Windup Girl

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Windup Girl Page 24

by Bacigalupi, Paolo

Jaidee walks on, listening to the steady chant of monks who pray every minute of the day, summoning the power of the spirit worlds to Bangkok’s aid. There were times when he himself knelt on the cool marble of the shrine, prostrate before the city’s central pillar, begging for the help of the King and the spirits and whatever life force the city was imbued with as he went forth to do his work. The city pillar was talismanic. It gave him faith.

  Now he walks past in his white robes and doesn’t look twice.

  All things are transient.

  He continues through the streets, makes his way into the crowded quarters along the back of Charoen Khlong. The waters lap quietly. No one poles its dark surface this late at night. But ahead, on one of the screened porches a candle flickers. He steals closer.

  “Kanya!”

  His old lieutenant turns, surprised. She composes her features, but not before Jaidee has a chance to read her shock at what stands before her: this forgotten man without a hair on his head, without even his eyebrows, grinning madly at her from the foot of her steps. He removes his sandals and climbs in white like a ghost up the stairs. Jaidee is aware of the appearance he presents, can’t help but enjoy the humor as he opens the screens and slips within.

  “I thought you had already gone to the forests,” Kanya says.

  Jaidee settles beside her, arranging his robes around him. He stares out at the stinking waters of the khlong. A mango tree’s branches reflect against the moonlight liquid silver. “It takes a long time to find a monastery willing to soil itself with my sort. Even Phra Kritipong seems to have second thoughts when it comes to enemies of Trade.”

  Kanya makes a face. “Everyone talks about how they are in ascendancy. Akkarat speaks openly of allowing windup imports.”

  Jaidee startles. “I hadn’t heard of such. A few farang, but …”

  Kanya makes a face. “‘All respect to the Queen, but windups do not riot.’” She forces her thumb into the hard peel of a mangosteen. Its purple skin, nearly black in the darkness, peels away. “Torapee measuring his father’s footprints.”

  Jaidee shrugs. “All things change.”

  Kanya grimaces. “How can one fight their money? Money is their power. Who remembers their patrons? Who remembers their obligations when money comes surging in as strong and deep as the ocean against the seawalls?” She grimaces. “We are not fighting the rising waters. We are fighting money.”

  “Money is attractive.”

  Kanya makes a bitter face. “Not to you. You were a monk even before they sent you to a kuti.”

  “Perhaps that’s why I make such a poor novice.”

  “Shouldn’t you be in your kuti now?”

  Jaidee grins. “It was cramping my style.”

  Kanya stills, looks hard at Jaidee. “You’re not ordaining?”

  “I’m a fighter, not a monk.” He shrugs. “Sitting in a kuti and meditating will do no good. I let myself become confused about that. Losing Chaya confused me.”

  “She will return. I’m sure of it.”

  Jaidee smiles sadly at his protégé, so full of hope and faith. It’s surprising that a woman who smiles so little and sees so much melancholy in the world can believe that in this case—this one exceptional case—that the world will turn in a positive direction.

  “No. She will not.”

  “She will!”

  Jaidee shakes his head. “I always thought you were the skeptical one.”

  Kanya’s face is anguished. “You’ve done everything to signal capitulation. You have no face left! They must let her go!”

  “They will not. I think that she was dead within a day. I only clung to hope because I was mad for her.”

  “You don’t know she’s dead. They could still be holding her.”

  “As you pointed out, I have no face left. If this were a lesson, she would have returned by now. It was a different sort of message than we thought.” Jaidee contemplates the still waters of the khlong. “I need a favor from you.”

  “Anything.”

  “Loan me a spring gun.”

  Kanya’s eyes widen. “Khun …”

  “Don’t worry. I’ll bring it back. I don’t need you to come with me. I just need a good weapon.”

  “I …”

  Jaidee grins. “Don’t worry. I’ll be fine. And there’s no reason to destroy two careers.”

  “You’re going after Trade.”

  “Akkarat needs to understand that the Tiger still has teeth.”

  “You don’t even know if it was Trade who took her.”

  “Who else, really?” Jaidee shrugs. “I have made many enemies, but in the end, there is really only one.” He smiles. “There is Trade and there is me. I was foolish to let people convince me otherwise.”

  “I’ll come with you.”

  “No. You will stay here. You will keep an eye on Niwat and Surat. That is all I ask of you, Lieutenant.”

  “Please don’t do this. I will beg Pracha, I will go to—”

  Jaidee cuts her off, before she speaks of ugliness. There was a time when he would have let her lose face before him, would have allowed her apologies to spill forth like a waterfall during the monsoon, but not anymore.

  “I don’t wish for anything else,” he says. “I am content. I will go to Trade and I will make them pay. All of this is kamma. I was not meant to keep Chaya forever, or she to keep me. But I think there are still things we can do if we hold tight to our damma. We all have our duties, Kanya. To our patrons, to our men.” He shrugs. “I’ve had many different lives. I was a boy, and a muay thai champion, and a father, and a white shirt.” He glances down at the folds of his novice’s clothes. “A monk, even.” He grins. “Don’t worry about me. I have a few more stages yet to traverse before I give up on this life and go to meet Chaya.” He lets his voice harden. “I still have unfinished business, and I won’t stop until it is done.”

  Kanya watches him, eyes anguished. “You can’t go alone.”

  “No. I will take Somchai.”

  Trade: the ministry that functions with impunity, that scoffs at him so easily, that steals his wife and leaves a hole in him the size of a durian.

  Chaya.

  Jaidee studies the building. In the face of all those blazing lights, he feels like a savage in the wilderness, like a hilltribe spirit doctor staring at the advance of a megodont army. For a moment, his sense of mission falters.

  I should see the boys, he tells himself. I could go home.

  And yet here he is in the darkness, watching the lights of the Ministry of Trade, where they burn their coal allocation as though the Contraction never happened, as though there are no seawalls needed to keep back the ocean.

  Somewhere in there a man squats and plans. The man who watched him at the anchor pads so long ago. Who spat betel and sauntered away as if Jaidee were nothing more than a cockroach to be crushed. Who sat beside Akkarat and observed silently as Jaidee was thrown down. That man will lead to Chaya’s resting place. That man is the key. Somewhere inside those glowing windows.

  Jaidee ducks back into the darkness. He and Somchai wear dark street clothes, stripped of all identifiers, the better to blend with the night. Somchai is a fast one. One of the best. Dangerous close in, and quiet. He knows his way around a lock, and, like Jaidee, he is motivated.

  Somchai’s face is serious as he studies the building. Almost as serious as Kanya, when Jaidee considers it. The demeanor seems to creep up on all of them, eventually. Seems to come with the work. Jaidee wonders if the Thai ever really smiled as he has heard in legends. Every time he hears his boys laugh, it is as if some beautiful orchid has blossomed in the forest.

  “They sell themselves cheaply,” Somchai murmurs.

  Jaidee nods shortly. “I remember when Trade was just a bit portfolio under Agriculture, and now look at it.”

  “You’re showing your age. Trade was always a big ministry.”

  “No. Just a tiny department. A joke.” Jaidee waves at the new complex with its high-tec
h convection vents, with its awnings and porticos. “It’s a new world, once again.”

  As if to taunt him, a pair of cheshires jump up on a balustrade to preen and wash. They molt in and out of view, careless of discovery. Jaidee pulls out his spring gun and takes aim. “That’s what Trade has given us. Cheshires should be on their badge.”

  “Please don’t.”

  He looks at Somchai. “It carries no karmic cost. They have no soul.”

  “They bleed like any other animal.”

  “You could say the same of ivory beetles.”

  Somchai ducks his head, but doesn’t say anything more. Jaidee scowls and puts his spring gun back in its holster. It would be a waste of ammunition anyway. There are always more.

  “I used to be on the poison details for cheshires,” Somchai says finally.

  “Now it’s you who shows your age.”

  Somchai shrugs. “I had a family then.”

  “I didn’t know.”

  “Cibiscosis.118. Aa. It was quick.”

  “I remember. My father died with that one as well. A bad iteration.”

  Somchai nods. “I miss them. I hope they reincarnated well.”

  “I’m sure they did.”

  He shrugs. “One can hope. I became a monk for them. Ordained for a full year. I prayed. Did many offerings.” He says again, “One can hope.”

  The cheshires yowl again as Somchai watches. “I’ve killed thousands of them. Thousands. I’ve killed six men in my life and never regretted any of them, but I’ve killed thousands of cheshires and have never felt at ease.” He pauses, scratches behind his ear at a bloom of arrested fa’ gan fringe. “I sometimes wonder if my family’s cibiscosis was karmic retribution for all those cheshires.”

  “It couldn’t be. They’re not natural.”

  Somchai shrugs. “They breed. They eat. They live. They breathe.” He smiles slightly. “If you pet them, they will purr.”

  Jaidee makes a face of disgust.

  “It’s true. I have touched them. They are real. As much as you or I.”

  “They’re just empty vessels. No soul fills them.”

  Somchai shrugs. “Maybe even the worst monstrosities of the Japanese live in some way. I worry that Noi and Chart and Malee and Prem have been reborn in windup bodies. Not all of us are good enough to become Contraction phii. Maybe some of us become windups, in Japanese factories, working working working, you know? We’re so few in comparison to the past, where did all the souls go? Maybe to the Japanese? Maybe into windups?”

  Jaidee masks his uneasiness at the direction of Somchai’s words. “It’s impossible.”

  Somchai shrugs again. “Still. I could not bear to hunt a cheshire again.”

  “Then let’s hunt men.”

  Across the street, a door is opening and a Ministry worker steps outside. Jaidee is already crossing the street, sprinting to catch the man. Their target strides to a rack of bicycles and bends down to unlock a wheel. Jaidee’s club slides free. The man looks up and gasps and then Jaidee is on top of him, baton swinging. The man has time to raise an arm. Jaidee swats it aside and then he is inside the man’s reach and clubs him across the head.

  Somchai catches up. “You’re fast for an old man.”

  Jaidee smiles. “Take his feet.”

  They lug the body back across the street, slipping into the puddled blackness between the methane lamps. Jaidee goes through his pockets. Keys jingle. He grins and raises them to show the prize. He ties the man quickly, blindfolds and gags him. A cheshire drifts close, watching, a molting of calico and shadow and stone.

  “Will the cheshires eat him?” Somchai wonders.

  “If you cared, you would have let me kill them.”

  Somchai ponders this, but doesn’t say anything. Jaidee finishes binding the man. “Come on.” They jog back across the street, slip to the door. The key enters easily, and they are inside.

  In the glare of electricity, Jaidee stifles the urge to locate light switches and plunge the Ministry into darkness. “Stupid to have people working so late. Burning all this carbon.”

  Somchai shrugs. “Our man may be here in the building, even now.”

  “Not if he’s lucky.” But Jaidee has the same thought. He wonders if he will be able to restrain himself if he catches Chaya’s killer. Wonders why he should.

  They slip through more lighted halls. A few people are still present, but no one gives them a second glance as they stride by. Both of them walk with authority, have the air of men others must defer to. Jaidee acknowledges others with a quick inclination of his head as he walks past. Eventually he finds the records offices he requires. Somchai and Jaidee pause in front of glass doors. Jaidee hefts his baton.

  “Glass,” Somchai notes.

  “You want to try?”

  Somchai examines the lock, pulls out a set of tools, sets to work probing the aperture, massaging its tumblers. Jaidee stands beside him, waiting impatiently. The corridor blazes with light.

  Somchai fiddles with the locks.

  “Eh. Never mind.” Jaidee hefts his baton. “Move aside.”

  The shattering is quick; the sound echoes and fades. They wait for footsteps but there are none. They both slip inside and proceed to rifle through the cabinets. Eventually Jaidee finds the personnel files, and then there is a long period of examining poor photographs, of setting aside ones that seem familiar, sifting, sorting.

  “He knew me,” Jaidee mutters. “He looked right at me.”

  “Everyone knows you,” Somchai observes. “You are famous.”

  Jaidee grimaces. “You think he was at the anchor pads to collect something? Or just there for the inspections themselves?”

  “Or perhaps they wanted whatever was in Carlyle’s holds. Or some other dirigible that aborted arrival and dropped in Occupied Lanna, instead. There are a thousand possibilities, no?”

  “Here!” Jaidee points. “This is the one.”

  “You’re sure? His face was narrower, I thought.”

  “I’m sure of it.”

  Somchai frowns as he scans the file over Jaidee’s shoulder. “A low-level man. Not important at all. No one with influence.”

  Jaidee shakes his head. “No. He has power. I saw the way he looked at me. He was at the ceremony when I was demoted.” He frowns. “There is no address information from him. Just Krung Thep.”

  The sound of scuffling comes from outside. A pair of men stand in the broken doorway with their spring guns drawn. “Hold!”

  Jaidee grimaces. Clasps the file behind his back. “Yes? There is a difficulty?” The guards step through the door, survey the office.

  “Who are you?”

  Jaidee looks at Somchai. “I thought you said I was famous.”

  Somchai shrugs. “Not everyone loves muay thai.”

  “But still, everyone gambles. They should have at least placed bets on my fights.”

  The guards come closer. They order Jaidee and Somchai onto their knees. As the guards come around to secure them, Jaidee lashes out with an elbow. Catches one guard in the gut. Whirls with a knee that slams the man in the head. The other guard fires a stream of blades before Somchai hits him in the throat. The man falls, dropping his pistol, gurgling through a broken windpipe.

  Jaidee grabs the surviving guard, drags him close. “Do you know this man?” He holds up the picture of his target. The guard’s eyes widen and he shakes his head, tries to crawl away towards his pistol. Jaidee kicks it out of reach, then kicks the man in his ribs. “Tell me everything about him! He’s yours. Akkarat’s.”

  The guard shakes his head. “No!”

  Jaidee kicks him in the face, drawing blood. Gets down beside the mewling man. “Tell me, or you follow your friend.”

  Both their eyes travel to the gurgling man, strangling on his own crushed airway.

  “Tell me,” Jaidee says.

  “No need for that.”

  At the door, the object of Jaidee’s hunger stands.

  Men pour
in through the door ahead of him. Jaidee draws his pistol, but they fire and blades slash into his gun arm. He drops the pistol. Blood pours. He turns to run for the office’s windows, but men tackle him, skidding on the wet marble. Everyone goes down in a tangle of limbs. Somewhere far away, Jaidee hears Somchai bellowing. His arms are yanked behind him. Zip straps bind his wrists in rattan bonds.

  “Tourniquet that!” the man orders. “I don’t want him bleeding to death.”

  Jaidee looks down. Blood is welling out of his arm. His captors staunch the flow. He’s not sure if he’s lightheaded from blood loss or the sudden lust he has for his enemy’s death. They yank him upright. Somchai joins him, his nose pouring blood, his eye closed. Teeth red. Behind him on the floor, two men lie still.

  The man studies the two of them. Jaidee returns the gaze, refusing to look away.

  “Captain Jaidee. You were supposed to have entered the monkhood.”

  Jaidee tries to shrug. “My kuti didn’t have enough light. I thought I’d do my penance here, instead.”

  The man smiles slightly. “We can arrange that.” He nods to his men. “Take them upstairs.”

  The men yank him and Somchai out of the room, drag them down the corridor. They reach an elevator. A real electric elevator, with dials that glow and designs of the Ramakin on the walls. Each button a small demon’s mouth, and busty women playing saw duang and jakae around the edges. The doors close.

  “What is your name?” Jaidee asks the man.

  The man shrugs. “It’s not important.”

  “You’re Akkarat’s creature.”

  The man doesn’t answer.

  The doors open. They come out on the roof. Fifteen stories into the air. The men shove him and Somchai toward the lip of the building.

  “Go on,” says the man. “You wait up here. Over by the edge, where we can see you.”

  They point their spring guns and order him forward until he and Somchai stand at the lip, looking down on the faint glows of the methane lamps. Jaidee studies the plunge.

  So this is what it is to face death. He stares down into the depths. The street far below. The air waiting for him.

  “What did you do with Chaya?” he calls back to the man.

  The man smiles. “Is that why you are here? Because we didn’t return her to you soon enough?”

 

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