Taipei

Taipei by Tao Lin

Book: Taipei by Tao Lin Read Free Book Online
Authors: Tao Lin
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openly snorting cocaine off a table in the back room, because the bathroom line was too long, when a security guard approached and Mitch threw the bag of cocaine (which Daniel was currently trying to find) under a table, or somewhere. They crossed the street, went in White Castle, sat in a booth. Paul realized a poster said “chicken rings” not “onion rings” and said it seemed “insane” and speculated on the process that must be required of making the meat into a paste to mold into rings.
    “I’m worried about Daniel,” said Mitch.
    “He has a warrant for his arrest in Colorado, I think,” said Paul.
    “Jesus,” said Mitch.
    “It’s probably better if he goes to jail instead of you. He’s unemployed and in debt to like five people. He has a seventy-dollar tab with me. I think he needs six hundred dollars in one week for overdue rent. You have a real job and a nice apartment. If he goes to jail I’ll relinquish his tab.”
    Mitch was fidgeting a little.
    “We can make a blog about him and mail him letters,” said Paul.
    “A blog,” said Mitch. “Jesus.”
    “I’m going to look for him,” said Paul.
     
    In Legion’s bathroom Paul read a text from Daniel that said “come outside.” Daniel, on the sidewalk, seeing Paul, began crossing the street, toward White Castle, looking in different directions while saying he knew the bouncers at Legion andthat Mitch shouldn’t have panicked. Paul said Mitch had a high-paying job.
    “Where is he?”
    “White Castle,” said Paul.
    “Should I get some of this coke? I could’ve gotten in trouble.”
    “Yeah. If that’s what you want.”
    “He’s lucky it landed on this little ledge,” said Daniel staring ahead as White Castle passed on their left. “I don’t think any was lost.”
    “My groceries are in White Castle. Where are you going?”
    “Let’s go to your room to do some of this coke,” said Daniel.
    “It’s too far,” said Paul slowing his pace.
    “We’ll go there and come back, it won’t take long.”
    “It’s way too far,” said Paul. “Just snort it off your hand.”
    They were on a dark street with no people, moving cars, or stores. Daniel’s head seemed more elevated than normal—and his neck, swiveling and ostrich-like, more mechanical and controlled—as he looked in different directions while removing cocaine from the bag with what seemed to be his fingers, then somehow maneuvering his hand into a fist, which he put into his jeans pocket. Paul felt unsettled, imagining amounts of cocaine trickling between fingers and slipping off the sides of fingers and the curve of the palm and sticking as powder against Daniel’s hand and pocket interior. Paul ripped a page from his Moleskine journal and said “here, use this.” Daniel continued looking in different directions a few seconds before taking the page and putting it directly in his pants pocket.
    “You should snort it off the Lincoln,” said Paul.
    “There isn’t a Lincoln here,” said Daniel.
    “That looks like a Lincoln,” said Paul pointing.
    “That’s a Pontiac,” said Daniel looking elsewhere.

    “You should hide between two cars,” said Paul, and Daniel moved slowly toward the street. Paul used his phone to photograph Daniel kneeling between two cars and sent the photo to his own Gmail account and to Daniel’s phone. He imagined them both sprinting in different directions the instant a spotlight appeared, gliding across the street, toward them, from a low-flying helicopter.
    “Good job,” said Paul walking toward White Castle.
    “You know I don’t usually do this to friends,” said Daniel staring ahead.
    “What do you mean?” said Paul grinning.
    “I mean, do you think it’s okay I did that?”
    “Yeah. You were put in a dangerous situation.”
    “I was looking on the ground for it, but it was on this little shelf,” said Daniel in White Castle.
    “Jesus,” said Mitch, who seemed distracted in a respiratory manner like, after Paul left,

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