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An excerpt from J.G. Ballard's Empire of the Sun
HE ALWAYS looked forward to the evening drives through the
centre of Shanghai, this electric and lurid city, more exciting than any other in
the world. As they reached the Bubbling Well Road he pressed his face to
the windshield and gazed at the pavements lined with night-clubs and
gambling dens, crowded with bar-girls and gangsters and rich beggars with
their bodyguards. Crowds of gamblers pushed their way into the jai alai
stadiums, blocking the traffic in the Bubbling Well Road. An armoured
police van with two Thompson guns mounted in a steel turret above the
driver swung in front of the Packard and cleared the pavement. A party of
young Chinese women in sequinned dresses tripped over a child's coffin
decked with paper flowers. Arms linked together, they lurched against the radiator grille of the
Packard and swayed past Jim's window, slapping the windshield with their small hands and
screaming obscenities. Nearby, along the windows of the Sun Sun department store in the
Nanking Road, a party of young European jews
were fighting in and out of the strolling crowds
with a gang of older German boys in the swastika
armbands of the Graf Zeppelin Club. Chased by
the police sirens, they ran through the entrance of
the Cathay Theatre, the world's largest cinema,
where a crowd of Chinese shopgirls and typists, beggars and pickpockets
spilled in the street to watch people arriving for the evening performance.
As they stepped from their limousines the women steered their long skirts
through the honour guard of fifty hunchbacks in mediaeval costume. Three
months earlier, when his parents had taken Jim to the premiere of The
Hunchback of Notre Dame, there had been two hundred hunchbacks,
recruited by the management of the theatre from every back alley in
Shanghai. As always, the spectacle outside the theatre for exceeded
anything shown on its screen.
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