Authors: Mike Stoner
I get up and head for the door.
âWhere are you going?' Geoff asks, but I don't answer. New Me
,
who appears to be getting on nicely with forgetting his wimpy predecessor and all his issues lately, has his superhero clothes on, but as he gets to the door Kim knocks into him on the way in.
âWhoa, slow Newbie.'
âExcuse me Kim.'
âIf you're going to speak to Pak, stop right there.' He walks me back a few steps with his hands on my shoulders.
âWhy?'
âHe just pulled me in as Geoff came out. He says anyone who stands up for him will be out the door straight away and won't get his month's notice. Geoff will lose his too. And no exit taxes paid by him.'
Do I care? So I lose my job? Is it a big deal?
âHe can't do that. He knows most of us haven't enough for the tax.' Julie is up and stomping across the room with her arms crossed.
Exit tax. Good point. I don't have enough. Geoff probably does, but why should he pay it? Sit down and think this one out. It's not my battle after all. I look at my knees.
âDon't worry about it, guys. My fault. My problem,' says Geoff.
âThat's a beauty, Geoff.' Kim leans in and examines the eye. âOh man. Standing up for Mei again?'
âSomeone has to,' snaps Geoff. âAnyway, I'm going up to prepare my class.' Geoff nods to himself, picks up his books, and heads to his class. The rest of us nod to each other, pick up our books, and head to our classes.
The day doesn't improve. Once the class has arrived there's a hole the size of China in the group.
âAnyone seen Johnny?'
There's a lot of shaking heads and one or two negative mutterings.
âOK. Perhaps he's ill. What shall we talk about today, then?' I walk around the horseshoe of tables expecting prompts.
Silence.
âAny questions about my life, England, anything?'
Everyone is looking at their desks. The class has lost its ring-leader.
Oh shit. And I've got nothing prepared. The photocopies are just for show for Pak and the staff. I haven't had to plan for this lot since day one.
âSo today, at last we can have a normal lesson, yes?' says Franz, the serious boy.
âAh, yes. Of course. Page
â
er.' I fumble through the course book and feel heat spreading across my face. Lucky dip. âChapter Seven. Reading exercise: The Royal Wedding. Read it then answer the questions.'
There are a few sighs as the pages turn, but at least three of the students sit up straight, pick up pens and start making notes as they read. There are some serious learners here. My body feels strange on me as I shrink yet further into it.
Eka's hands work their way down my back, squeezing and kneading and pulling as they go. My face is buried in the pillow. The smell of stale sweat and damp, almost hidden by perfumed washing powder, fills my nose.
âWhat will your friend do?' Knuckles rotate in the small of my back.
I open my mouth to answer and get a mouthful of musky pillow case. I turn my head to one side.
âKnowing Geoff, probably work the month then leave quietly. Then we all carry on and he's forgotten in a week.'
âNot nice.' A palm thwacks my left bum cheek.
âOw. What was that for?'
âBecause you are friend. You must help him.'
âHe's not my friend. None of them are my friends.'
Thwack across my other cheek.
âIf they not your friends, I not your friend too. You care for nobody?'
All hand contact leaves my body. I can feel her sitting upright as the weight shifts on the back of my legs.
âYou are my friend. I don't talk to them. They know nothing about me. You know a lot.' I argue.
âThey do not know about your ghost girl? They do not know you are crazy man?' The weight shifts again as she reaches for a cigarette and then I jump as she places a cold ashtray on my back.
âThey probably think I'm a little crazy, but no one knows about, about her.' I try to move so I can sit up, but Eka pushes my head back down.
âNo move. I'm talking and smoking, so you not to move.' She bounces up and down on me once to make sure I get the message. âYou stupid, you know?'
âOh? Why's that? Can you give me a cigarette, please?'
âNo. Because they like you. They invite you, who they never know a few months ago, to join at Toba and Bukit and in bars. They make you friend, but you say they are not friends. You not a nice crazy man.'
From the angle my head is turned I can see into the bathroom. A small green gecko clings to the wall above the squat, eavesdropping. I wonder what he makes of it all.
âOK. You're right. Maybe they are my friends and maybe I like them, I'm not sure, but how can I help Geoff?'
Her hand is in front of my lips holding the cigarette there.
âGo on. You get nicer. You allowed one smoke.'
I suck on it while she holds it between her fingers. I smell cheap moisturiser and tobacco. Then she takes it away.
âYou help him is all. I don't know how. He your friend, not mine.'
She rolls off my legs and lies down next to me. Her naked breasts fall towards her sides. I sigh at the beauty of her. What is she to me? It's not love, I know that. She is a sounding board, someone to tell my pathetic woes to, someone who is mine and not connected to anything else. She is my release and my fantasy. She is my sanity too.
âPromise you will help him.' She turns her face to mine. Black eyes framed by curling soft black hair. Thick lips that pass on wise advice. Does she know what she is, what she could be in the other half of the world? Men would fight for her, any job would be hers. Her life would be easy. But instead she sells herself when she needs and befriends a strange
bule
man with a dead ex who lurks somewhere under his skin and makes surprise appearances at the strangest of times. Although I wonder if Laura has finally had enough of my forced personality change and disappeared; I've never known her be so quiet. I'm pleased. I'm sad. I'm empty. I'm lonely.
âYou think of her again.'
âNo. I don't.' I roll onto my back so she can't see my eyes.
âYou think of her. I know. It's OK, crazy man. One day I find rich normal
bule
and you never see me after. OK?'
âOK.' I go up on an elbow and look at her face. Now she looks away. âAnd it will happen. You are so very beautiful and very clever. Any man would be happy to have you.'
âBut not you? You not happy to have me?' She continues looking away. Perhaps she's watching the gecko too.
âI don't “want” anyone. But you are my friend, my best friend here.'
âSo that is good. And you must help your friends.'
âI know. I must.'
I kiss her but she doesn't kiss back. An unusual moment. Is Eka actually pissed off at me? Suddenly she is up.
âI hungry. We go for food.'
She walks on tiptoes to the
mandi
. A long, dark, perfect form. She disappears and I hear her scoop up water and throw it over herself. The gecko scrambles up the wall. I reach over and get a cigarette. The smoke hangs motionless in the heat.
She is perfect. Why is she stuck here? How did that happen? Just one of those people born unlucky. Made even more unlucky by the fact that had she been born a few thousand miles away, she would be living at the other end of the social scale. Perhaps I should take her with me. Fly her back to England, parade her beauty around the streets, make her my little Eliza Doolittle. But I won't. Selfish as I am, I know it would change her. I don't want her changed. And I don't want anyone anyway. What I have lost is irreplaceable. Because of that I don't see that I could ever love her, and she should be loved, although something tells me she never will be. In some ways I want her all for me and me alone, but in others I don't want her at all. We aren't meant to be together. I think she knows that.
âSo not only are you forgetting the slice-of-cake rule, you're becoming a chauvinistic twat.
âWhy now, Laura? Why do you come now?
âI've had to watch you with this girl. Be ignored while you bury yourself in her sex. Use her for your own selfish needs. Well, I feel responsible. If it wasn't for me she wouldn't be falling for my Ice-Cream Boy. Because of me she's going to be heartbroken and abused by you. I'm trying to be your conscience.
âYou lost that right when you died.
âI didn't ask for it.
âI know. I'm sorry. But I didn't ask for what you left me.
âDo you have any idea how I feel? How I feel when you sleep with this beautiful girl? When you do it without love, but with anger. And it's my fault. Do you know how sad this makes me feel?
âI'm sorry, Laura. I'm sorry. I just need to forget you, and with her, it happens. Just for a short while the pain is gone. Without that break, that rest, I will break. I'll shatter.
âMan up. Just man up and deal with me.
âDon't you think I would if I could?
I'm aware the pillow is getting wet around my face. Tears are running down my cheeks. What am I doing?
âLeave me be. Please fucking leave me alone,' I shout to the room and the gecko and the crazy voice that can't be.
âCome here, Crazy. Stop talking to her. Come here,' comes a voice from the
mandi
.
I swing my legs off the bed onto the dusty floor, take a long drag on the cigarette and let the smoke out in a sigh before stubbing it out. Geoff and his black eye flash across my mind. He's got balls, more than either of me. I smile. I will help him. I just need to think how.
âCome, before I angry.'
But my dead girlfriend, her wishes and my conscience lose. Eka brings sanity of a type. I'm not ready to break. Not yet.
I don't bother tip-toeing. Trying to stay clean here is a lost cause. Flat feet plop across the dusty shed skin of people unknown, limbs of dead insects, and dirt walked in by rodents. I walk to the naked beauty waiting with a bucket of cold water in the blue-tiled room. Even when she throws scoopfuls of water over me, lathers me, rinses me and leaves me shivering in the icy cold fluid of the
mandi
, the dirt still sticks to my soles.
I look at the plates of food laid out on the plastic tablecloth. A fly buzzes from a dish of boiled rice and then lands on a fried chicken thigh. Eka picks the thigh up and the fly buzzes onto the next dish. There are about eight more for it to taste. They have all been placed on our table by the open-shirted waiter. They are dishes from the window display where they've been sweating in the heat and been walked on by countless more flies. There is no one else in this small eatery and I wonder how long the food has been sitting there.
âEat.' She tears a strip off the thigh.
âIt's all meat. I don't eat meat.'
âThat not meat.' She points at the rice. âThat not meat.' She points at boiled eggs in a yellow sauce. âThat not meat.' She points at something wrapped in leaves. âBut no matter because today you eat meat. Man eat meat. Chicken die to be eat, so you eat. You,' her finger is now directed at me, between the eyes, âeat.'
Those massive eyes of hers accuse me of everything; being a coward, being untrue to my friends, being untrue to her, being untrue to me, and a lot of other things that I don't know I'm guilty of, but no doubt, without a shadow, I am.
âThat looks like cow.' I point at a dish of brown flesh.
âIt is. You can eat, but I don't eat. I am Hindu.'
âI know and that's my point; you won't eat it, so why must I?'
âBecause you think you are good, but you are not. You have no goodness for others, you have noâ¦' She chews the chicken slowly while her mind hunts for the word. I get it first.