Timothy Hallinan
Breathing Water: A Bangkok Thriller
This book is dedicated to the memory of Raleigh Philp,
who left behind an ever-widening wake of inspiration,
and to Alicia Aguayo from her hijito
Pinch It
The man behind the desk is a dim shape framed in blinding light, a god emerging from the brilliance of infinity. The god says, Why not the bars? Youre pretty enough.
The girl has worked a finger into the ragged hole in the left knee of her jeans. The knee got scraped when the two men grabbed her, and she avoids the raw flesh. She raises a hand to shade her eyes so she can look at him, but the light is too bright. I cant. I tried for two nights. I cant do it.
Youll get used to it. The god puts a foot on the desk. The foot is shielded from the light by the bulk of his body, and she can see that it is shod in a very thin, very pale loafer. The sole is so shiny that the shoe might never have been worn before. The shoe probably cost more than the girls house.
The girl says, I dont want to get used to it. She shifts a few inches right on the couch, trying to avoid the light.
Its a lot more money. Money you could send home.
Home is gone, the girl says.
Thats a trifle, and he waves it away. Even better. You could buy clothes, jewelry, a nice phone. I could put you into a bar tonight.
The girl just looks down and works her finger around inside the hole. The skin around the scraped knee is farm-dark, as dark as the skin on her hand.
Okay, the man says. Up to you. He lights a cigarette, the flame briefly revealing a hard face with small, thick-lidded eyes, broad nostrils, pitted skin, oiled hair. Not a god, then, unless very well disguised. He waves the smoke away, toward her. The smoke catches the glare to form a pale nimbus like the little clouds at which farmers aim prayers in the thin-dirt northeast, where the girl comes from. But this isnt easy either, the man says.
She pulls her head back slightly from the smoke. I dont care.
The man drags on the cigarette again and puts it out, only two puffs down. Then he leans back in his chair, perilously close to the floor-to-ceiling window behind him. Dont like the light, do you? Dont like to be looked at. Must be a problem with a face like yours. Youre worth looking at.
The girl says, Why do you sit there? Its not polite to make your visitors go blind.
Im not a polite guy, says the man behind the desk. But its not my fault. I put my desk here before they silvered those windows. The building across Sathorn Road, a sea-green spire, has reflective coating on all its windows, creating eighteen stories of mirrors that catch the falling sun early every evening. Its fine in the morning, he says. Its just now that it gets a little bright.
Its rude.
The man behind the desk says, So fucking what? He pulls his foot off the desk and lets the back of the chair snap upright. You dont like it, go somewhere else.
The girl lowers her head. After a moment she says, If I try to beg, Ill just get dragged back here.
The man sits motionless. The light in the room dims slightly as the sun begins to drop behind the rooftops. Then he says, Thats right. He takes out a new cigarette and puts it in his mouth. We get forty percent. Pratunam.
She tries to meet his eyes, but the reflections are still too bright. Im sorry?
Pratunam, he says slowly, enunciating each syllable as though she is stupid. Dont you even know where Pratunam is?
She starts to shake her head and stops. I can find it.
You wont have to find it. Youll be taken there. You cant sit just anywhere. Youll work the pavement we give you. Move around and youll probably get beat up, or even brought back here. He takes the cigarette out of his mouth, looks at it, and breaks it in half. He drops the pieces irritably into the ashtray.
Is it a good place?
Lot of tourists, he says. I wouldnt give it to you if you werent pretty. He picks up the half of the cigarette with the filter on it, puts it in his mouth, and lights it. Then he reaches under the desk and does something, and the girl hears the lock on the door snap closed. You want to do something nice for me?
No, the girl says. If I wanted to do that, Id work in the bar.
I could make you.
The girl says, You could get a fingernail in your eye, too.
The man regards her for a moment and then grunts. The hand goes back under the desk, and the lock clicks again. Ahh, youd probably be a dead fish anyway. He takes a deep drag and scrubs the tip of the cigarette against the bottom of the ashtray, scribbles something on a pad, rips off the page, and holds it out. His eyes follow her as she gets up to take it. Its an address, he says. Go there tonight, you can sleep there. Well pick you up at six-thirty in the morning. Youll work from seven to four, when the night girl takes over. He glances at a gold watch, as thin as a dime, on his right wrist. In English he says, Hows your English?
Can talk some.
Can you say Please, sir? Please, maam? Hungry?
Please, sir, the girl says. Please, maam. A flush of color mounts her dark cheeks. Hungry.
Good, the man says. Go away.
She turns to go, and his phone buzzes. He picks up the receiver.
What? he says. Then he says to the girl, Wait. Into the receiver he says, Good. Bring it in. A moment later an immaculately groomed young woman in a silk business suit comes in, carrying a bundle of rags. She holds it away from her, her mouth pulled tight, as though there are insects crawling on it.
Give it to her, the man says. And you, he says, dont lose it and dont drop it. These things dont grow on trees.
The young woman glances without interest at the girl with the torn jeans and hands the bundle to her. The bundle is surprisingly heavy, and wet.
The girl opens one end, and a tiny face peers up at her.
But she says. Wait. Thisthis isnt-
Just be careful with it, the man says. Anything happens to it, youll be working on your back for years.
But I cant-
Whats the matter with you? Dont you have brothers and sisters? Didnt you spend half your life wiping noses? Just carry it around on your hip or something. Be a village girl again. To the woman in the suit, he says, Give her some money and put it on the books. Whats your name? he asks the girl holding the baby.
Da.
Buy some milk and some throwaway diapers. A towel. Wet wipes. Get a small bottle of whiskey and put a little in the milk at night to knock the baby out, or you wont get any sleep. Dip the corner of the towel in the milk and let it suck. Get a blanket to sit on. Got it?
I cant keep this.
Dont be silly. The man gets up, crosses the office, and opens the door, waving her out with his free hand. No foreigner can walk past a girl with a baby, the man says. When there are foreign women around, pinch it behind the knee. The crying is good for an extra ten, twenty baht.
Dazed, holding the wet bundle away from her T-shirt, Da goes to the door.
Well be watching you, the man says. Sixty for you, forty for us. Try to pocket anything and well know. And then you wont be happy at all.
I dont steal, Da says.
Of course not. The man returns to his desk in the darkening office. And remember, he says. Pinch it.
FOUR MINUTES LATER Da is on the sidewalk, with 250 baht in her pocket and a wet baby in her arms. She walks through the lengthening shadows at the aimless pace of someone with nowhere to go, someone listening to private voices. Well-dressed men and women, just freed from the offices and cubicles of Sathorn Road, push impatiently past her.
Next page