Metal pours off the face, eaten and discarded iron, peeling away in sheaves, layers of it flaking away as if blown by autumn winds. The bright leaves of melting iron land on teak flooring. They hiss and spread. The flakes burn on, creating a lattice of broken seared wood.
“It doesn’t stop,” Mai says, awed. Hock Seng watches with increasing unease, wondering if the yeastlike stuff will eat away the floor below and send the safe crashing down into the manufacturing lines. He finds his voice. “It is alive. It should lose its ability to digest, soon.”
“This is what the farang make.” Mai’s voice is frightened and awed.
“Our people have made such things as well.” Hock Seng shakes his head. “Don’t think the farang are so much as all that.”
The safe continues to disintegrate. If only he had been brave before. He could have done this when there wasn’t a war boiling outside the window. He wishes he could go back in time to his former frightened paranoid self, so worried about deportation, about angering foreign devils, about preserving his good name, and simply whisper in that old man’s ear that there was no hope. That he should steal and run, and it could not turn out worse.
A voice interrupts his thoughts. “Well, well. Tan Hock Seng. How nice to see you here.”
Hock Seng turns. Dog Fucker and Old Bones, along with six others, are standing in the doorway. All of them carrying spring guns. They’re scratched and sooted from the warfare of the streets, but smiling and confident.
“We all seem to have been thinking along the same lines,” Dog Fucker observes.
An explosion lights the sky, casting orange across the office. The rumble of destruction trembles through Hock Seng’s soles. It’s hard to tell how far away it was. The shells seem to fall randomly. If there is intelligence guiding them, it’s not for them to understand. Another rumble, this one closer. The white shirts, defending the levees, most likely. Hock Seng fights an urge to flee. The cracking of the iron-digesting bacteria continues. Leaves of metal waft to the floor.
Hock Seng tests the waters. “I’m glad you’re here. Help me, then. Come on.”
Old Bones smiles. “I think not.”
The men shoulder past Hock Seng. All of them larger than he. All of them armed. All of them uncaring of his and Mai’s presence. Hock Seng staggers as they bump him aside.
“But it’s mine,” he protests. “You can’t take it! I told you where it was!”
The men ignore him.
“You can’t take it!” Hock Seng fumbles for his gun. Suddenly a pistol presses against his skull. Old Bones, smiling.
Dog Fucker watches with interest. “Another killing will make little difference on my rebirth. Don’t test me.”
Hock Seng can barely control his rage. A part of him wants to fire anyway, to steal away the man’s smug expression. The safe’s metal continues to bubble and hiss, falling away, slowly revealing his last object of hope. The nak leng all watch Hock Seng and Old Bones. They’re loose, smiling. Unafraid. They haven’t even lifted their pistols. They simply watch, interested, as Hock Seng points his pistol at them.
Dog Fucker grins. “Go away, yellow card. Before I change my mind.”
Mai tugs at Hock Seng’s hand. “Whatever it is, it isn’t worth your life.”
“She’s right, yellow card,” Old Bones says. “This is not a fight you can win.”
Hock Seng lowers his pistol and allows Mai to pull him away. They back out of the office. The Dung Lord’s men watch with small smiles, and then Hock Seng and Mai are going down the stairs and out into the factory, and from there into the rubbled streets.
In the distance, a megodont screams in pain. The wind gusts, carrying ash and political pamphlets and the scent of burning WeatherAll. Hock Seng feels old. Too old to still be striving against a fate that clearly wishes him destroyed. Another whisper sheet tumbles past. The headline screams of windup girls and murder. Amazing that Mr. Lake’s windup could cause so much trouble. And now everyone in the city is hunting for her. He almost smiles. Even if he’s a yellow card, he’s not as disadvantaged as that sorry creature. He probably owes her thanks. If it hadn’t been for her and the news of Mr. Lake’s arrest, he supposes he would be dead by now, burned in the slums with all his jade and cash and diamonds.
I should be grateful.
Instead, he feels the weight of his ancestors pressing down upon him, crushing him with their judgments. He took what his father and grandfather before him had built in Malaya and turned it to ash.
The failure is overwhelming.
Another whisper sheet flutters up against the factory wall. The windup girl again, along with accusations against General Pracha. Mr. Lake was obsessed with that windup girl. Couldn’t stop fucking her. Couldn’t resist bringing her to his bed at every opportunity. Hock Seng picks up the whisper sheet, suddenly thoughtful.
“What is it?” Mai asks.
I am too old for this.
But still, Hock Seng feels his heart beating faster. “I have an idea,” he says. “A possibility.”
A new absurd flicker of hope. He cannot help it. Even when he has nothing, he must strive.
43
A tank round explodes. Dirt and woody debris showers Kanya’s head. They’ve abandoned the Ministry buildings-giving ground is what Kanya has called it, but in truth it’s a rout-running as fast as they can from the oncoming tanks and megodonts.
The only thing that has saved them so far is that the army seems intent on securing the main campus of the Ministry, and so its strength remains gathered there. Still, she and her men have encountered three commando units coming over the south walls of the compound and they have cut Kanya’s platoon in half. And now another tank, just as they were about to slip out a secondary exit. The tank smashed through the gate and blocked their escape.
She has ordered her men into the forest groves near Phra Seub’s temple. It is in shambles. The carefully tended garden has been trampled by war megodonts. Its main columns have been burnt by a fire bomb attack that swept through the dry teak of the forest like a raging demon, shrieking and roaring, so now they shelter in ash and stumps and smolder.
Another tank shell drops into their hillside position. More commandos slip around the tank, break into teams and dash across the compound. It looks as though they’re heading for the biological laboratories. Kanya wonders if Ratana is working there, if she even knows of the warfare above ground. A tree shatters beside her as another tank round explodes.
“They know we’re up here, even if they can’t see us,” Pai says. As if to emphasize his words, a hail of disks whines overhead, embedding themselves in the burnt forest trunks, gleaming silver in the black wood. Kanya motions to her men that they should pull back. The other white shirts, all their uniforms carefully smeared now with soot and ash, scamper deeper into the guttering forest.
Another shell drops below them. Burning teak splinters whine through the air.
“This is too close.” She gets up and runs, Pai dogging her. Hiroko streaks past, takes cover behind a black fallen log and waits for them to catch up.
“Can you imagine fighting that?” Pai gasps.
Kanya shakes her head. Already the windup has saved them twice. Once by spying out the shadow movement of commandos coming toward them, the second time pushing Kanya down a moment before a rain of spring disks shredded the air above her head. The windup’s eyes are sharp where Kanya’s are not, and she is blisteringly fast. Already, though, she is flushed, her skin dry and scalding to the touch. Hiroko is not built for this tropic warfare, and even though they pour water on her and try to keep her cool, she is fading.