“If this had been a regular job the Commissioner would’ve hauled my ass up to the cameras and made me into fine publicity material. Never believe the papers.”
“I thank you anyway.”
John returns to his documents. “It’s my job.”
“Just being curious,” Landon adds haltingly. “Do you get many— clients?”
“There aren’t enough operatives to Chronies so each operative is usually assigned a few until one of them turns critical.”
“Turns critical?”
“When an SX for him becomes imminent,” John answers. “Sanctioned Extermination.”
Landon winces at the ugly term. “So how many Chronies do you babysit?”
“I had three.” He looks at Landon over his reading glasses. “Now there’s just you.”
The engine starts and they back out onto a larger street. Landon stares broodingly ahead of him. “I was expecting you’d come to the hospital.”
“Couldn’t risk exposure.” He stops at the lights. “You’re wasting your breath if you’re trying to get me to reveal anything. If I were you I’d come clean with whatever I remember. It makes my job a lot easier and lets you live a great deal longer.”
The remark visibly unsettles Landon.
“I have to set up surveillance at your home.” The lights change and he accelerates. “But first, let’s go eat. I’ve been thinking of dosa and sambar all day.”
24
MAY 1961
THE SLUM, A maze of rotting wood and attap, was hemmed between Beo Lane and Bukit Ho Swee Road. Arthur peered over a ditch and there among the wooden stilts was an old, nameless grave submerged in a murky cesspool festering in the sun. The stench of excrement and sewage wafted on the muggy breeze.
Far away to the south, a plume of dark smoke grew against the blue sky—Arthur could see it over the fraying roofs of the ramshackle houses. But it seemed to be bothering no one.
In a coffee shop at Beo Lane loafing youths perched themselves on teak stools and watched the world like a pack of carrion vultures, harrying working-age men on suspicion that they might be a spies of a rival gang or gadfly officials from the Housing Council, seeking to evict families and demolish homes. Arthur was spared this because the lookouts knew him on account of a job he once held at a nearby warehouse.
“Bo dai ji la,” said one of them nasally, referring to the plume of smoke. He had a foot propped on the edge of his stool. “Si Kah Teng eh lang sio pun soh nia la. Bian knia. Wa nang kuah tau kuah beh kuah ho-ho eh.”
It was true. The semi-autonomous slum dwellers, isolated from the Council administration, were rather civic-minded about fires. They even had an alarm system of roving watchmen at night. Despite lacking proper utilities and an effective postal system, the slum had an excellent communications network: a name was all that Arthur had to give to a family residing at the slum’s edge, and that name was relayed from one person to another, frisking children to labouring adults, until at last the name emerged from the tangle of alleys—a gaunt young man clothed in a frumpy singlet that hung emptily off his bony, sunburned shoulders. His hair however, was combed and oiled with liberal amounts of brilliantine.
“You must be Ar-ter,” he proclaimed loudly.
Nearby a few girls snickered. They were returning from a trip to the public tap, water-filled kerosene tins straddled across their small shoulders on bamboo poles. Arthur knew they were sniggering at his name, which meant “pig” in their dialect.
Arthur returned a nod. “I’m here for my documents. Khun said to collect today.”
The skinny young man curled a finger at him. “Ar-ter come, follow me.”
They trekked across bridges of coffin boards that spanned perilously across polluted canals and through alleys too narrow even for motorcycles. Four large pigs foraged in a squalid puddle beside a common latrine. After a series of painted wooden walls they turned a corner and crossed another narrow bridge to the next cluster of houses. Outside one of them two boys poured kerosene over four caged rats and set them alight. Then they upended the cage with a stick and had the flaming critters scurrying to their deaths.
It wasn’t long before Arthur lost track of the number of alleyways they passed or the number of corners they had rounded. The smell of charring grew stronger.
“Is it much farther?” he asked.
“We here,” his guide answered.
Arthur was hustled inside a shack, in which three men sat lunching around a table laden with little dishes of food and a blackened pot of rice porridge. The guide said something in dialect to one of them—a scraggy, dark-skinned man with a coarse gold chain that hung like a shackle around his thin neck. He gave Arthur no more than a quick dart of his eyes as he ate.
It was the guide who spoke. “Khun busy today. He tell me to give you this.”
Arthur took over a brown paper envelope from him. He tipped it and out slid IC renewal documents and a blue passport bearing a coat of arms depicting a lion and a unicorn.
“Did he say where he went?”
“Kio yi mai meng ah ni tsuay la,” the gold-shackled man said tetchily. “Kio yi gia yi e mee knia gin tsao la.”
Arthur looked away. They didn’t know that he comprehended the string of dialect and it was better left that way.
“Maybe gone downtown,” the guide added in an empathetic tone. “If your document okay give me collection money. Forty-five a week.”
“Khun said forty a week for ten weeks,” said Arthur, taking care to sound more surprised than belligerent.
“Forty-five,” said the guide. “Plus interest.”
Even a fool would know better than to fuss with the yobs of the Twenty-Four Society. In a spot like this you just had to know your way around, and Arthur came prepared. The extra five dollars were meant for them and it had always been that way. Bastards. Grudgingly he shoved a roll of notes into the guide’s open hand and trudged up the alleyway from which he came.
Or did he?
Fifty yards into the maze Arthur realised he was lost. He stood in the middle of the alley like a rock between streams of kampong folks going about their business in a shade of unspoken apprehension. The distant column of smoke was still rising, and it had widened considerably such that it gave its end of the sky a stormy hue.
A squad of volunteer firefighters appeared from around a street corner. They were young men in their teens, some of whom bore red tin buckets and hooked poles that were used to dislodge burning attap roofs. A last man was dragging a partly reeled fire hose with its end burnt away. They were sooty and soaked.
The buzz of human activity amassed around the battered firefighters. The nest was stirred. Following a brief exchange of words the crowd hurriedly dispersed, scurrying in all directions in a sort of organised panic. Messages were hollered and relayed. Ablebodied men sprang into action fetching pails and empty kerosene tins. Nearby a group of caterwauling women began trundling out children and cast-iron sewing machines.
A southerly wind carried an acrid odour, and Arthur knew for certain that a conflagration was underway. Someone ran into his shoulder; the tides of panic were pouring into the alleys. At the base of the smoke column Arthur saw sporadic flashes of orange—his first glimpse of the flames.
He folded the documents securely into his pocket and packed himself into the growing lines of fleeing folks, certain that they would lead him out. Behind him another pail-wielding firefighting squad began dousing the attap roofs with water. Farther south he saw steam rising.
The lines led him around a bend, possibly towards the direction of Delta Circus. Just ahead an old woman joined the human river, her arms wrapped around two live hens. Somewhere in the middle a family rolled out bulky furniture and halted the flow. Hysteria spread amongst the fleeing folks as powerful updrafts hurled zinc roofing sheets into the sky. Close behind, flames raged over the roofs of doomed homes. Heavy black smoke suffocated everything in billows of umbral gloom.