I heard him before I saw him. “You Bad Gweilo!” “You Bad Gweilo” this man
yelled as I was knocked to the ground dropping the two bags of water balloons
that I was carrying – one in each hand. Dazed, I look up and see an enraged
Chinese man, who looked exactly like Jackie Chan dressed in a white skin tight
T-shirt that was now drenched with water from the water balloons that had hit
him. I struggled to get up without slipping on the terrazzo floor in Ocean
Terminal, the shopping centre that was located right at the foot of Kowloon
Harbour in Hong Kong. Right next to this shopping centre was the Star Ferry,
which took you across the harbour to Central on Hong Kong Island. As I struggled to get up, I saw the back
heels of two of my friends who were with us, Simon and Kevin, as they went
running off. My other friend Jamie, who was too large to run quickly, was stuck
behind with me. Jamie was a nice guy who unfortunately suffered from a
condition in which his body grew faster than his bones could develop. At 14, he
was over 6 feet tall and was the size of a grown man. As a result he was always
injuring himself with sprains and fractures. So Jamie and I were stuck to
contend with this very angry man and his now growing family which had been
gathering at the scene and seemed to number 60 people at this point. The man
motioned for the other male adults in his group to apprehend us, which they did
by bending our arms behind our backs and marching us through Ocean Terminal,
past all the people to the police station at the Star Ferry, where we awaited
our fate. We had no idea what was going
to happen to us, and as we pondered the possibilities: deportation, lashings and
jail, my mind began to go over the day’s events to think about what had just
happened.
Several weeks before, I was on the phone talking to Simon on
one of my infamous study breaks when he mentioned that he and Kevin would often
go to Ocean Terminal and throw water balloons at the boat workers from the
parkade of the shopping centre. Ocean Terminal had a multi-floor parkade that
faced the harbour, while all the shops were located in front of this facing
away from the harbour. Between Ocean Terminal’s parkade and the harbour was a large
boardwalk where people could walk along the harbour. Now the other thing I need to explain at this
point is that in Hong Kong, it was a criminal offense to let anything fall from
a height. This is because the entire colony was mostly apartment buildings, and
any land that was not apartments, was mostly walkways, so the danger to people
was very real if somebody were to drop something from a height. There were even
PSA’s about this on TV that would show a callous Chinese man drinking a beer
and then chucking the empty bottle behind him and out of his apartment window. I
could not believe what I was hearing in light of what I knew, so I called him
on it. “You’re full of shit Simon. You and Kevin haven’t done that. I don’t
believe you.”. But he insisted that it was true, and suggested that we do it
the next time we were together.
So about a month later, we had made plans to get together
and hang out for a day and night on the town. Simon, Kevin, Jamie and myself.
Our day would consist of going to the Star House Arcade and playing video games
for a few hours, hitting up either a McDonalds or a Spaghetti House – a pizza
place in Hong Kong and then just generally hanging out downtown or going to the
Jockey Club, where Simon’s dad was a member.
We did all those things – playing basketball near Simon’s place in the
morning, before heading to the arcade in the afternoon, and then to the Jockey
Club in the evening. It was here, after hanging out and having a few shandies
(beer mixed with lemon-lime soda – the one drink that people were willing to
serve to minors) that we discussed what we should do next. At this point Kevin
suggested that we go to Toys-R-Us in Ocean Terminal and pick up some water
balloons. At this point I realized that he was actually serious. I was not
thrilled at the idea as I really did not relish the thought of actually doing
something that could get us into trouble. But I didn’t want to be a killjoy,
and I must confess that there was a part of me that was excited by the thought
of doing something rogue.
So we left the Jockey Club and headed on the subway toward
the station at Tsim Sha Tsui, which was the closest station to the harbour. We
made our way to Ocean Terminal, found the balloons and several shopping bags
and made our way to the nearest bathroom. When we got there, we filled about 50
balloons with water and tied off the ends. They filled 4 plastic shopping bags
and were quite heavy. Kevin suggested that Jamie and I carry the bags so that
he and Simon could keep a lookout. Stupidly, I agreed to hold the bags. We made
our way from the bathroom up to the top level of the mall and then located the
exit to the parkade. We moved through the parkade, being careful not to be
seen, over to the side facing the harbour. We could see the boats moored up to
the harbour and the deckhands moving cargo and doing other duties aboard the
ships. I got ready to watch Simon and Kevin throw the balloons at these poor
souls who would be powerless to do anything since they couldn’t leave their
posts and wouldn’t be able to see where the balloons came from in the first
place.
Simon and Kevin grabbed their first balloons and took aim.
But much too my horror, instead of throwing them at the ships, they started
throwing them at the shoppers who were walking on the boardwalk below.
Me: “What are you guys doing????. You told me that you only
threw them at the boats. These people can come after us. We’re sure to get into
trouble.”.
Kevin looked at me with a scornful look of exasperated
disbelief.
Kevin: “Calm down. Nobody is going to find us. How are they
going to know exactly where the balloons came from? This parkade is 5 levels
high. Even if they can see that they came from the parkade, they will never be
able to tell which floor. Besides, by the time they get up here we’ll be long
gone. Relax.”.
After looking down and seeing nobody looking up or any other
sign of people coming after us, I relaxed and began to throw a few balloons
myself. In no time, we had gone through all 50 balloons. So it was time to go
back and fill the rest of the balloons. We made our way down to another bathroom. While Kevin kept
watch at the bathroom door, we filled the last 50 balloons. As before Jamie and
I held the four shopping bags of balloons. As we headed out of the bathroom I
laughed and said, “Yeah Kev, you’re right, but wouldn’t it be funny if we
actually did hit someone and they were looking for us right now?”. No sooner
were the words out of my mouth, that I was violently shoved backward against
the outside of the bathroom door, causing me to drop the two bags of balloons I
was carrying.
Back at the police station a very stern looking Chinese
policeman was processing our paperwork and seemed to take forever, which only
increased our apprehension of what was about to happen to us. After what seemed
like an hour, he picked up the receiver for a large, black old fashioned rotary
phone and leaned forward. “What is your parent’s telephone number?” he asked in
a demanding tone. I gave him the number without hesitation. I could hear my father’s voice
answer on the other end, even though the policeman was 2 feet from me. He
proceeded to explain our transgressions to my father and then went on to
explain that the penalties for this sort of thing were quite severe. At that
point, my father asked the policeman to hand me the phone. The policeman complied and handed me the
receiver.
Dad: “You have a problem son.”
Me: What’s going to
happen dad?”
Dad: I don’t know
son. I’ve tried to tell you that you are in a colony, you aren’t in North
America. We’ll have to wait and see.”.
At this point, I handed the phone back to the policeman, who
told my father that he wanted to call Jamie’s parents and inform them before
discussing with his colleagues what should be done with us. Then he hung up, leaned forward toward Jamie
and asked him for his phone number. After speaking with Jamie's father, he sat back in his rounded wooden backed desk chair and
began to speak to his two colleagues in Cantonese. I had no idea what he was saying, but from the sighs, and periodic pauses, I guessed that he
was either reluctant to charge us and was going to let us go, or he was going
to enforce the actual penalty, which was still unclear. I shut my eyes and prayed silently for what
seemed like several minutes.
Finally, the officer stopped talking, sat up in his chair
and straightened his collar.
Officer: “Throwing things from a
height is a very serious offence. So serious in fact, that is
punishable by a jail sentence. Do you understand? However, in light of your
age, and the fact that neither of you has a record of any prior offences, we
are letting you go with a warning. Here are your ID cards”.
With that he hands
us back our HK ID cards – the card that everyone in Hong Kong was required to
carry on their person at all times. “Would you like to call your parents
back?”. I was so relieved at this point,
that we were not going to jail that I did not answer right away. Jamie indicated
that he wanted to call and then after he was done, I called my parents and
spoke to my father. I told him that they were letting us go and I was coming
home. It was just after 10 o'clock at night when I left the police station to come home.
I arrived back at my parent's apartment just after 11 o'clock. My dad invited me to
sit with him at the dining room table, where he taught me how to play cribbage
and listening to me recount the night’s events. In the middle of the cribbage
game, the phone rang. It was Jamie’s father, wishing to speak to my father.
After a brief exchange, both men decided that it was best to contact Kevin and
Simon’s parents to explain that their sons had run off and left us in the
lurch. Neither Jamie's father, nor my father felt that this was behavior was something that should be encouraged
in young men. So Jamie's father told my father that he would call Kevin’s father, while my
dad spoke to Simon's father. He then hung up and went back to the
game with me, saying "I'll call him later.". But within minutes the phone rang again. It was Simon’s father.
He and my father spoke for a few minutes and then ended the call. I won at my
first game of cribbage and went off to bed exhausted.
The following Monday at school Simon and Kevin were both
really pissed off at me. When I asked them why they said that they had been grounded
for the rest of the school year, which at this point was about another 3 months
– no parties, no movies and no dates! I felt really bad for them, especially since neither Jamie nor I got in
any real trouble from our parents, who felt that we had learned our lesson.
The punishments fit the crimes. Simon and Kevin got nailed for abandoning you.
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