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Idiots in Vietnam 2nd Edition

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    Idiots in Vietnam(2nd Edition)

    Motorbikes, thick as porridge

    Ha Noi March 2007

    I emerge from Arrivals into the concourse of Ha Noi Airport with $400 inmy bum-bag. But the local buttons are dongs, 31,000 to the 1, so Ineed a Bureau de Change. There isnt one. Theres an INFORMATIONsign over there, but no one behind the counter.

    That smart young bloke in a brown suit, walking across theconcourse, seems to have recognised me. At least, hes suddenlystarted waving in my direction and shouting hello in English. Whatsthis about?

    I look round to check who hes aiming at but theres no one behindme. He must be shouting at me then. Does he think he knows me?Maybe hes from Cardiff. He looks a bit like one of the waiters from theHappy Gathering. Blimey, hes coming over. He wants to shake hands!Whos making the mistake? Me, or him?

    I get taxi, he says.Thats handy. But Ive got to change some money first, I tell him. I

    need dongs.Come, he says, striding towards the exit.No! I shout; money! dongs! I keep upping the volume. Maybe hes

    deaf. Ive only got American Dollars, I tell him when he looks round.Dollah OK, he assures me. Dollah velly good. Now hes gargling

    into his mobile.It all fits. That Chinese bloke on the plane told me they like dollars

    out here.Wait, the Happy Gatherer tells me when we arrive outside.Now a taxi swings into the kerb and Gatherer tells me to get in the

    back while he feeds my case and rucksack into the yawning boot. OK sofar. But now hes climbing into the front passenger seat. Thatsdifferent. Where go? he asks.

    Im going to the Heritage Hotel, I tell him. Where are you going?I go home, he tells me. I give help. You pay taxi. I get ride.

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    So were going to divert to the Happy Gathering. The guys achancer; nothing for nothing. How much? I ask warily.

    He inclines his head and looks thoughtful. Eight dollah, he decides.I spot a sign; HANOI 21 Km. And theyre going to charge me five-

    quid? OK, well settle for that, I tell him. A hundred-and-twenty-eight-

    thousand dong...Now were at a road toll. You pay, the Gatherer tells me.When I offer the driver a one dollar-note his expression turns from

    confusion to anger. He waves it aside and gives me a mouthful ofverbal scrambled egg. He want dong, says the Gatherer.

    I havent got dong, I tell him impatiently. You said hed takedollars.

    The two men sit yodelling at each other for a couple of minutes then,OK, says the Gatherer, driver pay now. Then we go bank. You getdong. Then pay driver.

    We push on along a dual carriageway amid the din of motorbikes.Traffic pollution hangs like sediment in the humid air. I wonder if theseguys pack any unpleasant surprises?

    Were entering Hanoi now. I relax a bit. But when the bank turns outto be an ATM, I tense again. Ill be in trouble with the wife. She comesfrom Scotland. She objects to paying interest to holes in walls.

    I get out of the taxi and approach the machine. This is scary. All thenumbers have strings of zeros after them. The ones towards the bottomare in millions. When I punch in 128,000 the machine gets violently sickand spews notes over me. I gather them up and head back to the taxi.

    I offer money to the driver. He goes unstable and starts screaming atthe Gatherer who waves the notes aside. This small money, says theGatherer. Driver want big money.

    Looks big enough to me, I tell him, all those noughts.Cents, he tells me.Youd better come and explain, I say, jerking my head towards the

    machine. Im beginning to feel uneasy. Come to think of it, Ive neverbeen at ease since I met this guy.

    I pay them enough to stop the drivers palpitations and trigger myown. Im not used to dealing in big numbers. And whats the interest on

    a string of zeros? Maybe Ive just broke the bank.

    *

    Ho Lo Prison aka Hanoi Hilton

    http://lh4.ggpht.com/-mhDMok2c7-Y/TqWYWsC0peI/AAAAAAAAAQg/tWPAIsE_KIg/s1600-h/Tourist%2093[9].jpghttp://lh4.ggpht.com/-mhDMok2c7-Y/TqWYWsC0peI/AAAAAAAAAQg/tWPAIsE_KIg/s1600-h/Tourist%2093[9].jpghttp://lh4.ggpht.com/-mhDMok2c7-Y/TqWYWsC0peI/AAAAAAAAAQg/tWPAIsE_KIg/s1600-h/Tourist%2093[9].jpg
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    Its the next morning and Im in a taxi heading for the 5 star, 58,luxury of the Melia Hotel. After I booked the Heritage I saw a report onthe internet that it was the worst hotel in South East Asia. So Iswitched my second night to the Melia. In the event, the 28 Heritagewas value for money; clean and spacious. But its in the grot of the

    suburbs so Im going along with the change. The Melias Central.This is a pukka taxi, with a meter. The trouble is, there are three sets

    of figures on it... all going up at different speeds. The lowest figure is inthousands. I think the top one is in billions. Its a long journey and themotorbikes are as thick as porridge. The driver doesnt speak anyEnglish, only scrambled egg. I offer him 100K 3. He looks delighted.So thats his tip as well.

    I watch a hotel porter whisking my case and rucksack away. VietNam is a Communist country. Its overstaffed. The whole countryspecialises in inefficiency. The upper-class hotels have a bellhop in

    every plant pot.An angel, in a long white dress and hat that looks like a halo, hands

    me a piece of paper with a number written on it. Its not her phonenumber. Its too short. Pity. I check-in but Im too early. My rooms notready. Theyll have my luggage in there at noon. Whats the number?they ask.

    You said the rooms not ready, so I dont know the number.No your luggage number? The lady in white gave it to you.Did she? I dunno. Ive lost it.OK sir. We fix. Five star service, caters for idiots.

    I collect a map from Reception and head outside for a walk. I likewalking. Im a walking person. But in Viet Nam, no one walks. Everyonegoes everywhere by motorbike. There are eight million people in SaiGon, thats Ho Chi Min City, and six million have motorbikes. Thats alorra bikes in one city. Ha Noi looks to be the same. And all those bikesseem to be on the road all the time. Its like nobody goes anywhere inparticular. Just get up in the morning, cock a leg over a bike, andmeander round the maze, honking your horn till bedtime.

    I consult the map. There are two targets within walking distance; HaNoi Prison Museum; thats the Hanoi Hilton where the Vietnamese kept

    shot-down American pilots; and the Catholic Cathedral.Outside, on the pavement, reality dawns. A road separates eachblock from the next. And the roads are no-go areas, rivers ofmotorbikes with a 20 knot current; every bike doing its own thing.Theyre not in lanes. Theyre all going in different directions on thesame patch; half men; half women; honking their horns in fruitlessmating calls. Its like an ant run out here; high speed dodgems.

    It gets worse. The overspill is on the pavement. They come up frombehind and whiz past me. The secret of staying alive is to keep walkingin a straight line. If you deviate, or stop suddenly, you scramble theequation. Everyone out there respects everyone elses space, whenthey can guess where it is. The same rules apply crossing the road.

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    Step off the kerb, close your eyes, and keep going straight, repeatingthe mantra to yourself... My Space. My Space. My Space. If you stopto cough youll have six-million bikes on top of you.

    Im a target now. A swelling convoy of trishaws keeps pace with me,yelling for me to leap aboard for a ten dollah tour, with a commen tary

    in scrambled egg. Motorbike-taxis, one after the other, swerve in frontof me, heading me off, urging me to squat on the pillion for a tendollah roller coaster whirl of engine-revving bliss. When I pause toconsult the map, chancers step out of nowhere, applying for the job ofpersonal guide. Its like nobody understands the concept of somebodywalking, or the joys of orienteering among flowing streams of horn-blasting traffic in the polluted air of a sweltering city.

    What these guys dont know, is that Im not a tourist. Not a real one.Im on a beeline from Cardiff to Saigon, on a mission to find my way tothe Cu Chi tunnels without the aid of a travel agent or guide. Its a

    budget trip. The plane fare subsidised by Air Miles, and hotels and traintickets booked on the internet. Im the only human involved. I wasgetting lethargic back there in Cardiff. I needed some action. So I setmyself a challenge.

    Outside the cathedral, a pretty girl in a palm hat tries to sell mebananas from one of the bowls that hang from either end of the poleshe balances on her shoulder. When I turn her down she offers to posefor a photo. OK, I take a shot and slip her 20K. Further down the linean old beggar-woman sticks out a bony arm for a handout. Ive beenalong this route before, many times. If I give 50 pence to every beggar

    who pops out of the pavement, a few hundred of the worlds poorestwill have their only chip butty of the year. The down-side is, that Ill beout of beer-tokens before lunchtime.

    So heres the dilemma. Did I give that girl 20K because shes pretty,then go and turn the old woman down because she aint? Hmm? Iknow... I hold up 20K and my camera. The same offers on the table forthe crone as for the girl.. She turns it down with a gesture of contempt.I pocket the money and walk away. Maybe thats why shes a beggar.She wont do something for something. Or have I got that wrong too?

    Through the window

    Another day, another task; board the train for a 32 hour trip to Sai

    Gon. Trouble is, I didnt sleep last night. A king-size bed in a 5 star

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    hotel, and I couldnt sleep cos I had Nasi Goreng for supper. Its thebest Ive ever had, but it was big. Egg and rice are clogging my guts.

    Its raining today, muggy as hell. Im sat in the station in a gatheringcrowd, waiting for boarding time. My tickets in my bum-bag. Ill be incoach 10; compartment 1; berth 1. The tickets were waiting at the

    Heritage when I arrived. All done by mirrors; couldnt be simpler. Its apiece of cake. Ive no problems.

    The crowd are all Asians except for me and two European couples. Iguess the couples are Frogs. The hotels are full of em. I suppose itsnatural. This was a French colony once. I seem to be the only Brit left inthe world.

    That tall thin railway worker went over to both European couples asthey came into the station and showed them to empty seats. He seemsto make a point of looking after Europeans. After a tip no doubt.Everyone heres looking for the main-chance. Hes heading for me now.

    Its getting near boarding time. The ticket inspectors opened thedoor that leads to the trains. We get to board an hour before take-off.The thin guys confronting me now. Hes making gestures. I dunno whathe wants. Its all in scrambled egg. Uh... he wants to see my ticket.Now he wants me to follow him. Hes got my case and were jumpingthe queue. Hes heading for coach ten. So hes got it right. Now hewants my ticket. Maybe he wants to see my compartment and berth-numbers, or to show it to the guard or something. Better give him a tip.Ive got two 10K notes here... 30p each. Ill try him with one. If helooks unhappy Ill give him both.

    Were in the compartment now, four bunks. Theres nowhere for thecases. Itll be a tight squeeze if someone gets in with their shopping.The guy suddenly spins round and sticks his hand in my face. Tendollah! he snarls. Hes gotta be joking. No way, I tell him, tenthousand dong.

    Ten dollah! he yells. He thinks hes Dick Turpin, but hes just awanker. Ten dollah? That must be the first line in the VietnameseEnglish Dictionary. Twenny dong, I tell him, shoving two notes in hishand. Ten dollah! Ten dollah! he screams. Were struggling now; metrying to ram 20K into his hand; and him pushing it away; a strange

    situation. Suddenly he strides past me. When I turn... hes gone.Jesus. I sit down. That took my breath away...I think this is mybed... Startled by the falsetto voice, I look up. And

    theres Emo Philips, the American comedian, reincarnated as a tallgangling Chinaman, complete with a medieval bobbed haircut, hoveringabove me, arms and legs all over the shop. We go outside and checkthe compartment number. Emos right; its 24. Im supposed to be in 1.Turpin dumped me on the wrong bed then demanded money. Peoplearent the same anymore.

    I hump my stuff to the right bed. The berths are filling up. Theres aVietnamese bloke in the bed above me and a middle aged woman in theone opposite. Theyve both got luggage so theres not much room. Now

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    a girl in her 20s arrives with a total of 7 cases and bags. Wereovercrowded, big time. But, on the bright side, the return journey isonly Two-million-two-hundred-thousand-dongs 78. For that, I get toSaigon and back, and beds for two nights. So Im saving something like300 on air, hotel and food bills. And I get to see Viet Nam from top to

    bottom.Nightmare! The last time I saw my train ticket, was in Turpins hand.

    He never gave it back. He broke off in the middle of the struggle andstrode away. Ive got problems...

    Yaah! God...! Emos at the door, standing there like a four-leggeddaddy-longlegs. This guys surreal. He wants a chat. Thats the lastthing I need. I just want to sit and worry. My heads in a whirl. I dontknow whether Im coming of going. Emo wants me to polish-up hisEnglish. He thinks I should go to China and teach it. He says I dontneed to learn Chinese. They all learn English anyway. They just need to

    polish the pronunciation. But teaching Emo is a fulltime job in itself. Hisvoice keeps changing register in mid-sentence, jumping from baritoneto falsetto and back in rapid succession. His arms and legs are thesame. He scratches his left cheek with his right hand by putting hisright arm round the back of his neck. Then he does the same with theother hand. Hes come from Shanghai to Viet Nam, job hunting. Hecant speak a word of Vietnamese. And, if he could, what would he do?We have two drivers on this train. They earn 30 a week each. Its a 32hour journey. And they have to buy their own food. Emo, sunshine gohome!

    The trains well underway now. Its grtting dark and theres themother of all storms outside. The rain is like hosepipes; lightningexploding in rapid succession. Its like the B42s are back with thenapalm, and were the target. Now I realise, my coats gone missing. Igo down the train to see if I left it in Emos place, but I didnt. Thatbastard, Turpin, must have grabbed it.

    The guard arrives, demanding my ticket. I tell him the tale of DickTurpin, but he only savvies scrambled egg. He goes away and comesback with two helpers. These trains pull a full coach-load of spareguards and comic-singers. Theres no-end of reinforcements. The men

    gargle and jabber among themselves, then bring their boss. This guysthe bad-cop... like the Jap guard on the River Kwai. No ticket, he rapsin English. Off train! Next stop! No messing. I like that in a man.

    I repeat the tale of Turpin. Off train! Next stop! he orders. I look atthe window; black dark; rivers of rain; lightning flashing! The thoughtof leaving the train on a night like this, lumbered with luggage andnowhere to go, no bed... no ticket... no nothing... in a land full ofscrambled egg... is... well... not good.

    In desperation I fumble in my rucksack and produce a piece of paperwith the phone number of Tony Kheim, the guy on the internet whodelivered my train tickets to the Heritage. I always carry backup.

    Phone this man on your mobile, I tell them. They do. He confirms that

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    I did buy a ticket. It takes the heat out of the situation. But... I cantstay on the train without a ticket.

    OK. Ill buy another one, I tell them. I fumble in my bum-bag andscrape 500,000 dong together. The boss waves it away. I want...million! he demands. But I havent got a million, I tell him. Off train!

    Next stop! he barks, in his best concentration-camp English. Whatabout this? I offer my credit card. Pah! he pushes it away. Its TescosPlatinum, I tell him. Hes unimpressed. American dollar? I ask. Hiseyes light up. Now youre talking, his eyebrows tell me. A hundredand twenty, he says, after a calculation.

    Thats nearly the return fare. Ive already paid for this bed, I tellhim.

    They jabber among themselves. OK, says the boss, at last,downgrade to couchette, 80 dollah. They know Im no dodger andtheyve softened a bit. No, I tell them, I need a bed. Ill pay the 120.

    They jabber again. OK OK, the boss weakens. Eighty dollah. Keepbed, he tells me.

    Theres no buffet. A woman comes round with a trolley, doling outfood to keep us alive; foul soup; chopsticks; a ton of boiled rice; dollopof soggy pickled-cabbage; fatty pork. Its worse than nothing at all.Vietnamese music blares full-blast from a speaker in the corridor. Itshot and stuffy. I lie on my bed, sweating and gasping for air. I cantsleep. I prowl the corridor in my socks. All the windows are locked. Ilook for a toilet. Its a squat. I come out with feet stinking of piss.

    This is it. Im stuck here till 9 oclock tomorrow night. Thats 24

    hours away. Time stretches before me like a waterless desert. Theresnothing to do; no one to speak to. Even Emo would be a blessing. Buthes on his bed, lifeless, like everyone else... corpses in a mobilemorgue.

    For no reason, I pull the screwed-up dong notes from my back pocketand iron them out. I dont believe it! There, in the middle of the ball...is my bloody ticket. Its tattered and torn, but its real. It must havecome from Turpins paw in the scuffle.

    In the end coach I pin a guard down and tell him the story. He hasnta clue what Im saying but summons an ever increasing number of

    assistants. At last Im talking to the guy from the Kwai, through aninterpreter who speaks perfect English. It takes a long time and a lot ofjabbering. You see, says the interpreter, at last. We have already paid80 dollah to the government.

    I frown and scratch my head. Were on a moving train.So, he goes on, if we give you 80 dollah, we lose a lot of money.So what are you saying? I ask.We want you to be very happy, he tells me.So do I, I tell him.So, if we give you 40 dollah, we lose 40 dollah and you lose 40

    dollah. Will that make you very happy?Ill be 40 dollars happier, I say.

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    No... very happy?Happy.No... very happy?This is Vietnamese for dont rock the boat. OK. Very happy, I

    concede.

    Kwai puts his hand in his back pocket, pulls out my wad of $80,miraculously retrieved from the government, and deals me 40. Sothats me... very happy...

    The girl with the pile of cases leaves the train at noon the next day.And theres my coat, under the last one. I find an open window, andair; then a European toilet... and people who speak English. Im backon course. A little wiser; a little poorer.

    Through the window

    Im in the middle of the crowd leaving Saigon station. Its dark and Imlooking for a taxi. A weasel-faced wanker, in a peaked cap and denim

    jacket, is pulling at my arm. Taxi, ten dollah, he chants. Taxi, ten

    dollah. How does he know its ten dollars? He doesnt know where Imgoing.

    Theres a taxi rank at the end of the approach; a long line of smart,white, four-wheel drives, filling up and pulling away. These are the boysI want. I head straight for them, humping a rucksack, pulling a case,and fighting off the Weasel. I flag a taxi. The driver ignores me. I tryanother and another and another... They all ignore me. Its like Iminvisible.

    Maybe the Weasels got the first claim on me. OK. I can sort that. Iwas around in the days of the Empire. We had ways of dealing with

    guys like this. I put my face into his. Get lost! I roar at the top of myvoice... and give him a push. His face fills with hate. But he slinks awaywith his tail between his legs. It all comes back to me now. Sometimesit pays to be hated. The taxi-men still ignore me. I dont get it. Even ifthey cant see me they must see my case. Ah... Maybe they are out insympathy with the weasel.

    Theres another guy at me now, in a grey uniform with an officialnumber on it. Hes got more manners than the Weasel. He wants me togo with him. He must be a taxi driver. I follow him across the approach.

    Oh no... hes loading my case onto trishaw. I dont believe it. Ive

    landed with Gunga Din. Its not even a decent trishaw, like the poshladies go promenading in. This is ancient; a single-seater; moth-eaten

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    and battered. I dont want to know it. But Ive no option. The taxis haverejected me. Rex Hotel, I tell him.

    Otel, he echoes.No, I tell him. Not any hotel: the Rex Hotel. Hes another chancer.OK, he says. Red otel.

    Aahh, gerronwithit, I tell him. Rex Hotel, fifty-thousand. No Rex, nomoney.

    We start off. Its uphill. Gungas got a load on. Hes struggling a bit.Ive got my feet on my case with my knees in the air and my rucksackunder my chin. Hes edging into the traffic. Theres no order on theroad. Just swirling eddies of motorbikes, honking horns, claiming theirspace. But he copes. Hes been doing this all his life; with the sametrishaw by the look of things. When traffic lights go green, bikes zoomaway on all sides. Gunga stands on the peddles, struggling to getmomentum up the slope. The journey goes on and on. I sense hes

    flagging.Otel! he shouts hopefully as we approach a dingy Vietnamese doss.Rex, I tell him. No Rex. No money.He tries it on, again and again, with every otel we pass. He hasnt a

    clue what were looking for. Im running out of patience. Im tired; twonights without a proper sleep. I need a shower and a change of clothes.Ive got Vietnamese piss on my socks. I bang the side of the trishaw.

    Let me off, I yell. Ill find a taxi.No. No. he pleads.Red otel. OK. OK.He shouts to people on the sidewalk. They shout back, pointing

    uphill. Were going the wrong way up a one-way street now, in the darkwithout lights, against a solid wall of motorbikes. Its like the M25 iscoming at me.

    Hes behind, standing on the peddles. Im his shield... He sees myproblem. He gets off the bike, comes round the front, and starts pullingme, like a horse and cart. He chickens out and makes for the sidewalk.Now hes peddling along the pavement. Ill settle for that.

    We come to a corner. There! he shouts triumphantly. Rex otel!And there it is. Closed! Boarded up. Dead as a Christmas turkey. I

    booked it on the internet. Ive been suckered again. Gunga Din sees the

    problem. He thinks Ill blame him. He shouts frantically to a guy sittingon the steps. The guy shouts back and points. We move on, roundanother corner. And there it is. A blaze of lights. The Rex Hotel. Theboarded bit was the back entrance.

    A coach has pulled-up outside, disgorging middle class, middle agedFrogs. Gunga pulls alongside and dismounts. Then he misjudges andthe trishaw crashes onto its side, shooting me nosediving among thecrowd, rucksack and all. The Frogs pause and gaze disdainfully down.Another Rosbeef stealing their thunder.

    Gunga hops around on one leg crying sorry sir, sorry sir. He can see50K evaporating. He might be a chancer. But hes hurt himself. And

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    hes no wanker. Hes worked bloody hard. We agreed on fifty. I givehim a hundred. Youre a better man than I am, Gunga Din, I tell him.

    In the cool of the rooftop bar, the inevitable Philippino musicians

    murder Western pop music on the corner stage. A couple of aging Frogcouples dance to the racket, clapping enthusiastically after everynumber. One middle aged bloke, a Chirac look-a-like, is swaying andclapping and tapping the table like a star-struck kid.

    The service is crap. I go to the bar to get more drink. The localhooker sidles up, youre new, she tells me.

    Not the usual description, I say.She says she runs a massage parlour on the floor below. Do you

    need a rub down? she asks.Or rub-up? I wonder.

    I manipulate, she says.I bet you do, I tell her. Shes attractive, in a pale skinned 4-star

    well-groomed kind of way. But I prefer the girls outside; pale gold skinand almond eyes; sitting astride their motorbikes in skin-tight jeans;shiny black hair tumbling over their shoulders. Theyre like dainty dolls.And they walk like dolls; little awkward steps. Its like their motherswind them up every morning; stick em on high-heel stilts; then turnthem loose to stagger about till they find a bike to cock a leg over.These girls are wild flowers. Once they master the walking problemtheyll take over the world. The hookers a houseplant.

    I tell her, no, I just need beer. She looks disappointed. Immarried, I say. Youre against the rules.

    The next night she arrives at my table. Can I sit with you? shewonders.

    Ive told you, I tell her. Im married.Just for a chat, she says.Naah. Youd better not, I say. She looks crestfallen and goes back

    to her table. I bite my tongue. Its 30-odd pence a pint in here. Adouble whiskys a pound. For less than two quid she could tell me talesto make my toes curl.

    Ive booked the trip to the Cu Chi Tunnelsfor the second day. Thatswhat this journeys all about. But Ive got my doubts. If I end up with acoach load of Frogs itll be a nightmare. And the hotels full of em.

    In the morning I go to the foyer and wait for the call. The place isawash with Yanks and Frogs. It doesnt bode good. Then this girl comesup and says, Mr Gregory? I say, yes. And she says, follow me. Suitsme. She a wild flower in tight jeans.

    She takes me to a chauffeur driven car and opens a rear door. Am Ithe only one? I say when were underway. No, she tells me, there aretwo of us. Its getting better.

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    We do the tunnels and the war museum. Shes the best courier Iveever come across. She walks with her arm round my waist and keepsfeeling my muscles and saying wow.

    She takes me to a Vietnamese restaurant for lunch. I dont eat withclients, she tells me. But youre nice and happy. I want to eat with

    you. Shes probably winding me up for a tip. But I can stand that.Especially after the meal, when she starts kneading both our stomachsto see which one is the fullest.

    At the end of the day I follow her up the hotel steps to the foyer. Atthe top she turns, puts her arms round me, and presses her cheek tomine. Maybe she wants a bigger tip. But it makes an old man happy.

    In the bar that evening, the hookers back. Can I come to your roomtonight? she wants know.

    I keep telling you; Im married, I say.For you, I do it for love, she tells me.

    Aww shucks, I cover my eyes with my hand. Its very nice of her.We hardly know each other. Ive still got this marriage problem, I tellher.

    She plants a kiss on my lips. And then shes gone.Mission accomplished. Ive done the tunnels. Im dreading tomorrows

    train trip. But hey, Im homeward bound.The funs over for this trip...

    Charlie aka Viet Cong Now you see Now you dont

    Enter Antonio ...

    Im on the train now. A colony of Frogs are swarming into the coach.This is worrying. I dont want them in here... But I neednt worry. Inwalks Miss Saigon. She looks about 19 but she turns out to be 27. Shelooks a dream as she clambers up and down onto the bunk above me. Awoman in her 30s is in the bottom bunk across the way. Shes nice andfriendly; wants to share her water; but Ive got my own.

    I wander into the corridor. The Frogs have got the windows open.Brilliant. Itll be great to have some fresh air in the place. But now thechief guard has come along with a key. Hes pushing the frogs out ofthe way and locking the windows. Hes a bit of a Hitler, this guy.

    Five hours later, the train stops and the Frogs swarm away. Thewoman in the bottom bunk has closed the compartment door and we all

    sprawl on our beds gasping for air.

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    Suddenly the doors flung open and a bloke in a khaki shirt andshorts barges in with a massive canvas bag which he dumps betweenthe bunks. I dont believe it... Hes wearing a blue crash helmet. ImAntonio... from der Nederlands, he roars in a foghorn voice, snatchingoff the helmet and throwing it on the vacant bunk. He points to the

    bag. Youll have to lift dis on der bed for me, he orders Hitler, who isstanding behind him. I have a heart condition.

    Hitler bristles. He doesnt lift. He shoves Frogs about and lockswindows. I get off the bunk. Illgive you a hand, I tell them. Three ofus heave it up and shove it on the bunk.

    Antonio pulls up a shirt sleeve, bends his arm and tenses the muscle,I vos a Marine Commando, he tells Hitler. Now he leans over thebottom bunk and shakes the woman. Im Antonio, from derNederlands, he shouts. Who are you? She looks bemused and mutterssomething in scrambled egg. Antonio does the same with the girl

    above, and gets the same response.Ratatatat! He suddenly crouches between the bunks, firing a heavy

    machine gun, full blast. Bang! Boom! He roars, lobbing hand grenadesonto the bunks. I vos a Marine Commando, he tells the girls, who arenow sitting lotus fashion on the lower bunk staring at him, wide eyed. Ivos in Curacao.

    Hes 65 with a shock of grey hair and grey moustache. And hes beenon a 2 month cycling tour in the Meikong Delta. Youll have to talk up,he tells me, Im deaf.

    Its all those bloody hand grenades, I tell him.

    I lost my hearing aid in the der crash, he tells me. He was in acollision with a motorbike and lost his front wheel. Mudder anddaughter, he suddenly roars, looking at the women. Its not verytactful. But its very Antonio. Bridget Bardot, he roars, suddenlyrealising how beautiful Miss Saigon looks. He dives into the canvas bagand produces a camera. You are der sex kitten, he tells her. I takeyour picture. Shes posing for him now; combing her hair and preeningherself. Hes got something going for him.

    Swish! A sandal skims my nose in a karate kick. I vos a MarineCommando, he tells me. Ratatatat! Boom! Bang! Hes off again. This

    guy did 2 years National Service in the 60s and, by the sound ofthings, hes lived off it ever since. But hes no more a soldier than I am.Hes at his pills now. Von for my heart, he announces. Von for my

    blood pressure. And von for Diabetes... Bang! he lobs a hand grenadeinto the corridor.

    I look at the women. Mad as a typhoon, I tell them. They nodenthusiastically. They dont know the language. But they guess whatIm saying.

    Dare vos dis Russian vife in the Meikong, he tells us. Antonio, shetells me. I love you. I love you very much. You must come to me inRussia... And I vill go, he assures us. And I vill give her much umpety-umpety.

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    The women leave the train at 0700. Antonio produces pictures of hiswife and daughter; two attractive women. Theres a postcard from hisdaughter too. Come back healthy, she tells him. And tell us lots ofstories. Hell definitely tell her stories.

    At 0800 he decides to go a walk down the train. I hear him telling a

    Vietnamese guy about giving umpety-umpety to a vife on the VeniceExpress. The guy hasnt a clue what hes talking about.

    Half an hour later hes back at me. Meet the new girlfriend, he tellsme. He pushes a Vietnamese wildflower towards me. He says shes 23.But she looks younger; much younger. He says she has an apartmentin Ha Noi and produces a condom. I vill sleep vith her tonight and giveher umpety-umpety, he tells me.

    Its only half-eight in the morning. Hes not had his breakfast yet.And hes already picked up a scrubber.

    I dont know how he knows she has an apartment, or that he can

    sleep with her. She doesnt speak a word of English. I think he tells herwhat he wants. And if she nods or smiles, its a done-deal.

    She leaves him now and goes to a compartment further down thecoach. There are two young blokes in there and she spends most of theday with them, behind a closed door.

    I have to be careful, Antonio tells me, holding up the condom. I haddis near miss vid a black vife in Africa. I think she had Aids. It vos newthen. I had to tell my vife about der girl. Ve both had to have tests andmedication.

    Christ. Its a wonder she didnt divorce you.

    Oh no, no. My vife understood. I vos just a young boy at the time.And I had been avay on business for a couple of veeks.

    Oh. Thats OK then. How old were you?Only 35; just a young boy.I nod my head. Theres no answer to that. But it explains his

    daughters postcard.He wants to know what I think of his new girlfriend.

    Shes not just an ordinary girl, I tell him. Miss Saigon was anordinary girl. I point to the top bunk. She let you take photos. But thatwas all. Ordinary girls dont take you back to their apartments for

    umpety.He gets another packet of pills from the big bag; takes one; andwashes it down with bottled water.

    Whats that one for? I wonder.Diarrhoea, he tells me.Have you been drinking the water?No. But ven Im vith dis little vife tonight, I might be excited and get

    the shits.I nod wisely. Theres no answer to that one either.The girls back at him now. Making pillow signs with her hands

    against her cheek. He throws me an, I told you so, look, as she takeshis hand and leads him away.

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    I stand corrected. Looks like hes struck lucky.But she takes him to the boys compartment, where hes invited to

    buy satay and coffee all-round off the food trolley.When he comes back he asks me again, vot do you think of my

    girlfriend?

    Shes with two blokes, I tell him. She could be a hooker, workingthe train. Ask the guards if they know her.

    He asks Hitler, but gets waved aside.Shes back in our compartment now. Sitting on the lower bunk,

    cuddling Antonio. He falls for it big time. She suddenly stands up andleaves without giving a reason. Ten minutes later, one of her boyfriendscomes and stands in the corridor, eyeing the Dutchman. Theressomething sinister about him.

    They could be setting you up for a honey trap, I warn Antonio. Twomen and a girl.

    Yah, Antonio gets the point. I vill put my things in a safe in thestation, he decides. And take only $30 to her apartment. Nothingmore. If they pull a gun. Dat is all dey vill get $30. But if they haveno gun, I vill destroy dem. Two fingers fly at my face. First, I take outtheir eyes. Den I chop them. Swish! Swish! His hands fly through theair in karate chops. Den I finish dem. He leaps to his feet and goeskicking down the corridor, like a German soldier whos lost control of hisgoosestep.

    Were getting near Ha Noi now. The girls back on the lower bunk,cuddling Antonio. I love you, she tells him in English. I love you. I

    love you. I love you.He looks at me, wide eyed. I told you, he says. She loves me. She

    has told me this herself. You heard her.Give me a kiss, he cries, taking hold of her shoulders and pulling her

    towards him.Yeeeaaow, she squeals and struggles like an angry cat. No kiss! No

    kiss! she screams.She rises and goes to the door. Goodbye, she calls over her

    shoulder, with a wide grin. Then shes back with the two boys, who arewaiting in the corridor.

    Vot do you think? he asks, hopefully.Shes taking the piss, I say.He nods his head. Yah. You might be right, he concedes. So I need

    a hotel in Ha Noi. Is dare room at your place?Dunno, I say. I booked it on the internet.Have you got a double room? he wonders.No way, I tell him. Im not sharing. Im not playing second fiddle to

    a scrubber.On Ha Noi station I see Antonio being towed away by one of the

    wankers. Dis man has a hotel, he shouts to me. He vill give me aroom for der night.

    I bet he will, I say, as I go looking for a chancer with a taxi.

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    The pictures below might interest the historians out there...

    Charlies Invisible Chimney... he cooked in his tunnel, around dawnwhen smoke mingled with the morning mist

    Now Some of Charlies Toys

    Step on it...

    and down you go to a bed of spikes.

    or

    This one rolls you down and pierces back and front

    or

    http://lh6.ggpht.com/-waYn3vuj6Ao/Tqch-7rvjCI/AAAAAAAAAiI/yTPS_B7wVCM/s1600-h/Tunnels%20992[25].jpghttp://lh3.ggpht.com/-XfdjAUy58Zg/Tqch6wyEYMI/AAAAAAAAAho/EABvvOD-1JI/s1600-h/Tunnels%2091[15].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-pUJQYQLbZOs/Tqch5QKMr6I/AAAAAAAAAhY/QCnQs_r2d2U/s1600-h/Tunnels%209[12].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-7uIAlEzm_cQ/TqcU_PExULI/AAAAAAAAAhI/ubc305sD8t0/s1600-h/Tunnels%209998[4].jpghttp://lh6.ggpht.com/-waYn3vuj6Ao/Tqch-7rvjCI/AAAAAAAAAiI/yTPS_B7wVCM/s1600-h/Tunnels%20992[25].jpghttp://lh3.ggpht.com/-XfdjAUy58Zg/Tqch6wyEYMI/AAAAAAAAAho/EABvvOD-1JI/s1600-h/Tunnels%2091[15].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-pUJQYQLbZOs/Tqch5QKMr6I/AAAAAAAAAhY/QCnQs_r2d2U/s1600-h/Tunnels%209[12].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-7uIAlEzm_cQ/TqcU_PExULI/AAAAAAAAAhI/ubc305sD8t0/s1600-h/Tunnels%209998[4].jpghttp://lh6.ggpht.com/-waYn3vuj6Ao/Tqch-7rvjCI/AAAAAAAAAiI/yTPS_B7wVCM/s1600-h/Tunnels%20992[25].jpghttp://lh3.ggpht.com/-XfdjAUy58Zg/Tqch6wyEYMI/AAAAAAAAAho/EABvvOD-1JI/s1600-h/Tunnels%2091[15].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-pUJQYQLbZOs/Tqch5QKMr6I/AAAAAAAAAhY/QCnQs_r2d2U/s1600-h/Tunnels%209[12].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-7uIAlEzm_cQ/TqcU_PExULI/AAAAAAAAAhI/ubc305sD8t0/s1600-h/Tunnels%209998[4].jpghttp://lh6.ggpht.com/-waYn3vuj6Ao/Tqch-7rvjCI/AAAAAAAAAiI/yTPS_B7wVCM/s1600-h/Tunnels%20992[25].jpghttp://lh3.ggpht.com/-XfdjAUy58Zg/Tqch6wyEYMI/AAAAAAAAAho/EABvvOD-1JI/s1600-h/Tunnels%2091[15].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-pUJQYQLbZOs/Tqch5QKMr6I/AAAAAAAAAhY/QCnQs_r2d2U/s1600-h/Tunnels%209[12].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-7uIAlEzm_cQ/TqcU_PExULI/AAAAAAAAAhI/ubc305sD8t0/s1600-h/Tunnels%209998[4].jpg
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    With this one you hang with your armpits impaled

    And then

    Theres one that opens like a window

    or

    See Saw Marjory Daw. Then down to the spikes.

    Then, for your convenience

    This one folds like a chair with spikes

    http://lh6.ggpht.com/-afjYOc_yWEc/TqciB7jzdMI/AAAAAAAAAio/v2AedFD3dQ4/s1600-h/Tunnels%20994[4].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-avvUDZCTMMw/TqciEyIGLwI/AAAAAAAAAjI/26Y3ZvTFvOE/s1600-h/Tunnels%20996[4].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-enJ6HvpPHsA/TqciAYRsO6I/AAAAAAAAAiY/o0UlYBkMp4k/s1600-h/Tunnels%20993[9].jpghttp://lh6.ggpht.com/-Db9YCbJ_jmI/Tqch82JH95I/AAAAAAAAAh4/HBIWqfbnvkw/s1600-h/Tunnels%20991[18].jpghttp://lh6.ggpht.com/-afjYOc_yWEc/TqciB7jzdMI/AAAAAAAAAio/v2AedFD3dQ4/s1600-h/Tunnels%20994[4].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-avvUDZCTMMw/TqciEyIGLwI/AAAAAAAAAjI/26Y3ZvTFvOE/s1600-h/Tunnels%20996[4].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-enJ6HvpPHsA/TqciAYRsO6I/AAAAAAAAAiY/o0UlYBkMp4k/s1600-h/Tunnels%20993[9].jpghttp://lh6.ggpht.com/-Db9YCbJ_jmI/Tqch82JH95I/AAAAAAAAAh4/HBIWqfbnvkw/s1600-h/Tunnels%20991[18].jpghttp://lh6.ggpht.com/-afjYOc_yWEc/TqciB7jzdMI/AAAAAAAAAio/v2AedFD3dQ4/s1600-h/Tunnels%20994[4].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-avvUDZCTMMw/TqciEyIGLwI/AAAAAAAAAjI/26Y3ZvTFvOE/s1600-h/Tunnels%20996[4].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-enJ6HvpPHsA/TqciAYRsO6I/AAAAAAAAAiY/o0UlYBkMp4k/s1600-h/Tunnels%20993[9].jpghttp://lh6.ggpht.com/-Db9YCbJ_jmI/Tqch82JH95I/AAAAAAAAAh4/HBIWqfbnvkw/s1600-h/Tunnels%20991[18].jpghttp://lh6.ggpht.com/-afjYOc_yWEc/TqciB7jzdMI/AAAAAAAAAio/v2AedFD3dQ4/s1600-h/Tunnels%20994[4].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-avvUDZCTMMw/TqciEyIGLwI/AAAAAAAAAjI/26Y3ZvTFvOE/s1600-h/Tunnels%20996[4].jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-enJ6HvpPHsA/TqciAYRsO6I/AAAAAAAAAiY/o0UlYBkMp4k/s1600-h/Tunnels%20993[9].jpghttp://lh6.ggpht.com/-Db9YCbJ_jmI/Tqch82JH95I/AAAAAAAAAh4/HBIWqfbnvkw/s1600-h/Tunnels%20991[18].jpg
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    And finally

    Get out of this under fire...

    Funny thing, war; the big boys dont always win.

    http://lh3.ggpht.com/-_lIScQHxJ88/TqciDWqKg_I/AAAAAAAAAi4/_iBVOLDFEAE/s1600-h/Tunnels%20995[4].jpg

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