“Sir?”
Hearing no response, the girl tried again.
“Mister Ch’in!”
“What?”
Three days had passed since that night and the two did not make any contact. Ch’in Ching went on with his daily routine – eating, sleeping and teaching – but from time to time, that man would pervade his thoughts. For instance, the chime had just struck and his mind wandered again as he tidied his materials. He thought back to a day not long ago, the same day of the week, the same class. He had reached the last section of Former Red Cliff Rhapsody when he saw the man outside his window…
“Sir… There’s something I wanted to ask you.” Ch’in Ching turned his attention back to the girl slouching against the podium with a paper in hand. She continued hesitantly, “You didn’t write this comment, did you?”
“Which?” Ch’in Ching had gone home and straight to sleep that night with a disconcerted mind. The lesson was first thing the following day, and he handed back the papers that Shen Liangsheng had graded without checking them over. It was only a quiz that would not be counted towards the final grade, so he thought it wouldn’t matter even if it was wrong.
“This one here.”
The girl raised the paper up to eye level. Ch’in Ching was quite amused when he had read its contents. It turned out that the girl had not paid attention in class and did not know the answer to three-quarters of the questions. Feeling embarrassed of herself, she tried to appeal with a comment at the end of the examination:
“I’m sorry, Mister Ch’in. I promise I will listen to your lectures and review properly. This will never happen again.”
Shen Liangsheng’s feedback was interesting as well, responding to her message in English:
“Time and tide wait for no man.”
The words were short and to the point, and the cursive letters flowed neatly like its author.
“Why? Do you think this is a false accusation?” Ch’in Ching could not say that he was not the one who marked it so he chose not to answer the original question.
“I just knew it wasn’t you.” The girl had no fear of her teacher, even dropping honorifics. She giggled, “If it were you, you’d probably say something like ‘The sun and moon passes by; time doth not wait for us.’ You wouldn’t write English.”
“Congratulations on your brilliant observation. Since you understand that, you should put more effort into your study and stop fooling around.”
“You’re changing the subject, sir.” The girl had not given up on her original intention for gossip. “Who wrote this? Was it a friend?”
As expected, she received nothing but silence from her teacher.
“Was it the one who came to the school looking for you last time? The really handsome one?”
“Why are you asking me this?”
“Then it’s true!” The girl slapped the table with glee. “I had better keep this safe so my children can have it as heirloom!”
A kid was going to be a kid. Ch’in Ching shook his head with a smirk while she skipped back to her desk and packed her things. He stepped out of the classroom with his documents under his arm and into the dazzling autumn sun. This time, however, there was no one waiting for him. He didn’t want to admit, nor think about the sudden disappointment that he felt. Instead he fled for the staff room.
Some chit-chat with his colleagues seemed to help him get a hold on himself. When he had just strolled out the school gate, however, he stopped dead in his tracks and backed away. He recognized the car parked across the road. He knew the man behind the wheels, too.
He had just been absentminded thinking of this man but when said man actually showed up, he could only think of escaping. He turned tails and left through the back entrance. As he walked he asked himself: if he has those intentions and you want none of it, then you should tell him exactly that and never see each other again. Why the heck are you hiding?
Ch’in Ching thought, because he had only appeared for a second and the students had just been dismissed, that Shen Liangsheng couldn’t have possibly spotted him amongst the crowd from his car. The truth, however, was the exact opposite.
Shen Liangsheng had been smoking in the car. His eyes were half-lidded from the fumes, hiding his emotions. He chose not to go in looking for Ch’in Ching to give the teacher some room, and so he can see what his reaction after seeing him would be.
That Ch’in Ching would take the back door did not catch Shen Liangsheng off guard but he did not chase after him either. The man was running away from him – when he reached this conclusion, the malevolence inside him began to itch.
Shen Liangsheng had always been the one who had the upper hand in the arena of love. Even when he had neither money nor power, the women gave him their complete loyalty and he was the one who could end the relationship when he wanted to do so.
Although he had no serious feelings towards Ch’in Ching and his actions were far from decent, Shen Liangsheng didn’t feel guilty at all. Rather, he believed that Ch’in Ching was thinking too highly of himself, rejecting his pursuit.
You can run but you can’t hide.
Shen Liangsheng patiently finished the cigarette and squashed the butt in the ashtray.
I promise you, Ch’in Ching, that you will one day come begging for me.
That day, Ch’in Ching ate a quick dinner after returning home. He sat at the desk, trying to prepare for the next day’s lessons, but his mind would not let him. First, he wondered for how long the man continued to wait at the school. Then, he thought maybe he should have been straightforward with him so he wouldn’t waste any more time.
His hands kept busy, too, while his mind was whirling. He flipped through his book and stopped once again at Former Red Cliff Rhapsody. He stared at the classic that he could recite off the top of his head and thought of the time does not wait that Shen Liangsheng had written. He let out a sigh.
It was such an insignificant thing but Ch’in Ching remembered it so vividly. He had been analysing the line “but only the clear breeze over the river and the bright moon between the mountains, when the ears catch one it creates sound, and when the eye meets the other it makes colour” when he saw the man. He turned his head and there the man was, standing outside the window, so charming that he outshone even the sun.
Now that he thought about it, he found that he had been hiding from this man, not only today, but ever since the beginning.
Perhaps humans had an instinct to approach good and avoid harm. He had a feeling that this person should not be tempted and now this prophecy seemed to have been fulfilled – or maybe it had not been.
What had been fulfilled were the man’s particular intentions – but there was nothing the man could do to Ch’in Ching if he simply told him his thoughts. This wasn’t a peaceful era but the law was still the law.
What had not been fulfilled were his own intentions of which he himself was wary – there was no way that the man could have gotten as far as he did that night if Ch’in Ching had been strongly against it. He could put the blame on alcohol but he would be outright lying to himself if he did.
Ch’in Ching had not turned on the main lights in order to save electricity. There was only a desktop lamp projecting dim yellow light over a square writing desk. Sprawled across the desk were principles of right and wrong that only took the form of Mara in the eyes of Ch’in Ching.
All he could think of were the words “when the eye meets the other it makes colour.” Ch’in Ching let his eyes close and his torso fall on the table. His cheek against the desk, he began to reminisce about the man’s face.
Staring into his eyes was like looking into the deep end of the ocean, cold and calm. Under his Grecian nose were thin, loveless lips from which sultry words as searing as his breath and fingers were uttered.
Ch’in Ching’s breathing hastened and he knew he was aroused. After failing to ignore it, he reached down and copied the way the man had stroked him. The more he did, the harder he became and the tighter his pants felt. He felt constrained like his feelings inside.
He did know that a man could love another man but if he were one of them, then the twenty-four years that he had spent thinking otherwise would have been a lie. He had attractive friends and colleagues but he had never felt anything or thought of them in that way.
Not even women made his heart beat, let alone men. When he was in school, a good friend often dragged Ch’in Ching along to drink away his sorrows from being rejected by his crush. His friend would envy how Ch’in Ching could put his mind to study without any stray thoughts or desires.
Ch’in Ching had no clue either as to why he simply had no feelings for anyone all these years. It was as though he had loved so much in his last life that he either used up his love for this life or came to fear love and refuse falling in love ever again.
Ch’in Ching knew reincarnation as an explanation was a big stretch, but ever since he had met Shen Liangsheng, his heart had been falling for the man, slowly and steadily as if preordained, despite their few encounters. Honestly, he had enjoyed the hinted conversations and suggestive dates until that night when they had stepped over the line. He had not been against it and even for a moment, had the urge to turn around and embrace the man, abandoning all of society’s taboos.
Meanwhile, his erection grew too hard to bear. He unbuttoned the fly of his dress pants and reached in to alleviate the fire in his groin. As he copied the man’s actions that night, he could almost hear his voice.
“Do you feel good? Want to feel even better?”
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