Alex Garland - The Beach
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- Название:The Beach
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'A year left at best. I heard by ninety-one it was already fucked up.'
'Right, so they'd seen it all before. Especially Daffy. Daffy was completely obsessed. You know he wouldn't ever go to Indonesia?'
'I don't know anything about Daffy.'
'Boycotted because of Bali. He went there only once, in the late eighties, and wouldn't ever go back. Used to talk all the time about how sick it made him.'
We sat down with our backs against the slab of root and shared a cigarette.
'I mean,' said Keaty, exhaling hard, 'you've got to hand it to them.'
'Definitely.'
'They really knew what they were doing. Most things were set up by the time Sal took me here, which was... uh... ninety-three. The longhouse was up and the ceiling was sorted out.'
'Two years.'
'Uh-huh.' He passed me the cigarette.
'So when you came, were there this many people?'
Keaty paused. 'Well... Pretty much...'
I looked at him, sensing that he was being cagey. 'How do you mean, 'pretty much'?'
'...Everyone apart from the Swedes.'
'In two years the only new people were the Swedes?'
'...And Jed. The Swedes and Jed.'
'That's not many. Well-kept secret.'
'Mmm.'
I stubbed out the cigarette. 'And the zeros. What are they about?'
Keaty smiled. 'That was Daffy's idea. It's a date.' 'A date? The date of what?' 'The date they first arrived.' 'I thought that was eighty-nine.'
'It was.' Keaty stood up and patted the stabilizer fin. 'But Daffy used to call it year zero.'
Revelations
Set up in Bali, Ko Pha-Ngan, Ko Tao, Borocay, and the hordes are bound to follow. There's no way you can keep it out of Lonely Planet, and once that happens it's countdown to doomsday. But set up in a marine park, where you aren't even supposed to be...
The more I thought about it, the more the idea grew on me. Not just a marine park, but a marine park in Thailand. Of all places, backpacker central, land of the beaten track. The only thing sweeter than the irony was the logic. The Philippines is an archipelago of seven thousand islands, but even in that huge fractured landscape, an equivalent secret would be impossible to contain. But amongst the legions of travellers passing through Bangkok and the southern islands, who'd notice when a few slipped away?
Strangely, the thing that least intrigued me was how they'd actually managed to get it all done. I suppose I sort of knew. If I'd learnt one thing from travelling, it was that the way to get things done was to go ahead and do them. Don't talk about going to Borneo. Book a ticket, get a visa, pack a bag, and it just happens.
From Keaty's few words, I pictured the scene. January nineteen-ninety, maybe New Year's Eve, Ko Pha-Ngan, maybe Hat Rin. Daffy, Bugs and Sal, talking as the sun starts coming up. Sal's found a boat to hire or even buy, Bugs has some tools in his backpack, Daffy's got a sack of rice and thirty packs of Magi-Noodles. Perhaps bars of chocolate have melted and moulded around the shape of his water bottle.
By seven that morning they're walking down the beach. Behind them they can hear the rumble of a portable generator through thethump of a sound system. They don't look back, they just push off from the sand and head for the hidden paradise they found a year before.
As I walked back towards the camp, on the way to find Étienne at the coral garden, I found myself almost hoping for another meeting with Mister Duck. I wanted to shake him by the hand.
I never did find Étienne and Françoise. I bumped into Gregorio on the beach. He was carrying our catch back to camp, and when I told him I was going to the corals, he looked doubtful.
'I think you should wait,' he said. 'Wait for... maybe one hour.'
'How come?'
'Étienne and Françoise...'
'They're having sex?'
'Well... I do not know, but...'
'Uh-uh. An hour, you reckon?'
'Oh...' Gregorio smiled awkwardly. 'Maybe I am too generous to Étienne.'
I shook my head, remembering my first night in Bangkok. 'No,' I replied, irritated to hear a sudden tightness in my voice. 'Spot on, I'd say.'
So I went back to the camp with Gregorio.
There was nothing much to do there except compare fish sizes with the other details. The three Swedes, as usual, had caught the biggest and were swaggering about, telling the cooks about their fishing technique. I got pretty pissed off listening to them, but even more annoying were the images of Françoise and Étienne that kept popping into my head. Eventually, craving something to occupy my mind, I went to Keaty's tent and dug out his Nintendo.
Most bosses have a pattern; crack the pattern, kill the boss. A typical pattern is illustrated by Dr Robotnik during his first incarnation in Sonic One, Megadrive version, Greenhills Zone. As he descends from the top of the screen, you jump at him from the left platform. Then, as he starts swinging towards you, you duck under and jump at him from the right. As he swings back, you repeat the process inreverse until, eight hits later, he explodes and runs away.
That's an easy boss. Others require much more manual dexterity and effort. The last boss on Tekken, for example, is a relentless fist-swinging nightmare.
The boss that distracted me from Étienne and Françoise was none other than Wario, nemesis of Mario. The problem was that to reach him, I had to struggle through several tortuous stages. By the time I arrived at his lair I'd taken too many hits and had lost the vital power-ups I needed to finish him off.
Every now and then, Unhygienix would take a break from cooking and wander over to inspect my progress. He and Keaty were the only two people in the camp who'd ever completed the game. He'd say things like 'Donta pausa on thata platforma.' (I'm abandoning his Italian accent from now on. You'll just have to imagine it.)
I'd scowl in frustration. 'If I don't pause I get spiked by the falling block.'
'Si. So you jump more quickly. Like this.'
He'd take the Gameboy, guiding Mario with amazing skill considering the size of his fat hands, and show me how the trick was done. Then he'd wander back to his cooking, fingers drumming a rhythm on his giant belly. The Gameboy was always slippery after he'd used it, and smelt of fish, but I considered that a fair price to pay for his expertise.
It took an hour and a half, but eventually I was able to reach Wario with a full complement of power-ups. Finally I could start trying to crack his pattern. Or so I thought, because at that moment the monochrome screen began fading away.
'EverReadies!' I yelped.
Keaty, who'd returned from the garden while I'd been playing, poked his head out of his tent.
'That was the last batch, Rich.'
'There's none left?'
'None at all.'
'But I've nearly cracked Wario!'
'Well...' He shrugged apologetically. 'Leave it alone a while. Ifyou turn it off for twenty minutes you might get another five minutes' playing time.'
I groaned. Five minutes wasn't nearly enough.
It was a bitter blow, running out of batteries. I could live without completing the Mario game, but Tetris was another matter entirely. Since Keaty had told me his record of a hundred and seventy-seven lines, I'd been trying hard to beat him. The closest I'd made was one six one but I was improving every day.
'This is ridiculous,' I said. 'Walkmans. What about them?'
Keaty sighed. 'Forget Walkmans.'
'Why?'
'Give, and gifts will be given to you, for whatever measure you deal out to others will be dealt to you in return.'
I paused for a moment.' ...What?'
'I went to church every Sunday until I was fifteen.'
'You're quoting the bible?'
'Luke, six, thirty-eight.'
I shook my head incredulously. 'What's the bloody bible got to do with anything?'
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