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Fishing for Tigers
Fishing for Tigers Read online
About Fishing for Tigers
‘A nuanced emotional and sexual drama’
– AUSTRALIAN BOOKSELLER & PUBLISHER
Six years ago, Mischa Reese left her violent husband and suffocating life in California and reinvented herself in steamy, chaotic Hanoi, where she now enjoys a life of relative luxury and personal freedom. Thirty-five and single, Mischa believes that romance and passion are for teenagers; a view with which her cynical, promiscuous expat friends agree.
Then a friend introduces Mischa to his visiting eighteen-year-old son. Cal is a strikingly attractive Vietnamese–Australian boy, resentful of his father, and of the nation that has stolen him away. His beauty and righteous idealism awaken something in Mischa and the two embark on an affair that threatens Mischa’s friendships and her reputation, and challenges her sense of herself as unselfish and good.
Set among the louche world of Hanoi’s expatriate community, Fishing for Tigers is about a woman struggling with the morality of finding peace in a war-haunted city, personal fulfilment in the midst of poverty and sexual joy with a vulnerable youth.
PRAISE FOR EMILY MAGUIRE:
‘Maguire seems incapable of spinning anything less than a compelling, endlessly engaging story that begs to be consumed in a single sitting’
– WEEKEND AUSTRLIAN
‘Maguire writes with a feisty, fair-minded intelligence’
– THE AUSTRALIAN
‘Emily Maguire is one to watch’
– WEST AUSTRALIAN
‘surreptitiously brilliant’
– KATE HOLDEN
Contents
Cover
About the book
Epigraph
Part One
Chapter One
Part Two
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Part Three
Chapter Thirteen
Acknowledgements
About Emily Maguire
Also by Emily Maguire
Copyright page
hen I’d told my sisters I was moving to Vietnam without a job or a plan, they were divided on what this meant. Margi thought I was having a breakdown and God knew what would happen to me in a foreign country in such a vulnerable state. Mel said that I’d broken down years ago and that there wasn’t much worse that could happen to me than my marriage to Glen. One thing they agreed on was that I needed to find myself.
My intention was the opposite. I wanted to lose myself so thoroughly that I would never find my way back. I had picked Hanoi because the airfare was cheap and I knew almost nothing about the place. The need to be swallowed up by strangeness was the closest thing to desire I’d felt in years.
In my first months there I had taken long walks and bike rides, caught cyclos and motos and taxis. I rode dust-caked, overflowing buses to outer districts where my red hair incited impromptu street parties. I felt constantly lost but began not to panic about it. Each night as I slept, the new streets were inscribed onto the map in my mind and almost without my noticing, Hanoi lost its strangeness, became home.
Even now, sometimes when I wake, I lie with my eyes closed and trace the streets in my mind, searching out new short-cuts, getting lost and found. The city is always as it is after a thunderstorm, shiny and clean and steaming. Schoolgirls giggle and wring out their shirts and the street vendors glance at the sky before whipping away their makeshift tarpaulins. The air is thick and damp, smelling of rotting fruit and fish sauce and exhaust. I wander until my mental map runs out of streets and only then do I let myself wind back in to the centre, back to the apartment overlooking the cathedral and the boy stretched on the bed, as cool and toxic as the rushing Red River.
Matthew had booked the roof garden at KOTO, which was where we always went to introduce newcomers to our circle, because the menu was westernised, the drinks were strong and the staff spoke at least a little English. They were all former street kids, so we got to feel magnanimous and charitable as we indulged. Matthew had asked, in his calm, charming way, that we not over-indulge tonight. The guest of honour was his teenaged son, not some newly imported slab of fresh meat.
It was obvious to the rest of us that the request was meant especially for Kerry who had been in Vietnam three years, but acted like a twenty-year-old backpacker who’d arrived from Liverpool that morning. On this night she was wearing a pink and black sarong twisted into a skirt and a clingy black singlet. Her long blonde plaits were tied with ribbons the same candy-pink colour as her nails and lips. She’d arrived ten minutes ago and had already ordered a second daiquiri. ‘If you’d seen what I went home with last night you’d understand,’ she said when I suggested she try to remain sober at least until Matthew and his son arrived. ‘God, I wish I could lose my sex drive.’
‘I have the solution to all your problems, my love,’ said Amanda, sliding in beside Kerry and taking a sip of her beer. Amanda was a university administrator who dressed like a rock star. That night she wore dark jeans and a tight black shirt with rips down both sides.
‘I’ve told you before, Mandy, you’re a babe, but I just don’t swing that way.’
Amanda, who had a new and hotter girlfriend every week, had the grace to look disappointed. ‘In that case, you’ll have to go with the second-best option. ElectroMart on Hang Bai sells these neck massagers. You know the battery-operated vibrating kind with a big, hard knob on the end? Thirty bucks and you’ll never need set foot in the backpacker district again.’
‘Who’s been in the backpacker district?’ asked Henry, pecking my cheek hello.
‘Kerry,’ I told him.
‘Oh dear. Trolling for Euro-trash again?’ He draped his leather jacket over the back of the chair beside me and then sat down with his designer-jean-clad legs spread wide enough for even a western-sized woman to stand comfortably between them.
Kerry drained her glass and waved at the waiter lurking in the doorway. ‘Easy for you to scoff, old man. You only have to stand outside after sundown to get laid. We tây ladies aren’t so lucky.’
‘ElectroMart,’ repeated Amanda, then turning to me, she added, ‘You should pick one up, too, Mish. A good hard massage will do you wonders.’
‘You know where you can get a good massage— Ah, here they are!’ Henry waved over my shoulder.
I turned and saw Matthew, stooping as always, a shy smile on his permanently flushed face, and for a moment I thought the promised son had failed to appear. But then the Vietnamese boy behind him stepped forward and raised a hand and I saw that he was too tall to be a local, his upper arms too thick. His smile showed teeth strong enough to bite through bone.
‘Everybody, this is Cal. Cal: Kerry, Henry, Amanda, Mischa.’
Cal nodded at us and we at him. Matthew looked relaxed, happy. I had expected shame, which I realise shames me, but there it is.
Henry started in on the kid: questions, recommendations, warnings. Kerry caught my eye, held up a cigarette and nodded toward the roof edge. While most of my Vietnamese friends found the sight of a woman smoking mildly scandalous, it was the norm amongst my expat pals. I think most of them smoked simply because they loved the idea of being able to do so in restaurants and on public transport. I understood that, and had no objection to others puffing away, but I mostly avoided it myself; even a slight shortness of breath felt like the onset of panic.
Kerry handed me a lit cigarette and I took it and held it over the edge of the roof.
‘Did you know he was Vietnamese?’ she asked.r />
‘He’s not. He’s Australian.’
Kerry flicked the air impatiently.
‘I didn’t know,’ I conceded. ‘But it’s hardly a surprise. There are loads of Vietnamese in Australia.’
‘It is a bloody surprise. I was expecting him to look at least slightly like his gangly, pale-faced dad. Actually . . .’ Kerry frowned and drew back deeply. ‘Why didn’t we know what to expect? Why haven’t we ever seen a photo of the kid?’
‘We must have.’ I thought my way through each room of Matthew’s apartment. ‘I think there’s a photo album on the shelf next to his desk. I never thought to look through it.’
‘Weird that he doesn’t have photos of him scattered around the place though. I mean, that’s what parents do, isn’t it?’
‘Maybe it would make him sad to look at them every day.’
‘Or maybe,’ Kerry said, ‘he doesn’t want the women he brings back there to know he has a Vietnamese kid.’
‘Does Matthew bring women back there? I sort of assumed he—’
‘Ate out? Who knows?’ Kerry squinted at me through the smoke. ‘He doesn’t talk about sex, have you noticed? Not the way others do. The way we do.’
‘It’s just how he is.’ I ground my barely smoked cigarette out on the wall and tossed it to the street below. ‘It doesn’t mean anything.’
Back at the table Henry was in full flight, lecturing Cal about what he called ‘the tragedy of package tourism’. Amanda and Matthew, who had heard it all before, were huddled over the menu, bickering about whether to order tapas-style or individually.
‘Loo,’ said Kerry. ‘I’ll grab a jug of something fruity on my way back.’
Cal caught my eye and I smiled. I tried to see Matthew in him, but there was no trace.
When Henry paused to sip his beer, Cal said, ‘So, um, Mischa? I was planning on taking the Boobs and Booze Bus to China Beach, and then spend some time bumming around Dalat, smoking weed – but Henry reckons that’d be uncool, so now I’m at a bit of a loose end. What do you recommend?’
‘Had you really . . . Oh, ha. The famous Australian sense of humour, yes. I was only saying—’
‘Do you like to walk?’ I asked.
Cal leant back and hooked his hands behind his head. He crinkled his nose towards his armpit and lowered his hands, wrapping them around the sweating beer glass in front of him. ‘Hiking, you mean?’
‘Oh, no, although there are some lovely national parks not too far out of the city. But I meant wandering. Walking around town, ducking down alleyways, getting lost in the Old Quarter. That’s what I recommend. To start with, anyway.’
‘Walking is a nice way to see the city,’ Henry agreed. ‘You need to take care in the heat, though.’
‘Come off it! I’m Australian, mate,’ Cal said with an exaggerated drawl that reminded me of men in khaki short-shorts in the outback discovery documentaries I’d watched as a child.
‘Ah,’ Matthew said, passing the menu to Amanda, who waved it at the hovering waiter and told him to bring a mix of appetisers. ‘But heat here is a whole different beast. You really should avoid exerting yourself in the middle of the day.’
‘Yes. Watch the locals – they crawl into the shade and sleep through the hottest hour. The bloody tourists keep clambering around in their silly caps and thongs, turning brighter and brighter pink, shouting at vendors, getting their backpack straps tangled in the handlebars of parked—’
‘Henry doesn’t like tourists,’ Matthew told Cal.
‘Now that’s not true. Tourism means prosperity for this country. I respect that. But there was a time when visitors came because they were interested in the country and its people. They came with basic knowledge and a desire to immerse themselves in the culture, to learn more. But now. Now it’s become so cheap to travel here – especially, no offence intended, for Australians – that every idiot who manages to save a couple of hundred dollars from their weekend job at the supermarket turns up and starts haggling over thirty-cent cyclo rides.’
‘Ah,’ Cal said. ‘So it’s not tourists you dislike, just the working class.’
‘Oh, zing!’ Matthew held up a hand and Cal slapped it.
‘That’s unfair. Henry loves the working class,’ I said. ‘Who else would shine his shoes and cook his meals?’
Henry gave me what I’m sure he intended to be a disdainful look. He was criminally handsome, though, so it came off as smouldering. ‘I just don’t want Hanoi to become another Bangkok or Phuket. Is that so terribly snobbish of me?’
‘I’m with you, man,’ said Amanda. ‘I’m so over these sunburnt teenagers wandering around the Old Quarter with their tits spilling out of their tiny tops. Have some fucking respect!’
‘Sorry, where did you say these girls wander around?’ Cal asked.
‘Now seriously,’ Henry said, leaning in close. ‘If it’s girls you’re looking for, stay away from the potatoes.’
‘Potatoes?’
‘White girls,’ Kerry said, plonking a jug of something thick and green in front of me.
‘Not “white girls”. White girls who live on french fries and Pepsi and slump around with their pasty potato flesh on display.’ Henry shuddered. ‘If you want to meet girls—’
‘Enough. Jesus, this is my kid you’re talking to.’
‘Yes, yes. Right you are,’ Henry said, then in a theatrical whisper to Cal: ‘We’ll talk later.’
The food came. The three young Vietnamese waitresses bowed their heads and giggled as they placed every dish as close to Cal as possible. I saw us all through the serving staff’s eyes: five pale, wilting, thirty- and forty-somethings basking in the aura of this broad-shouldered, caramel-skinned, unwithered boy. They must have wondered where we found him and what we were going to do with him. I suppose they guessed that we would do what our kind always do when we see beautiful things that don’t belong to us.
Except he did belong to us, in a way. Anyway, he would be the first to say that he was one of us. He would insist on it.
My phone rang and I went to the edge of the roof to answer it. The number was unfamiliar and the caller hung up when I answered. The telephone numbering system had changed three times since I’d been in Hanoi and the printed directory was wrong as often as it was right. Still, such calls were unnerving. The easy party mood left me. I felt guilty, watched.
It had become dark without my noticing and the street below was as empty as it ever got. Six or seven motorbikes passed by, honking at the clear space in front of them. Across the street, a driver rested on the back of his bike, his ankles crossed over the handlebars. Nearby, a grey-haired woman in yellow pyjamas squatted in the gutter scrubbing an aluminium pot.
‘Is she homeless?’
I jerked at the sound of Cal’s voice. ‘What?’ I followed his gaze to the old woman. ‘No, no. She’d live along this street somewhere. Probably behind that little green door there. People often wash-up outside. And cook and wash clothes and bathe children. Homes are so small, you see. And a lot of them don’t have what you’d consider a proper kitchen or they have to share one with others in the block.’
‘Do you have a kitchen?’
‘Yeah, I have to. My neighbours would die laughing if I came down and started chopping up veggies and boiling broth on the street.’
‘That’s why you have a kitchen? Because the locals would tease you if you didn’t?’ He had that flat, uniquely-teenaged tone that somehow suggested both outrage and indifference. ‘I suppose you’d have an outside squat dunny, too, if it wasn’t for the locals repressing you with their insistence on foreigners pissing inside.’
‘Ouch.’
‘I’m just saying.’ His gaze was still on the woman in yellow pyjamas. His long fingers tapped against each other and the muscles of his jaw popped and fell. The awareness that he knew I was watching him washed over me and I lifted my phone and pretended to be checking the screen.
‘I didn’t mean to offend you,’ he said after a m
inute. ‘I’m just a bit spun out by it all. People living like that—’ he nodded towards the woman who was now standing and balancing the empty washing bowl on her head – ‘which I expected, because Vietnam’s poor and everything, but then Dad’s place is really nice. Twice the size of our flat back in Sydney. Ducted air-con and marble benchtops and all that.’ He squinted at me accusingly. ‘Do you have marble benchtops?’
‘No, but I wouldn’t feel bad about it if I did. I’ve done my time in rat-infested, four-storey walk-ups with death-trap spiral staircases and squat toilets. But then I realised how stupid it is to try to prove you belong by living like the locals – the least affluent of the locals, at that. As if choosing to go without hot running water could turn an American into a Vietnamese or a rich person into a poor one.’
He sighed. ‘I guess that’s true, but it doesn’t mean it’s right.’
‘Goodness, this has become terribly serious. We’re supposed to be celebrating your arrival. Matthew’s been so excited to have you here at last. How long are you staying?’
Cal stretched his arms over his head and made a show of inhaling the night air. ‘Don’t know yet. I’m meant to start uni in February. I’ve already put it off a year, but I might defer again. Stay here a while then travel around a bit.’
‘What are you going to study?’
‘Journalism.’
‘Like your dad.’
‘I guess. But that’s not why I’m doing it. I just really like writing and I like talking to people and finding out how life works, so I figured . . . Mum’s not keen on it, though. She kind of hates journalists. Thinks they use people. Take their most intimate stories and painful moments and turn them into breakfast-cereal placemats.’
‘Harsh.’
‘Oh.’ Cal half-smiled. ‘You’re not a journo are you?’
‘No. I work with lots of them, though. I edit a magazine. The kind that takes people’s stories and turns them into – well, not cereal placemats, probably more like bánh mì wrappers.’
‘Sorry. Anyway, I don’t agree, obviously. Some are scum, I know, but not all of them.’
‘Not your dad.’