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27 April 2010

That Other Stuart Diver


For the past week there has been a lot of construction next door - including yesterday's noisy extravaganza of digging and earth moving. Dirt mountains are popping up everywhere. There is more equipment than people; quite unusual for a building site in Vietnam.

I woke up at 3am to the sound of an avalanche. I didn't know I could identify the sound of sliding dirt at thirty yardsbut there you go. Dirt was sliding in large quantities, right next to the house, and I knew it.

I started to wonder whether my apartment building would be joining it and - I'm ashamed to admit - wondered whether I could get in a quick nap before escaping. Srsly.

I was very, very tired. And really, really didn't want to get up. But it kept going and going and going. I started to imagine being winched out of the rubble by emergency workers ... wizened men operating on no sleep, rubbing their stubbled chin and looking worried ... coffee being drunk in the background ... spotlights and ropes ... fluoro yellow jackets. Then I realised where I was.

It wasn't fear that made me get up ... it was the realisation that Vietnam has no emergency services and I would have to do all the saving for myself. There was a parallel realisation that no matter how many people in this country seem happy to wear their pyjamas during the daytime, I was not one of them.

I eventually got up - all pre-Thredbo like - and popped my head out of the bedroom window. I could see an earth digger thingo shifting piles of dirt off the street. It seemed to be doing a poor job - pushing dirt along and missing key piles. It was more like rubbing than lifting.

Then I saw him.

The older security guard from downstairs - the one who has to wake up to open the door when I come home late - seemed to be in control of the digger. He was perched behind the wheel in a dangerously proactive show of confidence. It was so odd. The family from downstairs was also wandering up and down the street and around the digger, aimlessly supervising the event. They were quite unconcerned, like hey were watching TV.

Even the old lady was out there on the wander. She wasn't in pyjamas so I figured she had been rostered on. She seemed to think she was in charge though. Old person charge ... much like an old man at a car lot. I almost expected her to kick the tyre of the digger. She noticed me staring out of the window and smiled politely, like we had run into each other at the shops.

Her grandson (20 yo security guard) was also there, wandering around the front of the machine smoking cigaretts, artfully avoiding the arm of the digger as it swung towards him. The little kids weren't there but I spotted a teen - possibly a bored neighbour or a spruiker from one of the brothels up the road.

Then the Canadian guy who lives above me started shouting:

"What the fuck are you doing? This is fucking stupid! You're fucking stupid! How can you be so fucking stupid?!" and so on and so forth.

When he first started yelling everyone stopped for a moment and stared at him.

They were more curious than alarmed, like distracted kittens. The silence lasted about 10 seconds. The minute the Canadian stopped to draw breath, they started it all up again.

I couldn't work out what was happening so I went back to bed. The Canadian guy was still screaming and the digger was going but I was tired. I already had an insurance policy - the little kids were asleep in the house and I figured that if there was any real danger, they wouldn't have been left there. And I actually love my pyjamas ... more than I care to admit.

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hanoi will always throw one (or two, or three) last little reminders at you of the city that she is, just so you never, ever forget. They knocked down houses either side of mine the week before I left Hanoi and I can't tell you how happy I was to be leaving the banging, drilling, dust and general inconveniences of construction behind me!

cuntastic said...

well finally you're fucking off... c'os perhaps uv 'ad enuf... but sad i am to say, that you decided not to stay... so i've stolen all your sauces and dregs of undrunk vodkas, which i shall enjoy in ur honour, u find friend i am so fond of! so piss off and moan no more, til ur in jakarta where i hope to hear plenty more!

sent with fondness, cuntastic xxx

ps now u know how good i am at stalking, watch ur back as you start that walking!

SinBBQ said...

seems like someone has already had a little nudge of the vodka!

robinhood said...

Is that the Canadian pilot with the sick harley? The one that would have got into a fight had you not stepped in so quickly, with eager anticipation for some testosterone fuelled action...?

All whilst I lurked in the background quietly trying not to encourage violence, nor get too involved.

Cuntastic ambivalent to the high school dispute swallowed her 6th glass of merlot in one gulp and loudly beckoning "EM OI!" in her husky English accent for her next two glasses before 2 for 1 happy hour finished.

That's what I miss most - the Potato Noise.

Pen said...

Well it has only taken me until you are leaving to get on!!

I have a lot of reading to do to catch up on Vietnam - in retrospect eek.

Penelope v.e
(now the proud owner of the sex god - black polo volkswagon previously of BYWONG love it love it love it.)

Anonymous said...

bye Tone & bye Hanoi.

SinBBQ said...

yes that's the same one robin. the fight i broke up then realised he was a neighbour. he was going nuts tonight, too. and he's a commercial pilot. don't really want him in my cockpit.

SinBBQ said...

You're never too late Penny. Get in there and leave me some notes ... I am always told about new notes so I never miss any.

robinhood said...

That guy is a doosh bag. I'm pretty sure he was American... That's as bad as calling a Kiwi an Aussie

SinBBQ said...

sorry R but he was canadian. and i've always found canadians to be fuckwits. always so anxious about being called americans and pretending they are SO different that they end up becoming pale, thin versions of their larger cousins. you can't define a culture by what you are "not".

no different to kiwis really. sorry R.

robinhood said...

Daddy just needs a hug. Its ok I know you miss me.

SinBBQ said...

R - out of all my children, i've always hated you the most.

Lisa said...

I SPOTTED AN UNTRUTH IN THIS ENTRY.

You are so happy to wear your your pyjamas during the daytime.