"We couldn't save everything," Kanya murmurs, seeming to read his thoughts.
"We couldn't save even one thing." Jaidee lets his fingers slide along the grooves where the ivory beetle did its work. "The
"Not with AgriGen."
Jaidee smiles bitterly and pulls his hand away from the fallen tree. "No, not with them. But their ilk, nonetheless. Generippers. Calorie men. Even PurCal when the famines are worst. Why else to do we let them squat out on Koh Angrit? In case we need them. In case we fail, and must go begging for their rice and wheat and soy."
"We have our own generippers, now."
"Thanks to His Royal Majesty King Rama XII's foresight."
"And Chaopraya Gi Bu Sen."
"Chaopraya." Jaidee makes a face. "No one that evil should be graced with such a respectful title."
Kanya shrugs, but doesn't bait him. Soon the bo tree is behind them. At Srinakharin Bridge they disembark. The smell of food stalls calls to Jaidee. He motions Kanya to follow as he makes his way into a tiny
"I'm not hungry," Kanya says.
"That's why you're always in such a terrible mood."
"Jaidee…" Kanya starts, then stops.
Jaidee glances back at her, catches the worried expression on her face. "What is it? Come on then."
"I'm worried about the anchor pads."
Jaidee shrugs. "Don't be."
Up ahead, food carts and tables cluster along the walls of the alley, all jammed together. Small bowls of nam plaa prik sit tidily in the centers of the scavenged table planks. "You see? Somchai was right." He finds the salad cart he wants and examines the spices and fruit, starts ordering for both of them. Kanya comes up beside, a compact cloud of dark mood.
"Two hundred thousand baht is a lot of money for Akkarat to lose," she mutters as Jaidee tells the som tam vendor to add more chiles.
Jaidee nods thoughtfully as the woman stirs the threads of green papaya into the mix of spices. "It's true. I had no idea there was so much money being made out there."
It's enough to finance a new lab for generip research, or put five hundred white shirts on inspection in the tilapia farms of Thonburi… He shakes his head. And this was just one raid. It's amazing to him.
There are times when he thinks he understands how the world works, and then, every so often, he lifts the lid of some new part of the divine city and finds roaches scuttling where he never expected. Something new, indeed.
He goes to the next food cart, stacked with trays of chile-laden pork and RedStar bamboo tips. Fried snakehead plaa, battered and crisp, pulled from the Chao Phraya River that day. He orders more food. Enough for both of them, and Sato for drinking. He settles at an open table as the food is brought out.
Teetering on a bamboo stool at the end of his day, with rice beer warming his belly, Jaidee can't help smiling at his dour subordinate.
As usual, even with good food before her, Kanya remains herself.
Jaidee scoops chiles into his mouth. "I'm not afraid of him."
"The anchor pads were supposed to be his territory. His protection racket, his bribe money."
"First you worry about Trade, now you worry about Bhirombhakdi. That old man is afraid of his own shadow. He makes his wife taste every dish for him to make sure he won't get blister rust." He shakes his head. "Stop being so sour. You should smile more. Laugh a little. Here, drink this." Jaidee pours more Sato for his lieutenant. "We used to call our country the Land of Smiles." Jaidee demonstrates. "And there you sit, sad-faced, as though you are eating limes all day."
"Perhaps we had more to smile about, then."
"Well, that might be true." Jaidee sets his Sato back on the splintered tabletop and stares at it thoughtfully. "We must have done something terrible in our previous lives to have earned these ones. It's the only thing I can think of that explains it all."
Kanya sighs. "I sometimes see my grandmother's spirit, wandering around the
"Another of the Contraction phii? How did she find you? Wasn't she Isaan people, too?"
"She found me anyway." Kanya shrugs. "She is very unhappy with me."
"Yes, well, I suppose we'll be unhappy, too."
Jaidee has seen these ghosts as well, walking the boulevards sometimes, sitting in the trees.