"It's not that we're not useful," he says. "It's just a different index. Women are flowers, men are root vegetables. You wouldn't make a bouquet of turnips."
"Sometimes I worry about you," she says.
"Why's that?" He is halfway to the door.
"No one can really be as much like he seems to be as you are."
"I'll think that over," he says. "I'm sure it means something."
After the darkness of the bedroom, its one small window blocked by the air conditioner, the living room is milky with the light that spills through the glass door to the balcony, Bangkok wattage bouncing off the low clouds. The remainder of the lopsided cake sits on the table. The sight of it makes him smile, despite the electric jitter that's broadcasting random bursts of alternating current through his nervous system.
He pulls a pristine pack of Marlboro Lights from the jumble of clutter in the purse, peels the cellophane strip, and worries one out. As he passes through the open doorway into the bedroom, Rose snaps on the light. He slams his eyes shut against the glare. When he opens them again, he sees Rose, sitting up in bed with the sheet pooled around her hips, looking brown and amused. For the thousandth time, he notices how the light bounces off the polished skin of her shoulders, how the smooth muscles announce themselves in shadows on her flat stomach.
"I don't know," she says, giving him an appraising glance. "Maybe you could dance go-go." Her eyes drop as he feels himself stir at the sight of her. "Wait, wait," she says. "This would definitely disqualify you."
"Not at the Queen's Corner," he says, crossing the room self-consciously and slipping under the sheets. "Last time I was in there, half the girls weren't."
"Weren't what?" she says, taking the cigarette.
"Weren't girls."
She lights the cigarette, draws deeply, and regards it with comfortable satisfaction. "Did you think they were pretty?"
"Who?" He breathes in the smoke she exhales, seeking to soothe his nerves, wanting one himself.
"The ladyboys." Thai transvestites have an enthusiastic following among the international cognoscenti and have become a standard attraction in many of the go-go bars.
"No. They always look like… I don't know, plastic fruit or something. They don't seem to have real faces, or even a real age. They look like they might come in jars."
"Pay them enough and I'm sure they'll come in a jar for you."
"Rose," he says. His heart is beating irregularly.
"Uh-oh," Rose says. She studies his face. "What's happening?"
"I didn't give you your present." He reaches out and takes the cigarette from her and inhales it hard enough to blow a hole in his back. He is immediately sweepingly, reelingly dizzy. "Jesus," he says. "I can't believe I used to do that on purpose."
Rose is bent slightly toward him, watching him closely. She takes the cigarette and looks down at it. "Most people don't try to smoke the whole thing at once."
"So-" Rafferty says, and stops. The silence widens around them like a ripple in the center of a pond.
"Poor baby," Rose says, keeping her eyes on the cigarette as she mashes it in the ashtray. "All those words in your head, and they're not there when you need them."
"It's almost four A.M.," Rafferty says, in full retreat. "Coffee. Coffee is the answer." He grabs the bubble-gum pink robe Miaow made him buy at the weekend market at Chatuchak. Between the color and the cheerful, slightly fey yellow dragon embroidered on the back, it always makes him feel like Bruce Lee's gay stand-in. "Coming?"
She grimaces. "You mean, get up?"
"I know it's drastic."
"Wait," she says, and reaches down to a small zippered bag on the floor. Her hand comes up with a tube of lipstick and a loose Kleenex, and she applies the lipstick quickly and blots it, all in one swift, professional movement. "Ready for anything," she says. She tosses the sheets aside and rises, almost six feet of flawless naked woman. As always, she looks to Rafferty like some ambitious new stage of evolution, an inspired draft of Woman 3.0, a human Car of the Future. She turns her back to pick up the towel she invariably wraps around her, and Raf- ferty tears his eyes from the long shadowy gully of her spine and the tablespoon-size dimples above her buttocks, and grabs the box on the table. He drops it into his pocket on the way out of the room. Bumping against his hip, it feels as big as a watermelon.
The fluorescent lights reveal a kitchen that looks like it was used for grenade practice. Flour dusts the counters. Virtually every bowl, utensil, and platter Rafferty owns has ambled out of the cupboard, coated itself with something sticky, and assumed its least flattering angle. He pulls a bag of coffee beans from the freezer and drops a couple of fistfuls into the grinder, clearing a space on the counter with his pink silk forearm.
"One cake?" Rose says behind him. "All this for one cake?"
"But what a cake." The whir of the grinder fills the room. Silently counting to twelve, Rafferty reaches up into the cabinet with his free hand and takes down a box of coffee filters. He drops the box to the counter and uncaps the coffee grinder. "Perfect," he says, studying the grind. He opens the box of filters and pulls out a nest of tightly clustered paper cones. As always, the edges are stuck together. He ruffles them ineffectually with his thumb, trying without much hope to separate a single filter from the clump.
"You were going to say something," Rose says, her eyes on his hands. The lowered lids make it hard for him to read her expression. The towel is brilliantly white against the dusk of her skin.
"Yes." He manages to pry free a little clot of four filters, a minor triumph. He lets his hands drop to hide the palsy that seems to have seized control of them. "I was."
"And you had a present for me." She tilts her head to one side, watching his fingers fumble with the filters.
"After coffee," he says, crimping the paper edges to loosen them. They are almost karmically inseparable.
"Is that my present? In your pocket?"
He meets her eyes and feels his face grow hot. "Yes."
She purses her lips. "Not very big."
"Well, it's… no, it's not very big." His fingers feel like frozen hams, and the filters are resolutely glued together. His mind is suddenly a large and disordered room with words piled randomly in the corners like children's toys. "I mean, it's not-but you said that already-and it… it's…"
"Let me." Rose crosses the room, all business, and takes the filters from his hand. She slips a nail under the edge and separates the bundle into two. Then she places the top two filters, still stuck together, between her lips and closes her mouth. When her lips part, the filters come apart neatly, one stuck to each lip, and she removes them and extends them to Rafferty. Each of them has a dark red lip print on its edge. "The answer is yes," she says.
He has the filters in his hands before he hears her. "It is?" is all he can think to say. He stands there, a coffee filter dangling from each hand, the box with the ring in it exerting a supergravitational weight against his right hip. "It really is?" He has to push the words around the soft, formless obstruction in his throat.