Leaving
the highway, I made my way to smaller roads, through villages more remote, the
forest thicker, alive with strange squawks and chattering where before had been
only the hum of traffic. New types of death emerged, squashed on the road the
flattened coil of what had been a snake, a silver skin with tyre treads across
its middle, curled fang jammed between stones in the road’s surface. There was
the lizard, a whole metre in length, I must have disturbed the thing for I
realised its presence only through my ear. A slithering movement began, a
rustling of leather pulled powerfully through gravel. I glimpsed it, a real
dinosaur, the hanging skin beneath the neck, broad green back and that gigantic
tail, pulled over the ground by long, black claws.
As I moved south the rains returned, transforming
me from dry to dripping in 20 seconds, buckets of water from above and laughter
the only worthwhile response. After the clouds had said their bit, the sky
cleared just as swift, as if it had never bore a grey shade in all its days.
The world warmed again, and as I headed in and out of Thammarat, so Thailand
grew poorer, the landscape changing, pavements turning back to dust and soil,
concrete houses replaced by metal sheets and planks of wood, cars turning to
cows, motorbikes to bicycles. Life there became quieter, slower, softening as
the sound of engines disappeared. Islam emerged, mosques and minarets, the
Muslim south the poorest part of Thailand, where the Buddhists, ever viewed so
benevolently in the West, become only the oppressive majority. The Thai Muslims
protest for rights and, with deaths and brutality, the authorities crush all dissent,
the whole thing one more cooperation in that endless, borderless, war against
terrorism.
Out of the hills ran rivers, widening
in readiness for the sea. The houses moved from land to water, stilts
protruding the weeds and lilies, and tethered canoes pulling slowly back and
forth the rope that held them. From a rickety deck, children threw pebbles into
a bucket floating in the water, while a mother squatted among tangled fishing
nets, fingers working through endless knots. A man floated idly through the
scene, gliding home in a boat full of holes, his paddle breaking the still
surface with a slow plunge and a splash of water. It doesn’t get better than that,
truly picturesque… poverty that floats. From inside my pannier there came a
loud fluttering of lenses, the camera desperate for a peek, whispering promises
that if only I let it see what I saw, then never again would I have need of a
memory.
The complete book, Life Cycles, is published on June 2nd
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