Excerpt
Chapter
4
THE LIDO BAR
Mud
splattered motorcycles and UNTAC Land Cruisers lined both
sides of the road in front of the Lido Bar. Calvino studied
the action curbside for a few minutes. The girls and non-UN
personnel came and went on the motorcycles for hire –all
the drivers had second-hand 50cc Hondas imported by the
container load from Japan. The UNTAC Civ Pol on their hundred-thirty
a day pay check operated in a different world, coming and
going like Third-World warlords in high-class Japanese motoring
style. Calvino worked his way down a row of motorcycle taxis,
showing Fat Stuart's picture to the drivers. They smoked
cheap cigarettes and huddled under the balcony of the Lido,
keeping out of the rain.
It
was the kind of crowd that had looked at photos of dead
people before. In fact, looking at photos of the dead seemed
normal in a country which had preserved more pictures of
the dead than the living. The first driver stared blankly
at the photograph of Fat Stuart, turned it around upside
down, passed it down the line to the next driver, each one
in turn had a vacant, the lights are on but no one is at
homelook. The last motorcycle driver smiled and demanded
money. Calvino handed him a soiled five-hundred dong note
- which worked out to be less than one cent. The driver's
smile fled the scene as he handed Calvino the photo, and
pocketed the money. "He look like you," said the
driver, laughing. Calvino thought about this. He had been
insulted before but this guy was in a league of his own.
He
shrugged and turned away from the motorcycle drivers. Showing
them the photograph was a long shot - but sometimes guys
working the street had a good memory for anyone out of the
ordinary. And there was no question a Khmer weighing in
at one-hundred-twentypounds wouldn't easily forget a man
the size of Fat Stuart. This was the kind of weight range
which could buckle the frame of a 50cc motorcycle, blow
out the tires and bend the wheels and frame, putting its
owner out of the transportation business. His four-hundred-thirty
pounds required specialized transportation. Calvino glanced
at the four or five UNTAC Land Cruisers. He wondered if
Fat Stuart had had a friend or two on the UNTAC police force.
So far he had more questions than answers.
He
walked through the entrance. The Lido Bar was on the second
floor of an old, squat building. The red carpeted stairs,
frayed at the edges, stained, faded, spotted with cigarette
butt burns like the hide of a torture victim. It was around
eleven as Calvino climbed the flight of stairs, and walked
into the bar. It was dark inside. like the Thermae Bar in
Bangkok, the Lido catered for men who wanted a hassle- free
meeting place which had wall-to-wall women for hire. Young
girls, or older ones who kept to the shadows so their excess
mileage couldn't immediately be spotted in the half-light.
Calvino
had drunk in bars like this one. It was a place that made
you want to drink. No one could stay sober and sane in a
place like the Lido. This bar wasn't the last stop on the
road for women who had worked in a bar or massage parlor.
It was the end of the road. There was nothing on the other
side waiting but the grave. The end of the road women had
a certain look of sadness laced with excitement. It was
like a drug, pulling them back, making them lazy for normal
work. And there were the semi-pros - the girls with day
jobs who needed some quick cash for a birthday present or
the rent. Looking around the bar, it was not difficult to
spot the sharks among the newcomers, the runaways and castaways,
and the drug-addicts. Calvino threw back another drink.
One of the women eyed him, he looked away and she walked
on, looking for money for a fix, to feed her baby and pay
the rent. Who knew? Who cared?
The
interior of the Lido was vast. The room looked like it had
been gutted, stripped clean of large, oily nineteenth century
machinery, chains, wires and electrical switches and then
converted with some paint, tables and chairs, a bar counter
and jukebox. There was a dance floor in the middle. To the
right of the entrance was a long bar with stools, and on
all three sides of the dance floor were tables occupied
by working girls and clients. Dim lights and dark comers
turned the figures seated at the tables into shadows. The
Lido was like aback alley, a place one could slip in and
out of without being noticed or stopped. There was no cross-table
talk; the men kept to themselves, looking over the women.
Privacy was an obvious attraction. For the girls. For the
johns.
Calvino
sat at the bar and ordered another Tiger beer. After the
beer arrived he counted about a hundred women. it was a
rough count because there was a balcony overlooking the
street and a load of women were outside, drinking and talking.
Calvino sipped his beer and thought about how Lido was a
familiar name that had been hung on a number of places.
He remembered Lido Beach, Long Island where the wise guys
who worked on mob crews took their girlfriends on the weekend.
The Lido Cinema in Bangkok which someone burnt down. The
Lido Guesthouse in Singapore. Another fire trap waiting
to go up in flames. The Lido on the Champs- in Paris had
half-naked women dressed in four-foot high feathered head
dresses and knee-high silver boots. The kind of high-class
French joint where Fat Stuart L'Blanc would have had dreams
of scoring one of the girls. But he would have never gotten
in the door. And now Calvino was inside the Lido Bar in
Phnom Penh, where wise guys in uniform had a girlfriend
for no more than twenty-four hours, and civilians like L'Blanc
could also indulge their desires, recycling Vietnamese whores
who had been with a uniform the night before.
The
action was happening next to him. A half dozen blond-haired,
blue-eyed men formed a semi-circle at the bar. They wore
sidearms strapped to their hips. They started singing a
German song, and clinking their beer bottles as they sang.
Their green fatigues had small flag patches sewn on the
left shoulder-a black, red and yellow striped flag. They
were in their late twenties.
"They
are German doctors," said someone who had moved in
on Calvino's right. "They are singing a German drinking
song. They come here most nights, drinking, singing, and
then leave together. like a wolf pack on the hunt. But I
have never seen them take the girls."
Calvino
turned around on the stool.
"John
Shaw," said the newcomer, introducing himself. "I'm
from Ireland. Dublin, to be precise."
"Vincent
Calvino. From Brooklyn. Residing in Bangkok, to be precise."
John
Shaw eased into the idea this man was from Brooklyn, drinking
his beer, watching the Germans, looking out at the dance
floor. The music was courtesy of Madonna and a couple of
young girls were moving seductively to the music. At the
edge of darkness beyond the dance floor were a couple of
crew-cut men at a table.
"UNTAC
Civ Pol can't carry firearms. But in Cambodia the German
doctors are armed. You might call that an irony. Cambodia
is a place filled with irony. Irish irony blessed us with
poets; Cambodian irony has cursed them with mass killers.
Irony has an ambiguous, sometimes nasty, sometimes kind
edge. It can go either way," said Shaw.
He
was middle-aged, blue-eyed like the Germans, but he had
the kind of eyes that tracked like a hunting dog; eyes that
locked onto a detail, played with it, turned it over, didn't
let it go until he had no choice. He had no gut hanging
over his belt, his dark hair was short, and the half-light
showed high definition on his muscular forearm clutching
the beer. john Shaw looked like someone who kept in shape,
lifted weights, and played on the police football team.
NGOs had softer, anxious, frightened faces; they wore their
soft bodies as badges of honor, showing that they belonged
outside the field of personal danger, safe inside an office.
And if they ran, it was from danger and not for exercise.
"Are
you a cop or a philosopher?" asked Calvino, knowing
the answer before he put the question.
"I'm
a sergeant back home in Dublin. If you're born in Dublin
then you're a philosopher from birth. A poet by simply walking
the streets. What's your profession is neither here nor
there. My tour of duty ends in six weeks. Can't say III
miss much about this place. The missus and kids, now that
I'll be glad to get home to see."
"Ravi
Singh wouldn't happen to be your boss?" asked Calvino.
"Now
how would you be knowing that?" asked John Shaw, trying
to look surprised but the big smile spoiled the effect.
"Like
you knew the Germans were medical corps." Lt. Col.
Pratt and Ravi Singh had arranged for an Irish babysitter,
he thought.
"Can
I buy you a beer?" asked john Shaw. "Forget the
Tiger. Try the VB. It's a larger can for the same money."
The
Germans had finished their drinking song. They faced each
other and had that kind of look of men in a huddle between
plays in a football game. Then gave a final shout in unison,
clapped their hands, turned and marched out of the Lido
without taking any notice of the women hovering at the door.
"The
Germans have always had discipline, will-power," said
Calvino. "Qualities you want in a doctor or mechanic."
"I
can't really vouch for their discipline. But I know doctors
shouldn't be walking around with guns," said Shaw.
"In
America guns have become a necessary dress accessory,"
said Calvino. "like jewelry."
"Seems
like jewelry is on everyone's mind," said john Shaw,
The
comment had almost drawn Shaw out but then he returned to
his beer. Calvino saw him think this over and then back
off. John Shaw was one hell'va a cop, someone in control;
he wouldn't spring for something as obvious as this, and
he smiled and raised his VB beer.
"We've
put the Lido off limits for our boys," explained john
Shaw. "We've got policemen from thirty-two countries
on the UNTAC force. I have to be honest with you. Not all
of our colleagues here have the same police training and
experience. And when they come here, take out girls, put
them in UNTAC vehicles, before you know it, what is a personal
matter gets reported in the press. And that's a bit of a
problem. The missus in Dublin reads in the newspaper about
how all the foreign cops in Phnom Penh are sleeping with
Vietnamese prostitutes. She doesn't much like that. Not
that she's got anything against the Vietnamese. She doesn't,
I must say, and I don't much like what goes on here either.
You should go around to the health clinic, and see all those
lads standing in line with their dicks out, looking real
sad. Tonight, I'm having a little look-in. Checking out
who is being naughty and who's being nice."
"We
could stop bullshitting each other," said Calvino.
John
Shaw sighed. "Now why would I be..."
Calvino
cut him off. "It's doesn't matter why. I'm looking
for someone. He is well connected..." He let it ride.
"Connected
to what, Mr. Calvino?"
"That's
what I don't know. But if I had to guess, I'd say it's likely
army and some other influential people on the inside track
in Phnom Penh and Bangkok."
"You
know how hard it is to send someone home from Cambodia?"
asked John Shaw, shifting gears as the music changed to
heavy metal. "It's all politics here. How can you run
a police force when you can't control your men? Run them
out of the force if you have to? You know how much one-hundred-thirty
a day is for some of these lads? One year in Cambodia is
like working eighty years back where they come from. And
don't think they're keeping the full amount. Most of it
gets all divided up and passed down a line as long as this
bar with hands out all along the way. Some end up living
on four dollars a day. In their mind, they aren't much better
off than the Cambodians. Of course, the Cambodians are much
worse off, but they don't see it that way."
"The
man I'm looking for had the right background to startup
sideline business," said Calvino.
"A
lot of men have done that."
"This
man had opportunity and access to several military product
lines for which there is a world market. He was in business
with a jeweler in Bangkok. The jeweler's dead. He used to
come here. Maybe you saw him. He was a fat French Canadian."
"A
lot of people come in and out of the Lido."
"You
would have remembered Fat Stuart."
John
Shaw dropped one shoulder, leaned over the bar, the wheels
spinning in his head as he raised the VB beer to his lips.
"Some of our boys might bend the rules to their advantage
if they had the chance. It's cat and mouse. The Lido's off
limits, but you saw the Land Cruisers parked outside. They
know we can't hardball them. Send them packing for whoring.
They would just laugh in our face if we threatened them.
But they also know that some activities can get them a one-way
ticket out of here as fast as you can get a dose from a
Lido girl."
"Drugs?"
asked Calvino.
"That
would do it."
"How
about selling AK47s?"
"They
would be history."
"You
have your suspicions?" asked Calvino.
"Those
I have, my friend," replied the Irishman, setting down
his beer.
"But
nothing you can prove?"
"If
l had proof, then l wouldn't be sitting at the bar, talking
with you. Now would I"
Calvino
broke out in a big smile. John Shaw had a certain quality.
Call it sincerity or honesty. He had a little of the Irish
storyteller in him as well. Someone who had been on the
force long enough to know that it often made no difference
what the truth was; like love and hatred, the truth was
unstable, shifting. Calvino remembered what Pratt had told
him about police work. You studied close-up people straddling
the thin line, some working both sides against the middle.
Sooner or later someone always fell off. Patience was waiting
for that moment, not forcing it and being ready to catch
those unlucky enough to fall. But, as in most parts of the
world, in Phnom Penh, it was easier to define the line than
finding who was sitting in the shadows, talking to the whores.
"I'm
looking for a Vietnamese girl," said Calvino.
"You
came to the right place. Not that many Khmers working at
Lido. That gives you a wide choice," replied john Shaw.
Shaw
was right. The Lido girls were overwhelmingly Vietnamese
hookers - faces painted, in cheap dresses they sat at tables,
hovered around the bar, spilled onto the dance floor, friends
dancing in groups, looking over the men standing with beer
on the edges. Not long after the German doctors left, a
couple of foreigners - Africans not much smaller than Fat
Stuart and decked out in their traditional dress - were
dancing, their huge bellies pumping up and down with teenaged
prostitutes. The African peacekeepers towered above the
girls who giggled and pointed at the bouncing stomachs.
Calvino tried to imagine what was going on inside their
heads as they danced.
Calvino
eased off the stool.
"I'm
going to have a look around," he said.
John
Shaw shrugged. "By all means, help yourself."
He
walked along the edge of the dance floor, and then slipped
out the back and onto the balcony which overlooked the street
and main entrance below. He stood at the railing, looking
down. The rain pelted the canopy above the balcony.
From
behind him came a familiar English voice, "The trick
is to stay away from the gaping holes in the canopy."
Calvino
looked up and saw the hole and stepped to one side.
"The
whores can spot a newcomer," said the Englishman. "They
always stand under a hole, and the rain falls on their head.
It makes the whores laugh. They think a man who doesn't
know enough to keep his head dry probably doesn't know the
co st of screwing either. It'd be difficult to know if this
is actually true. But the whores believe it's true. And
that's really all that matters. "
"Scott,
what are you doing in Phnom Penh?" asked Calvino.
"Keeping
myself dry."
Richard
Scott smiled, tilted back in his chair, touching the wall,
his feet pressed against the floor, smoking a cigarette
and drinking a beer straight from the can. His gray eyes
and short-cropped gray hair gave him a boyish look for someone
pushing fifty. He had on his jogging outfit - Nike shorts,
Reebok tennis shoes, and a faded white singlet with a Singha
Beer ad on the front. Scott was in perpetual training, working
out with weights but mostly long-distance running. He entered
iron-man contests for men over forty-five years old and
sometimes finished in the top ten. Not bad considering a
lot of guys in that age bracket didn't whore or drink, and
had been in professional. sports. In Bangkok, he had tried
his hand at running a couple of bars, thinking he would
have his private stable of girls. Only it didn't turn out
that way. Toward the end, Scott had once said that the age
of bar girls had to be calculated like dog years. Each six
months working in a bar equaled five years in a normal woman's
life. By the time a girl had worked five years in a Bangkok
bar she was twenty-four going on fifty-four. Scott had been
drunk when he said this made all the women far too old for
him once he realized their true age. Calvino thought he
would have said the same thing stone cold sober.
His
was an old story repeated a hundred if not a thousand times
over-he drank too much and didn't have enough cashflow to
pay both the landlord and the police. Calvino hadn't seen
Richard Scott for nearly a year. Once or twice they had
run into each other at the forty-baht lunch at the Lonesome
Hawk Bar in Washington Square. Then Scott disappeared from
the Bangkok scene. One rumor had Scott double-crossing an
influential person who had him killed, his body tied down
with iron and cement and dumped in the Chao Phraya River.
Another rumor had Scott going back to London, and working
for a house removal company. That rumor had few believers;
Richard Scott never liked heavy lifting unless it was either
in a weight room or a bedroom.
"Should
I ask why you're here?" asked Scott. "Part of
a larger American conspiracy to give the Cambodians back
to the KR? After all, it was your country who financed them.
Armed them. Said, look at all those fields, why not do some
killing? You might be good at that. But you probably don't
want to talk about who is financing you in Phnom Penh. Did
I say that? I take it back. It's raining and it's never
a good time to talk about politics when you're trying to
stay dry."
Calvino
started to remember why he hadn't missed Scott. Richard
had a religious faith in working out, staying fit, and secure
in his belief that the Ms of the world lay at the feet of
the American Government. Every American was an agent, someone
sent with specific instruction either to convert or failing
conversion, to subvert and overthrow other governments so
they would have a market to sell weapons. There was no such
thing as a private eye or private agent; he had Calvino
pegged as a secret agent. A kind of at-large First Secretary
who talked shop with people like Alice Dugan.
I
heard you were in England," said Calvino.
"For
a couple of months. It was pretty grim. No work. And one
day I packed it in. Since I'd had enough of Bangkok I thought
why not try Cambodia and Vietnam."
"Did
you see Fat Stuart about a month ago?" asked Calvino.
Richard
Scott dropped the front legs of the wooden chair forward
and made a grab for one of the girls, pulling her onto his
lap. "He's a bit difficult not to see."
"He's
dead," said Calvino.
"Someone
once said if Fat Stuart died at the rate of one pound a
year, he might live to be a thousand."
"He
died all at once," said Calvino.
"The
first time he came to the Lido, the girls freaked out. Almost
all the whores are from Saigon. You've heard about the boat
people. This little one on my lap is one of the bus people."
He gave her a kiss on the cheek, and she curled up, playing
with his chest hair, twisting and braiding it with her fingers.
"Think how bad it's gotta be for these girls in Saigon
for them to get on a leaky old boat or in a broken-down
bus. For a few bucks they are riding with chickens and pigs
for hours. They've heard that Phnom Penh is lousy with rich
farangs who will fuck them for money. Some of them end up
at the Lido. Their worst nightmare must have come true when
Fat Stuart came through the door. He has dimples on his
knees larger than their face. He spoke a strange kind of
French. That's the hellish thing about poverty for a woman.
Either you starve or accept money from a thousand pound
jelly-fish-like creature to climb on top of you. Evolution
is a strange business."
"Fat
Stuart was four-hundred something," said Calvino.
"Tell
that to a girl who weighs ninety pounds."
As
Calvino stood back from the rail, automatic gun fire erupted
from about fifty meters up the road. AK47 fire in two, three
round bursts. This was followed by a moment of silence and
return fire came back from the opposite end of the street,
making the I-ido near the dead centre of the cross-fire.
The motorcycle taxi drivers on the street below had dived
under their bikes for shelter.
The
Vietnamese girls fled away from the hand-railing and stood
erect, their backs touching the far wall, clutching their
handbags against their chests. One was crying. Most were
shaking, eyes closed, lips quivering with fear. They looked
like the condemned at the wrong end of a firing squad. Being
caught in cross-fire on the balcony of the Lido was not
what they had in mind as a good evening of fun. They didn't
talk, joke or look at each other. Richard Scott finished
his beer and told the girl on his lap to go and fetch him
another one. But she was too afraid to leave his lap, and
she tightened her arms wrapped around his neck each time
he tried to pry her loose.
"They
freak out every time there's a little gunfire. It's nothing
really. Most of the time the Khmers are shooting at the
clouds."
"Yeah,
I've heard, they think it makes the rain go away."
Richard
Scott nodded. " Maybe it does. Who knows? Has anyone
ever studied the problem of rain clouds and bullets? Maybe
the CIA." Additional gun bursts knocked out some windows
in the building across the street.
"They
seem to have a hard time hitting the sky," said Calvino,
his hand instinctively reaching in for his own gun. He crouched
down near the balcony and looked down the street.
"It's
just a little shooting from near the market. The military's
probably put up a checkpoint," said Richard Scott.
"And some asshole forgot to stop. You have to stop
for them. You can't just keep on going or they get pissed
off. The soldiers want cigarettes or cash. It seems reasonable.
The government doesn't pay them. The Americans won't pay
them because they don't like their politics. So they have
to pay themselves. It seems to work out all right. Soldiers
shoot people who don't pay. Who is going to mourn a cheap
Charlie? Besides they don't have to shoot all that many
before the word gets out."
A
couple of the Vietnamese whores crept beside Calvino and
bent over the balcony, straining to locate the source of
the gunfire. But most of the whores stayed back, pressing
against the wall; they wanted as much distance as possible
between themselves and the exposure of being in the open
near the edge of the balcony. Scott explained that most
of the girls worked day jobs in the local beauty shops,
changing into their party dress and whoring by night. They
were what Scott called the Saigon bus girls. He explained
how they were afraid at night, and they had every reason
to be scared. The Khmer Rouge had machine-gunned men, women
and children, killing scores of Vietnamese some months earlier.
A great hatred of the Vietnamese had been whipped up during
the election. Killing Vietnamese was socially acceptable
behavior among a lot of Khmers. One of the few activities
which seemed to unify the populace. Killing had a different
meaning, a different history but roughly the same purpose
in Cambodia. To create terror and submission, nothing ever
worked better than summary executions.
"You
think I can get a beer?" Scott shouted at one of the
girls inside the door, She disappeared and a moment later
returned with a Tiger beer.
"They're
really not bad people," said Scott. "I kind of
like the Vietnamese. The whores are like us, Calvino. Outsiders.
They don't fit in. They hang around, do their job, and try
to find some decency in their lives. It's not their fault
the Americans fucked up their country. It's not the Cambodians'
fault the Americans dropped more bombs on Cambodia than
were dropped during World War 11. just because you say a
war ends doesn't mean it ends."
Calvino
figured out in his head that in bar girl years Richard Scott
must have been well over one-hundred-sixty years old. Long
enough for a heart to go hard, black and cold.
Across
the street from the Lido were crumbling buildings -not buildings
in the conventional sense but concrete shells. Calvino felt
the anger rising inside. Richard Scott's one-track condemnation
of America masked some deeper pain or hostility. Blaming
America was an easy way out for problems; it meant there
was no more work or thinking to do about trouble. Like bashing
Jews, a ready-made audience existed for this kind of hatred.
With the blood and dirt on American hands, why bother, it
was easier to sit on a balcony, drink beer, and bitch about
how the Yanks had fucked everything up. He started to count
what looked like bullet holes, controlling his anger against
Scott. The buildings were so run down the holes could have
been caused by anything. The condition of the buildings
showed that human beings were prepared to live in a city
like animals. These were animal holding pens; nests with
brick walls; structures so ugly, flat, and squat they seemed
broken. A four-story hovel which housed people with a shattered
history. Suffering and misery domes built by a tribe that
tried to kill itself.
On
the ground floor the metal gate was pulled tight with a
large Yale lock. Peeling paint, the windows splotched and
stained, making one feel the damp ache of those inside.
There were no lights in the windows; not even a candle.
The rooms looked abandoned; the building looked as if it
contained no living thing. Calvino could imagine the Khmer
Rouge taking people out of the rooms, and loading them into
trucks. They never came back. The building waited for new
occupants.
Below
on the street it was business as usual. The Lido motorcycles
pulled up with whores and customers. A moment later, another
driver, whore and customer seated on the back of allonda
50cc disappeared out of sight down the flooded street. Several
UNTAC Civ Pol vehicles were parked opposite the Lido An
off-duty cop -who looked Eastern European loaded two whores,
who were drinking beer, into the front seat of an UNTAC
Land Cruiser and drove away. Then Calvino saw John Shaw,
the Irish cop, walk alone across the street, keys in his
hand, climb into his land Cruiser, and follow after the
first vehicle.
"You
didn't happen to see Fat Stuart here with Mike Hatch? "
asked Calvino, turning back from the railing. There wasn't
an immediate reply, so Calvino rephrased the question, "Have
you seen Hatch around lately?"
Richard
Scott frowned, rubbing the side of his face. He had a nervous
condition which made his eye and cheek twitch whenever he
felt tension coming on hard. Hatch's name had twisted some
of the nerves. "I've been waiting for him to come around.
Let's see, it's been a couple of weeks. We have some business
plans," said Scott. "And these things take time
to organize."
"What
kind of business?" asked Calvino, pulling up a chair
directly opposite Scott.
"That's
kinda personal, isn't it?" The muscles in his face
pulsated, and Scott gulped beer from the can
"I'm
not asking for trade secrets, Scott. And I'm not working
for the US Government if that's what you're worried about."
Calvino could see the approach wasn't working. He pulled
out his wallet and showed Scott a check payable to Mike
Hatch in the amount of forty-five thousand dollars. It was
dark on the balcony. And Scott used his cigarette lighter
to read the check. "I'm looking to deliver this to
Hatch."
"When
did you become an investment banker?" Scott asked.
After
Hatch went into the gun business," said Calvino.
Scott
didn't much like this answer, and he quickly pulled the
Vietnamese whore off his lap and leaned forward in his chair.
"Who
said Hatch was in the gun business? Patten? Because if he
did, he's a lying sonofabitch." He looked Calvino straight
in the eye with a look which approached genuine surprise.
His gray eyes had betrayed his claim that he didn't know
the game Patten was playing. He handed back the check payable
to Mike Hatch.
Calvino
remained silent as he folded the check and put it back in
his wallet. Several of the Vietnamese girls watched over
his shoulder. There was a constant stream of girls circling
from the dance floor to the balcony. Some UNTAC personnel
in civilian clothes sat with girls at the opposite end of
the balcony.
"Our
business venture is in Vietnam. We are putting together
the deal of a lifetime. We are planning yuppy treks down
Highway One. Do you know how many American yuppies would
pay through the nose to have someone lead them down Highway
One? Thousands and thousands of Americans who heard something
about the war. This is their chance to follow in Charlie's
footstep s. It can't miss. Forget about guns. The money
is in tourism. Mike and I are planning the first Highway
One Marathon. We are working on a cableTV deal. Reporters
from all over the world will come to cover the Marathon.
Guns! Who in the fuck cares about guns? Except gun-crazy
Americans. You people are obsessed with guns. You're all
armed to the teeth. In. England we don't really like guns,
and we don't like people carrying them around in public.
And that includes the police."
The
scheme sounded like one Richard Scott would be interested
in doing. He was a jogger. He loved Vietnamese women. He
was finished with Bangkok and this was his opportunity to
combine his avocation, hobby, drinking, and whoring and
to get paid at the same time. It had the ring of truth.
What didn't we into the equation was what is real connection
was with Mike Hatch. He seemed to be covering up for Hatch,
holding back information about Hatch's whereabouts. If Scott
wouldn't tell him the truth, then Calvino thought there
was an outside chance one of the Lido girls was serving
Hatch and for the right price would take him directly to
his room.
"Which
of these girls did Fat Stuart take?" asked Calvino.
The
question caught Richard Scott off guard and made him laugh
unexpectedly, making beer shoot out of his nose. "The
one who when she turns to the side is so flat she disappears."
"No,
seriously."
Scott
wiped his nose and looked around the balcony for a couple
of minutes. The girl he had pushed off his lap crawled back
on, dangling her legs on his bare legs. "I love it
when they do that," he said.
Calvino
took out the photograph of Fat Stuart's dead face and showed
it to the girl. He held Scott's lighter close to the photograph.
He asked her if she recognized him. There was no reply.
"The
girls only speak Vietnamese. And a little French,"
said Scott. He then translated the question into Vietnamese,
and the girl stared hard, and finally pointed at one of
The girls in a red mini-skirt and white blouse who sat with
the off-duty UNTAC personnel at the far end of the balcony.
Her blouse was half-unbuttoned and she was necking with
one of the men who was running his hand up and down her
leg. "She says the shy one over there went with Fat
Stuart."
"When?"
asked Calvino.
"Light
years ago, "replied Richard Scott.
"In
bar girl time?" asked Calvino.
"In
Lido time. Here six days is one year. This one here is about
a thousand years old. But looks pretty good for her age."
"Any
other girls go with Fat Stuart?"
Scott
and the girl on his lap spoke in Vietnamese for about a
minute. "Apparently not. This girl apparently specializes
in rather large men. Though Fat Stuart was a little big
even by her standards."
Calvino
got up and walked over to where the girl sat, with her head
back, showing a long, slender throat. He tapped the UNTAC
soldier on the shoulder. "I don't want any trouble.
I just want to ask your girl a few questions. It will only
take a couple of minutes. "He held his hands palms
up as a gesture of peace. But it was a wasted effort, the
soldier' s. eyes looked from Calvino to the girl, and then
came off the chair with his fists flying. He had been drinking
and that made his reaction time a couple of ticks too slow.
He threw a couple of useless fatman's windmakers, missing
Calvino, who stepped to one side. Calvino caught him with
a heavy right into his midsection, and the fight immediately
left him The soldier grabbed the railing, struggling to
get to his feet, and instead leaned his head over the side
and vomited beer. Once again the motorcycle drivers below
ducked for cover; they were having one very bad night. Calvino
pulled the girl over to where Richard Scott was sitting.
"That
won't make you popular with the motorcycle taxi drivers.
They hate it when foreigners vomit on their heads."
"Ask
this girl if she knows Mike Hatch."
Scott
asked her, and nodded to Calvino. "Of course, she could
be lying. But Mike knows a lot of Lido girls, so she might
be telling the truth."
"Ask
her if she knows where Mike lives."
Richard
Scott smiled. "Now why didn't I think of that?"
He
asked the girl, and she said she knew where Mike Hatch lived
and it was not far from the bar. All she wanted was some
money for her time and effort. That seemed like a fair deal.
It
was after midnight when Calvino and the girl walked down
the tattered red carpeted staircase and into the street
where some of the drivers were cursing the vomit and combing
their hair with plastic combs. Their faces looked like the
nerve endings had been cut. Like they didn't feel much of
anything. And they didn't miss the pain.