The pot hits the wall. Rice grains skitter across marble. Water soaks everything. Tonight she will learn the location of this New People village. The place where her own kind live and have no masters. Where New People serve only themselves. Anderson-sama may say that his people are coming, but in the end, he will always be natural, and she will always be New People, and she will always serve.
She stifles the urge to clean up the rice, to make things neat for Anderson-sama when he returns. Instead, she makes herself stare at the mess and recognize that she is no longer a slave. If he wishes rice cleaned off the floor there are others to do his dirty work. She is something else. Something different. Optimal in her own way. And if she was once a falcon tethered, Gendo-sama has done one thing she can be grateful for. He has cut her jesses. She can fly free.
It is almost too easy to slip through the darkness. Emiko bobs amid the crowds, new color bright on her lips, her eyes darkened, glinting silver hoops at her lobes.
She is New People, and she moves through the crowds so smoothly that they do not know she is there. She laughs at them. Laughs and slips between them. There is something suicidal ticking in her windup nature. She hides in the open. She does not scuttle. Fate has cupped her in its protective hands.
She slips through the crowds, people jerking away startled from the windup in their midst, from the bit of transgressive manufactuary that has the effrontery to stain their sidewalks, as if their land were half as pristine as the islands that have ejected her. She wrinkles her nose. Even Nippon’s effluent is too good for this raucous stinking place. They simply do not recognize how she graces them. She laughs to herself, and realizes when others look at her that she has laughed out loud.
White shirts ahead. Flashes of them between the trundle of megodonts and handcarts. Emiko stops at the rail of a khlong bridge, looking down into the waters, waiting for the threat to pass. She sees herself in the canal’s reflection with the green glow of the lamps all around, backlighting her. She feels perhaps she could become one with the water, if she simply stares at the glow long enough. Become a water lady. Already is she not part of the floating world? Does she not deserve to float and slowly sink? She stifles the thought. That is the old Emiko. The one who could never teach her to fly.
A man approaches and leans against the rail. She doesn’t look up, watches his reflection in the water.
“I like to watch when the children race their boats through the canals,” he says.
She nods slightly, not trusting herself to speak.
“Is there something you see in the water? That you look so long?”
She shakes her head. His white uniform is tinged green. He is so close he can reach out and touch her. She wonders what his kind eyes would look like if his hands touched the furnace of her skin.
“You don’t have to be afraid of me,” he says. “It’s just a uniform. You haven’t done anything wrong.”
“No.” she whispers. “I am not afraid.”
“That’s good. A pretty girl like you shouldn’t be.” He pauses. “Your accent is odd. When I first saw you, I thought you might be Chaozhou…”
She shakes her head, slightly. A jerk. “So sorry. Japanese.”
“With the factories?”
She shrugs. His eyes bore into her. She makes her head turn-slowly, slowly, smoothly, smoothly, not a single stutter, not a single jerk-and meet his eyes, return his steady gaze. Older than she first thought. Middle-aged, she thinks. Or not. Perhaps he is young and only worn down by the evils of his job. She stifles the urge to extend pity to him, fights her genetic need to serve him even if he would sooner see her dismembered. Slowly, slowly, she turns her eyes back to the water.
“What is your name?”
She hesitates. “Emiko.”
“A nice name. Does it mean something?”
She shakes her head. “Nothing important.”
“So modest, for a woman so beautiful.”
She shakes her head, “No. Not so. I am ugly—” she breaks off, sees him staring, realizes that she has forgotten herself. Her movements have betrayed her. His eyes are wide, surprised. She backs away from him, all pretense of humanity forgotten.
His eyes harden. “Heechy-keechy,” he breathes.
She smiles tightly. “It was an honest mistake.”
“Show me your import permits.”
She smiles. “Of course. I’m sure they are here. Of course.” She backs away, flashbulb movements broadcasting every kink in her DNA. He reaches for her, but she pulls her arm from his grasp, a quick twist, and then she is turning away, breaking into flight, blurring into traffic as he shouts after her.
“Stop her! Stop! Ministry business! Stop that windup!”
Her whole essence cries to stop and give herself up, to bend to his command. It is all she can do to keep running, to push herself against the lashings of Mizumi-sensei when she dared disobey, the disapproving sting of Mizumi’s tongue when she dared to object to another’s desires.
Emiko burns with shame as his commands echo behind her, but then the crowds have swallowed her and the surge of megodont traffic is all around, and he is far too slow to discover which alley hides her as she recovers.
It takes extra time to avoid the white shirts, but at the same time, it is a game. Emiko can play this game now. If she is quick and careful, and allows time between her sudden surges she evades them easily. At speed, she marvels at the movements of her body, how startlingly fluid she becomes, as if she is finally being true to her nature. As if all the training and lashes from Mizumi-sensei were designed to keep this knowledge buried.
Eventually she makes Ploenchit and climbs the tower. Raleigh is waiting by the bar, as he always is, impatient. He glances up. “You’re late. I’m fining you for that.”
Emiko forces herself not to feel guilt, even as she apologizes. “So sorry, Raleigh-san.”
“Hurry up and get changed. You have VIP guests tonight. They’re important, and they’ll be here soon.”
“I want to ask you about the village.”
“What village?”
She keeps her face pleasant. Did he lie about it? Was it always a lie? “The place for New People.”
“Still worrying about that?” He shakes his head. “ I told you. Earn up and I’ll make sure you get there, if that’s what you want.” He waves her toward the dressing rooms. “Now go get changed.”
Emiko starts to press again, then simply nods. Afterward. When he is drunk. When he is pliable, she will pry the information from him.
In the dressing room, Kannika is already pulling on her performance clothes. She makes a face at Emiko but doesn’t say anything as Emiko changes and then goes out to get her first glass of ice for the evening. She drinks carefully, savoring the coolness and sense of well-being that overcomes her even in the swelter of the tower. Out beyond the roped-off windows, the city glows. From a height it is beautiful. Without natural people in it, she thinks that she could even enjoy it here. She drinks more water.
A rustle of warning and surprise. Women drop to their knees and press their foreheads to the ground in a khrab. Emiko joins them. The man is back, again. The hard man. The one who came with Anderson-sama before. She searches for signs of Anderson-sama, hoping that he will be there too, but there is no sign of him. The Somdet Chaopraya and his friends are already flushed and drunk as they come through the doors.
Raleigh rushes to them and ushers them into his VIP room.
Kannika slips up behind her. “Finish your water, heechy-keechy. You’ve got work to do.”
Emiko stifles the urge to snap at the girl. It would be insane to do so. But she looks at Kannika and prays that when she knows the village’s location that she will have an opportunity to pay the woman back for all the abuse she has delivered.