Authors: Mike Stoner
I hear a dry gulp from Geoff's throat.
âAnd you too, Newbie. Guess you're too fucking scared to look at me. I want you both out of here. Out of my bar.'
I'm hunting around inside trying to find the
Me
who stood up to the Liverpudlian, but he's absent; obviously only appears when stoned or mentally knackered. The rat makes a run across the floor and out of the bar.
Mei is off her stool and walking to Barry. I can hear her whisper in his ear, but don't hear what she says. He grunts. She whispers again. He grunts again.
âAlright,' he says quietly, then louder, âlucky for you, Mei says you spend well. For faggots. So fucking stay if you must.' His footsteps cross the room. His chair scrapes again. âBring me another beer, Mei.'
My head and everything in it, including split personalities and eyeballs, unfreeze themselves. Geoff's face is red, and still looking down. He shakes his head.
âCan you pay my bill? I'll sort you at work next week.' Without waiting for a reply his chair is kicked back and he is gone.
âPussy,' Barry mutters.
Enough. Enough of today and
dukuns
and expats and me. I need escape from mind games. I cross to Mei, settle up for me and Geoff, force a smile at her and say thanks. A small smile touches her lips but I can't see what's in her eyes. Then she mouths, âSorry.'
I smile and shake my head at her and leave her bar with my eyes fixed firmly on the outside.
âPussy,' says Barry.
âPussy, says Laura, you going to let him get away with that?
I say nothing to either of them. I want freedom. I want away from people and their pressures and needs.
I want Eka. She is no pressure, no stress. She gives, I take. She is enjoyment and a kind of peace. She is a shield of succulent flesh that wraps itself around me and lets me be the most basic of beings within her shield; a being without cognitive thought. A primal being. With her I want a succession of moments that contain nothing other than primal pleasure. And I'm going to get them.
Oh, yes I am.
Pleasure, pleasure, pleasure. You, you and she.
Oh, shut up.
Flesh. Faces burrowing. Into necks. Into skin. Bittersweet scents. Clawing, Caressing. Pulling. Tongue trails. Gentle bites. Almost pain. Hair in lips. Bitter taste. Sweet taste. Thirst. Sobs. Cries. Sighs. Solace. Closed eyes. Stroking. Finger tracing. Softness. Chests rising, falling. Rising, falling. Slowing. Stroking. Rising. Falling. Spinning. Sleeping.
âBetter?'
I mmm at Eka. I am better. Walnut Face is just an amusing event now. Rationality has returned. Eka seems to have that effect on me. The old man has crawled out from under my skin and taken his mind games and cheap tricks with him. Barry also doesn't scare me now. If Geoff wants to get involved that's up to him. It's not my business. Nothing is my business. That's not why I came here; I don't want business. I don't want involvement. Unless, of course, it suits my mood at the time, and Barry most certainly does not suit my mood. Dark, soft breasts under my cheek suit it now. Staring down the length of Eka's brown body, fingers tracing across her stomach and to her triangle of hair, the musky scent of after-sex skin, slow gentle breathing, a looseness in my shoulders and spine; all this suits now; this mood and this moment.
My mind is nearly empty again. All thoughts and anxieties flow out of my head and trickle from my ears and the corners of my eyes. They run down the sides of my cheeks and follow the curve of Eka's breasts onto the thin-sheeted bed, then briefly they puddle, soak into the mattress and join the dark and miserable thoughts of the hundreds of others before me who have sought solace in flesh and lust in this cheap and ugly hotel room.
She strokes my hair.
âI forget.' She looks at the ceiling.
âWhat?' I ask, my voice a croaking whisper.
âI forget. Things. Many things I don't want to think of. I forget.' A pause while her breasts rise, fall, with her breathing. âI forget, for a while I forget. I am happy. Thank you.'
My finger traces around her belly button. For a second it isn't
her
belly button, so I close my eyes hard and kiss her nipple. It is hers again.
âThank you, Eka. I thank you.'
MINNIE
âS
o
where you going today, man?' Johnny has to raise his voice above the sound of the rain. He flicks a cigarette at his mouth and misses. It bounces off his lip and lands in a wide rivulet of rainwater that's running across the school's fore-court. It spins and turns until it joins the torrent of water flowing down the road.
âKeep practising, Johnny.' I offer him one of mine.
The rain is relentless in its bombardment. It overwhelms roads and pavements and pours in waterfalls off shop awnings and buildings. It drums on the roof above us and thunder cracks overhead every few seconds. The day has fallen into a murky twilight.
Becak
riders have their plastic-bag-covered heads low as they pedal hard against the river that flows almost to their knees. The big four-by-fours send waves twice that height to the sides of the road as they drive on. The waves slosh up the rise on the forecourt and break over the top. Johnny and I step back towards the school entrance to avoid wet feet.
âGoing to Toba with the other teachers. Just waiting for them to finish their classes.'
âCool, man. Lake Toba is cool. Beautiful.'
âSo I hear.'
Johnny is moving from foot to foot. He opens his mouth and then closes it again.
âYou OK?' I ask.
âUh. Um. Yeah.' He nods his head and looks around. We're alone outside the school. Inside, students stand behind steamed-up windows, waiting for the rain to stop before leaving.
âActually, can I ask you something?'
âOf course.'
An old man over the street is wading knee-high through the water. Suddenly he drops and disappears up to his chest in the brief river. He swim-splashes two or three feet and then pushes himself up and out of the water as if climbing out of a well. He carries on as though nothing has happened.
âOh man. He fell in the shit. Under the pavement is shit. What do you call it, where shit and piss goes?'
âSewers?'
âYeah, man. Sewers. He fell in sewer. The pavement must be missing there. Ha ha. Shitty toes now.' Johnny is nodding his head up and down in rapid movements. âHa ha. Shitty.'
He's probably right. Shitty toes. The sewers run under concrete slabs which make up the pavement. Every now and then one is missing, leaving a metre-wide hole. You learn to look for them when you're walking and it's dry. The holes are easy to see, but under nearly a foot of water, they're invisible.
âLucky he did not go under. Drown in shit and piss. Ugh. That'd be shitty. Ha ha.'
âCertainly would be shitty. What did you want to ask, Johnny?'
âUh. Yeah. So, er, you had girlfriend, yeah?'
I answer, the words nearly jam behind my teeth but I push them out, âYeah, I did.'
âSo, you kiss her many times?'
âYes, and other girls.' Even though we've had this conversation in class already, I still add the extra information to see his reaction again.
âOther,' he pauses, smokes, flicks something invisible off his arm, âgirls.'
âYes.'
âAnd you do, you know, other stuff too?'
âWhat other stuff do you mean, Johnny?' I know exactly want he means but watching him squirm the words out amuses me in a Friday afternoon kind of way.
âYou know. Stuff.'
âNo, I don't know.'
âYeah you do, man. You know. Stuff.'
âWhat, stuff like pom-pom?'
âHa, yeah. Pom-pom. You do a lot of pom-pom with other girls?'
I laugh.
âSome girls, yes.'
âSo, er, you ever do it with boys too?' Johnny looks away and nervously pulls at his quiff.
âNo. I haven't.' I sense something is about to come from Johnny I don't really want to hear.
âIt's just thatâ¦' He looks over his shoulder at the misted faces behind the large school window. âIt's not fair, you know?'
I don't want to ask, but I have to, out of politeness to him and because I like him.
âWhat's not fair?'
âI'd, erâI'd, erâwell, so many people pom-pom with you, it's not fair because I'd like to too.'
There is only the sound of the rain stamping its feet on the roof above us and traffic swashing through the road-river. It is the only sound for long moment, during which an immense awkwardness builds between Johnny and me like a sped-up film of a skyscraper going up. It is over when a blinding flash and simultaneous whip-crack of thunder announce that the block of concrete and steel between us is finished.
âSorry, Johnny, but, butâ¦' What to say? âYou wouldn't want to see me naked. It's not pretty.' What sort of a get-out is that?
âI would,' he mutters. His usual confidence is washing away with the storm.
âI'm sorry, Johnny, but I've got to go and get my bag from inside. The classes have nearly finished.' I hurry away, leaving him staring at the rain, and go into the steaming entrance of the school, pushing past moist, condensation-covered students. Any words of comfort for Johnny held at bay by a sudden, previously unknown homophobia. I'm shocked both at Johnny's advance and my inability to deal with it like the liberal-minded bloke I like to think I am.
I reach to get my bag out from under my desk and a spray of sweat drops from my forehead. The AC must be playing up. I should go back and talk to him. I will. Now. But when I step back outside, I see him duck under the canopy of a bicycle
becak
and all I can do is watch as it labours off upstream, water sloshing over the footplate, Johnny's feet getting soaked.
âEh, Newbie.' The slap on my back is too hard.
âKim.'
âWhassup, man? You looking drugged already.' He pushes me away from the school doors as students start to pile out.
âYou know Johnny?'
âMr Cool with the leather?'
âYes, well, he just made a moveâ¦' I stop. No, don't. No big mouth. Not me. Johnny doesn't deserve gossip.
âOn you? He made a move on you. Cool Johnny? No fucking way.'
Too late. Cocked-up again.
âNo, not a move, he just asked about my sexual leanings.'
âCool Johnny is gay. Fuck. Wait âtil the girls in school hear this one.'
âKim. No.'
âOh, yes.'
âNo. He's a good kid. Don't.'
âReally? Why not?'
âBecause it'll make me look a shit and he doesn't deserve it.'
Kim contemplates the thinning rain.
âGuess he is a kinda good guy.'
âYou hate racism, Septic, remember. It's the same thing.'
He nods, looks at me, punches my arm.
âYou're no fucking fun, you fucking Limey. OK. Let's get the others and get to fucking Toba, man. Need some âshroooooms.' The school door swings behind him as he goes back in. The pre-ordered and modern eight-seater taxi pulls in through the subsiding flow of water on the road and stops just in front of me.
Toba: out of the city. Countryside. Green. Fresh air. Space.
Kim, Marty, Jussy and Julie come out of the school door in a silent line. Kim slides the minivan door and lets the others in first, then me, and as I climb in he says, âGay. Ugh. Not normal, man.'
I stop, half-in and half-out. There's a glint in his eye and he pats my bum.
âJust kidding. His secret's safe with me.'
The door slides shut. Julie is double-checking the price with the driver.
â
Bagus bagus
,' she says and pats the driver on the shoulder. âFor once it's as per the quote.'
âAre we picking Naomi up?'
âShe said she's not coming if you're going to be there, Newbie.'
âOh.'
âDon't worry, man. We'd rather have you and your schizo ways than her and her dreads.'
Four hours later, after a stop at a roadside shack to buy a case of beer, talking the very easygoing driver into letting us smoke grass, sharing it with him, discussing the Ten Commandments and getting it down to five, then singing the wrong words to Dylan songs while the jungle and villages pass by unnoticed in the dark, we arrive at the already sleeping town of Parapat, on the edge of Lake Toba, somewhat dazed and very stoned.
âThis picture isn't her.' Jane is sitting in the armchair. She looks like a small child who has aged too quickly. The chair towers over her like the jaws of some monster that is about to close its mouth. Her fingers stroke the edges of the photo frame. She is a small woman, but now she is even smaller. The weight of loss has pushed her down and compressed her into herself. Her red-rimmed eyes search the photo as though trying to find her place on a map, but not understanding why she can't even find a landmark.