God of Darkness
Chapter 3
Suddenly Jack's head appears
above the crowd as he walks across the entrance to the Ambassador
Hotel. He was all smiles, that was Jack. Next to him was Michael
Garrett who is a couple of inches shorter than Jack. They are talking
and laughing as they weave through the crowded pavement. Jack has
planned this piece of espionage with some care and precision. It
supposedly is a secret mission, and Hurley has sworn an oath of
silence. Not so secret that Michael hasn't been invited along. Hurley
is a little hurt, thinking this was to be a two-man raid party.
The plan seems like a year ago, counting one hundred day years.
"Hope I didn't keep you
waiting, Hurley."
"Just got out of a massage
session when I saw Jack," says Michael.
Jack winks at Hurley. "I
told him we had a business meeting."
"And about the top secret
Thermae project," says Michael.
Jack shrugs. "Michael has
the tools we need, Hurley. I say we cut him in."
Hurley thought, this is how it
starts. You cut in one friend and then another and before you know
it, the entire crowd has a piece of the action.
"If you'd rather not, then
it's okay. I don't want to cause a problem," says Michael.
"In other words, there is
no problem," says Jack. "The universe as we know it on
Sukhumvit Road is in perfect working order."
Hurley smiles and nods. "No
problem, Michael."
Michael looks at the corrugated
metal fence around the demolition site, "I know you and Jack
have a deal. I am not trying to cut in. I want to be a part of history.
Tell you what, your the boss, I go along and in return I owe you
one."
It was always good to have Michael
owing you a favour, or better yet, money. He is one of the best
technical guys in the company, and when there is a really difficult
problem to fix, Hurley needs Michael's good will to get the job
done. A public school boy who gets his hands dirty fixing cell sites
scattered over the city, across the country, transmitting signals
from one mobile phone to another. He hears rumours now and again
that Michael moonlights, milking other cash cows in the city. Nothing
substantial is ever confirmed but Hurley figures that sooner or
later he will figure out what Michael is up to. They are the same
age: Hurley and Michael. And have the same ambition-to stay free
of the spokes of the wheel that beat up the employees in the company.
To stay employed.
"No problem," says
Hurley. "Let's go."
"Let's get down to some
work," says Jack, squeezing between two of the vendor's tables
and pulled back a make-shift piece of corrugated metal from the
entrance to the old Thermae.
One of the vendors begins to
protest. "Closed. Cannot go inside."
"Health inspector,"
says Jack in Thai. "Government inspection. Stand aside."
The vendor's smile reveals black
gums as he steps aside.
Hurley and Michael go into the
compound a couple of steps behind Jack who leads with military precision.
Pseudo-Greek columns are on the sides of the doorway and the sign
overhead remains intact. From the upper floors is the sound of sledgehammers
smashing against concrete and falling debris. At the current rate
of destruction, nothing much will be left standing in another couple
of days. At the far end is a makeshift campsite for the workers;
three corrugated shacks built against the wall. On the cracked pavement
snot nosed children in rags play in the debris-having no idea that
it is Christmas Day. Cooking pots steamed over open fires. This
could be a in a refugee camp within shelling distance of some dusty
hamlet in some forgotten border war. Like migrant workers, these
Isan workers work where they sleep and rear their children in shelters
no one would think of housing war criminals. A couple of worn down
women who are twenty going onto fifty shift around the children,
through the grounds, dust in their hair. One looks after the kids,
the other is stooping forward to lift the lid of one pot and stirs
the rice. One of the kids-a two year old boy with no pants-throws
pieces of wood on the open fire. In the family tradition of peasants,
he's working before he can talk.
Shadows fall over the Old Thermae,
and visibility is further cut in half by an asteroid like belt of
grey dust that circulates in clouds eye level above the site. Hurley
moves forward into the private domain and finds himself in the orbit
of poverty, work, hardship and the smell of rice cooking. In the
driveway which leads to the shacks, Hurley and Jack halt their advance
alongside a flatbed truck. Michael kicks one of the balding tires.
All the fenders were dented.
"You wouldn't want to get
in front of this one when the tire blows," Michael says.
"The driver looks a little
overheated," says Jack.
The driver's door is open and
a small man squats in the shade a few feet away, beads of sweat
forming on his face, dripping off his lip. He is listening to a
Thai love song on a radio. Even the poor fall in love. The flatbed
is heaped with broken shards of concrete, iron rods twisting out
of the broken pieces, and next to the truck, all in a neat row,
are eight of the booths from the Old Thermae waiting for the end
like condemned prisoners. Jack steps forward and touches one of
the booths. Michael kneels down on one knee and looks for the initials
he carved into one of the benches years ago.
And Hurley, he leans against
the truck thinking that this is how it ends...always. With no one
around to mourn or even remember the lost generations of women whose
warm, moist thighs, naked legs and silky, soft underwear sat on
those booths; the hopes, dreams and bodily fluids had all dried
away, vanishing without a trace. The booths were the place of judgment;
the place where the judges selected from a large jury panel and
passed on a cash verdict. A film of white powdery dust covers the
black Naugahyde; dust to dust, ashes to ashes, the workers like
pallbearers lift one of the ghostly objects and heave it into the
back of the truck. Pallbearers from hell would have been more gentle.
Jack looks at Hurley and Michael with sad, brooding eyes.
"You see that? History is
being thrown on the junk heap."
"History will provide another
ass and another seat," says Michael.
"We better get moving,"
said Jack.
For Hurley the site is another
kind of abandonment, another way that people depart without ever
saying goodbye.
"Did I tell you my old man
came in from England today?" asks Michael. He's found his initials
on one of the benches and feels particularly pleased that he was
invited to go along.
"My dad has a heart condition.
He was here once. But he can't travel now," says Hurley. "Doctor's
orders."
"Bummer," says Jack,
turning one of the booths over onto the side.
The booths are what Jack had
come for. Standing on the flatbed a workman, smoking a cigarette,
eyes the three men. He stops working, hands loose at his side, staring
at the farang. His face is ash gray, and the red ember at the end
of the cigarette glows an evil color as he inhales.
"Where's your boss?"
Jack yells, cupping his hands and shouting in Thai, hoping to be
heard above all the crashing, thumping, and pounding noises in the
compound.
Michael has a laser pen red light,
sneaks it out of his trousers and draws a ribbons of red light across
the debris, up the worker's pant leg and ending like one of those
India sub-continent red dots of the Hindu right between his eyes.
The worker inside the flatbed
shrugs as if he does not understand Jack, and turns around, swatting
at the light as if he is being attacked by a mosquito or a hungry
ghost awakened from the kitchen of the Old Thermae. Hurley moves
around the side of the truck and bumps into another workman pissing
against the side of the wall. He excuses himself, waits until the
worker finishes, pulls his wet equipment back inside his trousers
just as Michael's red beam illuminates the wall a few inches from
his face. The worker jumps, screaming, as if bitten in the balls
by a snake. He whips around, his head looking up and down and from
side to side, his face frightened.
"Pee," says Michael.
The Thai word for ghost sound like the child's word in English for
taking a leak, taking a piss, for eliminating water.
"My friend wants the skin
from the black chairs," is the rough translation from Hurley's
Thai into English.
"What for?" asked the
worker who has been pissing against the side of the wall. He's even
more terrified now that these three farangs are here to skin the
old booths. A bad omen. It's a MacBeth opening and the witches hunger
for hide.
"To make telephone covers,"
says Jack, replying honestly.
"We have money," says
Michael. "At least I don't think I spent it all at the massage
parlor. Normally, the old man takes care of that kind of thing."
"It's for an offering to
Rahu," says Hurley. Rahu is the Hindu God of Darkness. Khun
Maa's favourite deity, who is worshipped by offerings of eight black
eggs, eight black children, eight black chickens. Why not eight
black Naugahyde strips from the Old Thermae? thinks Hurley.
"Rahu," repeats the
workman.
Jack flashes Hurley an admiring
"You got him" kind of grin.
The workman smiles, the
kind of local smile that Thais sometimes break into when they have
some confirmation that the farangs in their midst are hysterically
eccentric creatures willing to spend money on things that no one
would ever guess had any value. In this case, for a Hindu god. The
workman looks worried, turning around to stare at the wall quickly
to see if that red light had reappeared. It has not. Is this a trick?
Is this good fortune? Who are these three strange men coming into
this life, speaking of gods and bringing mysterious red lights?
His face softens as he decides the farang are an omen of good fortune.
Whatever that red light source was, these strangers are being delivered
for a payday; the workman feels this deep in his bones.
Heaven Lake
Press (1999), 2nd ed., 318 pp.
 
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