Authors: Mike Stoner
âWell, you shouldn't go spreading that stuff about. It's not nice.' I wink at him and giggle some more.
He looks undecided for a minute and takes another half-step forward. I'm waiting for someone to talk some sense to me, but Old Me seems to be sleeping and Laura has decided to stay deceased for this one. The others must be happy to sit back and watch New Me be some sort of witty hard-man TV hero. Oh, the irony: when you stop caring about yourself you become brave.
Never mind that the others won't help. I'm an Action Man, all fuzzy hair and scars and real gripping hands, with no brain.
Ben's arm goes back and his fist is balled. I start moving my arm up but it doesn't want to move very fast. His fist is coming at me in a wide swing and I realise I should probably get out of the way, but nothing happens. My batteries must be on low. So I wait and my eyes close themselves. And I wait and I wait. I can't be that stoned. Time doesn't go that bendy, does it? Lightning flashes all pink through my closed eyelids. Thunder rumbles all around, shaking the wooden floor.
âNot here in my bar.'
I open my eyes to see who, what and why. The barman has his arm hooked over Ben's, holding it back. Ben is struggling to push him off, but the Indonesian is strong. His face is calm.
âNot in my bar.'
There is another long-haired Indonesian guy standing behind the first. He looks as if he is doing nothing more than waiting for a bus.
âOK. OK. Just let go.' Ben yanks his freed arm back. âBut this one here is fuckin' dead next time I see him.' He nods his head at me as he says this. My giggling has diminished into a smile. My eyes are jittering again and Ben is slightly out of focus.
âPlease pay your bill and leave,' says the barman to Ben.
âI ain't payin'. Not if you're kicking me out. You should kick him out too.' His finger points at me. âHe started it.' The excuse of a small child. Ben's turned into a small child.
âNo. You pay. You leave.' The barman turns and nods at me. âThis man helped Indah. She is my cousin.'
âWell, I ain't payin'.'
The barman steps between the two of us and faces Ben.
âYou pay your bill, please.'
âNo.' He steps back. âI might come back here tonight and burn this fucking shithole.'
âPay your bill, please.' Calm in the storm as lightning explodes over our heads.
âFuck you.' Ben's arm is pulled back again and then swinging in its wide arc. The Indonesian doesn't move his feet, just leans back. The punch passes within an inch of his nose. He hasn't even blinked. Ben still stands there, rebalancing his feet after a slight stumble at the punch attempt.
âPeople like you disappear around here,' the barman says calmly.
âRight. And places burn down.'
âPeople like you really disappear. One moment here, next day no sign.' They look at each other in silence for a second. âGone.' All the bar is watching. Lightning flashes and the sound of rain almost drowns out the thunder.
âPlease pay.'
âFuck you.' Ben turns, trips over the step from the bar as he leaves, lands in the mud, gets up and is gone down the path into the wall of rain, Sherman shirt instantly soaked. Applause from behind me.
âThanks,' I say to the barman. I'm grateful but also disappointed I didn't get a beating. I wanted a beating.
âIt's OK. He is an idiot.' he picks up my drink and hands it to me. âWe get many
bule
idiots here. I know where he stays. This place we are all close. Like family. You won't see him again. Now please go back and enjoy tonight with your friends.' With that, he and the other man, his silent partner, go back to the seats at the bar. The barman picks up the guitar by his chair and starts strumming. The other guy starts singing: âNo Woman, No Cry'.
I sit back in my corner, arms stretched along the rails, feet out in front of me.
âMy hero,' says Kim.
The other three laugh.
âI need a joint after that,' says Julie.
âYeah, that'd be nice,' I say and lean my head out into the rain. It wallops my face like a power shower. The jungle lights up every few seconds, green trees flashing on and off under lightning that scratches the length of the sky. On and off. On and off. A filling river gathering speed below. Water pouring down my face and through my hair. On. Off.
A feeling I achieved something. I meant something. I changed something. You just have to do it and it's done. It's changed.
A beating would have been nice though. Knocked Old Me out for good.
But I do feel different.
I feel new.
On. Off.
I feel stoned.
I look back at her as I go through the crowd of people. She is perched on a stool at the bar watching me, smiling. I smile back and knock into someone. I turn to apologise. A blank face looks back at me from under short-cropped hair and round head stuck on thick neck. I apologise again.
âWanker,' it says.
âSorry,' I again say and turn sideways to slide through the gap between him and his friend.
I keep going; the urge to pee is suddenly stronger. I make my way through the packed pub like a timid pinball trying not to bounce off anything. I push my way into the toilets and queue while the smell stings my nose and men talk in swearing sentences about women and cunts and football. Finally I arrive at a slowly emptying bowl of urine.
âThere's that twat who knocked your beer.'
I carry on peeing, pretending I'm not me. The man to my right has finished and leaves. Then the blank face is there, next to me. I cut my pee short and zip up. Which is just as well as the blocked urinal is close to brimming over. As I turn, Blank's friend is waiting behind me. He knocks into my shoulder as I sidle past.
âLater,' he says.
I leave the toilets to laughter. My face is hot and my legs weak.
The crowd blurs past my watering eyes as I slalom my way back to Laura.
âWhat's the matter?' she asks, throwing an arm over my shoulder.
âIdiots in the toilets. I think we should go.'
My heart pounds and I'm angry at the way my body is reacting to aggression. I'm scared. I don't want to be, but I am. I can't stop it, the fear spills into my blood like an oil slick. It pollutes every vein, artery and vessel.
âDo you want to go?' She holds my face and kisses me.
âNo. Yes. Do you mind?'
âCome on. Let's go. This place is terrible anyway.'
Someone knocks into my shoulder and I stumble against Laura.
âSorry,' says a voice in mocking high pitch.
There he is. I feel looseness in my bowels and legs. Why am I reacting like this? Strength should be filling my muscles, not leaving them.
âCome on.' Laura is off the stool and hooking her arm through mine. âLet's go.'
The blank-faced man is pushing up against me so that my body has Laura pinned to the bar.
âNice girlfriend,' he says. âCan I have a go? Then I'll let you leave.'
My throat seizes shut and my brain is incapable of creating a plan. Somewhere in a recess I will myself to deal with this. Nothing comes. I manage to open my mouth, but that is all.
âWhat's your problem?' Laura asks him, calm as a pond on a white-hot day.
âYour boyfriend knocked my beer. He owes me a pint. Or something else.' He winks at Laura, turns to his friend and laughs like a seagull.
âYou sad little cliché of a man,' says Laura.
I almost smile at her balls, but instead grimace at the thought of where this might lead. âI'll get you a drink if it'll make you not be such a twat.'
It should be me making snappy comments, dealing with the situation. I'm struck dumb and useless like a garden gnome. Instead of being an Alpha I'm nowhere to be found in the Greek hierarchical alphabet of male. I'm less than Zeta. I reach in my pocket and manage to hand money to Laura.
âI'll pay for it,' I croak.
My vision has become tunnelled as I focus on Laura asking and paying for a drink. My mind is cutting out Blank Face and friend. Thumping blood in my ears deafens me to words around me. Laura leaves the drink on the bar and pushes me forward, more knocking shoulders, seagull laughter, masses of people to get through. Finally out into the cold night air and two pairs of feet clipping along the road while traffic speeds around beside us. No talk. My eyes water in the winter air. Steam plumes from my mouth like a speeding locomotive.
âUseless. Fucking useless.' At last my mouth thaws. âI should have refused. I should have stood up for you.'
I stop. Laura walks on a few steps then turns back to me.
âYou are you, and that is why I love you. I don't want a man who can stand up for himself in a fight. I want a man who knows all the little things that make me happy. And you know those things.'
âBut you were calm. You handled it.' My hands run through my hair. âI nearly pissed myself, for god's sake.'
She puts her arms around my waist. I pull them off.
âBut I want to be able to deal with shit like that.' I think I'm going to cry. âI wimp out. I can't even function. Fuck.'
I'm walking in a circle around the pavement. Car lights shoot back and forth beside us. The sound of engines and wheels on tarmac are like thunder.
âAnd that's not your fault. It's human. You couldn't help it. Your body shut down. Just instinct is all it is.'
She takes me by the arm and leads us back home. Every step brings to mind a different possible solution to what has happened, a different possible outcome; a punch here, an elbow there, a man standing next to his beautiful girlfriend being applauded, a head smashed into a urinal, a knee to a groin followed by a clever one-liner. But I am not a movie script, I am not a hero, I am me. I cannot cope with Alpha males. I cannot think quickly enough to deal with an immediate problem. I have a safety cut-out and a spine made of ice cream. I am Ice-Cream Boy. I am soft and soggy and that night I cannot make love, no matter what words, what affection, what tenderness comes from her body. It doesn't matter to her. I know. She loves me. I am sure. But I want to be more for her. She deserves so much more.
VICTIMS OF
ECONOMY
âO
ur
sister was raped.'
     I take a mouthful of juice and swill it around my teeth. I look from Fitri to Benny, who is chasing an ice cube around the bottom of his glass with a straw.
âThat is why she is not here,' says Fitri.
I swallow my juice but my mouth still feels dry.
âWhere is she?' I ask.
âIn Singapore. With my mother.'
The silence is uncomfortable, at least for me. Benny has upended his glass over his mouth, and after a stubborn moment of hanging on, the ice drops. Fitri sips on her nearly full glass.
âI like mango juice,' she says.
âMe too,' I say.
âThat is why we hate Indonesians. Because of what happened.'
âWhy do you stay here?' I ask.
âMy father has good business here, he says. He cannot have business the same in other countries.'
I can feel the floor through the beanbag; it's hard on my bottom. I wiggle and try to think of a way to lighten the moment.
âBut rape isn't bad compared to other things that happened.' Fitri examines her juice. âThey used things on my friend's sister.'
âPerhaps we shouldn't talk about this now, Fitri.' I look to Benny, who is now crunching his ice.
âThey put things in her.'
Fitri: fifteen, a child, still wearing her school uniform, knowing such things. I want a cigarette.
âFitri.' Her father stands at the door. âThis is not conversation for an English lesson. Come, the lesson is over today. Children, let's go for noodles.'
I am relieved but also disappointed. Fitri needs to talk to someone. I stand and say goodbye to the kids.
âNo. You come too. Meet in front. I will bring the car around.' Charles walks off around the pool with his head down.
âCool,' says Benny, âI'm hungry.'
âYou greedy monkey. This is two dinners tonight.' Fitri stands and comes to my side. She looks at my face and smiles.
âDo not be afraid. They are good noodles where we go. My father is not angry with you.'
âI'm notâ¦I'm not afraid,' I say, but she and Benny are leaving the games room ahead of me. I wonder how she sees I am afraid before I realise I am. There is something blunt and angry about Charles today. He must be wondering why Fitri is talking to me about her sister and rape.
I follow them to the waiting car, where Charles sits behind the wheel, cigarette hanging from his lips, squinting through the smoke straight out the windscreen. Benny climbs in beside him. Fitri and I get in the back. We all sit in silence as the gates are opened by security who check the road first, guns over their shoulders, then nod for us to drive out. It is a silent drive. Ten minutes later we pull up in a restaurant car-park under a flashing neon noodle sign.