Hotel Quarantine by Yun Peng
In August 2020, I traveled to China because my father was gravely ill. The flight from Honolulu to Beijing normally took eleven hours and cost under $900. But in summer 2020, pandemic travel restrictions made it nearly impossible for someone in the U. S. to find a ticket to China. In June I booked a United flight scheduled to depart in early July. Its continent-hopping itinerary, Honolulu-San Francisco-Frankfurt-Beijing, seemed perversely designed for a great coronavirus mixer. In late June, the crucial Frankfurt-Beijing leg evaporated. I found out about this not through United, but on one of those Chinese websites run by “ticket gurus” dedicated to geeking out the problem. A civilian like me needed people like that--deep in the weeds about rules--to navigate the baroque and ever changing minefield. At the center was the Chinese government's Five One policy (one carrier allowed to fly into one airport via one route on one day of the week). All flights in violation of this policy were invalid, even though on various travel sites you'd still see plenty of these doomed-to-be-cancelled flights being sold. (You'd really wonder how much money was lost, and gained, through these false transactions.) Then airports in various countries had their own rules about who, from where, bearing what kinds of document, could pass through and stay in the airport for how long (a 24-hour layover limit was more manageable than one that required you to depart on the same day, for example). On these websites featuring elaborate charts and beautifully made spreadsheets, reality looked very different from the naive abundance advertised on civilian travel sites: Is the Minsk route still viable? How about Ethiopia? Has anyone tried Cambodia as a workaround for the rule that forbade mainland Chinese citizens to transfer via Hong Kong? By this point of my rapid education I knew key airports by codes. It's also weird to watch your expectation adjust: in June a $2500 round-trip ticket was begrudgingly acceptable; by July, you'd be thankful if you could find a $4000 one-way ticket for just one leg out of three or four. At some point, the fear of being infected receded into the background, and the usual travel worries never had a chance to rise above notice. No international flights were allowed to use Beijing as the port of entry. With the 14-day quarantine rule, any city in China was as good as any other. I made a list of airlines and called them one by one. It's always the same answer: all China-bound flights were sold out till the end of October. Xiamen Airlines was near the bottom of my list. I was surprised when the agent offered a one-way ticket from Amsterdam to Xiamen. It's in August, later than what I’d like. But the only other remotely possible flight departed from Auckland, New Zealand. So this was my itinerary: Honolulu-Seattle-Amsterdam-Xiamen-Beijing.
I had another problem besides the ticket. My passport had expired and my plan to renew it was derailed by the closing of the Consulate due to the pandemic. After two weeks of intense back and force with the Consulate, I was issued a Travel Document. But no airline agents I called could say for sure if they'd accept it as a valid ID.
Because so many things could go wrong, the quarantine hotel appeared in my mind as a shiny goalpost: if I could reach there I'd be home free. Even the anticipated boredom felt welcome. I needed a limbo to compose myself for the next part of the journey.
At the same time: what if I got home too late?
I was also curious. I knew I was an anonymous body passing through a dense web of intertwined technological and bureaucratic power. Each body passing through was like a particle shot into a cloud chamber, revealing invisible forces in the field. I wanted to catch a glimpse of how things worked while being the object of the work.
On Day 6 of the quarantine, my sister called in the evening and told me that my father was rushed to the emergency room. For the next eight hours I waited for her to call back to give me an update. I was so close, yet so far.
Also in this hotel, near the end of the quarantine, one early morning I had a vivid dream about my father. That dream had given me what I needed, what I feared I didn't have, to go on to the journey home.
I left Honolulu on August 3 and arrived at home on August 21. On October 6, exactly two months after I landed in Xiamen, my father died. I am grateful that I got to be there for the last two months of his life. I am also grateful for everyone who watched me along the journey. I felt the gentle propelling wind behind me all the way.
Yun Peng
Yun Peng lives and works in Honolulu, HI, where she teaches Chinese literature and film at University of Hawaii at Manoa
To view more of Yun’s work follow @featherladder.