Asian Saga - King Rat - Asian Saga - King Rat Part 5
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Asian Saga - King Rat Part 5

When they had finished the eggs, the King put some coffee on the hot plate and searched for his cigarettes. Then he remembered he had given them away, so he reached down and unlocked the black box.

"Here, try some of this," Peter Marlowe said, offering his tobacco box.

"Thanks, but I can't stand the stuff. It plays hell with my throat."

"Try it. It's been treated. I learned how from some Javanese."

Dubiously the King took the cigarette box. The tobacco was the same cheap weed, but instead of being straw-yellow it was dark golden; instead of being dry it was moist and had a texture; instead of being odorless it smelled like tobacco, sweet-strong. He found his packet of rice papers and took an overgenerous amount of the treated weed. He rolled a sloppy tube and nipped off the protruding ends, dropping the excess tobacco carelessly on the floor.

Godalmighty, thought Peter Marlowe, I said try it, not take the bloody lot. He knew he should have picked up the shreds of tobacco and put them back in the box, but he did not. Some things a chap can't do, he thought again.

The King snapped the lighter and they grinned together at the sight of it. The King took a careful puff, then another. Then a deep inhale. "But it's great," he said astonished. "Not as good as a Kooa - but this's -" He stopped and corrected himself. "I mean it's not bad."

"It's not bad at all." Peter Marlowe laughed.

"How the hell do you do it?"

"Trade secret."

The King knew he had a gold mine in his hands. "I guess it's a long and involved process," he said delicately.

"Oh, actually it's quite easy. You just soak the raw weed in tea, then squeeze it out. Then you sprinkle a little white sugar over it and knead it in, and when it's all absorbed, cook it gently in a frying pan over a low heat. Keep turning it over or it'll spoil. You've got to get it just right. Not too dry and not too moist."

The King was surprised that Peter Marlowe had told him the process so easily without making a deal first. Of course, he thought, he's just whetting my appetite. Can't be that easy or everyone'd be doing it. And he probably knows I'm the only one who could handle the deal.

"Just like that?" the King said smiling.

"Yes. Nothing to it really."

The King could see a thriving business. Legitimate too. "I suppose everyone in your hut cures their tobacco the same way."

Peter Marlowe shook his head. "I just do it for my unit. I've been teasing them for months, telling them all sorts of stories, but they've never worked out the exact way."

The King's smile was huge. "Then you're the only one who knows how to do it!"

"Oh no," said Peter Marlowe and the King's heart sank. "It's a native custom. They do it all over Java."

The King brightened. "But no one here knows about it, do they?"

"I don't know. I've really never thought about it."

The King let the smoke dribble out of his nostrils and his mind worked rapidly. Oh yes, he told himself, this is my lucky day.

"Tell you what, Peter. I got a business proposition for you. You show me exactly how to do it, and I'll cut you in for -" He hesitated. "Ten percent."

"What?"

"All right. Twenty-five."

'Twenty-five?"

"All right," the King said, looking at Peter Marlowe with new respect. "You're a hard trader and that's great. I'll organize the whole deal. We'll buy in bulk. We'll have to set up a factory. You can oversee production and I'll look after sales." He stuck out his hand. "We'll be partners - split right down the middle, fifty-fifty. It's a deal."

Peter Marlowe stared down at the King's hand. Then he looked into his face. "Oh no it's not!" he said decisively.

"Goddammit," the King exploded. "That's the fairest offer you'll ever get. What could be fairer? I'm putting up the dough. I'll have to -" A sudden thought stopped him. "Peter," he said after a moment, hurt but not showing it, "no one has to know we're partners. You just show me how to do it, and I'll see you get your share. You can trust me."

"I know that," Peter Marlowe said.

"Then we'll split fifty-fifty." The King beamed.

"No we won't."

"Jesus Christ," the King said as he felt the screws applied. But he held his temper and thought about the deal. And the more he thought - he looked around to make sure that no one was listening. Then he dropped his voice and said hoarsely, "Sixty-forty, and I've never offered that to anyone in my life. Sixty-forty it is."

"No it isn't."

"Isn't?" the King burst out, shocked. "I've got to get something out of the deal. What the hell do you want for the process? Cash on the line?"

"I don't want anything," said Peter Marlowe.

"Nothing?" The King sat down feebly, wrecked.

Peter Marlowe was bewildered. "You know," he said hesitantly, "I don't understand why you get so excited about certain things. The process isn't mine to sell. It's a simple native custom. I couldn't possibly take anything from you. That wouldn't be right. Not at all. And anyway, I -" Peter Marlowe stopped and said quickly, "Would you like me to show you now?"

"Just a minute. You mean to tell me you want nothing for showing me the process? When I've offered to split sixty-forty with you? When I tell you I can make money out of the deal?" Peter Marlowe nodded. "That's crazy," the King said helplessly. "It's wrong. I don't understand."

"Nothing to understand," Peter Marlowe said, smiling faintly. "Put it down to sunstroke."

The King studied him a long moment. "Will you give me a straight answer to a straight question?"

"Yes. Of course."

"It's because of me, isn't it?"

The words hung in the heat between them.

"No," said Peter Marlowe, breaking the silence.

And there was truth between them.

An hour later Peter Marlowe was watching Tex cook the second batch of tobacco. This time Tex was doing it without help, and the King was clucking around like an old hen.

"You sure he put in the right amount of sugar?" the King asked Peter Marlowe anxiously.

"Exactly right."

"How long will it be now?"

"How long do you think, Tex?"

Tex smiled back at Peter Marlowe and stretched his gangling six-foot three. "Five, maybe six minutes, thereabouts."

Peter Marlowe got up. "Where's the place? The loo?"

"The John? Around the back." The King pointed. "But can't you wait till Tex's finished? I want to make sure he's got it right."

"Tex's doing fine," Peter Marlowe said and walked out.

When he came back Tex took the frypan off the stove. "Now," he said nervously and glanced at Peter Marlowe to check if his timing was right.

"Just right," said Peter Marlowe, examining the treated tobacco.

Excitedly the King rolled a cigarette in rice paper. So did Tex and Peter Marlowe. They lit up. With the Ronson. Another delighted laugh. Then silence as each man became a connoisseur.

"Jolly good," said Peter Marlowe decisively. "I told you it was quite simple, Tex."

Tex breathed a sigh of relief.

"It's not bad," said the King thoughtfully.

"What the hell're you talking about," Tex said, flaring. "It's goddam good!"

Peter Marlowe and the King were convulsed. They explained why and then Tex too was laughing.

"We got to have a brand name." The King thought a moment. "I got it. How about Three Kings? One for King Royal Air Force, one for King Texas an' one for me."

"Not bad," Tex said.

"We'll start the factory tomorrow."

Tex shook his head. "I'm on a work party."

"The hell with it! I'll get Dino to sub for you."

"No. I'll ask him." Tex got up and smiled at Peter Marlowe. "Happy to know you, sir."

"Forget the sir, will you?" Peter Marlowe said.

"Sure. Thanks."

Peter Marlowe watched him go. "Funny," he said quietly to the King. "I've never seen so many smiles in one hut before."

"There's no point in not smiling, is there? Things could be a lot worse. You get shot down flying the hump?"

"You mean the Calcutta-Chungking route? Over the Himalayas?"

"Yeah." The King nodded at the tobacco. "Fill your box."

"Thanks. I will if you don't mind."

"Anytime you're short, come and help yourself."

"Thanks, I'll do that. You're very kind." Peter Marlowe wanted another cigarette but he knew that he was smoking too much. If he smoked another now, then the hunger would hurt more. Better go easy. He glanced at the sun-shadow and promised that he would not smoke again until the shadow had moved two inches. "I wasn't shot down at all. My kite - my plane got hit in an air raid in Java. I couldn't get it up. Rather a bore," he added, and tried to hide the bitterness.

"That's not so bad," said the King. "You might've been in it. You're alive and that's what counts. What were you flying?"

"Hurricane. Single-seat fighter. But my regular plane's a Spit-Spitfire."

"I've heard about them - never seen one. You guys sure as hell made the Germans look sick."

"Yes," said Peter Marlowe softly. "We did, rather."

The King was surprised. "You weren't in the Battle of Britain, were you?"

"Yes. I got my wings in 1940 - just in time."

"How old were you?"

"Nineteen."

"Huh, I'd've thought, looking at your face, you'd be at least thirty-eight, not twenty-four!"

"Up yours, brother!" Peter Marlowe laughed. "How old are you?"

"Twenty-five. Son of a bitch," the King said. "Best years of my life and I'm locked up in a stinking jail."

"You're hardly locked up. And it seems to me you're doing very well."

"We're still locked up, whichever way you figure it. How long you think it's going to last?"

"We've got the Germans on the run. That show should be over soon."

"You believe that?'"

Peter Marlowe shrugged. Careful, he told himself, you can never be too careful. "Yes, I think so. You can never tell about rumors."

"And our war. What about ours?"

Because the question had been asked by a friend, Peter Marlowe talked freely. "I think ours will last forever. Oh, we'll beat the Japs. I know that now. But for us, here? I don't think we'll get out."

"Why?"

"Well, I don't think the Japs'll ever give in. That means we'll have to land on the mainland. And when that happens, I think they'll eliminate us here, all of us. If disease and sickness haven't got us already."

"Why the hell should they do that?"

"Oh, to save time, I suppose. I think as the net tightens on Japan, they'll start pulling in their tentacles. Why waste time over a few thousand prisoners? Japs think of life quite differently than we do. And the idea of our troops on their soil will drive them around the bend." His voice was quite flat and calm. "I think we've had it. Of course I hope I'm wrong. But that's what I think."