‘I’m going travelling,’ I told Olivia, ‘and you are welcome to him.’ To Olly I said nothing at all, not one word, not ever. The only thing I wanted to do was go away, and the most appealing idea was Thailand. I did it without a backward glance. Oliver and Olivia: the perfect couple.
Dad had just asked me for money to bail out his sinking business. He was incensed that I was going travelling instead, but I told him I’d find a way to help, and I have.
I have ignored every letter and email from my sister, and I will continue to do so. I have no sister.
Olly hasn’t come to find me, and he won’t, thank God. I know that he is logical enough to have factored the possible fallout into his decision to sleep with my sister, and to have accepted that if I found out about it, we would be irrevocably over. He’s stupid, yes, but not that stupid. I won’t be seeing him again.
How refreshing to revisit that scene and find that, in fact, I’m grateful to the two of them for their treachery. They’re the ones that have to live with themselves. Not me. I don’t have to have anything to do with either of them ever again. And that is the most liberating thing in the world. I don’t have to marry a crashing bore who’s crap in bed. I don’t have to marry anyone. I don’t have to have a sister. I’m on my own. Rachel’s my sister, and we’re heading down to the beach again.
April 18th
Krabi
Krabi is full of ‘falangs’, i.e. foreigners. While I’m all too well aware that I am one myself, I still don’t like to see this many others. There’s something annoying about the way all of them – all of us, I should say – think that we’re special. It only takes a quick glance around to see that this is not at all the case. Everyone’s dressed the same, acting the same, treating Thailand as a theme park. I’d like it if the Thai people could go to a different part of the world and swan around there thinking they’re slumming it.
Anyway. Rachel and I left Koh Lanta – lovely Koh Lanta – this morning. We sat on the deck of the boat for hours as it took us towards the mainland (pausing for the alternative crowd at Koh Jum), and I spent a long time trying to quell my nerves.
I held this book and considered throwing it into the water. I knew it was what I ought to do.
I couldn’t quite bear to. Perhaps before we get on the plane I’ll destroy it in Krabi.
Jake’s always brushed aside my objections. One thing he said which has stayed with me is this: ‘Every country has people addicted to drugs. Very few of them are home-grown products. How much smuggling do you think happens? It’s a thriving industry, Lara, and the number of people who are caught is minimal. You’d only get caught if Customs were tipped off, or if something about you made them suspicious. Which is never going to happen because you’re such a fucking genius. Our operation isn’t like that. It’s a tiny little operation working below the official radar. No one’s tipping anyone off because we’re not treading on anyone’s toes and we’re not screwing each other over. It’s safer than crossing the road.’
I laughed at that part, because it was clearly rubbish. Half an hour later I stepped into the path of a rickshaw and got a cut leg and a bruised arm, so in fact, as far as I’m concerned, he was right.
All the same, I am having an attack of conscience.
We got to Krabi at lunchtime, took a cab to a cheap guest house on one of the main roads, and checked in to two little rooms with fans but no A/C, next to each other around a courtyard. You reach the rooms by walking through the back of the check-in, directly through the middle of the kitchen (battered aluminium pots and smells which are half enticing, half gross), and through the family’s sitting area. Then you emerge into the courtyard with its six huts and three loo/showers round the corner.
Everything feels straightforward, living like this. Who needs TVs or carpets or any of the rubbish I grew up insulated by? The sun is shining on my diary, I’m sitting at a plastic table, and I’m feeling I can do anything. Rachel’s reading
The Beach
next to me. We’re meeting Jake in a bar later. I feel excited and sick.
April 19th
Bit hung-over today. We had beers while we were eating, but afterwards Jake produced a bottle of Sang Thip, and when that comes out I know it’s the beginning of the end.
I was nervous introducing him and Rachel in case they hated each other. They are not only my two best friends, but they’re actually my two only friends. Rachel knows that, but Jake doesn’t. Anyway, it turned out that they got on perfectly well. Straight away they were all ‘I’ve heard so much about you’ to each other (Jake was exaggerating as he and I have barely spoken, but he was extremely charming to her), and then it felt as if the three of us had been friends for ever. We all ignored the weird reality of what we were up to.
I’d forgotten how much I love to be beside him.
I’d like to visit myself a year ago, when I was going out with Olly and heading to see the parents for Sunday lunch every week, and tell that boring bland idiot (me) that I’d soon be hanging out in Thailand with an Australian drug-smuggling boyfriend. I’d like to see her face.
I’ve got up early: Jake’s still sleeping in our bed, and there’s no sign of Rachel yet. I don’t know what time it is, but the cockerel is crowing so loudly that I’m amazed no one else is awake. I want to go for a walk, but Krabi is a staging post, not a scenic destination in its own right. I’ll just sit here in the cool morning sun for a bit.
When we were all drunk, Rachel asked Jake if she could travel with me.
As far as I can recall (and that’s unreliable, as my head hurts), he laughed and said yes, she could, as long as she didn’t do or say anything that might risk fucking it up.
I need some water. A German man just came out of the bungalow opposite, wearing a pair of baggy Y-fronts and carrying a towel and a paisley-print sponge bag, heading towards the shower. He smiled and said good morning very politely. People are beginning to get up. I’m going to the shop to buy a bottle of water. Then we can go for the biggest hangover breakfast Krabi can provide. If anywhere will come up with the goods, it’s Krabi. An unpretty town that’s like a Wild West frontier town, a gateway to other places. It’s a place to eat and drink and wait for a bus or a boat or a plane.
April 20th
The flight is tomorrow. It takes forty-five minutes, and then everything will change.
When we get to Singapore, I’m going to ditch Jake.
Any time he’s passing through Singapore, however, I will welcome him with open arms, in a no-strings way.
Rachel and I sat at neighbouring computer terminals yesterday, and looked up websites of potential employers in Singapore. There are opportunities for both of us. She phoned all the international schools, and has made appointments to go and chat to two of them next week. I’ve found two jobs advertised that would suit me. I’ve printed out the (lengthy, bureaucratic) application forms and started to work out how to apply for a working visa.
Derek’s going to meet us at Changi airport when we arrive. We’ll put my backpack in the boot of his car, and he’ll drop us at a hotel with enough cash to do whatever we want.
I must overcome my misgivings about Rachel coming along. She won’t freak out. She will be fine.
April 21st
Excited. Nervous. Unable to string a sentence together.
We’re going to go for cocktails at Raffles hotel tonight. That’s what people do in Singapore. All we have to do now is get there.
I’m sitting on the plane. Rachel is not sitting next to me, because Jake said she couldn’t. I’m just on the plane, summoning my cool. I must get through this. I can’t wait. No alcohol on the plane for me. Cocktails at Raffles later.
Later
This cannot be happening. It cannot. Cannot cannot cannot.
April 23rd
Singapore
I can’t bear to write it down.
So instead I’ll say I’m lying on a bug-infested mattress in a disgusting hostel on Orchard Road in Singapore.
And I can’t even cry. The world has ended.
I’m on my own. It’s just me.
Later
Try to write it. Try to write what happened, step by step. Then I can show it to people who don’t believe me, as proof. Nobody believes me. WHY DOES NOBODY BELIEVE ME?
We caught the plane, Rachel and me. I had the khaki backpack Jake gave me. Rachel had her normal one, her blue one, with a load of my stuff crammed into it. The rest of my stuff had gone with Jake, as usual.
Krabi airport is small. I was busy getting myself in the zone. I almost ignored Rachel. We queued for check-in for ages.
Rachel was quiet, but she looked all right. Every now and then she’d look me in the eyes and force a smile, but we weren’t really speaking. I didn’t want to be distracted.
Jake queued a long way behind us. He wasn’t sitting with us. It’s always like that. Men are much more likely to be pulled over than women. Women aren’t pulled over at all, unless there’s a tip-off.
We checked in just fine. I did all the talking, and we both gave a wide-eyed ‘no’ to the ‘Could anyone have interfered …?’ question. Our backpacks vanished, with airline labels bearing our names.
We didn’t acknowledge Jake in the departures lounge. I tried to cheer Rach up. We had coffee, then lunch, and we meandered around the shops. She was terrified for me – I could see it in her eyes – but it was too late.
Neither of us had a fucking clue.
Of course it wasn’t too late. We could have faked an emergency and got ourselves let back into Krabi. It was only a walk of a few metres. Who cares about the bureaucracy? We could have flown here and walked straight out without bags. But it all seemed inevitable and compulsory.
By the time we got on the plane, she was struggling to hold herself together. I tried to ignore her, but she was sitting five rows in front of me, and she kept getting up and going to the loo. I tried to smile when she walked past, but her face was like a mask, and I had to ignore her because I needed to stay in my zone.
Then we landed. I waited for her, so we could get off the plane together. That was not the plan, but she needed a talking-to.
‘We’ll split up,’ I said. She looked too scared; I couldn’t walk through with her. She was like a beacon. I needed to go on my own to do my usual trance. If she was pulled over for looking suspicious, I thought, it wouldn’t matter because she had nothing to hide. If I were pulled over with her, it would, I thought, have been disastrous.
The backpacks, both a bit battered, one blue and one khaki, appeared on the carousel fairly early. That was good. I took mine (the khaki one), put it on a trolley and set off. ‘See you in a second,’ I whispered. ‘Nearly there.’
I became the head girl, strolled through Customs with my head held high, and grinned as I got to the other side and the relief started to course through me. Cocktails at Raffles, that’s what I was thinking. My first step on Singaporean soil was, I thought, the moment my new life began.
Derek was waiting. He kissed me on the cheek as if he were meeting a friend, picked up my bag and swung it on to his shoulder. While he set off for a taxi, I hung back, waiting for Rachel.
I didn’t realise for ages. It wasn’t surprising that she took a while to come through. If I were a Customs officer, I would have pulled her over. I was glad my bag was gone, so that if she tried to tell them everything there wouldn’t be any evidence.
She still didn’t come.
I couldn’t see Jake, but I knew he would be watching, from a distance. I watched and waited, but from the concourse it’s impossible to know anything. I thought Derek would come back, but he didn’t.
Jake was suddenly there. He walked straight over to me, took me by the arm and marched me towards the exit.
‘What’s happening?’ I said. ‘Where’s Rachel? Jake? Where’s Rachel?’
I pulled away from him. He shook his head.
‘Don’t, Lara. Don’t make a scene here, of all places.’
‘But she hasn’t done anything. Nothing can have happened.’
‘I’ll tell you,’ he said. ‘I’ll tell you, but not here.’
He dragged me out of the air-conditioned building into the muggy outside world, towards a taxi.
I wasn’t getting into it. I couldn’t leave her behind. We argued furiously in low, polite voices, both of us desperate not to attract attention.
‘OK,’ he said in the end. ‘Get in this cab, or I’m leaving you here without any of your money and without any way of ever finding out what just happened, and you’ll never see your friend again.’
I hated him, but I went. He got the cab to take us to Chinatown, and we went to an outside table at a bar and he ordered beer. I wasn’t going to drink it, but then I did, quickly. I didn’t taste it or want it, but the alcohol immediately did something. It made me slightly braver.
‘Go on,’ I said. ‘Where is she?’
And then he told me. And when he’d told me, he got up and left, and I know I will never see him again.
April 25th
I have begged people to arrest me. They refused and said they’re going to deport me.
The khaki backpack contained nothing but heroin. It was by far the biggest consignment I’d ever taken, and by bringing it safely into Singapore, the world’s scariest place, I’d done something brilliant and exceptional. Said Jake.
He had (and I had worked this out by now) also hidden a kilo in Rachel’s bag. He wouldn’t say why. Either he couldn’t help himself, or he deliberately used her as a distraction, knowing that she would look uncomfortable and guilty no matter what. He set her up and now he doesn’t give a shit.
He told me that everything about this trip had been a huge gamble to start off with. He and Derek knew that the Thai authorities were looking at them and their movements. This, he said breezily, was the last time they’d been planning to use me anyway.
I screamed at him. ‘This was MY last time! I was dumping YOU!’
I’d strolled through Customs carrying so much heroin that a death sentence would have been inevitable. Rachel was carrying enough for that and didn’t even know it, and she was stopped and her life is over.