Excerpt
Chapter
14 Love Nest Bar
Love
was not something anyone found in the bar.
As
for nest - it was more of a pit than a nest.
Bitter
Bob slumped over the bar, his arms collapsed around his
head as if he had heard an air raid siren. He squirmed on
the bar stool shivering with the cold sweats. His pants
were wrinkled and soiled, and he smelled like he hadn't
had a bath in a couple of days - in the tropics that amounted
to a month of neglect.
"I
knew that kid. Hutton. And one more thing, I used to know
his whore. I think I even used to know you, Calvino. From
the old days. They fucking killed him," said Bitter
Bob. "And you wanna know why they killed him?"
Because Hutton was a farang."
In
Bitter Bob's mind "they"were unknown people, mostly
Thai thugs, always out on the edge, waiting like toilet
flies to attack a farang with his dick in his hand. If they
got Jerry Hutton, the way Bob's mind reasoned, then they
might have targeted him next. And they were waiting for
him outside the bar, lurking in the back of tuk-tuks or
slouched over a motorcycle in the shadowy areas in between
street lamps on Soi 23.
"Bob,
did you get a look at the guy Noi went out with?"
Bitter
Bob raised his amber bottle of Singha beer. He sucked on
it long and hard, not taking in any air, until he set the
bottle back on the counter and ordered another round.
"Some
fool," said Bitter Bob.
"What
country was this fool from?"
"If
you're asking me whether this fool was a foreigner, then
I guess I'd have to say he was. Foreign, I mean. He didn't
speak English like an American."
"Was
he French, Aussie, German? Think, Bob." Calvino was
thinking that Bitter Bob had about as much ability to identify
the nationality of a farang as the average upcountry bargirl
*
"I'm
thinking but nothing inside my mind. I ain't good at spotting
accents. He was just another shitfaced fool. A stranger
and that's all I know."
Calvino
had talked to Bitter Bob at the Love Nest Bar around ten.
He had missed Noi by fifteen minutes; she had been bought
out for a short-time. When Calvino came back after eleven
Noi still hadn't returned. He looked at his watch and ordered
a Mekong and soda.
"She
ain't back, if that's of any interest to you," said
Bitter Bob.
Calvino
bought him a beer.
"The
mamasan said she went short-time," said Calvino.
"In
my opinion that could mean just about anything from ten
minutes to ten days in Bangkok. The Thais gotta different
way of telling time. I've got a theory about that,"
said Bitter Bob.
The
waiter set down Calvino's Mekong and Bitter Bob's beer.
He wasn't in the mood to hear Bitter Bob's theory about
the passage of time in Thailand. So rather than sitting
at the bar, he took his drink and sat alone on a long bench
in the back. He liked having his back against the wall.
A waitress in high heels and a bikini top brought him two
chits stuffed in a bamboo cup and put it on his table. He
nursed his Mekong and soda. Noi was a business woman, he
thought. For her a short-time averaged one hour and that
included travel time. As he drank his Mekong he saw Bitter
Bob clocking him in the bar mirror. Bob's bloodshot eyes
stared as if wondering whether Calvino might know who "they"
were; and he was toying with Bitter Bob, trying to egg him
on, draw him out, he was part of the plan for the Thai bikers
who waited outside. The moment ended when Bitter Bob lifted
his hip on the stool and farted, making the sound of a tire
at high speed hitting a nail on the road. He chuckled in
his hand, then Bitter Bob's attention moved back to the
TV screen where his favorite movie was playing.
The
video was one Calvino thought was tailored for Karl's specialized
interest - vivid color close-ups of smashed, burned, and
punctured human bodies. Bodies pulled from cars, planes,
rivers, lakes, sand pits and streets. Doctors in white frocks
performed autopsies, using a workshop worth of tools, scalpels,
tongs, and a special stainless steel saw. He watched as
the saw cut through a skull and the brain fen out with a
nudge from the doctor's gloved hand. The video was an all-time
favorite of the Bitter Bobs and the other leftover drunks
who floated on alcohol vapors through the Soi Cowboy dead-zone
hours. Farang zombies - the third shifters gone paranoid
- sucking down drinks and trying to hold it together watching
teams of doctors ripping out hearts, lungs, livers, and
miles and miles of guts. Hutton's video of the Burmese executions
of the students was a sweet piece of innocence compared
with the slow-mo of the yellow ooze spurting along the edge
of a doctor's knife slicing through a diseased kidney.
Calvino
drank inside the dead zone of a Soi Cowboy night. In that
concourse, farang cut adrift from all moorings applied alcohol
to their pain of losses which could never be recovered.
The dead zone was the time warp between the end of happy
hour and the run-up to midnight. Nothing much happened.
The energy level reduced to the basics of breathing, eating
bar nuts, drinking and watching videos - and discussing
theories of time. During this down period the bar girls
- who had done one or two short-times - got their second
wind and began moving in for another kill before the night
ran down.
All
that flickered during this period was the same video repeating
how messy it was, like eating pudding with your fingers,
to open and disassemble the organs of the human body. For
hours on end customers and girls watched livers, spleens,
brains, guts spilling into plastic containers.
Seated
at the bar with Bitter Bob were a couple of dark, hunched
over figures looking like they were shaking off the effects
of a tranquilizer gun. The fun games they had thought brought
pleasure somehow had gone wrong. Their expressionless, yellowish
faces glued to the tube looked the same as what was left
of the faces on the bodies in the video. Hardcore credentials
were earned by witnessing one gory video autopsy after another
and never breaking into a sweat or throwing-up on the bar.
They gathered at the Love Nest, and dozens of other places
like it, these menof indeterminate age who carried their
emotional dart marks in public like war wounds which never
properly healed.
But
that night Bitter Bob had the cold sweats, and it gave Calvino
a bad feeling. He kept thinking of what Tommy Loretti had
said about his treatment not having a hero or a linear story.
It was the Bitter Bobs who wanted the hero. Someone to look
up to, someone who could tell him who "they" were,
and show him how to protect himself when they came at his
face. He was thinking Tommy had a point when he had an overpowering
urge to see joy.
"I
want to see the dog," said Calvino to the waitress
in tight jeans and a red knit shirt that dung to her breasts.
"And don't tell me joy's gone out on a short-time."
The
waitress replied to his request with a fake smile and then
studied Calvino's face, trying to remember where she had
seen him before. Was he a Cheap Charlie on the make, or
could she squeeze him for a few baht? A light came on somewhere
in the back of her eyes. Yeah, yeah, she remembered Calvino.
He had taken Noi a couple of times some years ago. And this
was the same guywho had given her the German shepherd; she
had scored. One farang was dead and another had taken his
place in less than a month, confirming that the universe
was perfectly ordered in Bangkok bars. The girls had taken
bets that Calvino would come checking after the dog; farang
had that way of not letting something go. Farang had a strange
relationship with dogs, always patting and kissing them,
forgetting they were animals, talking baby-talk to them.
No wonder they believed just about anything a girl would
tell them about mother's broken leg, nong with the unpaid
school fees, and the water buffalo about to die unless a
vet was called in.
"Joy's
upstairs," the waitress said. "Sleeping. She not
go out with farang. Her pussy too small."
Not
that Joy was a dog; it was simply a question of size ratio.
It came down to a practical question of throw-weight. If
a farang wanted to buy out Joy, then there would be a price.
So far there had been no request, but the question was left
open.
"Joking,"
said the waitress. "Why you want to take dog? Take
girl. She's much better for you. Look there and there."
Her finger stabbed the air as she circled around the bar,
pointing out the girls in red rayon Chinese house coats
with white piping along the collar and the front. Love Nest
Bar was printed in big white letters on the back.
"Fifty
baht, you go upstairs, wake up Joy, and tell her an old
friend has come to scratch her ears," said Calvino,
taking a fifty baht note from his wallet and holding it
out.
The
waitress slipped away - not slipped, she skipped, pranced
away, because she had scored, and when anyone scored they
clutched the money and did an end-zone victory dance across
the floor to alert the other girls that money had gone through
the goal posts and landed straight into her pocket. Without
a hug, a kiss, or a fuck. Lucky money, free money.
A
few days had passed since Calvino had delivered the German
shepherd to Noi. He had changed his mind a couple of times,
and finally walked over with Joy, knocked on her door and
walked home with an uneasy feeling he had been thinking
American in the gesture when he should have been thinking
like Noi in Thai. She looked out with a pack of relatives
at the door and shrugged her shoulders, as if to say, "What
are you saying? I gotta pay to feed this fucking monster?
Look at all my hungry relatives behind me. And you're saying
this royal dog has more right to food than them?"
He
had given her money for the dog food but he was certain
the dog would only get left over rice, fried grasshoppers,
and chicken bones. he had been smart enough not to tell
her the dog was worth at least forty all-night pump and
grind sessions in some cheap hotel or rundown guest house
on Soi Ngarn Duphli where the geeks and shitkickers who
shot up with heroin hung out. The "Croaks" who
unlike Karl didn't pump iron or shoot-up steroid chasers.
The "Croaks" never worried about AIDS because
they were already dead. "Buying this dog meant a lot
to Jerry," Calvino had tried to explain to her. "He
thought you could change your life. Breed the dog. Sell
the puppies and make money. Enough money to stay off Soi
Cowboy." He was talking to stark cold stone; something
talk never could blast through.
She
stared at the dog and thought about what Calvino, was saying,
working it over in her head, trying to figure out what was
in it for him and how to get some cash. "Jerry's dead.
Never mind. Everyone dy-laow. Jerry not help me now. So
what you say I do? I sell dog pussy, no problem Sell, can.
But I cannot sell my pussy? I think very stupid. Jerry think
like you. Farang don't know how Thai girl think."
"Don't
let anything bad happen to the dog," said Calvino.
"You know what I'm saying. The dog gets hurt, then
there is gonna be some trouble. And I know you don't like
problems . I'm trying to help out here. Do the right thing.
All I'm asking is that you do the right thing. What Jerry
would've wanted." After he finished his little speech
he knew that b asically he had wasted his breath; but he
owed it to Hutton to try. Noi's relatives shrank into the
shadows, as Noi tensed her entire body in the doorway.
"Jerry
buy the dog for me. None of your fucking business. I eat
dog. Can. I let farang fuck dog. Can. I sell my pussy. Can,"
said Noi, as if she had earned an MBA degree in supply-side
economics.
In
a buyer's market, a smart seller like Noi knew that fast
money was the only money worth getting up for, or going
into the sackhead first for. It had ended in direct confrontation.
The worst of all sins in Thailand: he had challenged her,
implied she was less than trustworthy, and suggested she
would be accountable for her actions. Calvino, had been
in Thailand long enough to know Calvino's law of accountability:
never tell a bar girl she's accountable for her actions
unless you are prepared for a fight.
With
Noi, he had broken the cardinal law.
He
had an edgy, sinking feeling as he saw joy sitting near
a mosquito net with several relatives crawling over her
that he had made a mistake. He had heard that Noi had returned
to her old bar. What disturbed him was the rumor the German
shepherd had entered what the Japanese called "The
Water Trade" -the night life. Joy had become a bar
dog. He had phoned Bitter Bob who had confirmed the dog
was not just hanging out at the Love Nest Bar, she had become
a star attraction.
"I
dunno if it's true or not. But some fool said that German
shepherd cost more than two of these girls. You know, if
you go upcountry you c an buy a girl for twenty, thirty
thousand baht. That's what some fool said joy cost."
"Where
would you put your money, Bob?" asked Calvino.
"Well,
that's a tough one. For good balling you'd have to go for
the girl. For loyalty the dog. You can't really piss off
a dog. A girl gets pissed off and she's liable to take a
knife to your cock. So I guess the best thing is just to
keep drinking and not think too much," said Bitter
Bob.
The
bar girls at the Love Nest Bar liked Joy. They cuddled,
teased, kicked, hugged, kissed and ordered joy around the
bar. There was more than a little sadism when the girls
pounced on Joy. Some deeper anger that the life of the animal
was more highly valued than their own life. The customers
such as Bitter Bob liked Joy, and the marnasan decided joy
was good for business. Customers were buying drinks for
the German shepherd. The first night on the job, joy got
drunk on beer. The Love Nest was one of the few remaining
single shophouse bars left on Soi Cowboy where the girls
slept like firewood stacked in cords; the others had become
large entertainment centers for tourists.
The
waitress who disappeared upstairs with Calvino's fifty baht
had been gone ten minutes. Enough time for Calvino to have
a good look around the bar. In the two years since he had
stopped coming around, little had changed. He recognized
most of the half dozen hardcore customers who mixed with
nearly two dozen bargirls. Customers and girls were the
same old faces from before.
It
was a time warp kind of bar. He had paid the bar fine for
Noi a couple of times in those days. A year later, Jerry
Hutton had bought her out, fallen in love, and made the
traditional farang one-man rescue mission into the never-never
heartland of the Bangkok sex world. This was the coal face,
the miners in g-strings, deep inside the shaft, chipping
away through the night. If Hutton had lived long enough,
he would have understood that the kind of people who worked
and camped out in the Love Nest Bar could never be saved;
they always returned to the same sinking ship like rats
which had evolved water-wings - they would never drown,
there was always another ship in the port. Calvino's law
of Bangkok fables Cinderella never went short-time waiting
for her Prince Charming to arrive with her lost glass slipper.
The
Love Nest had no Cinderellas or Prince Charmings. What the
bar did have was a pedigree German shepherd which was a
cheap drunk and drank beer, scotch, and gin chasers. Joy
had made adiversion from the go-go dancers, the mirrors,
and the autopsy video.
Calvino
drank, stared at the go-go dancers, and the mirrors. Behind
the dancers were concave wraparound mirrors constructed
inside a cylinder like Star Trek "Beam me up"
cubicles. The bar girls rarely danced; they hung motionless
like bus commuters, a hand grabbing the floor-to-ceiling
silvermetal pole. The only rotation of hips occurred as
they shifted position, getting a better place to watch the
TV screen at the opposite end of the bar. If the medium
was the message, then the mirrors did a hellish job of conveying
a possible message from the future.
The
optics in the mirrors enlarged the girls' thighs and bottoms
five or six times, and created a distorted illusion of the
front and back of the bikini-clad teenage dancers. The bar
girls on the platform wore the regulation bikini and highheels.
But that all changed in the mirror. Mirror, mirror on the
wall who's the most beautiful girl of all? The Love Nest
mirrors answered the question with a nightmarish vision
of the future twenty-odd years down the road when she was
pushing forty and her ass had expanded five-fold. For guys
like Bitter Bob who glanced between the dancers and the
autopsy video, the special effects of the mirrors confirmed
their view of the world in three time frames: a hostile
past, a hopeless present and a bitter future. And in the
center were two beautiful dancing girls who were half in
the present and half in the future - more guts dropped into
the bucket on the screen - and in this Bar Jerry Hutton
had thought he could change one life.
Joy
bounded across the floor and jumped over a bar girl, landing
on Calvino's lap. Her paws resting on his shoulders, she
licked his face and pushed her head against his neck.
Then
her head whipped around and she stuck her snout into his
Mekong and drank, her tongue splashing Mekong over the table.
She sneezed a couple of times. Calvino stroked her long,
thick brown and black coat. The fourteen month old puppy
pulled away from Calvino, and swung her large front legs
with enormous paws over the small oval table in front of
the bench. The mamasan came over and sat on the bench a
few feet away from Calvino and made sloppy kissing sounds.
Calvino knew a power-play when he saw one. This one worked.
In a reflex action, joy leaped over Calvino, and nuzzled
the mamasan, her jaws gnawing gently on the mamasan’s large,
floppy breasts. The mamasan, half drunk, pretended to punch
joy's face with her fists. As she laughed and turned her
red face away, joy chewed on her hair tied in a bun.
Joy
rammed at her head and snapped off one of the mamasan's
earrings. This caused near panic. Bar girls and mamasan
grabbed at joy, pulling open her mouth, searching the throat
for the earring. A teenaged bar girl pulled down the top
half of her bikini and offered a breast to the dog - she
pinched her pinkish nipple, sticking it in Joy's face, then
pulled back. She returned with a cigarette lighter, flicked
it under Joy's nose, Joy barked, and playfully chewed on
the bar girl's arm. A pimp at the bar leaned back from his
stool and patted Joy, fed her a handful of bar peanuts.
He reached back to the counter, then returned with a lighter.
Joy barked, as the flame came dose to her face. Calvino
on the second sweep of the lighter came across from his
table and grabbed the pimp's wrist. Calvino raised the flame
to touch a cigarette clenched between his lips. He saved
the pimp's face and made his point with a single gesture.
At the same moment, there was a further diversion, as one
of the bar girls, on her hands and knees, found the mamasan's
earring on the floor.
The
obedience school post-graduate scholar was regressing fast
working in the bar. Joy was acting like a cheap drunk and
going down as fast as any young girl brought in from upcountry
and put in a bar. it wasn't a ride downhill; it was being
dropped off a cliff. Calvino wondered what Rolfo would have
thought, seeing the German shepherd with papers going back
one hundred and fifty years getting sloshed on bar scotch
in a bar called the Love Nest. After he gave Rolfo ten thousand
baht for Joy, Rolfo said there was one confidential piece
of information that as joy's new owner he was entitled to
receive. He said it was a code-word.
"What
kind of code-word?"
Rolfo
wrote it down on a piece of paper, tore it off the pad and
handed it to Calvino. The word was - Bismarck.
"If
you say that word in a sharp, firm tone, this dog will kill.
I trained my dogs for the special forces. And when I finish
they are no longer man's best friend. They are one man's
friend. The owner who controls and disciplines the animal."
Calvino
patted joy on the head. "A killing machine?"
"One
hundred percent guaranteed," Rolfo had said. "So
you must careful never to use this word. Not even as a joke.''
Calvino
saw the pimp on the edge of taking a stand. He thought the
word to himself - Bismarck.
The
girls beat up on the dog; the customers cuffed her on the
ears, and flicked lighters in her face. These weren't wanton
acts of cruelty as much as acts of pure boredom.
"It
ain't right, I told Toom," said Bitter Bob, nodding
at the mamasan. "If she doesn't watch that dog, the
girls are gonna kill the poor bitch. You give booze to a
dog and it ain't gonna live long. You ever see a dog liver?
lt doesn't arnount to a hill of beans."
The
Bangkok police didn't arrive at the Love Nest Bar until
about twenty after one. Lt. Col. Pratt had been looking
for Calvino for nearly two hours when he remembered the
matter about the dog. Bitter Bob and most of the dead zone
characters had fled into the night, alone, and in the brokendown
condition which made neither sex nor sleep likely alternatives.
"We
found her at Hotel 99. She had been dead two, maybe three
hours," said Lt. Col. Pratt.
"And
you're not telling me the rest." Calvino stroked joy,
her large head on his lap. The girls in the bar were huddled
in a dense clump at the far end of the bench, crying.
"There
is some rough play, Vincent," said Lt. Col. Pratt.
"Hatcher.
He had Noi killed, shit."
"Nothing
points to Hatcher. It all points to you."
"Of
course. That's how he works," said Calvino.
"I'm
doing the best I can, Vincent."
"What
happened?" asked Calvino, wishing a waitress would
take his order for another drink.
The
operators who ran the short-time hotel had reported the
murder to their contact in the force, who passed the information
along, until someone who worked for Lt. Col. Pratt saw a
connection was being made between Noi's death and Calvino.
Noi had been found dead in a short-time hotel - the kind
with white plastic curtains which drop behind a car so no
one can identify the car or the registration plates. Hotel
99 was located deep inside Soi 11. An attendant had checked
out the room after he knocked a couple of times and no one
answered the door. He used a master key and let himself
inside. He had called out in Thai. There had been no answer.
The sheets on the bed were in the usual tangled state and
the scent of bodily fluids circled in the air. Noi was found
in the bathroom. More precisely, she was inside the bathtub.
The taps had been left on. The bathroom was flooded. Noi
was deep inside the tub, the water covering her body. Her
hands had been tied behind her back, and she had been held
down with some force. When the attendant looked over the
edge, Noi stared up with dead eyes.
The
attendant had identified the john who arrived with Noi at
the short-time hotel. It was a photograph of Calvino. Noi's
relatives had already given a statement about the conflict
between Calvino and Noi over the dog. Most murders in Thailand
were the result of a gambling debt, a business conflict,
or a failed love affair. Circumstances pointed to Calvino
being guilty on at least two counts.
"I
was here at ten, and then again at eleven and never left.
Bitter Bob was at the bar Toom was here. That waitress over
there was serving me drinks," said Calvino.
"And
between ten and eleven?" asked Lt. Col. Pratt.
He
had gone to Rolfo's house and talked with Karl again.
"Seeing
a man about a dog," said Calvino.
"The
attendant at Hotel 99 has fingered you, Vincent."
"How
much you figure Colonel Hatcher paid him, Pratt? Two thousand
baht? Maybe five thousand?"
"I
can handle the attendant for now," said Lt. Col. Pratt.
"But
sooner or later this asshole is going to take us, Pratt."
"Did
you hear the news?"
Calvino
shook his head; he didn't want to admit that he had been
watching the bar blood and guts video.
"The
army has sent a thousand more troops to the Burmese border,
and the air force bombed the Burmese about an hour ago,"
said Lt. Col. Pratt.
"What
you're saying is Colonel Hatcher, and this guy Oxley, and
their friends have won?"
Lt.
Col. Pratt leaned over and patted the dog.
"'I
blame you not; for you are mortal, and mortal eyes cannot
endure the devil,'" said Lt. Col. Pratt, quoting Rkhard
III.
It
was the most Thai of answers wrapped in the most elegant
of Shakespearian prose. Calvino was not accountable under
either Thai or English emotional sensibilities for searching
out the devil while avoiding the blame laid at the feet
of mortals. What Lt. Col. Pratt didn't tell his friend was
the bargain he had made or the devil he had made that bargain
with. He would be attending no more pro-democracy meetings.
There was that most Thai of all Thai things which had faced
him - personal loyalty on the one side and personal conviction
to an abstract idea. The Italians had something like this
when they greeted each other with the word paisan. There
was no other choice in his mind but to help Calvino. It
was the Thai in him. Like it had been Calvino's decision
not to tell him about the threatening phone calls he had
received over helping Dex. Calvino's law about the hardest
lesson to learn was to stop talking when you had nothing
to say. Pratt had his own law of silence don't start talking
about threats received unless you need to be rescued. There
was nothing that Calvino as a farang could do, or could
be expected to do about the phone calls. There was no rescue
mission Calvino could work or blanket of protection he could
offer. Dex had invited the threats through his actions;
and Pratt, by going along to the meetings thought he might
be able to create a shield from harm. Only it didn't work
out that way. But Calvino was a farang and had crashed the
Mad Hatter's Tea Party. There were broken plates, shattered
tables, and sharp edged swords sweeping through in the night.
"Democracy's
not on the menu," said the March Hare.
"You're
mad," said the Mad Hatter.
"I
think we should vote on it," said Alice.
"Kill
her. She's mad. After her."
And
Calvino thought the party was in jest; a celebration of
fun, until the chase had begun.