Chapter 7
It was almost two weeks later that she confided in me.
Things had been going well between us. In fact, my main worry was how I’d manage to keep seeing her during the summer.
And then, at lunch, on a Thursday, she sat down and said, “My father is gone.”
Actually, she sat down and didn’t say anything for a long time. She hadn’t brought lunch. She waved away my sandwich.
I asked what was wrong, and that only made her look more as though she would cry.
Then, finally, she told me.
“What do you mean, gone?” I asked.
I knew her father traveled sometimes—to conferences in Providence, or Vancouver, or Berkeley. He could hardly afford it, but activists in a town would raise enough money to pay his expenses and a bit more, to hear him speak. Sometimes Ti-Anna would go along, helping translate, but often he went on his own. So his being away was nothing unusual.
“He’s disappeared,” Ti-Anna said, almost without expression.
She looked around as if someone might be eavesdropping, but of course there was no one. It was a normal sunny day on the track-and-field bleachers.
I waited for her to explain, and gradually she did, in bits and pieces.
Two weeks earlier, she said, her father had flown, much to her mother’s dismay, to Hong Kong.
This was news to me.
“I know, I know,” she said. “I didn’t tell you. My dad is totally paranoid about the agents keeping tabs on him, and it’s just easier if I can answer honestly when he asks, ‘You haven’t mentioned this to anyone, right?’ And it didn’t seem like such a big deal.”
I nodded. I believed it wasn’t that she didn’t trust me.
“So what was he doing? I thought he wasn’t allowed to go back to China?”
“He’s not,” Ti-Anna answered. “But he thought Hong Kong might be different.”
Hong Kong, I knew, is a gray zone, part of China but with its own government and more freedom. It was a British colony for a hundred years, and when Britain gave it back in 1996, China promised not to impose its Communist system. So far they’ve kept the promise.
“Even so, he wasn’t sure if they’d let him in once he landed.” “So why did he go?”









