The Year of the Golden Pig XXII
By Ewan
- 1542 reads
The taste in my mouth took my mind off the pain in my skull. The bone itself was aching, anything inside it felt like mush. I tried to sit up, which at least told me I was lying down. Both eyes were glued shut with some crusty substance, I hoped it was dried blood. There was grass or something growing underneath my body. It wasn't likely I was still outside the Tokyo Rose. Besides, I hadn't heard a voice or a vehicle since regaining consciousness. Sitting up still feeling too much of a chore, I rolled onto my side and kept rolling. Downward, and fast. The stench and the wet feeling told me I was in some kind of ditch. Risking all kinds of infection, I scooped some water with my hands and eventually de-crusted my eyelids. I hoped I'd get to some clean water soon.
The ditch ran beside a dirt track. It didn't look like it led anywhere. In either direction. I turned right. They say people usually turn in the direction of their dominant hand, when offered a random choice. I don't. People have often called me contrary, I usually agree with them. Walking an abandoned dirt track was pretty boring: I felt my head with both hands. An ostrich had laid an egg in my scalp, there was plenty of dried blood, enough to have flowed over my eyelids. Had I been left for dead? Or was it a friendly warning from Uncle Sam? They couldn't have left me too far out in the bondu: the jungle was cut back and, after about two miles, I passed a Malay kampong. It was deserted, roof fallen in and two cars rusting in front of the stilts. Perhaps they were missing me at the office. I looked at my watch. The figures read 10:06. It was light, it had been a long time to be unconscious.
The track met a road eventually. It was the Bukit Panjang Road, I was about a hundred yards from Wing Wah's Tailor and my illegal flat above the old gouger's shop. Either I didn't look quite as bad as I felt, or Wing Wah was living up to the inscrutable stereotype for the fun of it. He just grunted and held out a hand palm upward.
'What?' I snapped.
'Key.' He said. 'You go, Mistah Law.'
'What about my stuff?' I asked.
For answer, he laughed and said,
'You no want now, Mistah Law. Smell very bad.'
His laugh followed me up the stairs.
He was right, I didn't want anything from the room. There must have been more than one of them searching. There was more than one calling card atop the pile of urine-drenched clothes in the middle of the room. I wondered what kind of animals they were to do such a thing, and if they had stripped naked to do it, to avoid soiling their own clothes, whilst soiling mine.
Downstairs, I overpaid for using Wing Wah's phone for the last time. Luckily Jenny Diver was in the office.
'Come and get me, Wing Wah's, now.'
I stood outside, scowling at the fastidious Chinese giving me a wide berth on the wooden walkway in front of the tailor's.
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interesting 23? So there are
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