Note: Some of the characters use pidgin English. This is not intended to be offensive just to recreate a dialect that was spoken at the time.
Hong Kong: 1875
"Hey Missee. You no go there, heya."
"I'm just interested, Amah".
I take my ear away from the closed door. I am desperate for some excitement; for a chance to know something more of this strange place where father has made our fortune. But in the six weeks since I have arrived I have been restricted to the walls of this house and its gardens with the occasional visits for tea to and from the neighbours. Father promised I would be taken out to 'suitable places' as soon as the hot and wet summer gave way to the more pleasant autumn but work once again takes him from me. Mother, who accompanied me from England shuts herself up in her room all day writing letters to her friends about how she wishes to return home. Her and father barely speak. She stings him for taking her to this 'alien, heathen land'. He retorts that this heathen land pays for the nice country house overlooking the river Avon, her servants, her parties, her wardrobe and the expensive tutors which have helped make their daughter into the ideal, young, refined English lady.
We hear voices and the door begins to open. Amah gestures frantically to me;
"Missee chop chop".
But it is too late. I want it to be too late.
My father opens the door. This is the first time I have seen Chinese men who were not servants up close and there are two of them. I cannot help but stare. They are both wearing those flat, round hats and dark blue tunics with oversized sleeves and which hang down over the waist. Beneath the tunics are what can only be described as long, white trouser- skirts and what seem like tough blue slippers over white socks. They look alien yet strangely appealing in some way. The older of the two has a thin, whitening moustache and beard while the younger is clean shaven with a slightly ovaline, handsome face. His rich, dark eyes suggest intelligence, depth and a hint of mischief. They also remind me of my loneliness. I guess him to be in his mid twenties. Meanwhile the looks they give suggest they are just as surprised to see me as I am to see them.
"Robyn," my father says sternly. "You should not be here."
He turns to look reproachfully at Amah who smiles an embarrassed apology and bows repeatedly. The older of the two Chinese men tries to look away in a dignified manner as if the whole scene is beneath him but the younger man steals a quick smile at me with his eyes before following his senior in averting his gaze.
At me.
My breath catches in the back of my throat. Immediately I want to know everything about him. For only a second I stare at him as intensely as I can before remembering my lessons on how to be a lady and I avert my own eyes modestly. The atmosphere crackles and my ears swim with the silence. I wonder if he is feeling it too as I try to catch him in the corner of my eye and in so doing I see him not looking at me in exactly the same way that I am not looking at him.
My father clears his throat.
"Thank you for coming today, Ho Tang. I will see you and your son out. Amah, go tell his sedan bearers he is ready. Robyn; your room, now."
I was on my way to my room. But I heard their voices through an open window. Father had decided to see them out through the back entrance for some reason. I see him shake hands with HoTang and acknowledge his son's bow with a curt nod before the two men enter separate sedan chairs. I follow every movement of the younger man as he enters his litter and note the long braided queue trailing down his back. My father gestures them both to close their curtains before four over-lean men; their faces obscured by conical hats heft up their load and carry them down the peak into the island below. From my prison, I stare after them long after they are out of my sight...
************************************
Father enters my room. I am worried what he will say. He is a good man; kind even. But I don't really know him. I was still very young when he went to China to seek his fortune. His visits home were short and infrequent. He would send us letters with fantastic tales of the strange land he was living in and the strange people he was living among. It seemed a world away from the English countryside, from my classes in embroidery, piano playing, ladies deportment, and from our monthly trips to the city of Bath. And now at the age of eighteen I am finally here with him but the adventure still remains tantalisingly out of reach. We live in a nice house half the way up Victoria Peak and just a short walk from the residence of the Governor himself; but my world is limited to this collection of small mansions a top a hill. I can look down and try to make out the markets, the tiny homes which seem to increase in number daily and the fishing villages which populate the island. I can glimpse the Royal Navy ships and the Chinese junks and fishing boats in the waters to the north. And I can discern the growing settlements on the Kowloon peninsular across the strait, and then finally the gateway to the vast Chinese Empire itself; but for all this I might as well still be at a sewing lesson with my governess at home and still dreaming...
"I know I haven't had much time to show you Hong Kong," he begins "but I am sure you understand how busy I have been."
"Yes, father. I was just curious that's all. There is little to do here. Who were those men?"
I am partially curious and partially trying to delay what could be a difficult conversation. He plays along for now.
"That was Ho Tang and his son. He is my comprador."
Seeing my blank look, he continues.
"Each firm in the China trade needs a comprador. They are agents who connect us with the markets here. They purchase things like tea and silk on our behalf and also sell op...they sell things for us too."
"Well, I didn't hear anything. Least of all that kind of talk," I reply.
"Ah, yes. About that. You must know that it is not your place to be snooping about the business of men."
"I wasn't snooping father, I..."
He raises his hand for silence.
"Your mother wrote me about how, how shall I put it, how unconventional you had become. This just cannot do, Robyn. You are at an age when we need to consider your future. A lady eavesdropping on business conversations and who seems likely to risk getting herself into unsupervised situations with men - and Chinese men at that - is hardly going to seem an attractive proposition. Hong Kong is a very small place and if you act like this word will get around."
From the very beginning I had suspected that this is the reason why he really sent for me. It's not an adventure; quite possibly the complete opposite! The vague worries which I'd had about the Governor's ball due to take place tomorrow; it all makes a different kind of sense now. I might have been willing to accept this design for my life before today, but how can I now? After meeting HIM?
"But father please. I cannot marry yet..."
"Why on earth not? You have completed your schooling. I am working day and night I cannot keep you forever. You need not concern yourself. I will ensure a generous portion for your own especial use and also ascertain that your husband can provide for you and, should you wish it, allow you to return to England."