The tuk tuk’s engine coughed a blue cloud into the Bangkok dawn. Two farang—wasted, grinning, lost—spilled onto the cracked sidewalk. They clutched phone poles like ship masts. The driver, a ghost in a grease-stained vest, held out a palm. Not for payment. For forgiveness.
The girl—blonde, crying mascara rivers—kept saying, “We almost died. That was so sick. We have to post that.” The boy, already editing on his phone, didn’t look up. The shot they’d take wasn’t the blood on the curb. It was the neon, the laugh, the filter. Tuk Tuk Patrol Pickup 13-14 -Globe Twatters- -2...
“Copy,” I said. “En route.”
I flicked the butt into the gutter. Shifted into gear. Dispatch crackled: “Pickup 13-14, Khao San Road. Two Germans. One is bleeding from the ear.” The tuk tuk’s engine coughed a blue cloud
They didn’t know I used to be Tourism Police Division 6. Until I watched a Swedish backpacker get stabbed for a fake Rolex and my lieutenant said, “File says accident. You saw nothing.” So I stopped filing. Started driving. Started watching. Every night, the same movie: kids from rich countries, chasing a Thailand that never existed, running straight into the one that does. The driver, a ghost in a grease-stained vest,