"Oh my god, we're gonna crash!" a woman shrieks. White knuckled passengers tense as the plane's cabin pitches upward then noses down like a diving roller coaster. The woman's screams sound like Faye Ray in King Kong. I've flown a lot but this ancient airliner is rattling like it's held together by loose bolts.
A Vietnamese flight steward stumbles down the aisle keeping his balance by clutching at seatbacks. Reaching the hysterical woman's seat, he starts barking at her like an angry pit-bull. There is a dull whack - the unmistakable sound of flesh striking flesh. My temper grinds into gear. The fuckin' bastard actually backhanded her right across the jaw. Should Jim Becker interfere? Hell no. I ain't that crazy.
The air smoothes out as clouds melt away. My ballpoint clicks over the woman's sobs and the roar of the worn-out Russian jetliner's engines. Under "Passenger Comments" on the ticket envelope, I write "Cabin crew needs to work on their people skills." I stare out the window at the jungle below. My father flew those Indochina skies during the Vietnam War. I've been invited to Hanoi to bring Lieutenant Clifford Becker home, or what's left of him anyway.
A blast of hot and sticky air immediately hits as I step through the plane's doorway. Five armed military militia escort the passengers into a dilapidated terminal building. Inside, sour-faced immigration and customs officials scrutinize each foreigner as if we're dangerous felons entering a third-world penitentiary.
Two hours later, I pick up my suitcase, and step through the swinging doorway into the sizzling Vietnamese atmosphere. Motor scooters, car horns and smoke-belching busses infest the street outside the terminal. Although the war has been over for more than twenty years, one can't slough off the not-so-subtle side-glances. The message in their Vietnamese eyes is clear: Mistrust of the American Imperialist is still alive and well. Okay where is Minh Von Dong?
"Excuse me sir?" a soft feminine voice says in English. "Might you be Mr. James Becker?"
Her beauty is staggering - disassembling. My disoriented wits quickly reassemble themselves. "Yes Miss. I am James Becker."
Luscious lips smile as she extends her hand. "Welcome to Hanoi Mr. Becker. My name is Tara Fon-Dong. Father asked me to meet you."
"Oh yes." Her handshake feels warm and firm. "How do you do Tara? It's very nice to meet you."
"Nice to meet you too." She winks, "Oh, and no one's complained yet."
Behind her, a husky uniformed Vietnamese bulldozes his way through the crowd yelling in unintelligible words. Tara's face goes tight as piano wire. She spins around, snapping at him in Vietnamese, seemingly undaunted by his uniform or that ominous revolver strapped to his hip. I'm at a loss as to the shouting match's meaning but cordial pleasantries it isn't. The verbal slugfest is over in a few seconds. The angry man withdraws, staring at us, pacing like a panther in a cage. Tara's quick eyes dart from side to side. "Hurry Mr. Becker," she says motioning frantically. "We must go before he has second thoughts."
Trotting across the roadway to the parking lot, we climb into a battered canvas-covered Toyota Land Cruiser. Tara swings into the driver's seat and cranks the vehicle's engine.
"If that guy is your boyfriend or something, I'll be happy to catch a bus or a taxi."
"Just the stupid fuzz," she says waiving off concern. "Forget him."
"Cops with guns I don't forget. He was yelling like you were breaking some law."
"To him, you are breaking the law."
"Me? I just got here."
"You see, for an American gentleman to speak to, or be seen with a Vietnam lady is quite forbidden."
I gulp. "Forbidden? Well, some days I'm the dog and some days I'm the hydrant."
She laughs. Her delicate hand shifts the Toyota's transmission into gear. "He calls it -- ethnic pollution. Seems he forgot that it's the twenty-first century. So I had to remind him."
"I can imagine how you did that."
She glances over her shoulder. Her smile fades to a frown. "Shit," she mumbles, lips twitching. "Looks like that cop had second thoughts."
I twist in the seat. Coming across the parking lot is a white pickup with a revolving red light on its roof. "What does he want now?"
"Hang on Mr. Becker."
I grab for the dashboard as Tara's booted foot shoves the accelerator to the floorboard. Tires spin as we peal away in a spray of flying gravel. A siren wails. I roll my eyes. Less than an hour in Marxist vacationland and I'm already doing sixty in a parking lot with a crazy woman at the wheel with the cops in hot pursuit. Tires scream for mercy as the Toyota roars into traffic. With me clutching the seat for dear life, Tara rockets through Hanoi at mach-two. Weaving through this chaotic mishmash of motor scooters, bicyclists and rickshaws all going at warp-speed says there're only two types of drivers in Hanoi -- the quick and the dead.
"Looks like you lost him," I say as we screech around a corner.
"Pay him a penny for his intelligence, you'd get change back," she says with a devilish grin.
Tara's feisty self-confidence is as attractive as her physical splendor. Minh Von Dong had mentioned a daughter in his letters. But this daredevil on wheels hardly fits the demure Vietnamese gal I'd imagined. She looks a few years younger than I am, maybe 21 or 22. Quit slobbering Becker. She's forbidden fruit. Besides, that cop's pissed as hell. Good chance he's broadcasting an all-points-bulletin with orders to gun down the American on sight. Well, deep shit being what it is, may as well enjoy the view. Beneath Tara's pointed straw hat, lustrous skin covers her animated, high cheek boned face. Big deep-chocolate eyes sparkle like diamonds when she smiles. And those jeans - those incredible jeans. Watching Tara move in them is like is like getting subtle whiffs of pornography. It's impossible not to keep an eye on the sunlight splashing across her filmy lavender blouse and wonder . . . is she or isn't she? Not wanting to be too obvious, I turn away and stare at a passing billboard. Is it a Communist slogan warning foreigners not to touch? Brakes grab pitching me forward. We swerve off the road and skid to a stop behind a thicket of trees. Tara shifts the transmission into neutral and her burnished black boot ratchets the foot brake.
"You okay Mr. Becker?"
"I'm great. But I think my stomach's about five miles back."
"It'll catch up. Reach under your seat. Grab that screwdriver and license plates. Bring them."
"Isn't switching license plates illegal?" I ask as she's tightening a screw.
She considers that for a second, then shrugs, "Sure it is. But it's better than sitting under hot lights and being interrogated all night by crooked cops."
"I see your point," I say following her purposeful strides toward the front of the Toyota. "Now that we're turning to a life of crime, you may as well call me Jim."
"Okay Jim." Knees bend and jeans strain against her ass as she squats down to attack a rusty bolt. "Father said you work for American Army Intelligence, right?"