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Death Rides Pillion
A Rescue van speeds past and my group of friends, nestled comfortably in our
rental car gliding along the highway, converse about the merits (or otherwise)
of the private rescue services in Thailand. About a kilometre down the road
reality slaps us hard in the face as we stumble across the reason for the Rescue
van’s haste…
In the mirage-inducing, asphalt-melting, face-burning, mid-day April heat of
Thailand, a motorbike rider and his pillion passenger have been knocked off
their bike by a hit-and-run driver. The bike is in pieces littering the clean
and ordered highway. The two men have, quite literally, come to rest a few
inches from each other. The impact of hitting the road at speed has torn the
rider’s shoulder from his body, and blood the colour of a deep-polished fire
engine flows freely, adding unneeded drama to an already unspeakable scene.
The man’s head is almost face down and his neck is twisted like a macabre
bendy-toy. I can see his eyes as we pass. They stare intently, as if trying in
vain to register the magnitude of the scene unfolding before them. The air is a
black cloak of stillness. The girls in our car let out an instantaneous and
simultaneous gasp of….
Recognition. That’s what it is. The sound your body makes when it sees what it
must never fully comprehend. The sound of your mind recognising. The stoic
Australian drives on, burying his shock deep. Deep. The pragmatic Korean
shudders involuntarily but forces her mind to calm itself. The superstitious
Chinese-Thai asks politely if we mind if she rolls down the window to scream.
She does so. She screams our private shock for us. I rub her leg, but not for
the selfish pleasure we are accustomed to. For comfort. Sharing the recognition
that this time it’s not us. We are not pieces of bloodied, torn flesh lying
motionless in the Asiatic heat. We are alive. We can feel. We can talk. We can
express ourselves. We can scream.
The driver of a song-taew has pulled over so his ghost-hungry Thai passengers
can disembark and stare at the unfolding drama. Stare at the bodies of ‘the
others’. The ones who are no longer ‘us’. For how could they be us? Death
happens to other people.
No one removes their shirt or jacket to cover the faces of ‘the others’. The
faces. So still. Yet they can see. They know. They understand.
~WB
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