But inside the house, for a moment, nothing else mattered.… The shared house stood a few kilometers inland from the neon shoreline of Phuket, where the illusion of cheap paradise had quietly collapsed. Six months earlier, the German couple—Lena and Markus—had arrived with a guidebook still recommending “$10-a-night bungalows.” What the guidebook hadn’t caught up with was the post-pandemic inversion of Southeast Asia’s economy: energy prices reshaped by the aftershocks of the war in Ukraine, supply chains rerouted, and a surge of digital nomads pushing up rents across tourist hubs like Phuket. Now they lay on thin mattresses, feet wrapped in gauze. Athlete’s foot had spread easily in the humid air, worsened by their refusal to spend money on proper medication. Markus had once calculated their daily budget down to the cent; now he calculated how long they could ignore hunger. In the next room, the Australian surfer, Dean, polish...