Roses

Chapter 222,629 wordsCompleted

The chapter opens in a noisy, smelly city where four new children are introduced to a cramped third‑floor mattress room overseen by Uncle En. He treats the newcomers like cats, easing them into the city gradually while constantly monitoring them with a “shiny watch” that supposedly contains an all‑knowing voice. The children must roll up stained mattresses each day, learn to hide money in a bag inside their clothes, and obey strict rules: sell roses to tourists without a permit, avoid police, never go into a hotel or car, and report any abuse. Oryx is given a new name, SuSu, a too‑large dress, and becomes the most prized little seller, while her brother, who despises smiling and selling flowers, is threatened with being sold to a pimp or forced into dangerous messenger work. Older children discuss his grim prospects in graphic detail. One day a man attempts to take SuSu to a hotel; Uncle En instructs her to comply, promising protection. She enters a mauve‑gold room, undresses, and the man exposes himself, prompting a disturbing sexual act. Uncle En bursts in, beats the trembling man, confiscates all his money, and carries SuSu out, mocking the man’s frantic attempts to flee. Outside, Uncle En jokes about marrying her, calls her “little treasure,” lets her “listen” to his watch (though she hears nothing), and reinforces his control. The chapter ends with SuSu’s conflicted emotions—she feels both sorry for the exploited men and empowered by her forced role—while the fate of her brother remains unknown.