Now he looks at Emiko through bleary vision and thinks about debts he owes, and wonders if he will live long enough to pay them.
“We’re going to get you out,” he whispers.
A new wave of shivering takes him. All through the night, he was hot, and now, abruptly he is cold, shaking with the freezing feel, as if he has returned to the Upper Midwest and freezes in those still cold winters, as if he looks out at snow. Now he is cold, and not thirsty at all, and even a windup girl’s fingers feel icy against his face.
He pushes weakly at her hand. “Is Hock Seng here yet?”
“You’re burning up.” Emiko’s face is full of concern.
“Has he come?” Anderson asks. It is intensely important that the man come. That Hock Seng be here, in the room with him. Though he can barely remember why. It is important.
“I think he will not come.” she says. “He has all the letters he needed from you. The introductions. He is already busy with your people. With the new representative. The Boudry woman.”
A cheshire appears on the balcony. It yowls low and slips inside. Emiko doesn’t seem to notice or care, but then, she and it are siblings. Sympathetic creatures, manufactured by the same flawed gods.
Anderson watches dully as the cat makes its way across his bedroom and molts through the door. If he weren’t so weak, he would throw something at it. He sighs. He’s past that, now. Too tired to complain about a cat. He lets his gaze roll up to the ceiling and the slow whirl of the crank fan.
He wants to still be angry. But even that has gone. At first, when he discovered that he was sick, when Hock Seng and the girl had pulled back, alarmed, he had thought they were crazy. That he hadn’t been exposed to any vectors, but then, looking at them, at their fear and certainty, he had understood.
“The factory?” he’d whispered, repeating the girl Mai’s words, and Hock Seng had nodded, keeping his hand over his face.
“The fining rooms, or the algae baths,” he murmured.
Anderson had wanted to be angry then, but the sickness was already sapping his strength. All he could summon was a dull rage that quickly burned away. “Has anyone survived?”
“One,” the girl had whispered.
And he had nodded, and they had slunk away. Hock Seng. Always with his secrets. Always with his angles and his planning. Always waiting…
“Is he coming?” He has a hard time forcing the words out.
“He will not come,” Emiko murmurs.
“You’re here.”
She shrugs. “I am New People. Your sicknesses do not frighten me. That one will not come. Not the Carlyle man either.”
“At least they’re leaving you alone. Kept their word, there.”
“Maybe,” she says, but she lacks conviction.
Anderson wonders if she’s right. Wonders if he is wrong about Hock Seng as he was wrong about so many things. Wonders if his every understanding of the place was wrong. He forces away the fear. “He’ll keep faith. He’s a businessman.”
Emiko doesn’t answer. The cheshire jumps onto the bed. She shoos it away, but it jumps up again, seemingly sensing the carrion opportunity he represents.
Anderson tries to raise a hand. “No,” he croaks. “Let it stay.”
49
AgriGen people march off the docks. Kanya and her men stand at attention, an honor guard for demons. The farang all stand and squint at the tropic sun, taking in the land they have never before seen. They point rudely at young girls walking down the street, talk and laugh loudly. They are an uncouth race. So confident.
“They’re very self-satisfied,” Pai mutters.
Kanya startles at hearing her own thoughts voiced aloud, but doesn’t respond. Simply waits while Akkarat meets these new creatures. A blond, scowling woman called Elizabeth Boudry is at their head, an AgriGen creature through and through.
She has a long sweeping black cloak as do others of the AgriGen people, all of them with their red wheat crest logos shining in the sun. The only satisfying thing about seeing these people in their hated uniforms is that the tropic heat must be awful for them. Their faces shine with sweat.
Akkarat says to Kanya. “These are the ones who will be going to the seedbank.”
“Are you sure about this?” she asks.
He shrugs. “They only want samples. Genetic diversity for their generipping. The Kingdom will benefit as well.”
Kanya studies the people who used to be called calorie demons and who now walk so brazenly in Krung Thep, the City of Divine Beings. Crates of grain are coming off the ship and being stacked on megodont wagons, the AgriGen logo prominent on every one.
Seeming to sense her thoughts, Akkarat says, “We’ve passed the time when we can hide behind our walls and hope to survive. We must engage with this outside world.”
“But the seedbank,” Kanya protests quietly. “King Rama’s legacy.”
Akkarat nods shortly. “They will only be taking samples. Do not concern yourself.” He turns to another farang and shakes hands with him in the foreign style. Speaks with him using the Angrit language and sends him on his way.
“Richard Carlyle,” Akkarat comments as he returns to Kanya’s side. “We’ll have our pumps, finally. He’s sending out a dirigible this afternoon. With luck we’ll beat the rainy season.” He looks at her significantly. “You understand all this? You understand what I’m doing here? It is better to lose a little of the Kingdom than everything. There are times to fight and times to negotiate. We cannot survive if we are entirely isolated. History tells us we must engage with the outside world.”
Kanya nods stiffly.
Jaidee leans over her shoulder. “At least they never got Gi Bu Sen.”
“I would rather give them Gi Bu Sen than the seedbank,” Kanya mutters.
“Yes, but I think that losing the man was even more irritating to them.” He nods at the Boudry woman. “She was quite enraged. Shouted, even. Lost all her face. Paced back and forth waving her arms.” He demonstrates.
Kanya grimaces. “Akkarat was angry, too. He was after me all day, demanding to know how we could have allowed the old man to escape.”
“A clever man, that one.”
Kanya laughs. “Akkarat?”
“The generipper.”
Before Kanya can plumb more of Jaidee’s thoughts, the Boudry woman and her seed scientists approach. An ancient yellow card Chinese man approaches with her. He stands ramrod straight, nods to Kanya. “I will be translating for Khun Elizabeth Boudry.”
Kanya makes herself smile politely as she studies the people before her. This is what it comes to. Yellow cards and farang.
“Everything is change.” Jaidee sighs. “It would be good for you to remember it. Clinging to the past, worrying about the future…” He shrugs. “It’s all suffering.”
The farang are waiting for her. Impatient. She guides them down into the war-damaged streets. Somewhere in the distance, off near the anchor pads, a tank booms. Perhaps a cell of holdout students, people not under her control. People beholden to different sorts of honor than she. She waves to two of her new underlings, Malivalaya and Yuthakon, if she remembers correctly.
“General,” one of them starts, but Kanya scowls at him.
“I told you, no more generals. No more of that nonsense. I am a captain. If captain was good enough for Jaidee, then I won’t name myself higher.”
Malivalaya wais apology. Kanya orders the farang into the comfort of the coal-diesel car, and then they are whispering through the streets. It is a luxury that she has never experienced, but she forces herself not to exclaim at Akkarat’s suddenly exposed wealth. The car slides through the empty streets, making its way toward the City Pillar Shrine.