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The next morning, the Scientist asked Noble if she’d been stagnant in Hong Kong all this time or whether she’d used her robot brain and come up with any practical left-wing theories.
‘My slow robot brain?’
‘Or non-practical left-wing ideas. Anarchist ideas. Anything new would be welcome.’
‘Should we have breakfast first?’
‘Or are you also in the grip of the fake left?’
Noble got up and put on her Death to Servalan t-shirt. ‘There’s a yum cha place across the street. It’s full of right-wing elderly people, but you won’t mind as you won’t understand what they’re saying.’
‘You have been following the world, haven’t you?’
‘Is that a no to yum cha?’
‘You haven’t checked out…’
‘No?’
‘Fine, eat first. But you can’t dodge forever.’
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At the yum cha restaurant, Noble tried to order, but didn’t understand what the waitress said back to her. When she couldn’t catch it a second time, she just nodded and said, no need.
The waitress looked at her like she was a physics textbook and walked off.
‘Do they not understand English?’
‘Not here.’
‘Must be tough.’
‘It’s my fault, not theirs.’ Noble started washing the bowls and chopsticks. ‘What’s this fake left you keep trying to group me with?’
The Scientist took the lid off the teapot, peered inside then put it back on.
‘It’s a kind of tea.’
‘Oh.’
‘Not poison.’
The Cuban smiled then leaned back in her chair and talked for thirteen minutes straight about the fake left, referencing terms and phrases Noble had never heard of, explaining the myth of Janus, mentioning wealth and class struggle before leaning forward and trying to sum it all up in one line: ‘Basically, it’s a bunch of rich people heading off change by asking for change.’
‘I’m not sure that makes sense.’
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