Authors: Mike Stoner
There's a cry from the Chinese muscle table. Reflex action means we all look.
âSorry. But Chelsea score,' says the one in the middle. âYou please carry on.' He waves his hand in a general sweeping motion to indicate the rest of us and looks back to the screen.
I'm smiling.
âYou're weird.
âNot as weird as you. You're completely inexplicable.
âYou attempt to put her anywhere, and I'll put you in the hospital.'
âDid I just say that?
âCorny.
âSorry.
âI'm with him on that, Barry,' says the British businessman as he falls off the fence and lands on his feet, on the side of the righteous and messed-up.
âYou lay one finger on her and I'll take that baseball bat to you. Business interests will be forgotten.'
Barry looks at him and his facial muscles twitch as though he has just stood on a nail.
âHe's going to say “et tu, Brute?” now.
âHe hasn't the brains.
He looks to the German for backup, who looks around the room and does a quick mental calculation. His eyes linger on Mei, run up and down the bat, pass back to me, his mouth turns up, a nod, back to Barry.
â
Ja
, fuck you, man. You are a dick.'
âBut I own this bar. You lot get the fuck out beforeâ¦'
âBefore what? You take on everyone in here? I'm playing with the idea that we do all leave, except for Mei, the baseball bat, and you.' I turn. âYou'd be happy with that, wouldn't you, Mei?'
She nods, her eyes thin and focussed on her prey, lips drawn tight.
âI like much. But most I like is Barry sign me my bar back, and then never come again here.'
âI think it is possible.' British businessman gets businesslike. âAs it's part my money you've invested here, Barry. And since you've invested, the profits seem to be suffering, so I'm pulling out. We'll have the contracts ready next week, won't we, Barry?'
Barry rubs watery eyes. A lost and scared and lonely boy. He replaces his glasses, then removes them again as if he doesn't like what he sees, mutters something that might be an attempt at being defiant, but only sounds like âfaggot,' and he starts walking out.
âWhat about the apology, Barry?'
âAnd still you persevere.
âNow I've startedâ¦
Barry stops with his back to the room. Shoulders rise slowly.
âNow, Barry. To Geoff and Mei.'
Barry turns, and as he does so his head sags as though his body is exhausted from carrying the weight of it and the rubbish held within. He is running on emergency power only. Geoff, however, has had a recharge bolt shot up his arse and gets up, puts his arm through Mei's and leads her to where Barry stands.
âMei first, please, Barry.'
A momentary flash of anger lights Barry's eyes as they meet Geoff's, but when they see whatever is there, the light goes out and they move on to Mei, but not her eyes, they rest on a point just below her mouth.
âI'm sorry, Mei.' His shoulders slump. âReally.'
Really? Genuine remorse?
Mei stands with straight back, chin up.
Barry looks back to Geoff, but before a word leaves his mouth, Geoff's fist is shooting through the air. It hits his chin, carries on, pushing with the wound-up tension of a released coil, sending Barry's head back on his shoulders, causing the rest of his body not to fly backwards but to collapse almost silently to the floor. His hands don't have time to even attempt to break the fall. He is creased up on the tiles like a feeble foal freshly dropped from its mother's rear. Then his hands find ground, push up slowly until he is standing on legs that wobble like the same newborn foal and, without another word, he staggers from the bar.
âBugger the apology,' says Geoff, âthat felt better.'
âYou have free beer, Mr Geoff. And you too, Mr Newbie.' Mei surveys her kingdom and subjects like a queen. âAll of you. Free beer.'
âFuckin' A.' says Kim.
âBut only one.'
The Chinese backup, who haven't backed up anything, stand and throw notes on the table. âNot for us, thank you. The football was very good. Liverpool win.' And they leave.
âWho were they?' asks Marty.
I watch their dark-jacketed backs disappear into the night outside.
âPassing trade, I guess. And who,' I say to Geoff, who examines his knuckles with a smile I never knew could fit on his face, âare you?'
âA happy man,' he laughs. âAnd thanks for that very surreal and satisfying moment.'
The British businessman downs his beer and raises his eyebrows to the German, whose wife checks the room for blood and guts as she comes back from the toilet.
âCome on, Erich. Let's leave this lot to their not-so-faggotty ways.' He pats me on the back as he goes. âWell done. I never really liked him.' And they too are gone.
âWant to go get a drink somewhere quiet? she asks.
âYes. I do.
âYou've grown a nice set. I knew they were there somewhere. I always knew that.
Despite the noise of laughing and celebration and of protest at my wanting to depart from Mei's, we leave together, hand in hand, stepping out into the warm enveloping night, where people are as invisible as ghosts.
We lie in the grass of the housing-compound playing field together and look to stars and constellations. I hold her hand. She holds mine. Our mouths are still as our lives together speed through our minds. I am plugged into her and memory and moments flow between us in powerful currents. There are things she remembers clearly that only lurk in the dark, dusty areas of my brain. They are cleaned off and brought into the light thanks to her. Important moments to her. Important moments to me. Some match, some don't. But they are all equal here. We are one under this foreign sky. One life created by moments we share.
Lightning soundlessly cracks the clear sky. It starts near the horizon on the right and spiders across the night, shattering its wholeness in less than a second.
âNot a cloud to be seen.
âAnvil lightning, I do believe, she says, smug in her complete lack of smugness.
âHow do you know so much?
âBecause I'm me. It's probably travelled from a storm cloud miles away.
It does it again, spidering across the sky at such a speed that it's nearly impossible to follow its journey.
âWow.
âDon't see them like this back home.
âClouds will roll over in a few minutes, then it's going to pour down.
âWe should move.
âWhy? Scared we might get hit and die? Because I'm already dead, remember.
She leans over my face and blows in my eyes. I blink. Then she kisses me, forcing her tongue between my lips.
âIf only all dead people were like you.
âOver her shoulder I see the blackness of a cloud bank rolling over the top of the houses that encircle the playing field. Another bolt escapes, lighting up the cloud and shining through Laura so that she disappears in the light. I blink. I blink again.
She is gone. You idiot, she's gone because she isn't real. Control this madness. Control it.
âIf that's the case, how come you now know about anvil lightning?
She is lying beside me again, as solid as the trees and houses around us.
âSubconscious memory. I learnt it at school and it's been lurking in the recesses ever since.
âCould be.
âBut I hope it's because you are here.
âI am. And so is the rain.
Big, heavy drops arrive, random and far apart, landing on us and around us. But we lie there, more drops slowly filling the spaces between the first, until I am blinking water from my eyes.
âLet's go clubbing. Celebrate the coming together of Old Me and New Me. Celebrate the birth of a don't-give-shit hero.
âSounds good to me. To both of me.
I laugh.
We run from the field and the compound to the main street, where we flag down a taxi. By the time we are in, I am soaked. Laura is dry. I ignore the possible meaning.
SEASICK
âI
hear
you did a good show,' Charles says into the bowl as he sucks in a mouthful of noodles from his soup.
âYes, it seemed to do the trick.' I decide his way of eating is better than mine, as I have splatters of sauce over the front of my T-shirt. Trying to eat noodles with dignity doesn't work. I bend my head low down over my bowl and slurp up too. Inelegant, but it isn't a social issue here. Get those noodles in no matter what noise you make. And why not?
âSo now you must do your part of the deal.'
Cars crawl past outside the window. I squint as white sunlight reflects off them.
âBut your men didn't do anything.'
âExactly what I told them. Only if you were being killed would they step in. I am an excellent judge of people, and there is something in you, or perhaps not in you, that I knew would deal with the problem without too much help.'
âI'm a coward, so I don't know what you saw.'
âIt's what I didn't see. Something is missing in you, and when people aren't whole, they get on and do what they must without worry for themselves.'
âLike you.'
Charles nods, then slurps up the last of the noodles. He dabs his mouth with a fine handkerchief he pulls from the inside of his jacket, then his hand goes to the pocket on the other side and he pulls out a small, worn, black book. He flicks through some pages, eyes squinting, until he finds what he is looking for.
âOn Tuesday you must be in Lampuuk near Banda Aceh. Teddy will meet you at the next cove north from Lampuuk beach during the afternoon. You will do everything he says.' He closes the black book and puts it on the table next to his coffee.
âWhy?' I dig around under the thick black coffee with a teaspoon, looking for condensed milk. I manage to recover some. This is the taste of Indonesia. Strong thick coffee and sweet milk.
âBecause he will help you replace the missing bit of you.'
âIf you're so sure, why don't you use him? Use him to help you and Su-Chin sort out your problems.'
âBecause Su-Chin does not want to be helped. She does not want me.' He lights a cigarette and rubs his eyes. âAnd I respect her for that. I am not good for her.'
âWell, I thinkâ'
âI do not care what you think. It is not your business, so do not talk about her again.'
My mouth opens to tell him that I'm not his business either, but I yank the words back down from the top of my throat. He can't help his wife, so he wants to help me. Although why me, I'm not sure. Maybe he just wants to help anyone.
âNeither you nor Teddy know my problems. I'll do what you want, but you can't help me either. It's impossible.' I move my packet of cigarettes on the table around like I'm thinking chess moves, then I take one out and light it. I draw in the smoke and hold it, let it burn my lungs, get in my veins, do its business, before blowing it from my nose in two long straight grey lines.
âTeddy sees you have problems. You are like a glass man to him; you can't hide anything from him.'
I study him for once, stare at him like he stares at people. Look at the straightness of his mouth, into the lines around his eyes and the darkness within them. He looks back and for the first time we hold each other's gaze as equals. His pupils seem to quiver for a moment and then they break away from me. They scan the room as if searching for something.
âExcuse me.' He gets up and heads to the toilets.
I blink, move the cigarette pack around the table with index finger again, until it nudges Charles's notebook. The notebook that holds the details of my future appointment and, as he normally keeps it close to his chest, probably details of many of his appointments, meetings and, perhaps, contacts.
I look over my shoulder: waiter scribbling a couple's order, people dotted around the high-class restaurant slurping noodles, a corridor leading to toilets. No one paying
bule
any attention; that's one thing about expensive places, the Westerner is left alone.
I flip the book around to face me and flick through its pages. Chinese characters everywhere and no order or headings to pages. But at the back, just as I am about to replace it as I found it, a page of numbers, each one preceded by characters. The numbers look like phone numbers, and some have international prefixes. Quickly checking behind me again, I reach into my school bag and pull out a scrap of paper and a pen and scrawl any number that starts with 00. I scrawl quickly and copy ten numbers. I fold the paper and slide it into my shirt pocket with the pen and then return the notebook to where it was. Five seconds later Charles returns and sits. His hand goes to the book and puts it back in his jacket.