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Further Afield
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We get lost for the next three hours. We putter along lazy back roads and through villages lulled by the heat, past the huge limestone formations rocketing out of rice paddies, giving water buffalo in the road a wide berth. We remain vaguely lost until noon, when a road sign materializes and points us directly towards Tam Coc Cave. The downpour starts just as we park the motorbike and lasts long enough for us to have lunch and play several games of cards.
The boatman rows funny, facing forward, and some of the boats we pass are rowed by foot and packed with snacks. The mediocrity of the ride is suspended every time we enter a cave where pure magic overtakes us as our boat cuts a line through the water-reflected cave roofs. The presence of a 'boat-lady' baffles us until she busts out her embroidery and tries to push it on us. The rest of the ride is refusing pillowcases. As the sun begins to set we decide to ride 30 km southeast to Phat Diem, the Sino-Vietnamese Cathedral with European influence built in 1891. After 15 km and several near misses with herds of school-kids on bicycles, the sun is kissing the horizon and sending pink ripples across the sky. Another 15 km and we've pulled over twice to check out huge cathedrals before we finally find the church we're looking for. The curling roof of Phat Diem cuts a magnificent black silhouette into a sky full of purple dusk and when we join worshippers in the wooden pews, the hum of their chanting buzzes up our tailbones. After services finish, we mount the motorbike again for the thigh numbing ride back to Ninh Binh. In the dark, our eyes pinched against armies of bugs, we ride through an ocean of stars that swirl in our wake above the sleeping fields full of rice.

Illustration by Bob Veon
(Bob
Veon's Website)
Read more about the author of this story:
Mary Slaughter
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