LOATH TO BOARD A further trolley, Rose had taken a rickshaw back across town. Soon the peaceful environs of Bukit Timah and then the gentle slope of Mount Rosie was before her again. When at last they entered Belvedere, the subdued clatter of cutlery and conversation could be heard in the dining room. Ah Fong had already served dinner and Rose was relieved to find they had not been missed. She hurried to take her place at the table before the window, where they always sat for meals. Howard followed his mother as she crossed the room, nodding apologies to her lodgers whenever she caught an eye. Cynthia was already eating, with the amah crouched attentively on her haunches beside the chair. At the sight of Rose the child jumped up, a whirlwind of tawny hair and milky skin, and threw her arms around her. Her face, pressed against Rose’s dusky cheek, could not easily be prised away.
With no more than a glance at his sister, Howard took his place at the table and stared about the dim and flickering room full of moving shadows. The glow of the candles that were lit each evening saved electricity and, said his mother, created a gracious ambience, but nothing for Howard could eradicate Belvedere’s intrinsic sadness. Whatever efforts were expended upon the house it remained to him cavernous, gloomy and secretive. The long windows were open to the evening, the perfume of night flowers and damp earth mixing with the odour of poached fish and the melting wax of candles. The lodgers, who sat two or three to a table, were exclusively young European men in Singapore on a first tour of duty.
Howard hated the way he must sit before them, subject to scrutiny and comment, evaluated over a sea of tables. He already understood it was his sister who held the lodgers’ attention; any cursory glances that came his way were solely of a curious nature. Sooner or later everyone remarked on the difference between the siblings, comparing Howard’s darker cast of skin to Cynthia’s creamy appearance and her startling green eyes. That a mother could produce at one time a swarthy son but at another a daughter of such delectable properties was, he already realised, one of nature’s foibles. Once, he had overheard a loud-mouthed man from Cardiff remark that Landlady Burns must have had it off with one of her lodgers nine months before Cynthia appeared in the world. Snorts of laughter greeted this remark. Howard had turned and run, his heart pounding. Although he had not understood the comment, he understood the besmirching of his mother and for some time afterwards he had secretly believed that he and Cynthia had different fathers. Later, he realised this could not be, for Cynthia had been born in Upper Serangoon before their father died, before they came to Belvedere and the world of lodgers.
After the happenings of the day, Howard’s knees still trembled and his stomach closed at the prospect of food. He pushed a fish fillet listlessly about his plate, remembering again the crack of bullets at Kreta Ayer. Looking up, Howard caught his mother’s eye and saw that she too could not eat her dinner. In the candlelight her face appeared unfamiliar, her eyes cratered in shadow beneath her brow. He hated the old house at this time of day. The lurking presence he sensed in the dark cavity of Belvedere was already actively stalking about. The only thing tolerable in his new home was its overgrown orchard. The gnarled branches of the mangosteen trees, hung with dark fruit the colour of burgundy, encircled a secret world of twisting vines and foliage. Sometimes, thickly smeared with a home-made insect repellent, he climbed up a tree to pick the hard globes of fruit, peeling off the thick skin, sucking on the white flesh within. Only the slither of snakes, the movement of lizards or the buzz of insects reached him in this place of hot rotting smells.
All he wanted was to return to their old home in Upper Serangoon with its green-latticed shutters and orderly garden and the cricket he played with his friends. There, the neighbourhood boys were Eurasian like Howard and rode with him to school in a mosquito bus, squashing into the vehicle together. The conductor balanced on the back step, clinging to a rail, and swung dangerously around corners. There were orchards about the houses in Upper Serangoon from which they stole rambutan, durian and mangosteen. The Eurasian boys made up two cricket teams and Howard’s father had coached them. Then, when his father died, they moved away and Howard found himself far from his friends and the small local school he had attended. Now, he went to St Joseph’s Institution, a school of Catholic Brothers who used the cane, and where he had no friends. He hated the new house, Belvedere, with its dilapidated façade and the European lodgers his mother was so happy to serve; it could in no way be called a home. He reached into his pocket and pulled out his father’s compass and, opening the lid of the flat wooden box, stared down at the red-tipped needle. Rose had found the compass while clearing out Charlie’s desk after his death and given it to Howard. When they moved to Belvedere he had set the compass to point in the direction of Upper Serangoon, so that he could find his way back there if needed.
That night sleep pulled him under quickly, the weight of his dreams heavy upon him. Howard heard again the shouts of the communists as they rocked the trolley and remembered the Inspector’s battered sun helmet upturned in the road, stained with the blood of its owner. He awoke with a start to his dark room, listening to the pipes in the belly of Belvedere grumbling with elderly flatulence. Outside the heavy splatter of rain could be heard. Lightning flashed and thunder froze him where he lay. He found he was bathed in sweat but dared not move or reach for the glass of water that stood on the table beside his bed.
Although, when the shots were fired, Howard understood his mother’s fear as the wounded Chief Inspector was dragged into the police station, he was disappointed that the man was not dead. He did not know who the communists were, but already he felt allegiance; they had demonstrated a daring that excited him. His heart pumped with outrage on behalf of the rioters whose courage before authority had met with such brutality. Now, in the darkness of Belvedere, he pondered what it was about the Chief Inspector that seemed to him so familiar. As a gecko clucked loudly from the wall, he realised with a start that the inspector resembled a man at Great World Amusement Park who Howard would never forget.
Not long before his father died, they had gone together to Great World. Howard loved these outings to the amusement park with its shooting galleries, eating stalls, theatres, musicians and the excitement of the boxing ring. In the cavernous dance hall the taxi girls with red lips and high heels danced for money with men, the moving bodies of the swaying couples were pressed together as one. Some women had skirts slit high up their thigh; others wore gowns exposing their cleavage. Howard’s hands became clammy and the muscles of his legs grew tight as he stared into this tawdry world. A band played in a dark corner and the music ran wildly through him. The strong odour of beer and cigarettes accompanied a licentiousness he recognised but could not frame in words.
‘I’ll bring you here when you’re older. We’ll find a real beauty for you to dance with,’ his father laughed that day.
Howard had been allowed to have two rounds at the shooting gallery and to buy a stick of candyfloss in an unhealthy shade of pink. His father drank a couple of beers and Howard an orange squash, and eventually they had made their way to the lavatories. These were situated to one side of Great World and were modern and clean with the novelty of a chain to pull that released a flush of water. In Upper Serangoon they were still visited each morning by the honey-cart with its odorous buckets. When Howard went out with his mother he was still young enough to go with her into the Ladies’ lavatories of public places. That day at Great World he was proud to be out alone with his father and enter the door marked Gentlemen.
Inside the lavatory Howard followed his father to the row of urinals. A tall Englishman stood with his back to them and Charlie Burns took a place beside him. From a skylight, sunlight fell on the Englishman’s greying head and his father’s chestnut hair, and burnished the fountain released from the Englishman to an arch of liquid gold. The remaining urinal lay in shadow, and Howard positioned himself before it. He noticed with pride that his father’s skin, in spite of some cricket under the sun, was paler in shade than the bronzed and leathery skin of the other man; he looked more English than the Englishman. At last the man buttoned up his fly and nodded to Charlie in a friendly manner. Then, as he turned away, his gaze settled on Howard who was still struggling to undo his shorts and he stopped abruptly. Stepping forward with a frown and grasping Howard by the scruff of the neck, he began to shout.
‘You are not allowed in here, you dark-skinned rascal. If you were older I’d call the police.’
Shocked by the sudden attack, Howard cowered in terror, sure the man was going to hit him. Instead, dragging Howard roughly forward, he frogmarched him to the door. Before being ejected into the noisy clamour of Great World, Howard turned in mute appeal to his father. Charlie Burns stood rigid at the urinal, his face turned away, his eyes on the wall before him and uttered not a word. Outside, the Englishman wagged a threatening finger at Howard as he strode away. Howard stared after him in confusion; his bladder was full and his shorts open to expose him. More than the shock of expulsion was his father’s refusal to acknowledge him. His throat constricted and he thought he might cry before the closed face of the door.
‘Sorry, son,’ his father whispered when, at last, he emerged from the lavatory. He pointed to the door next to the one he now shut behind him.
‘That’s the door for you, and me too of course if that man really knew. He thought I was a whitey, like him,’ Charlie chuckled, delighted. Directing Howard’s attention to a higher level, he pointed out the word EUROPEANS above the door from which he had just emerged, and the sign OTHERS over the door to which he now pushed Howard. He did not accompany his son inside this alternative toilet but waited outside, lighting up a cigarette, leaning back against a wall.
Now, in the darkness of his home Howard heared the gecko cluck once more, and he knew the dark presence of Belvedere had settled in the shadows thickening the corners of his room. In his mind the face of the Chief Inspector and that of the man in the lavatory of Great World had already fused into one. So it was that he had wished for the blood of the Chief Inspector, although he had no knowledge of why he wished this. He had just wanted the man to die. He knew these memories were part of him now and would live within him for ever. Something inside him seemed changed, as if he had grown several inches in just those few minutes at Kreta Ayer. Already he felt an old man.
Rose Burns tossed and turned and could not sleep. She stared at the parchment shade of the lamp hanging above her bed. The long electric wire was lost in the darkness of the high vaulted ceiling. Caught by moonlight the shade hovered luminously, disembodied as a ghost. The thunder had become more distant as the storm abated. Now, the low rhythmic boom of bullfrogs and the shrilling of crickets returned again from the garden. The scent of the sea and the faint stench of sardines drying on a faraway beach drifted through the open window. The night seemed full of strange perfumes, unsettling thoughts and the violent residue of the day. The shouts of the mob at Kreta Ayer still echoed in her ears, as did the terror she had felt when the trolley was rocked about. With each crack of thunder she remembered the sound of gunfire spitting through the air. She saw again the Chief Inspector’s sun helmet abandoned in the road, the empty cup a dark and bloodied hole, and knew in sudden terror the fragility of life.
A flash of lightning caught the silver frames of photographs arranged on the chest of drawers, the familiar faces frozen in time like the flies in lumps of amber she had seen once in a museum. Before her Charlie smiled, debonair and handsome, holding Cynthia and Howard as babies. There was fifteen months between the two children and in the photograph Charlie’s head was turned towards the green-eyed Cynthia, as if to disown his dark son.
With his ginger hair and quiet demeanour, the Chief Inspector at Kreta Ayer had reminded her of Charlie. Although as Eurasian as Rose, Charlie wore his fair skin like a badge of honour. For Rose, the sight of her dusky limbs against his pale body had always filled her with humility. Yet suddenly now, the thought of Charlie brought an angry lump to her throat. He had left her stranded in the middle of life to face alone situations as precarious as that at Kreta Ayer. The unexpected heat of these emotions took Rose by surprise. For a time after Charlie died she had felt she was drowning. Although he’d had a good job at the Asiatic Petroleum Company, he had made little provision for his family and she saw now that a great resentment had accumulated within her.
Charlie had not chosen to marry her but had ‘done the right thing’ when she found she was pregnant with Howard. After a dance at the house of a mutual friend in Katong they had gone for a walk on the beach, where he had forced himself upon her. Although, as was right, she had put up a fight, some part of her was flattered by his attentions and had not found the outrage to resist. Turning her thoughts away from Charlie, she thought again of Mr Ho and his laboured breathing. Then lightning illuminated Charlie’s face once more, and behind him the bank of silver frames holding further images of the dead. Just as the Chinese revered their ancestors, finding their future in their past, Rose too felt the same.
Her ancestors carried the names of disparate European cultures: Pereira, Martens, Rodrigues, de Souza, O’Patrick, Thomas, McIntyre, van der Ven. Washed up upon the shores of Malaya these men married local women, and their children then intermarried again and again until a hybrid people was formed. There was Cousin Ella with round owlish glasses who might be mistaken for a plump English matron but for the narrow tilt of her eyes. There was Agnes Martins, wife of Thomas O’Patrick, first generation Eurasian son of a tavern keeper in Penang. Thomas’s dark face had the boning of a European while beside him Agnes, thin as a bird in her European clothes, had features and colouring more Indian than Dutch. Seated in her garden Matriach Thora, stern in a black dress with lace collar was surrounded by six daughters and their husbands. On these faces the patterning of genes shifted even as Rose looked at them. The darkness of hair and eyes, the depth of a feature, the angle of an eye or a cheekbone, each traced a unique heritage. We are a people of shadows, Rose thought looking up into the darkness above her. A further weak flash of lightning revealed the worn paintwork of the ceiling and the damp stains of mould on the walls.
The chance to acquire Belvedere had arisen unexpectedly for Rose soon after Charlie’s death. The place had once been the residence of a British government official but had later been converted into a boarding house. It had never taken flight as an enterprise and was eventually abandoned lying derelict until Rose, looking for accommodation and the means to support her family, was shown it by a house agent full of apologies for its state. With the sale of the house in Upper Serangoon and the little Charlie had left her, she had enough to consider buying it, provided she made careful plans. The house crowned a low rise, and stood in beleaguered dignity like an ageing dowager reluctant to admit infirmity. Whatever its faults and state of decay, the charm of the place overwhelmed her. Rose was taken by its black and white timbered gables and elegant whimsy that seamlessly combined Tudor, Gothic and colonial elements in a graceful symmetry. Built of brick below and whitewashed wood above, the red-roofed house was longer than it was wide. Verandas running along both floors were a distinctive feature but the double portico, originally built to shelter a horse and carriage, appeared like a generous afterthought in an otherwise compact plan. The neglected orchard bore little fruit, and mosquito and snakes had laid claim to the place. The crumbling kitchens were the haunt of vagrants and stray dogs, the tennis court was invisible beneath a waist-high field and the dining room ceiling had partially collapsed; but the price was a bargain and Rose had seen possibilities at once. She also liked its location at the base of Mount Rosie. Long ago, the road had been named after a Rosie de Souza, pretty Eurasian wife of a German, and Rose was drawn to this strange connection. I shall be Rose of Mount Rosie she had told the house agent and, even as she spoke, she knew she was destined to live there. After the purchase she had set about Belvedere’s restoration with enthusiasm.
Although Rose had bought Belvedere two years before she was still surprised to find herself living in this part of town. Bukit Timah was largely an enclave of wealthy Europeans. Only the odd Chinese family, such as her neighbour, the business tycoon Lim Hock An, dared venture beyond Chinatown on the wheels of their new money. In her old home in Upper Serangoon she had been surrounded by other Eurasian families but here there was no sense of community; few people knew their neighbours. Each large house was an island in a sea of manicured lawns, people kept rigidly to their own social stratum and the races never mixed. In Upper Serangoon, a place where everyone knew everyone, locals chatted over garden walls, borrowed flour and sugar from each other and attended church and musical evenings together. If she had not been so busy, first renovating Belvedere and then attending to the young men who were her lodgers, it would all have been unbearable, she thought.
Rose was an orphan and when she married she had hoped Charlie’s family would become her own. This had not happened. The family’s European ancestor was no more than a generation removed and this showed in their fair skin, especially in Charlie who, much to everyone’s delight, could easily pass for a European. The desire of the Burns family to distinguish themselves from other Eurasians and associate with Europeans, even if those Europeans would have little to do with them, proved a stumbling block for Rose. She was not what the Burns family needed. They considered she had trapped handsome Charlie into marriage by the age-old ploy of pregnancy. It was feared his promising career at the Asiatic Petroleum Company would be stunted by the presence of Rose. She had also been born in Malacca of a confusing line of swarthy intermarriage, and could not trace her Portuguese ancestry to any white-skinned individual. At every turn her Asian roots showed through, from a love of salt fish pickle and belachan shrimp paste, to an enjoyment of eating with her fingers. She had no sense at the beginning of her marriage of what was ‘done’ or ‘not done’ in the Burnses’ code of behaviour. Although she worked hard to eradicate her faults, the family never accepted her. In spite of marriage to Rose, Charlie did well at the Asiatic Petroleum Company, but merit had its ceiling for all the local communities and this inevitability had had a profound effect upon him. He grew depressed, and finally suffered a fatal heart attack. Even at the funeral Charlie’s family offered Rose little comfort, already blaming his early demise upon the frustrations of his marriage. His death was an opportunity to cut all contact with her.
Rose was a taciturn woman, often called withdrawn. Full busted, small waisted and ample hipped she had worn, even as a young woman, dresses with high necks and demure collars. It was her sister, Heather, who had been ever anxious to reveal her creamy décolletage and her shapely arms. Rose was the elder of the sisters, watchful and responsible. Their parents’ deaths, one after the other, had placed responsibility upon her early in life. The girls were taken in by a childless aunt and uncle; Rose had been fourteen and Heather eleven. Aunty May and Uncle Reg looked to Rose to keep her young sister in order. Yet, even at that tender age men’s eyes rested on Heather; Uncle Reg was no exception. Whenever Heather sat beside him, his hand sought out her bare knee. Later, Heather learned the full power of her attraction and as a consequence many cruel things had been said about her. Fate extracted its comeuppance when she died after a crude abortion. Rose thought now of Cynthia, of her auburn hair and wide green eyes, so like Heather’s, with a pang of fear. And Howard, once he became a man, would be no less vulnerable to accident through a careless spreading of his seed. Had Charlie not been so moral and God-fearing a man, her own fate might have been no different to that of her sister. Instead Charlie married her and gave her a good home, allowing her to send bits of money to May and Reg, even though he advised it was best not to see them.
Whatever her feelings about the part of town she now lived in, Rose had been surprised at her relief on returning to the area after the events of Kreta Ayer. Bukit Timah Road, shaded by rain trees, with huge epiphyte ferns nesting like plump roosting birds on their branches, was now comfortingly familiar. The calls of cicada and birds filled the lush profusion and a sweet fragrance of blossom pervaded the air. Sometimes, the European residents of nearby bungalows could be seen on a veranda, languid in basket chairs, glasses of refreshment beside them while from tennis courts the soft thud of balls was heard. Rose was even glad to see the turrets of Lim Villa before she turned into Chancery Lane and the approach to Mount Rosie. The back of Lim Villa’s estate adjoined the end of Belvedere’s garden and was the extravagant whim of the enormously wealthy Lim Hock An. Part French château and part Norman castle, Lim Villa could be glimpsed from Belvedere, which was at a higher elevation, across a dividing storm canal behind a fringe of trees.
Lightning no longer flashed and the roll of thunder was gone. Rose turned in her bed to look again in the direction of Charlie in his silver frame. Frozen in time, these photographs were like the flowers she pressed between the pages of books, devoid in the end of the very life she wished to retain. In the dark room the only sound now was the grumbling of Belvedere’s ancient water pipes.