Changelings
BY ETHAN SONG '24
We were both catching frogs to eat in the field. Chicken or pig was birthday only. I saw him squatting in a rice paddy roasting baby frogs over a small gas burner and I approached, cautiously, because I had never seen someone my age before. With how grown the world was I didn’t think there was many of us. He waved me over.
WANT ONE????
SHHHHHH.
We aren’t supposed to be here.
This field is Fung’s.
My dad says he’s the meanest landlord in China.
Oh, I didn’t know.
Isn’t this thing cool?
I traded with the mechanic for five cigarettes.
Want one?
I hesitated before declining. He shrugged his bony shoulders and lit a cigarette on the sputtering fire. The cigarettes were stolen from his dad who had them locked away under the bed. I could tell stealing was something he did very often. He didn’t have as many teeth as I did and his left arm bent funny and his speech slurred in a way that made it easy to mince words. He asked if I had ever been caught stealing and I told him no, because I never needed to.
He didn’t say much after that. In consolation I gave him a lighter rusting away in the river Yong. His fingers stiffened awkwardly as he wrapped the lighter in his palm, like a crane dipping its head beneath the water. Streaks of gray dirt traced slits under his fingernails.
He smiled a little. I do too. His teeth are rust like the river Yong.