“Teacher,
you are okay?” Li asks me, creasing his forehead and pointing to
his chest. Poor kid: right in the middle of his tutorial, I've had a
coughing fit. I coughed through part of the first class, my coffee
break, and now Li's tutorial.
“I'm
fine,” I wheeze, a Kleenex pressed to my mouth. “Don't worry—the
doctor says I'm not infectious.” I lapse into another coughing fit.
“I just—cough—have a
tendency—cough, cough—to
cough.”
Li
doesn't understand tendency, so
I have him look this up in the dictionary. This frees up some more
time for me to cough some more.
Li's
expression gets even more serious. “You must be careful! When you
go home, you must rest.”
I
laugh at this. I have another class to teach after this one, plus a
long commute, and when I get home, the housework will be all mine.
“When
I go home, I must do laundry and cook dinner,” I say. “My husband
has a cold too, and his is a lot worse than mine.”
Li's
eyes open wide and he shakes his head. “No, no—you must not
housework!” he says. “That
is very bad for women with cough!”
Much
as I'd like to agree with anything that gets me out of housework, I
have to question this. “Isn't it bad for anybody with a cough?” I
say. “Woman or man?”
He
shakes his head. “Especially bad
for woman.”
This
intrigues me. “Who told you that?”
“My
mother,” Li says, his eyes wide and innocent. “She often cough.”
He does a good impression of somebody with a bad cough and points to
his chest, putting on a pained expression. “So I know that many
kind of work bad for woman with cough.”
Thinking
that Li's mother could well have a serious illness, I pull out the
dictionary again. But after we've gone through asthma, bronchitis,
emphysema, and tuberculosis, Li shakes his head firmly. “No—my
mother just cough, not disease.”
“So
what kind of housework is bad for, um, women with a cough?” I ask.
Li
frowns, considering this. “Clean floor. Also shop—very bad to
carry heavy thing if cough.”
“What
about cooking?”
“Very
bad.” He furrows his brow. “Also wash clothes.”
“Cleaning
the toilet?”
He
blinks. “Yes, that is bad too.”
I'm
really beginning to enjoy this conversation. I enjoy it even more
when Li proudly tells me that he can cook, mop floors, shop for
dinner, and do the laundry, that indeed he has become quite skilled
at all of these in order to save his mother from the pain of chores
that are Unsuitable for a Woman with a Cough. I really want to meet
Li's mother. Li may be a bit naïve, but he's not a dumb kid, not by
any stretch of the imagination. He studies diligently, is capable of
critical thinking, and is almost always the first person in class to
answer some of the harder questions. However his mother has worked
her magic I have no idea, but I take my hat off to her.
“Take
care yourself, teacher,” Li tells me, pushing his chair back and
gathering up his books. “Do not housework! Then your cough stop.”
I
tell him that I will leave the housework for the weekend. “Thank
your mother for me, okay?” I say. “Tell her your teacher says
good job.”
Li
looks puzzled, but he nods.
I
watch thoughtfully as Li exits the classroom, his arms full of books
that I know he is going to study.
I
am seriously considering introducing Li to one of my daughters.
8 comments:
Sounds like a catch, as long as his mom isn't a con woman with her cough. :)
ROFL. Housework also very bad for Woman Who Writes.
Would Li do the housework in the household your DD will set up with him?
Cough-cough...
Charles -- What else could his mom be but a skillful con artist? I'm just amazed she's managed to carry it off so well.
Anne-- Damn right it is!
Mirka -- Going off to teach my daughters the art of coughing right this minute. :)
I suppose a pain in the back might work too... :) Smart mom! That boy will make some woman very happy.
Fantastic story - why did I never think of that?!
That is one smart mom!
This was beautiful!
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