Asian Saga - King Rat - Asian Saga - King Rat Part 15
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Asian Saga - King Rat Part 15

"Huh?"

"Katchang idju and bully, in one meal?"

"You just don't live right."

Peter Marlowe was tantalized by the aroma and the bubble of the stew. The last weeks had been rough. The discovery of the radio had hurt the camp. The Japanese Commandant had "regretfully" cut the camp's rations due to "bad harvests," so even the tiny desperation stocks of the units had gone. Miraculously, there had been no other repercussions. Except the cut in food.

In Peter Marlowe's unit, the cut had hit Mac the worst. The cut and the uselessness of their water-bottled radio.

"Dammit," Mac had sworn after weeks of trying to trace the trouble. "It's nae use, laddies. Without taking the bleeding thing apart I canna do a thing. Everything seems correct. Without some tools an' a battery of sorts, I canna find the fault."

Then Larkin had somehow acquired a tiny battery and Mac had gathered his waning strength and gone back to testing, checking and rechecking. Yesterday, while he was testing, he had gasped and fainted, deep in a malarial coma. Peter Marlowe and Larkin had carried him up to the hospital and laid him on a bed. The doctor had said that it was just malaria, but with such a spleen, it could easily become very dangerous.

"What's a matter, Peter?" the King asked, noticing his sudden gravity.

"Just thinking about Mac."

"What about him?"

"We had to take him up to the hospital yesterday. He's not so hot."

"Malaria?"

"Mostly."

"Huh?"

"Well, he's got fever all right. But that's not the main trouble. He goes through periods of terrible depression. Worry -about his wife and son."

"All married guys've the same sweat."

"Not quite like Mac," Peter Marlowe said sadly. "You see, just before the Japs landed on Singapore, Mac put his wife and son on a ship in the last real convoy out. Then he and his unit took off for Java in a coastal junk. When he got to Java he heard the whole convoy had got shot out of the water or captured. No proof either way - only rumors. So he doesn't know if they got through. Or if they're dead. Or if they're alive. And if they are - where they are. His son was just a baby - only four months old."

"Well, now the kid's three years and four months," the King said confidently. "Rule Two: Don't worry about nothing you can't do nothing about." He took a bottle of quinine out of his black box and counted out twenty tablets and gave them to Peter Marlowe. "Here. These'll fix his malaria."

"But what about you?"

"Got plenty. Think nothing of it."

"I don't understand why you're so generous. You give us food and medicine. And what do we give you? Nothing. I don't understand it."

"You're a friend."

"Christ, I feel embarrassed accepting so much."

"Hell with it. Here." The King began spooning out the stew. Seven spoons for him and seven spoons for Peter Marlowe. There was about a quarter of the stew left in the mess can.

They ate the first three spoons quickly to allay the hunger, then finished the rest slowly, savoring its excellence.

"Want some more?" The King waited. How well do I know you, Peter? I know you could eat a ton more. But you won't. Not if your life depended on it.

"No thanks. Full. To the brim."

It's good to know your friend, the King thought to himself. You've got to be careful. He took another spoonful. Not because he wanted it. He felt he had to or Peter Marlowe would be embarrassed. He ate it and put the rest aside.

"Fix me a smoke, will you?"

He tossed over the makings and turned away. He put the rest of the bully in the remains of the stew and mixed it up. Then he divided this into two mess kits and covered them and set them aside.

Peter Marlowe handed him the rolled cigarette.

"Make yourself one," said the King.

'Thanks."

"Jesus, Peter, don't wait to be asked. Here, fill your box."

He took the box out of Peter Marlowe's hands and stuffed it full of the Three Kings tobacco.

"What're you going to do about Three Kings? With Tex in hospital?" asked Peter Marlowe.

"Nothing." The King exhaled. "That idea's milked. The Aussies have found out the process and they've undercut us."

"Oh, that's too bad. How do you think they found out?"

The King smiled. "It was an in and out anyway."

"I don't understand."

"In and out? You get in and out fast. A small investment for a quick profit. I was covered in the first two weeks."

"But you said it would take you months to get back the money you put out."

"That was a sales pitch. That was for outside consumption. A sales pitch is a gimmick. A way of making people believe something. People always want something for nothing. So you have to make 'em believe they're stealing from you, that you're the sucker, that they - the buyers - are a helluva lot smarter than you. For example. Three Kings. The sales force, the first buyers, believed they were in my debt, they believed that if they worked hard for the first month, they could be my partners and coast forever after on my money. They thought I was a fool to give them such a break after the first month. But I knew that the process would leak and that the business wouldn't last."

"How did you know that?"

"Obvious. And I planned it that way. I leaked the process myself."

"You what?"

"Sure. I traded the process for a little information."

"Well, I can understand that. It was yours to do as you pleased. But what about all the people who were working, selling the tobacco?"

"What about them?"

"It seems that you sort of took advantage of them. You made them work for a month, more or less for nothing, and then pulled the rug from under them."

"The hell I did. They made a few bucks out of it. They were playing me for a sucker and I just outsmarted them, that's all. That's business." He lay back on the bed, amused at the naivete of Peter Marlowe.

Peter Marlowe frowned, trying to understand. "When anyone starts talking about business, I'm afraid I'm right out of my depth," he said. "I feel such an idiot."

"Listen. Before you're very much older, you'll be horse-trading with the best of them." The King laughed.

"I doubt that."

"You doing anything tonight? Oh, about an hour after dusk?"

"No, why?"

"Would you interpret for me?"

"Gladly. Who, a Malay?"

"A Korean."

"Oh!" Then Peter Marlowe added, covering at once, "Certainly."

The King had marked Peter Marlowe's aversion but didn't mind. A man's a right to his opinions, he'd always said. And so long as those opinions didn't conflict with his own purposes, well, that was all right too.

Max entered the hut and crumpled on his bunk. "Couldn't find the son of a bitch for a goddam hour. Then I tracked him down in the vegetable patch. Jesus, with all that piss they use for fertilizer, that son-of-a-bitching place stinks like a Harlem brothel on a summer's day."

"You're just the sort of bastard who'd use a Harlem brothel."

The King's snarl and the raw grate of his voice startled Peter Marlowe.

Max's smile and fatigue vanished just as suddenly. "Jesus, I didn't mean anything. It's just a saying."

"Then why pick on Harlem? You wanna say it stinks like a brothel, great. They all stink the same. No difference because one's black and another's white." The King was hard and mean and the flesh on his face was tight and masklike.

"Take it easy. I'm sorry. I didn't mean nothin'."

Max had forgotten that the King was touchy about talking crossways about Negroes. Jesus, when you live in New York, you got Harlem with you, whichever way you look at it. And there are brothels there, an' a piece of colored tail's goddam good once in a while. All the same, he thought bitterly, I'm goddamned if I know why he's so goddam touchy about nigs.

"I didn't mean nothin'," Max said again, trying hard to keep his eyes off the food. He had smelled it all the way up to the hut. "I tracked him down and told him what you said."

"So?"

"He, er, gave me something for you," Max said and looked at Peter Marlowe.

"Well, hand it over for Chrissake!"

Max waited patiently while the King looked at the watch closely, wound it up and held it close to his ear.

"What do you want, Max?"

"Nothin'. Er, you like me to wash up for you?"

"Yeah. Do that, then get to hell out of here."

"Sure."

Max collected the dirty dishes and meekly took them outside, telling himself by Jesus one day he'd get the King. Peter Marlowe said nothing. Strange, he thought. Strange and wild. The King's got a temper. A temper is valuable but most times dangerous. If you go on a mission it's important to know the value of your wing-man. On a hairy mission, like the village, perhaps, it's wise to be sure who guards your back.

The King carefully unscrewed the back of the watch. It was a waterproof, stainless steel.

"Uh-huh!" the King said. "I thought so."

"What?"

"It's a phony. Look."

Peter Marlowe examined the watch carefully. "It looks all right to me."

"Sure it is. But it's not what it's supposed to be. An Omega. The case is good but the insides are old. Some bastard has substituted the guts."

The King screwed the case back on, then tossed it up in his hand speculatively. "Y'see Peter. Just what I was telling you. You got to be careful. Now, say I sell this as an Omega and don't know it's a fake, then I could be in real trouble. But so long as I know in advance, then I can cover myself. You can't be too careful."

He smiled. "Let's have another cup of Joe, business is looking up."

His smile faded as Max returned with the cleaned mess cans and put them away. Max didn't say anything, just nodded obsequiously and then went out again.

"Son of a bitch," the King said.

Grey had not yet recovered from the day Yoshima had found the radio. As he walked up the broken path towards the supply hut he brooded about the new duties imposed on him by the Camp Commandant in front of Yoshima and later elaborated by Colonel Smedly-Taylor. Grey knew that although officially he was to carry out the new orders, actually he was to keep his eyes shut and do nothing. Mother of God, he thought, whatever I do, I'm wrong.

Grey felt a spasm building in his stomach. He stopped as it came and passed. It wasn't dysentery, only diarrhea; and the slight fever on him wasn't malaria, only a touch of dengue, a slighter but more insidious fever which came and went by whim. He was very hungry. He had no stocks of food, no last can and no money to buy any with. He had to subsist on rations with no extras, and the rations were not enough, not enough.

When I get out, he thought, I swear by God that I'll never be hungry again. I'll have a thousand eggs and a ton of meat and sugar and coffee and tea and fish. We'll cook all day, Trina and I, and when we're not cooking or eating we'll be making love. Love? No, just making pain. Trina, that bitch, with her "I'm too tired" or "I've got a headache" or "For the love of God, what, again?" or "All right, I suppose I'll have to" or "We can make love now, if you want to" or "Can't you leave me in peace for once," when it wasn't so often and most times he had restrained himself and suffered, or the angry "Oh, all right," and then the light would be snapped on and she would get out of bed and storm off to the bathroom to "get ready" and he would only see the glory of her body through the sheer fabric until the door had closed and then he would wait and wait and wait until the bathroom light was snapped off and she came back into their room. It always took an eternity for her to cross from the door to the bed and he saw only the pure beauty of her under the silk and felt only the cold in her eyes as she watched him and he could not meet her eyes and loathed himself. Then she would be beside him and soon it would be silently over and she would get up and go to the bathroom and clean herself as though his love was dirt, and the water would run and when she came back she would be freshly perfumed and he loathed himself afresh, unsatisfied, for taking her when she didn't want to be taken. It had always been thus. In their six months of married life - twenty-one days of leave, being together - they had made pain nine times. And never once had he touched her.

He had asked her to marry him a week after he had met her. There had been difficulties and recriminations. Her mother hated him for wanting her only daughter just when her career was launched and she was so young. Only eighteen. His parents said wait, the war may be over soon and you've no money and, well, she's not exactly from a good family, and he had looked around his home, a tired building joined to a thousand other tired buildings amid the twisted tramlines of Streatham, and he saw that the rooms were small and the minds of his parents were small and lower class and their love was twisted like the tramlines.

They were married a month later. Grey looked smart in his uniform and sword (hired by the hour). Trina's mother didn't come to the drab ceremony, performed in haste between air raid alerts. His parents wore disapproving masks and their kisses were perfunctory and Trina had dissolved into tears and the marriage license was wet with tears.

That night Grey discovered that Trina wasn't a virgin. Oh, she acted as though she was, and complained for many days that, please darling, I'm so sore, be patient. But she wasn't a virgin and that hurt Grey, for she had implied it many times. But he pretended that he didn't know she had cheated him.

The last time he saw Trina was six days before he embarked for overseas. They were in their flat and he was lying on the bed watching her dressing.

"Do you know where you're going?" she asked.

"No," Grey said. The day had been bad and the quarrel of the night before bad, and the lack of her and the knowledge that his leave was up today was heavy on him.

He got up and stood behind her, slipping his hands into her bosom, molding the tautness of her, loving her.

"Don't!"

"Trina, could we -"