Pixieland Jazz

Chapter 233,539 wordsCompleted

Uncle En is reported to have sold his flower business to a tall, thin, pock‑marked man who later claims Uncle En was found dead in a city canal, throat‑cut, naked and without money or a watch. The exact cause of his death remains ambiguous. Oryx recounts that after this incident she was sold to a man who made movies. She and three or four other girls were taken to a large, walled house with broken glass and barbed wire, where they were kept in a storeroom‑like room near the kitchen, fed better food (including chicken), and forced to stay silent under the watch of dogs.

The girls were later loaded into a truck marked with red lettering and a red‑parrot logo. The cramped, hot journey ended at another location where a different man received them. Oryx cannot remember the exact wording on the truck, only the image of the red parrot. Jimmy becomes fixated on this clue, searching the Internet for a “red parrot” brand, finding a cork‑nut‑parrot named Alex, but it does not match the colour, leaving the mystery unsolved.

The building where the movies are produced is called “Pixieland” by the white cameraman, Jack. Jack is described as a large, rope‑haired man who eats meat, dislikes fish and rice, and nostalgically speaks of “big, better movies.” He frequently uses crude language, jokes, and sings “Pixieland jazz” for the children.

Life on set requires the girls to stay “pure”: they bathe with buckets, receive occasional toke or beer, but no hard drugs. They watch cartoons, braid each other’s hair, and sometimes observe adult actors filming. Although smoking is officially prohibited, Jack sometimes gives them cigarettes. Jack teaches them that “everything has a price” and that they must obey every direction—smile, cry, perform—or suffer the director’s wrath. He claims he survived disease only because he drank heavily and warns the children not to become like him.

Jack also teaches Oryx to read English using a children’s book about a girl with long braids and stockings. Oryx calls this exchange a “trade” that enables her to speak with Jimmy now. She admits that the “movies” involved sexual exploitation, but frames it as acting. When Jimmy asks directly if she was raped, Oryx deflects, saying all sex is “real,” leaving the question ambiguous.

Throughout the dialogue, Oryx repeats that “everything has a price,” yet also admits that love and time cannot be bought. Jimmy repeatedly challenges her narratives, accusing her of sweetness and denial, while Oryx shifts between tender, detached, and angry tones, reflecting her trauma and attempts to protect Jimmy from the harshness of her past. Unresolved motifs include the red‑parrot logo, the identity of the tall thin man who took over Uncle En’s business, and the full extent of the movies’ exploitation.