We put the camera away and I settled in to watch the road as we bumped along.
Suddenly... I felt Lulu's hand on my back.
My arms were clasped around Lulu's chest, as most riders do on the back of a motorcycle, and as Lulu tried to slide his hand further around, I lifted my elbow to begin to pry his arm upwards and away from me. His groping hand froze as he realized he had been caught. And yet he left it there on my butt. I made a face of utter disgust and began again to lever up his arm with my elbow without causing us to crash on the highway.
As I waved to the sweet schoolboys crossing the bridge in the other direction, I realized I was truly in the middle of nowhere, and had to act very wisely if I was to get out of this predicament, AND get justice. We were just an hour away from B.M.T., where I knew there would be buses to civilization, and so I decided to play it as cool as possible until then.
Our motorcycle pulled up at a small highway cafe for fresh Vietnamese coffee and condensed milk. "I see you tired," said Lulu, sympathetically. "You need coffee." I forced a smile and collapsed onto the cafe's hammock, avoiding the two cats chasing each other along the dirt floor.
It was silent for a while, and I began to have conflicting thoughts. Maybe that pawing on the road really was just a kind back massage. Lulu had been such a helpful and kind guide. Would he really be so creepy as to be willfully groping? I understand how to deal with blatant Latin American machismo and come-ons from my travels down south, but this was a strange new situation. Maybe it was all in my head.
Then Lulu pulled up a chair and spoke low. "Usually when I touch the girls, they laugh. They think it fun. If you don't like, I stop, just don't tell." I sat bolt upright in the hammock. Oh that little rat. He knew EXACTLY what he was doing, and he was using Molester 101 lines on me! I said nothing, but finished my coffee and got back on the motorcycle. Eleven more kilometers to B.M.T.
At last we arrived in the Eden Hotel in the capital of Vietnam's Central Highlands: good old Buon Ma Thuot (pictured, right). B.M.T. grows and trades some of the best coffee in the world, and has seen incredible positive growth from the resulting money. The town is also known for being the first city "liberated" by the North Vietnamese Communists at the end of the Vietnam War in 1975. I grabbed my valuables, threw them into a private locking room in the hotel, showered and changed, then strode downstairs to liberate my own self.
"Sit down here, please," I said to Lulu, pointing to a table in the middle of the crowded hotel lobby. He sat, confused. I pulled out a piece of paper.
"Before we left, we wrote a contract for the itinerary and the money for these four days," I said, picking up a pen. "We are now going to change that contract. Tomorrow, instead of riding on your motorcycle to Nha Trang, I will get onto a public bus and take the seven hour journey alone. We will also change the amount of money I pay you to half."
Lulu blanched and choked out, "No! We go to Nha Trang together! I want take you to Nha Trang! Why you change contract? Why?"
I looked him straight in the eye and said very loudly: "BECAUSE," glaring, "YOU TOUCHED" I held up my open palm, "MY ASS." I slapped my hand onto my butt. The clerks at the Eden hotel looked up in shock, and I continued. "You do NOT touch someone without their permission. You do NOT. You disrespected me and it is NOT all right."
Lulu let out a yelp like a dog that had been hit by a motorcycle and threw himself forward over the desk. "OKAY, OKAY!" he hissed, "Yes, yes, change contract! But not so loud, not so loud! They look at me!" Thank you, Vietnamese Shame Culture, for getting my back.
With a sigh of relief I turned back towards the contract. I lowered the price three times, and each time Lulu nodded rabidly and hissed, "Yes, yes, just not so loud!" By nine pm we awkwardly shook hands and Lulu said he'd help me to the bus station at eight thirty in the morning.
At seven am, I went downstairs with my bags, planning to take another form of transport to the bus station, but Lulu was there with the motorcycle ready. He handed me a foul-smelling curl of gray and said, "Dry squid. You eat." I declined. (A friend later joked, "Squid jerky is my go-to food to apologize for groping.)
I figured I would give this trust thing one more shot, and so we chugged down the brown highway and soon pulled in at the station. Lulu hopped off and ran inside. A moment later he ran back out. "Bus you want is full," he said. "Yeah right," I replied, striding in and buying a ticket for $2.50 four feet from us." "No, no! He hollered, "That bus take eleven hours! Bad bus!"
At this point the rusted old minibus to Nha Trang pulled out of the station towards the road and I grabbed my bag off the motorcycle. "It's all good, as long as I'm not on a motorcycle with you," I said, bounding up the dirty minibus stairs. As we pulled away I could see Lulu awkwardly standing in front of his shiny motorcycle, staring in shock out at space. I leaned out the window and shot him a searing glare. He hung his head.
The minibus was packed with Vietnamese country folk, six massive sacks of rice, a busted motorbike, and two babies (pictured, left). All the people smiled at me warmly, and when we stopped at a mountainside gas station, they offered me tea and lotus fruit, showing me how to eat it when I got confused. They were truly kind.
Though my trusty computer was broken from the motorcycle journey, I, myself, am not.
Several people have said that I should report Lulu, which is one reason (besides personal therapy) that I am writing this story in such detail. I have very mixed feelings about this, because in Vietnam the penalties would be extremely, extremely harsh. Moreover, the ninety-nine percent of our journey that did not involve groping was truly fantastic, and I appreciate the insight into Vietnam that my guide helped me absorb.
For now I will content myself with the knowledge that the women in the Eden Hotel may have reported the scene I made screaming at him and miming the grope, and, more likely, tourists who Google "Easy Riders" will find this article and Lulu's picture.


I'm so sorry Lillie - I know how hard it gets when you start second-guessing yourself that you'd blown it out of proportion/imagined it. You did the right thing and I'm glad you're okay!
ReplyDeleteRight on Lillie! You did the right thing in a very difficult/scary situation. Thanks for sharing it. Happy 2 months on the road - you're seasoned and strong!
ReplyDeletewow. what a story. i was glued to every paragraph. i'm glad you're okay and i'm glad lulu is not, thanks to our good friend, shame culture.
ReplyDeletePowerful stuff. You handled the situation amazingly, and the 8 part-series on the whole is EPIC.
ReplyDeleteLillie, I'm so proud of you! You handled it really well and I'm sure it made an impression on him. It's terrible that you--or any person had to deal with that kind of bullsh** though.
ReplyDeleteYou could not have handled things one bit better. This blog should be required reading for would be world travelers.
ReplyDeleteWhat a sad story, the bastard became to comfortable with the trust you place on him, i am glad you told him where to get off and revised the contract you had with him. Glad you are ok and Happy travels
ReplyDeletewell done, lillie. more evidence that you are particularly capable of a trip like this. i'd've gotten myself out of the situation, but i'd never have had the chutzpah to sit him down like that. probably would have paid in full and fled like a child. ignoring the fact that i wouldn't have the nerve to go alone on that motorcycle trip in the first place.
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