonfiction book The World Without Us, by Alan Weisman. As part of my research, I tried to burn an old book and was relieved to discover that it is actually more difficult than one might think. For the record, I thoroughly enjoyed Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood and, in fact, my story has a few homages to the novel which I challenge readers to find. —Eric Choi, 2015
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Eric Choi is a Hong Kong-born writer, editor, and aerospace engineer living in Toronto. His Asimov Award-winning novelette “Dedication” appeared in Japanese translation in The Astronaut from Wyoming and Other Stories (Hayakawa, 2010), edited by Toru Nakamura. With Derwin Mak, he co-edited the Aurora Award-winning anthology The Dragon and the Stars (DAW Books, 2010), the first collection of speculative fiction by authors of the Chinese diaspora. He is also the co-editor, with Ben Bova, of the new science fiction anthology Carbide Tipped Pens (Tor Books, 2014).