The Last Day of Harry’s Life

Harry took a seat at the bar. It was that magic window after lunch and before happy hour, when working people worked and the silence of sunlight was left to be savored by true drunks. 

Dust danced in a suspended beam. A couple of deadbeats sat with endless dim suspended in their eyes. 

The once pretty publicant lounged on her stool, the swan song of her dancing days playing in the background. 

The color was starting to run out of her hair. She was still slim and stacked, though her stomach had recently begun to fold like an accordion whenever she bent over. Her faded-black tank top hung loose on her shoulders, having been washed a few too many times. Truth be told, so had she. Once joyful similes had lured a murder of crows to squat around her eyes.

She was slightly annoyed when Harry coaxed her off of her stool to order a drink, make that two — a shot of bourbon and a beer. 

She plopped them down before him with a contemptuous sigh before returning to her perch. 

There had been so many occasions, in this exact place, when bold men stepping up to get laid turned her into the end-all-be-all of a fleeting moment. 

But what had once been earnest took a turn for the sordid. Affectionate gazes turned to lechery. So she bowed out and conducted other’s forgotten nights, which would likewise metastasize into misremembered nostalgia for days gone by. 

But Harry, well, he had never had such dancing days. Spotlights were for another type. He’d always found himself an outsider when the swirling heart of revelry swelled to the jukebox jaunt, whisking working stiffs away from the everyday and into each others arms. 

Roadhouse vultures of his ilk were relegated to standing back and letting the hawks swoop in, snatching beauty from the hardwood floor. He was content to pick off whatever carrion was left hanging over the stools at closing time. Sometimes they were the prettiest ones of all, but only when they were the craziest. The most broken. The most willing to break. 

There was a certain type of lady who spit piss and vinegar at the big white smiles and owners of old-fangled letterman jackets hanging in hall closets. 

Art school dropouts and English majors on a decade-plus of minimum wage fucking men like Harry to say fuck you to the natural order of things. They normally sobered up when youth was fleet of foot but not fully gone. That is, except, for the true acolytes of the end of the night.  

Yet sex was sex. A biological drive contingent on mechanics. Acerbic wit can hardly make up for a limp dick with a 50:50 shot of being broughtout of a whisky coma.

Even when the coin landed heads up, Harry sometimes found himself going down on a tin of cat food peppered in cigarette ash.

Then came the same friction of headache thrusts and phallic numb seeking release and catching the clap instead. It hardly seemed worth all the effort. 

Still, there was something left of humanity in that dyadic stumbling, fumbling in the abyss. 

Once, he even thought he had seen the light, even if, in the end, it was just the esca of the angler fish luring him in. 

And then one day, those serendipitous romps unceremoniously stopped. 

All the sad smart girls his age had eventually chosen minivans or the grave. They were all just stopping by anyways, even those who never left town. 

Cat scratches and oversized sweaters covered up teen-aged cries for help. For the others, harder drugs were found. Darker haunts. More expedient ends to the one-and-only terminus shared by wasted and well-lived lives alike. 

Either way you sliced it, they came and they went. But Harry was still left on his stool, past the point of being anything less than rock bottom made manifest in the slumping shape of a middle-aged man. 

The fact that his face had started to sag like the stomach of a fixed cat, or that his actual stomach distended like a Jiffy Pop bag, wasn’t helping his cause. His nicotine stained fingers matched the bisque in his jaundiced eyes. His hair was perennially tousled, his shirt stained, his heels uneven, his face stuck in the shadow of the working day’s end. 

No, his once infrequent amorous romps were a privilege long lost. Luckily for Harry, he was sanguine about the whole thing. For today would be the last day of his life.

He tapped his fingers on the hard wood, looking to conjure a feeling that would not come. So he disturbed the bartender again, ordering one shot and then another, which he dispatched with efficiency. He sipped his beer and stared down the bar and over the empty stools.

There were only ghosts but not spirits lounging in the afternoon light. 

A slight headiness came, albeit muffled by decades of serotonin drain. When drink finally lost its capacity to elicit mirth, Harry knew he was reaching the end of the line. But he kept drinking anyways, looking for the last drop of a feeling that made all that was not ok somehow ok. 

There had once been a time when death filled him with terror. That wide-eyed adrenal spike at the very thought of his own demise. But such fears were the stuff of youth. 

The bottom of his life didn’t fall out all at once. It was more like time elapsed erosion of soon-to-be dead man’s bluff. 

He had his own share of minor hopes and outsized delusions. He just didn’t know how people kept on once nothing remained from the grind except the self-aware slave.

Probably family and friends kept them afloat. Probably not thinking about much of anything at all. Probably denying the fact that the night drive ends with a trip off the cliff. And maybe, just maybe love. 

Harry had felt it once, at a time when he had enough patience and concern to attempt excavating the quarry of his own hardened heart. 

Luckily it had been too fleeting, and too long ago, to feel like anything other than a dream. He couldn’t even fein a sense of consequence, an impetus to examination, a quandary over u-turns, retraced tracks and paths better taken. 

There was enough culture built around the song and dance of choosing rye over the glint in a hopeful man’s eyes to let someone comfortably settle into their own shit. 

Likewise, there had once been friends, hours-long phone calls, bar stool commiseration, shoulders over arms, atta-boys! and “it’s all gonna be alright!” lies. 

But people got on with their lives. The calls shorter, and less frequent, before stopping all together. The drinks were still raised, but only in one’s own company. There was less to share anyways. Less interest in explaining the nuts and bolts of his quivering heart. Less patience to hear just how much the song remained the same.

So he did everyone a favor and shut up. And the they all got on with their lives. And he got on with his. And before he knew it, he was the aging, if not old man at the bar. 

He had become Father McKenzie, writing the words of a eulogy that no one would hear.

Still, while all and sundry had been laid to rest, there was always one hitch when it came to the drunken art of forsaking that thing called loved. 

Christine. He had met here right in this seat, 20 years ago. He would never understand how what was supposed to be a one-night stand ended up digging its heel in for life. 

Hair the color of the night and breasts as pale as morning light, the blue in her eyes found the sun behind the grey clouds in his own. She was that perfect combination of indy girl cliche, sarcastic and vulnerable, contemptuous of her beauty and all it would have afforded her, if she’d been willing to pay the price. 

But she paid a price anyways, one far dearer than whatever truth she was seeking against the grain. 

Harry was her last serenade. Though for a moment their night seemed the prologue to a new day.  Then she up and washed down that last delusion with a bottle of pills. And her eternal sleep ended up being Harry’s last broken dream.

An ersatz version of her or two would come and go. And the one day, no one came calling at all.

That was the thing about life. He’d meet a million ends without knowing it at the time. Perhaps those blows would be crushing if they came with harbingers. Better for the slow boil of regret to eat away at him one day at a time. Here comes the last loving hug, dick tug, sunset on the beach, morning on a mountain peak; plane ride, car drive, warm hello and cold goodbye. But what would he have done if he had known at the time? Perhaps today would have come much sooner than today. 

Truth be told, Harry couldn’t remember the name of the first girl he had ever slept with. He couldn’t remember the face of the last. And overtaking all of the in-between, there was the unforgettable Christine, as much as forgetting could have set him free from the infinite stream of becoming. 

He felt a pang in his booze-steeped heart and ordered another whisky. This time the barkeep’s look of scorn was slightly tinctured with concern. But this wasn’t the kind of place that asked you to slow down. No, it was the kind of place where people like Harry went to speed up the inevitable. 

He took the shot and brought the glass back down. But rather than feel less pain, a slight throb settled in his head. 

He got up and walked over to the juke box, searching out an old Tom Waits’ song. It was still there, just where he had left it all of those years before.  

He poured in his change and pressed B4. The tune began to play. He and Christine had listened to it ironically that night. It was so “meta” as no one called it at the time. 

Two kids at a bar playing a song about two kids eyeing each other at a bar. And they did what kids of their generation did, train their irony on the high crime of sentiment. 

But then something came over them during the penultimate verse. The faux smiles straightened out as they burden of not being allowed to be vulnerable weighed them down. They made the mistake of looking each other in the eyes during an unguarded moment. And all that pained them came into clear focus. 

Words about being lonely. About searching out that lost face that was nowhere to be found, when love for a ghost was found and drowned in another round.  

And they knew deep down that was them too. They were staring each other in the eyes and yet terrified to be seen. They were desperate for love and disavowed it every day of their lives. But not that night. If only they had not reverted back to the cold comfort of cowardice. Maybe she’d still be here. Maybe he’d still be there. 

The song came to an end. His headache did not. Harry walked back over to the bar and checked his wallet. He emptied its contents on the counter and thanked the bartender as he set off.

Whatever followed “Hey Mister!” was muffled by the swinging door. The blinding light hurt his eyes as the throbbing intensified. Harry shielded his face as he walked to his car and got inside.

There were no more songs to be played. No more places to be seen. No more appointments to be met. No more hopes. No more promises. No more lies. No more goodbyes.

He opened up the glove compartment and pulled out a revolver, raising it to his temple. Without a second thought he cocked the hammer and pulled the trigger, blowing out his brains on Heartattack and Vine.

The bartender heard the shot ring out just as she finished counting her tip: $74.79.

My own Bukowski

There’s a truth about this sort of writing. It is destined for the bargain bin of Amazon self-publishing. Back before we all got injected with 200 ccs of pop psychology, we didn’t know that folks like Bukowski were outliers. Back then, we called ‘em lucky bastards. I guess it’s all a bit same-same but different. After all, luck can rub off on anyone. But in the cold light of statistics, you’re most likely fucked. And by you, I mean me. 

One guy, just one, got to drunkenly deliver packages and lay pipe before making it in the second act of his life. His life was given the greatest gift of all: A story arc. But he’s gone, and he took his world, and most of his audience, with him. Teenagers unboxing junk from China will make more money from YouTube in a day than I’ll make from a lifetime of words. Granted, he’s a million times the writer I’ll ever be. But still. Bukowski didn’t have to compete with Pornhub.

Publishers no longer want prose as purple as a drunk polack’s dick. NO one wants to take any risks. Everything has been work-shopped to death. It’s write by numbers now. It makes sense. The pie is shrinking and someone’s gotta pay the rent. Keep the lights on. Keep the darkness out. This thankless gig is merely an ends to a Hollywood option. Literature nothing more than a self-indulgent sales pitch. And I couldn’t sell viagra at a Bangkok whorehouse if my life depended on it.  

Those are the shakes. I don’t know why I’m still trying. I guess it’s a way of keeping my own cold light of day at bay until I make it until the end of the night.

This curse of being. Trying to be. Be anything. When the universe very clearly is dead set on us being nothing at all. 

The German philosopher Philipp Mainländer once theorized that God realized his existence was a mistake but was too much a coward for out and out suicide, so blew himself up to die out one conscious ember at a time. And here we are, the white hot spangles of dying forever, sublimating all of our fear into Facebook rage. 

Mainländer was a pessimist with a big heart. He likely would have burned Bangkok to the ground, seeing only suffering, and not pleasure in the flesh. For him, sublimity could only be found in death. He likely wouldn’t have read Bukowski. Something tells me his drunken countryman likely had little time for him. 

Better Brahms, Barbera wine and a big wet pussy in his face than embracing the end that was coming anyways.  

I once thought I’d tell my own stories of the down and out Bangkok night. The problem is, I just don’t want to write them. I don’t want to touch all that is gone. Especially since so much of what is gone never was. So much of what was to be was just a dream I failed to will to be.

It’s hard to write something knowing it’s all for nothing. No audience. No connection. No cash. Who knows. Maybe this year just got to me. Watching my own life make like Mainländer’s God and explode.

Not long ago, by which I mean a lifetime ago, I was at a cheap Soi 19 hotel. As my friend’s ex bar girl beau read Buddhist tracts inside their room, we headed to the roof for a modest-view Bacchanal.

Hours later, a lady I then barely knew but would soon grow to love beckoned me over. A motorbike ride over on the other side of midnight and she let me know just what goes on behind closed doors.

She left for work the next morning without waking me, as I slept the sleep of drunks. I finally rose long after the sun in a strange place. It was one of those oddly blissful hangovers, where the aches of the body were salved by the sublime. 

Opening the blinds, I took in the view of Rama IV from high up above. For the first time in a while, I really smiled.

I had a decent job. I had better friends. I was falling in love. Covid was a known-quantity but had yet to blight the world. I was easy like Sunday morning on Saturday still. There was hope for the future and joy for the moment. Like every day before and after, I had my whole life ahead of me. Little did I know my vista was looking out on a mirage. Thank God. Nothing wrong with a sandcastle for a day when seaman’s silence is our fate.

And that’s the one gift of writing, immortalizing that which is fleeting, somehow making the agony make sense. Suddenly the tragedy of the dead beats takes on a comedic quality. All peccadillos pass without slight. Mortal sins are plot devices. 

Terrible people become great characters. Irascible losers enslaved to the author’s hand our closest friends. All is forgiven. Even ourselves, especially those parts of our selves we see in them. 

I never really dreamed of being a real writer. In fact, I would have been happy to make it into the bargain bin. I wanted enough for cheap Hawaiian shirts and inexpensive beer.  I wanted cruise ship crooners belting it out in Bangkok basements in the dead of night. I wanted to create a world where I could be my pretend idea of me. Free from the trailer-littered side of the road to nowhere that shaped my destiny. 

And once upon a Saturday morning or two I got to be that man. I got to be my own ersatz version of Bukowski of make believe.  

I got to live in the world I’m not living in today. The one where I am hopelessly, tragically me. 

Those were the good ol’ days

More. More. More. At any cost. Any cost. Red lining in the red, bloodshot eyes, endorphin highs, cocaine lights and loveless last rites.

Send me back to that Friday eve of sunset when I was basking in the light of a new dawn. Send me back to that post-coital bliss with torrential nostalgia filling the dark. Send me back back back to that golden age which was just over a month ago. For these are many things, but they aren’t the good ol’ days.

Granted, for many of us, things aren’t so bad. I still wake up, sometimes, next to someone with love shining through sleepy eyes. I lost a well-paying job and was forced to take on another for substantially less pay, but I’ve got enough in the bank to get by for a time. The authorities have me in a visa vice, but institutional backing is keeping me out of the covid cauldron of Chaengwattana. 

After a good month of having my nervous system back-firing on me, I came to terms with my worst case scenario — going back to America. At some point some job at a gas station will likely be on the way. That’s something of a professional fall but my lot at least pretend to pay homage to an honest day’s work. And despite whatever dusty corner of the road I find myself on to make ends meet, I’m already thinking about Four Roses, family and country roads. Even at its worst, it’s not so bad. After all, I’m alive.

Still, in they snaking couloirs of this red-tape kingdom, I feel I’ve stumbled upon a Catch 22 in Kafka’s castle. And then I have to laugh. For sanity comes, perhaps not in Thai fatalism, but the savoir faire of Niebuhr’s prayer— “God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference.”

Or, to not quite surmise the stoicism of Marcus Aurelius — it is what it is.

My return to Bangkok in December started off with a bang. I finally had it, the easy demeanor that had previously alluded me in all of my moralistic static in a hedonistic sea. After realizing what a life in the straight world of America would do to me, I jettisoned the “oughta be’s” and got my ballast on point.

Friends from all corners came out to embrace me. 

“You’ve changed.”

 And in the change the music played. The libations flowed. Cubanos via Dominica were smoked. And then I met a girl who just got me. And then, it seemed, things were made complete — gold filling the broken places in kintsugi me. 

But that bulwark of normalcy was a sand castle taunting the tide. It’s the curse of happy people to start denying the pull of the moon. And perhaps I was still prepared for some ebb and flow. But nothing like the storm that followed. 

And with that cyclone’s portentous waves came a toothache shake of the soul. The anxiety buzzed hornet-song under the bonnet. Try as I might, I couldn’t shake the feeling that something was amiss. So one weekend I took a trip down to a Thai-frequented tourist town to outrun the hum in my own engine. An old friend joined me as we packed into a minivan on a Saturday morning. We were donning masks as the creep of contagion was starting to seep in, but by the time we arrived, we pulled them aside. For now, this gulf-wrapped town was leaving free of fear. We found an old condo by the waterfront renting out rooms. The building was decades-old, massive, half-empty, and half-haunted, which is to say it was just right for me. White-washed walls and breeze in every hall. Large windows in every well letting the light and salt-sprinkled air in.

They didn’t even take passports at reception. Nothing like a joint that allows escapees the option of escape. Even if escape is a lie. Even if our GPS, cell-tower ping, Google tracking, 21st century scribes have made prisons of our own metadata lockdown lives.

As it turned out, neighboring rooms on the 12th floor were free. They were perched on the corner of the road giving a panoramic view of the promenade and sea. Every inch of my room was brushed in flamingo wing.  A power line below hummed. The wind blew eternal. It was everything I had been looking for to escape the Bangkok haze. 

The beach, beer, seafood and waves filled the day. Santana, old Thai songs, talks of God and the ghost of our own lives chimed a nightingale’s song. Swallows from the bath rustled pine fronds. A few tears fell for those too-early gone. 

Time and again, from mood swing to swung, our oft repeated refrain broke through:

“Will you look at that view. Will you look at that view…”

The next morning I awoke with a heavy head and washed the sand out of my eyes with a swim. Up above the darkening sky unseasonably threatened a downpour. So it was more beer and Abraxas as the rain rolled in, over, and beyond. I cannot say if it was the place or my place in the place, but I never wanted to leave. But leave we did. A world slowly being turned on its head beckoned. 

And when we finally hopped off at On Nut and grabbed a few at the Beacon, little did I know it would be my last Bangkok street-side beer for a time … perhaps all time. 

Through the following work week, a balcony view, ice-cold beer, morning swims, rainstorms and Santana’s song were on my mind. Then the bars were shuttered for good; the people watching perches for Sukhumvit’s night owls gone. And I certainly gave a hoot. But rather than read the writing on the wall, I took another seaside trip to outrun the langoliers the following weekend.  

My friend once again tagged along, albeit on a later ride. But by then that low hum ominous buzz down below had grown to a power line pop. A transformer explosion and sky-spark shower was imminent. There was no relaxing anymore. The nervous undercurrent was running through the streets. You could see it in people’s eyes now perched above masks — the stupid animal fear. Invisible monsters looking to conjure the beast in man.  

After a day at the beach, on Saturday night we ambled around a shut down town. Many of the bars were closed insofar as they weren’t taking in customers. But bar staff and friends were gathered around spaces with upturned chairs, meat on the spit and drinks clinking in the smoke. The Thai party persisted, albeit as a familial affair. 

And then we found one bar still open in the traditional way. A motley crew was gathered — a pool table in play. It was reminiscent of a French colonial holdout on their rubber plantation denying the apocalypse now. Africans, Europeans, the owners from up north, my Scandinavian friend and American me, all celebrating what would be a final retreat into the night.  

I smoked a cigar and tried my best not to flirt with the spunky pint-sized tender of the bar — a Chiang Mai import named “Shrimp” — who clearly had eyes for me. Those you avoid always chase — the plight of the taken man trying his best in love-inspired fits of honesty.  A jigsaw man with a broken body turned out to be an absolute pool shark, besting my symmetrically long-limbed friend whose game was poorly executed under a Leo and SangSom sea. 

And we partied well past the witching hour, until I finally closed a door on the conquest I could not let be. It’ll be one of those cases of never my imagination will forever resurrect for me. 

Then came a long walk down the nearly-abandoned promenade. Just the waves, the dark, and that growing undercurrent of dread. 

We sat out one last night with exhaustion in our bones. It wasn’t the same. So we retreated to our rooms and slept the troubled sleep of drunks. 

The following morning, twice hungover and guilt-ridden to boot, the reality of things hit me like a wet fish to the face. The selfishness, the denial, the unwillingness to see that the whole god-damned world was changing around me.

I couldn’t get back to Bangkok soon enough. So I headed to the bus station while my friend stayed behind, although fears of closing borders prompted him to come back a few days later. 

At the bus station, the adjacent mall already felt built on the edge of the world. And clearly everyone was on edge. It was nearly empty. There’s something essentially eerie about temples of consumerism without people. It’s a feeling of space made empty by diminishing function, no more escape into the nothingness of desire — emptiness compounded by emptiness. Perhaps that’s part of their perennial appeal as sets for late night horror film fare. It’s no wonder they inspire the warped vaporware muzak of late night Youtube watchers who these days rarely buy anything but Amazon wares. 

And I chose a near empty dinner in that hollowed out temple to eat lunch and kill time. A woman seemingly taken by madness locked eyes on me and refused to break contact for the duration of my meal. Mental illness, wanton aggressiveness at the foreign threat — the gods only know.

With my departure time approaching, I paid as a gaze burned a hole in my back. In the adjoining alley, I boarded a half empty bus back to Bangkok. Traffic was relatively light. I drifted in and out of consciousness, for me an uncanny feat feat, and a testament to the booze imposed prohibition on actual sleep. 

I arrived that Sunday afternoon to a near-empty Eastern Bus terminal. I must say, the Thais I did see on my trip home exhibited hygienic habits that told me there was no way this pandemic would just pass. 

Public toilet hand pushers throwing two seconds of soapless water right into their faces. 

Unwashed fingers prodding noses beneath masks that had been turned into petri dishes through relentless groping. People puling down face covers to let out a cough or sneeze. 

 And as they shot you, the foreigner, dirty, or nervous looks, you realize that no one’s failed efforts at prophylaxis are even about protecting others. It’s just a bunch of scared kids trying to protect themselves. There’s no sense of epidemiology — it’s all black magic. And that week they were convinced it was “farangs” who had brought the curse on them. Always someone to blame, always a finger pointed in vain. 

Just ask that gentleman in Phuket turning his spotlight on violence. Violence against us, the other he secretly always hated. And now that the money is gone, so is his patience. And he is legion…

The one group of people not afraid were the fare-less drivers, who clearly had been laying about for a while. They called out in a lackadaisical way — stuck between the frequency of Thai “mai pen rai” and far more universal defeat. 

But I wasn’t even interested in the skytrain, a mere stone’s throw away. Rather, I opted to walk home to take in the new air of the city. 

 The entire stretch of Sukhumvit I traversed seemed nearly abandoned. Nothing but drawn shutters in one segmented row of shophouses after the other. And the specials played in my head:

“This town (town) is coming like a ghost town

All the clubs have been closed down

This place (town) is coming like a ghost town…”

More steps down the uneven pavement and the only eyes above masks looked on in fear.

“Do you remember the good old days before the ghost town?We danced and sang, and the music played in a de boomtown.”

And for the first time I picked up a coffee in a table-less cafe. Finally I made it home. Soon thereafter my lady turned up. I felt relieved to see her, and daft for skipping town when I should have stayed. Then came the guilt, for seeking out the party as the world slowly shut down. For not keeping my distance in my late-night revelry.

 Later stories came of Moon Bar revelers who had not been so lucky. Coyote dancers and other late night prancers had finally caught a new disease. The growing infectious explosion at the military controlled 8-limbed dancehall of death turned up yet another story of corruption and greed. 

No, I wasn’t just putting myself in harms way. I was endangering her too. And that was the only cheating I did that night. And that was crooked enough to scare me straight for a spell. And then my life got smaller by the day. 

First it was working from home. And then the gym was closed. And I found relief in a park run, but the cities few green spaces have since been shut down by the boys in brown. And then the curfew came, though that at least provided some poignancy to match the discomfort the overfed call pain.

Two lovers perched on a bed in the dark, taking in the silence for the first time ever. The heavily-trafficked Sukhumvit thoroughfare had transformed from eternal traffic jam to utterly bare. Though the occasional late night outlaw blazed a rocket trail down the street. More often, it was cops needlessly blaring sirens and flashing red lights to abuse their privileged place in the lock-down metropolis. And finally the last skytrain home. 

And in the throes of what goes on behind closed doors, the best of being a life was mine once more. But cavities grew around the golden repair. And with it the fight against those feelings of despair. 

Talks of the 24 shutdown loomed. And all us too-oft drinkers live in constant fear of the impending ban on booze.

 And I’ve been drunk or half-drunk nearly every day. And I keep thinking of all the things I should be doing with my time rather than phone fucking and pickle-braining my life away. 

And then the Pope’s sagacious words about a deeper closeness rang through. And I have found new depths in my girlfriends eyes, the quiet streets at night, and all the rooftop refugees of my condo all dreaming of those wild Bangkok nights. 

And then it hits me: I’m so god-damned lucky.

I’m not scraping the slums of Klong Tuey alongside Ratchani Cheausuwan to find one more satang before desperation pushes me to lose my mind. I’m not in a 10 meter shack without running water running alongside blackwater canals with the millions of marginalized in Metro Manilla.  

I wasn’t among the tens of thousands of migrants making the Myawaddy rush back to Myanmar, their brethren in displacement camps, or the denizens of that dictatorial state where some townships have one doctor per 80,000 damned. 

My home wasn’t welded shut in a Wuhan home-sized tomb, left to die of starvation and disease in 21st century Count of Amontillado doom. I wasn’t one of millions let go by the master of capital, helping the megacity makers and breakers “extrude their working class like so much unwanted accrual,” as Roy painfully, and elegantly put it. 

I was not part of the social distancing lie that meant keeping the poor off the streets and even more tightly packed into the public squalor and disease incubators, free of running water, and topped off with sun-baked corrugated coffin lids. Let the masses huddle in shit and face Dutertes bullets, least they think of clogging the streets. 

The real cost of this pandemic will fall on the millions of untold victims with no blue check marks to multiply the force of their virtue. In the poor places, there will be no Netflix blanket after dark. Just that same wild-eyed animal fear and rapid beating heart, waiting for the divine ecstasy and  extreme horror of the big mort.  

And you see a lot of ugliness coming from la petite mort chasers. Expats addicted to release and angry at the prospect of hedonistic interruptus. Epicurus as their lodestar and a cloud of contagion leaving them without compass.

But secret knock on a sun-heated door and you’re back in the blowjob parlor for more. The girlfriends of yesteryear now a desperate whore. You unconcerned for their hell in store. Prayers to the angles of death that this storm claims more. 

You’d be amazed how many are hoping and wishing all those broken lives will bring on a new age of desperation-fueled pay for play. What darkness of heart breeds hopes that shattered lives are the source of a new Golden age?

This crowned-king of fear is bringing out the monsters of the Big Mango, looking for their next sugar rush. Though this city is merely the most distilled version of the disease of our age. More. More. More. At any cost. Any cost. Red lining in the red, bloodshot eyes, endorphin highs, cocaine lights and loveless last rites. 

And now, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is shuttered for the first time since the Black Death. So grab the reaper by the crotch and engage in the play of breath. 

“Squeeze, Squeeze, Squeeze, just a bit harder, just a bit harder — anything!, anything! — but ‘check bin’.”

For the sum total is nothing less than the wages of sin. So they pray they may never live to see the dawn they have ushered in. 

Billy the Ice Agent

Pla was playing pool. She was 40 with bleached blond hair and a more serious demeanor than most bartenders at foreigner-heavy haunts. She shared a love of 80s metal. She wanted to rock out to Ratt like Cassidy from the Wrestler. But Billy was no Ram. He was just broken. So many people in this place were broken. 

Luke, the 50-something Belgian owner of the bar, was an abusive drunk with a heavy drinker’s paunch, a fake smile, a perennially partially buttoned shirt, two wives in two countries and a lady in Thailand who on paper ran the bar. Her name was Rung. She was in her mid 30s and equipped with the gutter snipe’s gift of manipulation honed by years of abuse. 

Her previous Thai husband had held a knife to her throat in a typical northeastern fit of jealously. Pressed against the front door thinking she was going to die, neighbors heard the commotion and came a knocking. Somewhere in the confusion, she got out. Rung did everything for her daughter, or so she said as she rattled her plastic tip jar in front of me. 

But in Thailand, if the bar industry is anything to go by, the opposite seems to be true: Children are forced to do anything for their parents. Parents, who, so often, are just like Rung and her abusive beau. The pain life inflicted on them becomes the wrench with which they lash out at a broken world. So many of our tools get trained on tragedy.  

Rung once told me how Luke used to make her sit outside while she listened to him fuck bargirls in short time hotels. Despite her fits of jealously, she almost seemed to respect him for that solitary act of truth telling. He was lecherous and sadistic but he didn’t hide it. And Rung was poorly educated, co-dependent and ill-equipped to make it on her own. Or so she believed. Or so she made others believe. Whether latching onto a man like Luke was her best option is a question that only Rung could really answer. 

Her self-esteem, it must be said, was not high. 

Another corpulent patron would sometimes grab her by the ass and squeeze with creeping ivy fingers.

Rung wrote it off with a laugh: He no help himself. He just love ass!” 

Ok can then Rung, ok…

But one night Luke smacked Rung up good in front of customers. Maybe it was small potatoes for a woman whose previous lover had almost killed her, but it was too much even for drunks, hustlers and otherwise indecent folk to bear. Bad vibes descended on the bar thereafter.  

A lot of people seemed to stop stopping by. Or that’s what I heard. I’d since stopped stopping by some time before. What was once new had grown old. Bangkok was never short on new options and old haunts falling by the wayside. 

I first stumbled upon Tigra Belgian Vintage Café in my smoking days. As a converted shop house that opened out onto the world when the shutter rose, it seemed like a perfect people watching spot to drink San Miguel Lights and let the cavalcade of skinny girls straddling motorbikes ride by. 

Soi Pridi 2 cut between Sukhumvit 71 and the Chalong Rat Expressway. It was a heavily trafficked short cut where street racers and street carts put side-walk-less pedestrians at constant risk.  

The neighborhood was still heavily Thai, with low-rent massage parlors and family-run restaurants lining both sides of the street. Bug cart pushers crept along the streets selling crispy critters at night. Skewers of meat were always on the brazier. Chillies were always being crushed under the pestle. Sacks of Some Tam tied off with rubber bands were slung by deft hands to street walkers and ladies of the night alike. 

 But with W District nearby and foreign-centric condos popping up like mushrooms after the rain, the area was increasingly attracting Westerners. There was always the odd Russian model chasing lower rents parading down the street. But then the hostel opened and the backpackers came, cutting a sharp contrast to the gargantuan Europeans whose sense of a good life had never evolved past cigarettes, sex and booze. 

Maybe there is no evolving in that sense. 

But the bar did attract its share of characters. I remember hanging out with a fairly well-known film director I’ll call Tommy, whose heroin chic physique and Pig Pen Marlboro musk belied his frenetic conversational clip and high octane approach to life. He was a dad pushing 50 but had somehow defied the beigest blight of aging. 

His candle was burning at both ends. The end seemed neigh. 

More than a few times I saw Tommy walking through the neighborhood with Russian girls half his age. It was funny because sitting in a café with my Belarussian friend, she saw the director walk by and said: “Now there’s a man who looks unhealthy. He looks like a drug addict.” 

Some of her CIS sisters clearly disagreed. 

Tommy wasn’t the only man of note to hit the bar. On the night Billy got iced, some fairly well-known expat director type talked my ear off about something or the other. 

He smelled like rotting onions and sexual desperation. That’s all I can remember about him: the pungent stench of violation. Something told me he’d violated more than a few boys in his day. But maybe Bangkok simply makes you imagine the worst in people, because the worst in people is all around you, all of the time.     

Yes, Tigra attracted so much detritus washed away from foreign shores. Drunks. Paillards. Hustlers. Hacks. Unconfessed killers of others. Convicted killers of self.  

There was the seemingly octogenarian army vet who had clearly lost his mind, always stopping by in an agitated sweat, trying to crush the hand of every man he met, hurling invective at all who tired of his shit. It was hard to tell if he used his age as pugilistic prophylaxis.

It had, after all, saved him from a number of well-deserved beatings. Once, a group of 20-something English lads all 6 feet tall (and taller) abandoned the pool table to ask my table of randoms if Sarge were with us. He’d apparently called the tall blond kid a faggot after trying to crush his hand and challenging him to a game of pool. The kid was half-ready to beat the retired drill sergeant to death but first looked to see if he had a younger companion who could perhaps take the beating instead. Everyone at my table insisted that we didn’t roll in Colonel Kurtz’s platoon. We all agreed that mad man Kurtz was a cunt. 

The bar then refused Sarge service, so he ambled off screaming profanities on the way. I won’t forget his agitated demeanor, sweaty sheen and wild blue eyes. The madness I say … the madness. 

Perhaps Sarge was the apotheosis of Bangok batshit – the end result of being an ageing lost boy who finally loses it. Why else would you go to a strange land to die? Why after so many decades of life you have no one to connect with but girls a quarter your age who are waiting for you to become mulch? Is this how it all ends?

And Billy, well, Billy was one of those guys. 

The first time he yelled across the bar at me, he seemed ok. Overweight with peppered black hair, blue eyes and a scraggly beard, he had a slight lisp that gave him an unearned air of affability. He appreciated Pla and her rock and roll aesthetic. Pla was blue jeans and peroxide rock in a world of mind-numbing EDM. She wouldn’t last much longer. She would tell Luke that Rung and her brother had been skimming off the top for some time. Luke responded by firing the messenger. What choice did he have? The bar was in Rung’s name. And he had probably figured her theft into the abacus of gratuitous blue collar fleecing. Steal twice a day’s wage and you end up with half an honest day of pay. Such was the Bangkok way. 

But Pla seemed honest. With a cool hand and easy demeanor she did her best to teach me pool on the side. I’d later bring a similarly tempered girl named Ice to rack ‘em up, only to quickly get shut down. I sucked at pool. Still do. But the effort still got me laid that night.  

And Pla, well she held a candle for a dying SE Asia sensibility. May her Finnish flame keep her warm in those colder environs she was spirited away to… 

One day, Rung invited me to a birthday party she was having on a Thursday. I took a motorbike over from work. I started hitting the beer hard. Northeast food and poorly made sushi weaponized to a mass extinction event lined the counter. The place was packed. The drinks and drunks flowed.

My Scandinavian friend, let’s call him Søren, stopped by to celebrate with me that night. He was a digital nomad stuck in a relationship with a street bar cart owner and part time pimp. They lived in a Thai-style apartment off behind the bar. The lady had her hooks deep in Søren. Søren had a good heart but took to change like ocean liners at night headed for icebergs. 

Which made him a lot more like me than I like to admit. 

Tigra that night was filled with the regular cast of characters. The skinny 20-something backwards-capped Brit and his wife — a gorgeous, tattooed lady with unblinking bar girl, bedroom eyes. They were always playing pool. They were both sharks, at least on the table. Sarge stopped by to introduce himself and tried to crush skinny Brit’s hand. Skinny Brit took it in stride. 

Far too many drinks in, I would later get trapped talking to the director/producer of onion aroma acclaim. But it’s hard to take in words when all you’re trying to do is escape the stench. At some point Søren sensibly retreated. I had already set up a Friday of hangover pain.

And then Billy started chatting with me. Billy the ice agent I would learn. 

Billy, 56, was angry that he hadn’t gotten his government cheese as some sort of settlement. Settlement for what, I never learned. Probably threw out his back raping migrants in the desert. Billy was the exact type of man who ended up gaming the Thai immigration system by staying permanently on tourist visas. Which is to say, he was a hypocrite. Thailand is full of them, the sleepwalking denizens of chud nation, riding hard for Trump and Brexit. 

God bless the wrathful, abandoning ship to spread their seed among the trailer-less tragedies littering pay-for-play perdition. But the rage never leaves them because they contradictions are never resolved. 

So much fucking among the accidental antinatalists of Generation Narcissist.

These libertarian libertines are so often a big bundle of contradictions: well drink bottom feeders angry that time, genetics and personal choice had kept them from sipping off the top shelf of sexual selection. 

You can buy everything else you see? Why not other people? So these boomers and tailcoat straddlers came to Bangkok looking to drink and fuck their way out of the existential chasm. Hedonism does work for a time. And it takes time to lay down the daily routines that start to tighten like a noose. But then novelty goes with your libido. The void widens. The darkness calls. 

Then your dick goes limp as smoke-choked veins collapse and the hangover headache becomes a permanent feature of your life. Suddenly the party is killing you. Suddenly, the only solution consumerism ever taught you ends up being the poison and not the cure. 

And Billy, well Billy was one of those guys. Angry at the world, entitled and looking to pour buckets of shit which sprang from his deep well of rage. And I told Billy as such. I told him he was a real fucking bummer. I told him standing there and listening to him vent his shit was exhausting. I told him I was tired of listening to him project all of his problems onto all and sundry.

He said he didn’t like my “new speak.”

I think that was his word for words he didn’t understand.

Talk about new speak. 

I admit I said too much. I was far too drunk to say less. Billy did not take kindly to it. I really wound him up and then I walked off. Yes, I pulled the grenade pin and left others to endure granite shrapnel shot. 

With decades of resentment triggered and then marinated in a steady stream of booze, Billy started popping off at the mouth like a pop-rocked pelican who took the Pepsi challenge.

“Fuck you!” to every man who made eye contact. “Fuck off whore!” to every woman who didn’t. 

The local mafia guy and his friends got tired of Billy’s shit. So as he made his way out the bar, Billy got glassed. That overhead smash opened up a nasty gash, blood dripping in the shape of an arrowhead.

And when the police and the paramedics came to tend to the fat man in blue dazed and confused, a bar full of locals swore they saw the damndest thing: A drunk foreigner bash a bottle upside his own head. 

Billy’s soon to be ex-girlfriend undoubtedly failed to translate Billy’s own interpretation of events. Needless to say, no arrests were made that night. 

One thing I forgot to mention: Billy had Parkinsons. And for that bit of misfortune I did pity him. Nothing like complicating a nervous system disorder with alcoholism and head trauma. 

Maybe the same thing happened to Sarge 30 years prior. Maybe Thailand is the coward man’s version of suicide by cop. Cop a feel, cop a buzz, cop out of life. 

“Me, Me Me, Me, Me I, I … I’m so fucking important. I’m so fucking important … right?

Fuck you Billy.

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