An usher led them to the table assigned by their invitation, where they found the eight other diners all still waiting politely for their arrival—two middle-aged Africans wearing somber suits and expressions, two seedy-looking Beijing men in drab Sun Yat-sen, a beautiful oriental woman, two young Chinese runners and their coach. All stood when they approached and shook hands while the woman translated.
The black men were from Tanzania, a coach and trainer. They were somber because their athlete apparently had not managed to fly out of Tanzania for the race tomorrow; they felt obliged to attend the banquet insofar as a place had been reserved, but they were flying out in the morning, too chagrined by their athlete’s absence to attend the race. The seedy pair were from
After the initial
The speeches then commenced to drone from the dais. They saw Mude had a seat very near the podium. He had changed his attire from Western western to Eastern western—a preppy dark-blue blazer with coat-of-arms. He was introduced and stood to speak. The photographer took Bing’s little Panasonic cassette recorder from his shoulder bag. He punched the Record button and set it on the table. It soon became obvious that neither Chinamen nor Roundeyes could understand a word of Mude’s address, and the multitudinous roar of small talk rose again from the tables. Mude didn’t seem to notice.
The American editor began to interview his Chinese magazine colleagues and the coach. The writer took notes. The photographer busied himself with photographing the exotic dishes as they arrived and whispering descriptions of each into the recorder: if this marathon thing didn’t float he might get a cookbook out of it:
Whisper near Mike
: .. . tiny tomatoes pickled and arranged in delicate fan, gingered eel, lotus root in oyster sauce, duck neck, radishes carved to look like roses…Editor
: Whose idea was this race tomorrow?Female voice
: He says it started as a mass movement, the idea. In New China all ideas come from the masses.Editor
: Why don’t they have better times? Ask him that.Female voice
: He says their fastest runner is two hours and thirteen minutes. You will meet him tonight. He is from a minority in Union Province.Editor
: What is a minority?Female voice
: In China there are many! These two boys are called minorities. From some provinces they speak different languages.Young male voice
Whisper
: Boiled eggs, pickled eggs, eggs soaked in tea, and one one-thousand-year-old fossilized egg for each table, like sinister black jelly with a blacker yolk…Editor
: Will you ask if China is ready to devote the time and specialization it takes to become world class?Female voice
: He says, absolutely.Editor
: Was he an athlete himself?Female voice
: When he was twenty he had great hopes of going to the Olympics. That was thirty years ago, a time of great turmoil in China.Whisper
: …beans, peanuts, pickled walnuts, fish stomachs and celeryMale chinese voice
:Female voice
: He says, “To the good health of your country.”All
:Editor
: If one shows athletic talent is he given special dispensation by the government?Female voice
: He says, yes.Bling
: Yes, indeedy!