When, in February 2009, I climbed the stairs to Mike's Shopping Mall in Pattaya, Thailand, a woman in her forties who was selling clothes next to the main entrance stormed towards me and exclaimed: "You name Hans? You name Hans?" I said yes and assumed she mistook me for somebody else for I was certain I had never seen her. "My name Kung, Soi four", she said, "Soi four, in Bangkok." I didn't know anybody in Soi four. And, I didn't know anybody by the name of Kung (the Thai word for shrimp) either. "Sell clothes", she said, "You come see Sai." She pointed to a young and pretty woman of about twenty. All of a sudden I remembered.
Many
years ago, I spent much time in the Thai capital where my regular
walks also took me to Asia Books in the Landmark Hotel. Kung had a
stall near the Landmark on Sukhumvit Soi four. Sai, who was around
eight at that time, sometimes followed me into the Landmark. I
started to buy her ice cream, sometimes I just sat and talked with
her for a few minutes (my Thai is virtually non-existent but I
distinctly remember telling her one day that I soon would go the
airport whereupon she insisted on coming along). Unsurprisingly, Sai
has no such recollection.
The three of us sat for a while,
smiled, and chatted. "Where is your husband?" I asked Kung.
"He die", she said, "he drink too much". It is
one of the explanations for a variety of mishaps (the other one is
"have accident") in the land of smiles. "You have
email?" Kung wanted to know. When I wrote it down for her she
said "I have no email." I didn't ask her why she wanted
mine if she didn't have one herself. "When you come back?"
she asked. "I don't know" I smiled. It all felt supremely
casual, and it all felt good.
I doubt that I would have
recognised Kung outside her (for me) typical environment. She however
seems to need less context than I do.
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