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The King’s Last Song
He gets business for all the motoboys and pointedly leaves Mons until last.
Luc, he thinks. Of all the people they could have done this to. Those idiots! The foreigners bring money, they come here to help us! Why are they doing this? What will it do to Cambodia?
The US special quota for garments will end soon. The garment industry brings 250,000 jobs and when it goes, what will replace it? All we have is tourism!
William feels the trickle of dreams washing away. I won’t get my new bike. I won’t be able to help aunty buy her new house. The land we were hoping to sell for development – twelve thousand dollars we were told we would get for it – maybe that won’t sell. I won’t have the UN archaeologists to talk to, to find out about things.
He remembers one of Luc’s students insisting to Mrs Bou that William was a colleague, not a motoboy. He got William inside the pink marble dining room of the Phimeanakas and up the stairs into the social area. It was large enough to unfold huge photographs of Angkor taken from airplanes.
One photograph covered seven hundred square kilometres. It used a kind of radar to penetrate the ground one dot at a time, and a computer joined up the dots. The signals had bounced off a satellite in space. Luc’s student explained geosynchronous orbits to him. William’s head jerked back with shock and pleasure. What a wonderful idea.
The machine is always falling, but the ground falls away at the same pace. So it always stays above the same spot of ground. Who would do things like that for him now?
Luc had bought him a mobile phone. He simply passed it to him one day outside the guesthouse. ‘This is so we can telephone you whenever we need you.’
William had stood in silence, stroking the phone. He didn’t want to show strong emotion. He was embarrassed, and fearful of doing something unseemly like crying.
A mobile telephone made him part of the world. His friends could telephone from Japan, from Australia and say, William, we are coming, please organize a trip. William, we are at the airport, can you come and fetch us?
William was silent for so long, wary of speaking, that Luc had become worried that he’d done something wrong. ‘I’ve paid for the sim card and for fifty dollars’ worth of calls. But you’ll have to show up with your family ID card to collect them.’
Finally William had something neutral to say. ‘I know the people in the shop.’ He coughed and still did not dare look at Grandfather Luc. He was horribly aware that he had said nothing polite, not a word of thanks. The beautiful numbers were illuminated from within.
Nobody had ever done such a thing for him before. Not unasked, not something so perfect for William. Luc must have known it was perfect for him without having to be told.
William coughed again, trying to find words. Finally he’d said, still not looking up. ‘This is a very good action. This is a thing that is full of merit.’
Then he was able to look up and bow and sompiah respect and thanks. ‘Luc, I am so lucky that you are my friend. I tell my aunt about you. She says you must be a very good man. I am so unhappy whenever you go away.’
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