Sunday, August 10, 2014
Thursday, April 3, 2014
The Old House on Bay Avenue
THE OLD HOUSE ON BAY AVENUE
THE OLD HOUSE ON BAY AVENUE
I slept in the anteroom because the bed was there and early in the morning while still in bed the freight train would rattle by just across the dirt fields, cycloned by blackberry brambles. When the roar of the engines died, I would gradually hear robins or sparrows chirping and singing. Those days I was 21 and 22 and I didn’t need coffee or strong tea to wake up yet and I would linger in bed relishing the morning deliciously because my strength was still in my brain and my eyes and limbs were good and young though my loins were still virgin and it was to be another 3 years before I have my first sexual experience with an older married woman from Aberdeen.
For now group and ring theory filled my head and no one has licked the Pacific Rim of my cock yet. I had many women and girl friends and I mean just Platonic friends because I made friends easily and I was not a threat to them; I did not demand sex, though a few would really want to initiate me. I was that shy. I remember Reed who taught me how to kiss in my car before I went down to Eugene to attend the University of Oregon and maybe the trouble was that it had started with Eileen. I will talk about that in a little bit. That was my first frost in the telephone booth, but in retrospect, I still love her, because she came back to me twenty years later and made it up to me.
Well, let me continue with the story on Bay Avenue then.
More than anything it was a time of reading. In the summer I worked for Kerns Desoto furniture factory, a mill just a few blocks down in Hoquiam. There was not much to say about that. It was just a summer job and all they demanded was that I didn’t eat in the lunch room because there were a couple of girls worked there in the wood lathes and they liked me or I mean they probably just looked at me and found me a Chinese curio, and so the red necks gave me these mean stares. The tension was so thick that I went outside and leaned about the building with its weeds and wild flowers and all to eat my sandwich and apple by myself. Nobody spoke to me and I didn’t give a shit. I paid my union dues and they needed some robot to sort the wood as it came out of the saw. I discarded the pieces with the worm holes and stacked the good pieces on a pallet eight hours a day. And when I went home I took a short nap with the sawdust still in my lungs and then my brain was so clear that I read Herstein’s Introduction to Abstract Algebra like it was nobody’s business. How I loved that mathematical realm then.
On Saturday mornings I would drive to the Highway Grocery early in the morning and get a bottle of Mogen David blackberry wine and a yellow pad of legal paper and tried to write something. That summer when I was twenty-two I bought a Writer’s Market and daydreamed that someday I will be a writer. But all I need essentially was to drink enough blackberry wine so that I felt mellow enough so that went the emerald light flooded through the bedroom window (I had moved into the back bedroom by then; it was a two-bedroom house), the unnamed tree in the backyard with its foliage and closure silhouetted itself upon the window I was transported to leagues under the sea. The world was dense and its mysteries began to beckon to me. I had also studied philosophy with John Wisdom by this time. But I didn’t know how to write worth beans. But at least in a small town, I was not anomic. I was the son of Bill and Kim Woon, restaurant owners of the Hong Kong Café on Simpson Avenue. Everyone called them Mamason andPapason. But they were neither. They are as Chinese as Chinese can be, for those who know the difference between Chinese and Japanese. I was the Hong Kong Kid, as known to Dixie Wilcox’ parents. Dixie and I were secretly in love, but neither one of us made any attempt to make it happen in the real world. Later when I worked for the Aberdeen Post Office, I could have asked Dixie out for a date, but I was like a sojourner in a temporary land. I never felt I belonged. The freight train was always going by and it never stops and I sometimes fancy that hoboes were on it wishing they could get off and I wished that I was on it – with destination Bangor Maine.
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Jose in Our Restaurant Kitchen
Jose in our kitchen
It isn’t
kind to call your older brother Jose. It is definitely lack of respect. Yet
that was what my mother called my oldest uncle, her brother. Jose had the misfortune
of being stuck in Peru for 40 years before my dad sponsored him over. I never
forget going to see Mr. Sanderson, the attorney who also arranged for my
immigration to the US. I came from China at age 11. I had to memorize a bunch
of “facts” about “my village” and which direction my front door faced and who
was my closest neighbor in the village and what were the surnames. That was a
trick question, for everyone in the same village had the same surname. China is
a patriarchal setup. And I was even born the leader of my village of my
generation. Tough luck, Gary Locke, you are not it.
The first
time I saw my eldest uncle Jose I was living at Albert Yu’s rooming house. Hank
had driven my book to pick up Jose at the airport and then they brought Jose to
see me. I am the oldest of all my siblings. The duty to help Jose adjust to
American life fell on me. That’s the way it works. My mother had a grimace the
whole time we were together with Jose at the Tai Tung Restaurant in Seattle
Chinatown. Hank had dropped us off at the café while he went to purchase
Chinese restaurant food stuff for our café in Aberdeen, and so he did not have
dinner with Jose and my mom and me. My mom arranged that private meeting. Jose
had two wives. A legal but an unfaithful one in Hong Kong and a non-legal one
and also later proved to be unfaithful and she was in Lima, Peru. Later I was
to learn her name to be Carmen.
Jose was a storyteller and
a good gossip. He read the Chinese newspaper from cover to cover and had
brought with him a set of cookbooks from Peru. He had worked in large chifas
that catered to Japanese in Peru. They were good businessmen, but Jose said
that they always designed the toilets next to the kitchen of the chifas. Chifas
is a Spanish word for “cooking rice.” It is a transliteration. Jose said if he
weren’t number one cook he certainly was number two. Later we got to know that
Jose is a good storyteller. All his life he missed his fortune or luck by a
nanosecond or a micrometer. It is bad to be born in the year of the goat. Seems
like everyone is getting the better of you.
(More later…).
Jose in our
kitchen (part 2)
Whenever
Jose works in the kitchen, he leaves a trail of vegetables and water on the
floor. My father always say of Jose, he is not a man of planning or vision,
when he dies, he will just drop dead somewhere and others will have to take
care of his body. My father is not very charitable. He has known very little of
charity his life. Jose goes home to his apartment that we own at two in the
morning when we close the restaurant. My dad and I stay to clean up and to have
our wee morning meal together. That’s the only time my dad tells me of his
oppression and humiliation.
He
was interned at Angel Island and he was interrogated there. His immigration would
in some sense be deemed criminal, but that is because the criminals were making
the laws. Suffices now to say that if he was a criminal, he was in crime for
other reasons, not because of the circumstances of his immigration. Because our
name was changed to Woon, I am a paper son. But the crime was that my
great-grandfather had already come as an indentured servant in the town of
Hoquiam in 1880 and his son was in all likelihood murdered. We never found the
body or the reason he was missing. So my father had to purchased an immigration
paper – somebody else’s and for those who don’t know this story and others,
Google “paper son.” And/ or the Chinese Exclusion Act. No, it was not drama. It
was how an entire nation was banned from entry to the USA.
My
father seldom ate vegetables. His big meal of the day, and the only time he
could eat it too, was when we sat together in the wee morn and the freight
trains would blow their lonely whistles a few blocks away. His grandfather came
when the rails were young and he did laundry and cooked for the loggers. North
of Hoquiam, in Humptulips, you can go into the woods and find abandoned rails
tracks, when over a century ago, these tracks transported lumber out of the
woods. My great-grandmother was in China. They were separated by the Pacific
Ocean and by American immigration laws. My great-grandfather had a solitary
teapot in the backroom of his laundry shop and
he had a solitary teacup.
My
great-grandfather’s name was Locke Li, meaning a man from the Locke villages
and possess of great strength. He acted as a labor contractor and the mayor of
Hoquiam went with him to his village to conscript 500 men for the logging industry.
One of the men that came over from China was Gary Locke’s grandfather.
My
father used to say to me in the lonely hours of the café at night, “I used to
think that we can be president in one generation, but now I know it takes three
generations to grow a president. He didn’t like Gary Locke very much because my
father despised Beijing. And Gary Locke went to Beijing to be the US
Ambassador. My father and I are peasants. We distrust officials. If you come in
to our restaurant through our front door and you are a relative, we then know
that you have forgotten the old ways. Relatives and close friends come through
the back door. That way, any secret business is unobserved.
(End
of part 2, to be continued…)
Sunday, March 30, 2014
You Are Not Albert Yu
You are not Albert Yu
You are not
Albert Yu. I used to know a Albert Yu. I lived in his rooming house. He had
been a pharmaceutical sales rep before he became a student slum lord. I did odd
jobs for him in lieu of some rent money. He had two huge dogs called
"Happy" and "Lucky." He asked me if my father gambled. He said
that he and his father in Hong Kong were not on speaking terms because he
bought an expensive suitcase and his father criticized him for it. He said he needed
that one with the lock.
He took me to a whore house on Capital Hill. He didn't carry
any money with him and he borrowed some from me. I supposed he was afraid that
he would blow his wad in a place like that. The cops sounded the siren in the
alley and the madam said that's how they make sure that they'd be paid off. She
said the "girls" were actually nurses "moonlighting."
That was my first time. Zsa Zsa treated me well. That's was after the madam had given me some orange orange juice and a "marriage manual" to read. I think the gist of it was "in, out, repeat if necessary juice and a "marriage manual" to read. I think the gist of it was "in, out, repeat if necessary."
That was my first time. Zsa Zsa treated me well. That's was after the madam had given me some orange orange juice and a "marriage manual" to read. I think the gist of it was "in, out, repeat if necessary juice and a "marriage manual" to read. I think the gist of it was "in, out, repeat if necessary."
That was my first
time. Zsa Zsa treated me well. That's was after the madam had given me some."
Years
later, another former student tenant named Bruce who drove a metro bus at the
time saw me at the HUB. I was mentally ill and homeless and I carried and
played a guitar. Bruce asked me if I knew what had happened to Albert. I said
no. Bruce told me that Albert had blew his brains out.
I thought Albert was happy. He married a beautiful woman from Honan, China and had driven me to his house to talk one time. He said that Herfy's in the U-District was full of "too many ears." I was paranoid. I said I was being followed. A helicopter buzzed above. He laughed and said, "You are being followed!"
When Bruce told me that he had blew his brains out. I said, "Correction. The CIA got him."
I thought Albert was happy. He married a beautiful woman from Honan, China and had driven me to his house to talk one time. He said that Herfy's in the U-District was full of "too many ears." I was paranoid. I said I was being followed. A helicopter buzzed above. He laughed and said, "You are being followed!"
When Bruce told me that he had blew his brains out. I said, "Correction. The CIA got him."
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