Take The Orange Pill
Another brilliant Banlung day bloomed bright. Infinitesimally small intense waves and particles traveled at 186,000 miles per second.
What you don’t see is fascinating, said Ice Girl. She and Leo heard the clatter of tourist utensils singing near dumb thumbed Angkor Wat guidebooks dancing with dusty beggar children hawking vignettes at a medical clinic.
The Angkor Children’s Hospital in Siem Reap has 22 beds in one room. They are filled with infants wearing air hoses in their nose. They suffer from pneumonia, tuberculosis and dengue. This is common. A parent holds a tiny hand.
I.C.U. has five occupied beds.
400 mothers cradling kids wait to see a nurse. She dispenses free orange generic pills.
Life is a killer. Life is a generic placebo.
The mothers are happy to get SOMETHING, anything. They have no knowledge about modern medicine.
One effective blue pill costs $1.00. Parents need to buy 15.
$15.00 is a fortune. Out of the question. Parents accept free ineffective orange drugs. Parents need a miracle.
How much does a miracle cost?
Mothers are hopeful. They wait. They have ridden on the back of cycles from distant villages. Everyone there had an answer for the child’s sickness. Babble voices of genocide female survivors sang remedies. Men pounded drums. Relatives prayed and burned incense.
A shaman dancing with death smeared chicken blood over a tiny chest. Another healer waved smoking banana leaves over a child running a fever.
400 mothers waited forever to see a nurse and get an orange pill.
Chapter 22 Ice Girl in Banlung
Ling's art in Laos