Alyce nods, "I am already assuming that he could have eyes on. I took some time yesterday morning to try to muddy the water for him by editing the file at the bus terminal to indicate that you and I had purchased tickets for the northerly route out of Phnom Penh and then went to buy things, sending a delivery drone to the same northern location while using an alternate identity to buy the things that were delivered to us." She shrugs. "It may work to delay him a bit along our trail, but I am sure that he has eyes on Ling Tse Tau and the others and will follow them out to Andoung Tuek. But I think that we are alright until that time. Still, I am keeping a watch and Sasha should let me know if someone shows up in the village."
Alyce enjoys the sound of Al's voice and lets him tell his tales. She is genuinely interested in his many adventures and her questions indicate that she is paying attention. "You have certainly lived a fascinating life, Al. I am sure that there is more before North Africa and after as well. Perhaps you will share those stories some day."
Small huts built among the giant trees and extending over the water on stilts begin to appear on both sides of the river and boats are seen with greater frequency as Sangha and his passengers approach civilization. Misha's sensors alert Alyce that they are approaching a village that can only be Chi Pat. Located near the navigable terminus of the Preak Piphot, Chi Pat is much smaller than Andoung Tuek, but certainly large enough to be called a village. It boasts a small store and post office and no fewer than two bars, one located in the very small Chi Pat Royal Hotel. The hotel's claim to fame is that a member of the royal family stayed there on a tiger hunt. That event was a hundred and eighty years ago, but to the owner it means he can use the name. It caters to the small number of tourists that actually come this far inland, usually hardy individuals interested in backpacking through the Cardamom Mountains and a handful of transients that work on a government mine located some two hours by helicopter to the east of the village. The mine has a small permanent operation in Chi Pat that consists of an office, storage facility, helipad and maintenance hangar for the single small personnel helicopter and the much larger transport helicopter that runs freight to the mine and ores from it. The office doubles as the freight dock for the single large boat that makes a trip to Andoung Tuek every two weeks with the ores and brings supplies and facilitates the changing of personnel. The mine buildings are protected by razor wire-topped fences and decent security systems, to include two dogs and eight guards that live inside the warehouse in a small barracks. While technically part of the government security forces, these soldiers care little about the locals except for the black market alcohol and prostitutes they can provide and do not get involved with local disputes.
Besides the mining compound and the hotel, the village consists of a number of businesses and about forty private dwellings. A government operated store and post office is located directly across from the dock. It provided the only real communications with the outside world any of the locals can get and there can sometimes be a line of people who want to pay to use one of the several commlinks available there. A small market area with several stalls sits near the public dock, with several of the shacks close enough to the water that they have their own boats tied up to the lanai that surrounds them on the waterfront. A bar catering to locals and the hardier mining employees that want something more than what the hotel bar offers lies just beyond the market. About half of the houses are located on the east end of the village and the rest on the west.
Sangha pulls up to the local dock area and ties up amidst the rest of the boats there. He assists his passengers from the boat and points down the muddy road to a building he identifies as the hotel, telling them, "There is Royal Hotel. Should find room there. I go to relative, but not enough room for others. Always best tourists stay hotel. Much music, much laughter, maybe other tourists or miners. I recommend stay inside, or at least in main part of village after dark. Some crazy men come live just north in huts. Hate all tourists. Actually hate everyone." He turns and points to a small grouping of stalls, explaining, "There is market. Small but can find many things there if look and have money. Much black market. More and better than Trader Jim, but more expensive. Some alcohol for miners and others with money to buy. Some drugs, too. Arrange for new girls for mine camp and Wang Sun's, that sort of thing. Just past market is Wang Sun's place. Is bar for locals. Most locals not welcome at hotel bar so go Wang Sun's. Better fun, with strippers and whores, but be careful if go. Some nights is rough crowd. I hear you talk at Trader Jim's about maybe expedition for professor. Good chance find men at bar who look for work to carry supplies and be guards. Trader Jim not all crazy; something bad out there, but no one knows what. I hear relative talk of big bad thing that scare people, who are the crazy people I mentioned earlier. If still want leave tomorrow, must leave here by maybe noon to get Andoung Tuek for dinner. Leave later with current on side for faster travel. See back at boat by noon." After getting nods from Al and Alyce, Sangha smiles and heads off up the road, leaving his passengers to fend for themselves. Al and Alyce head to the hotel, drawing looks from the locals in the street and at the small open market, some of the vendors waving them over to look at their goods, even at this hour.
The hotel is really quite small and much deteriorated from its heyday when it served as a jumping off point for royal hunts. Most of the lobby decorations are hold-overs from the French colonial days or even older, with no seeming prevailing theme other than a sad attempt to give an impression of quality. The pillars supporting the vaulted ceiling are chipped and badly in need of a good paint job. The inadequate attempts at repairing them are completely visible. The entire rear portion of the hotel has fallen into ruin and only eight rooms total are currently available for rent, and Al finds seven of those already occupied. The man behind the registration desk speaks the national Khmer in deference to his guests, most of which are government employees. He is a youngish man who likely realizes that he is in a near dead-end job with no real prospects of improving his lot in life. Instead, he gives off an air of superiority, clearly believing that the coincidence of his being born in Phnom Penh puts him several rungs higher than the locals in Chi Pat. Al signs for the room and is completely not surprised to hear that it is on the second floor and there is no lift available nor any bell service. They are told that the full service bar also provides fine meals. The kitchen closes at nine PM, but the bar does not close until three AM. The manager tells Al that two hikers and seven mine employees are currently guests, with the miners providing the loud noise coming from the bar as the hikers are out at present. Al thanks the man, who has addressed all of this information to Al while completely ignoring Alyce other than to make a quite obvious attempt to get a good look down the front of her shirt, which she has left accidentally unbuttoned when leaving the boat. Heading to their room they find that, once again, there is only one bed, but it is of a size that both of them can fit in it comfortably if they desire to. The bathroom is a communal facility down the hall and the single shower there is first come first served. Alyce looks at Al and says, "Well, the place has its good points and bad and is certainly like a lot of places I have stayed in at the edge of whatever jungle I was about to head into. So, do you want to go out looking around? If you do not mind terribly, I am thinking of some of the 5-star cuisine advertised in the bar kitchen and then sitting in one of those comfy looking chairs in the lobby with a good book."