There were those at school who smelt of tomato sauce, others of garlic. And of course there was no avoiding the stench of BO after the cross-country run. But Mimi had a curious smell that no one could recognise.
Mimi Lu lived in a two-storey shop that seemed to float on a cloud of strange smells. She was embarrassed enough that her home stank like a compost heap on a hot day, but the odour seeped into everything â her clothes, her pigtails, her skin â and could even be detected on her breath. Her parents forced her to drink all kinds of disgusting brews. The only way to get them down was to hold her nose until the very last swallow.
At school she was called Smelly-Loo. Kids complained if they were asked to share a desk. She never told her mum or dad about the bullying. They wouldnât understand. They might as well have come from Mars.
âRemember, Mimi, you are Chinese. Be proud of it.â The words rattled around inside her brain. They were empty words that didnât belong to her.
How can I be proud? They speak English with a funny accent that makes them sound really dumb. And other kids live in a proper house with grass and a garden. All I have is the footpath out on the street.
Mimi sat at the old laminex table in the kitchen staring at her navy blue school hat. She was remembering what Miss OâDell, her art teacher, had told her that day about
chiaroscuro
â how to paint light and dark. The more she looked at her hat, the more it looked like a mountain range with hills and valleys.
Through the red curtains that separated the shop from the living quarters, Mimi could see her father putting on his clinic coat ready for the first patient.
Ding ding-a-ling.
The shop door opened.
âDr Lu, Iâm in a bit of a hurry. Can you see me now?â came a voice used to giving orders.
Uh oh.
Mimi hid behind her maths book.
âOf course, Miss Sternhop,â replied Mimiâs dad.
Miss Sternhop rapped her walking stick on the concrete floor. She was a solid lady with short, straight brown hair and two massive trunks for legs. The only thin part of her body was her lips. If Miss Sternhop ever collided with a car, it would be the car that suffered the most damage.
She placed her wrist on a small cushion. Dr Lu felt her pulse. Was it weak or strong, stringy or full? He wrote on a pad in Chinese characters.
âSee your tongue please,â said Dr Lu.
Miss Sternhop opened her mouth wide and poked out her tongue. It was purple and thick and swollen at the edges.
She looks like an iguana from the Galápagos Islands.
Mimi stifled a giggle.
On the back wall of the shop stood an antique wooden cabinet, with one hundred box-like drawers. The cabinet once belonged to Mimiâs grandfather in China. He was a herbalist too. Dr Lu didnât know how old it was but he was always finding secrets from other peopleâs lives. Once he found a carved jade bracelet hidden in a secret panel at the back of a drawer. It was so tiny only a child could have worn it. There was a letter too, folded into the shape of a bird and pushed through the centre of the bracelet.
âAiya, family so poor, have to give away precious baby daughter. Before in China many people like this.â Mrs Lu touched her heart.
Mimi wondered what it would be like to live in China.
If I was born there Iâd look like everyone else. Iâd fit right in.
Dr Lu pulled one drawer halfway out and grabbed a handful of dried mistletoe. From other drawers he pulled out slices of fragrant angelica, licorice root and creamy white grains of Jobâs tears. He weighed each herb separately, then divided them evenly into four paper packages.
âThis good for arthritis,â said Dr Lu. âDrink two times every dayâ
âHowâs Mimi doing at school?â asked Miss Sternhop.
Mimi slid down in her chair.
âNot good,â Dr Lu replied, shaking his head. âShe draw too much.â
âThat
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