Episode 2 – The Photos

Daniel outside Veyo Villa, our house on Male’, Republic of Maldives. We were so lucky to have so much room on a tiny island 1 mile long and 1/2 a mile wide with a population of nearly 80’000 (yes, I did say eighty thousand). I spent a great deal of time reading up on that balcony, it had and amazing view out over the sea to Hulule Airport so I could watch the planes coming and going (about 3 a day in those days!). As you can see there is nothing tall around us, the law for building anything taller than the tallest palm tree had only just been lifted.
On Daniel’s beloved dirt bike, down by the harbour on one of the newly paved roads. A dirt bike on such a tiny island was completely unnecessary but since the unpaved roads often flooded higher than the top of one’s wellingtons (in which case nothing to do but take them off and wade) it was nice. Sadly I don’t have a photo of Daisy, my faithful Raleigh bicycle. When Daniel asked me why I called her Daisy I told him because in her heart she was yellow. After one trip away I came back to find he’d taken the whole bike apart, painted it daisy yellow and put it back together, complete with pristine Raleigh insignia. Every other bike on Male’ was black at that time!
A typical bumboat bringing in supplies while Daniel waits to unload. They look romantic (I suppose) but they take 1 hour 20 minutes to get to Tanjung Leman, are normally filthy dirty and frequently belch foul smoke.
Sorry, this photo is in a terrible state so didn’t scan well but i love it as Richard had just been born and Daniel looks so proud and happy.
Think my mother took this as we were both staring at Richard marveling at how clever we’d been to produce the most perfect baby in the entire world (and all you parents know exactly what I’m talking about). It’s odd to see Richard’s hair in that photo because he went bald as a coote very quickly and stayed that way for so long I wondered if he was going to grow any 🙂
Richard insisted on this photo, I’m not a fan, but it does remind me what a brilliant idea it was to go to Mum’s for the birth and then stay, especially as my Aunt & Uncle lived right next door. We had plenty of willing baby sitters and had such a wonderful Christmas we did the whole thing again the next year, yes, including the baby part!!!

November 2020, No. 2

I realise the last paragraph of episode 1 of this blog says I will explain why I decided to stay on Pulau Sibu, however I’ve changed my mind and decided to give a little background to us setting up home at Sea Gypsy. Probably procrastination because the sudden and unexpected death of one’s spouse, especially one so young, is a tough subject to make fun reading, which is what I’d like this blog to be. I promise I will get to it but let’s go back to 1992 and work our way there in chronological order.

Just rereading episode 1 and notice I didn’t actually mention at the beginning that I was pregnant when Daniel went on his jolly to Malaysia. I had never wanted children, ever. I was completely lacking in any type of biological clock or maternal instinct and avoided anything to do with children like the plague. Daniel was like the Pied Piper and wherever he went any children about would follow (for those of you that know our son Richard you will be well aware that he has inherited this trait from his father). Of course the fact that Daniel (and Richard for that matter) are both Peter Panesque (so to speak) has a great deal to do with it!

Upon discovering that Daniel regularly stopped off at a neighbour’s house on his way home from work in order to visit the new born baby (the mother was extolling his virtues as a helper because he didn’t just pop in to see the baby, he actually bathed her and looked after, whilst entertaining her older sister so that the mother could take a shower or relax for a while) I realised I had to allow the poor chap needed to be a father.  He had said that he would rather be with me without children than with someone else with children, and we could always adopt if I changed my mind later and was too old. 

Why is it that an older man with a younger woman doesn’t raise an eyebrow but an older woman with a younger man does?  I suppose times have changed but 30 years ago it was shocking.  Not that the age difference showed particularly, not at that point in time.  However I must admit it did occur to me that when I was 50 he would only just turning 39 and it would be very easy for him to dump me and marry a younger woman to have children.  I know, I know, you’ve already decided he was marvelous and loved me and he wouldn’t do that and so had I but I’m nothing if not a realist! Banking on the fact he was a commercial diver and sperm can be affected by pressure, plus the fact I’d been on the pill virtually continuously since I was 17, I took the risk of coming off the pill to get pregnant. Nothing happened, yay! I had taken the high road and done the right thing by my lovely husband, it wasn’t my fault if nothing happened.  My idyllic self absorbed life with my darling man could continue just as I loved it.  After nearly two years, in March 1992 to be precise, I went to the doctor with a suspected kidney infection, which he confirmed, and then continued with “and you’re pregnant”.  I was absolutely horrified. I slapped on a fake smile and leapt up and down with my deliriously happy husband. What on earth had I done? Especially as two months later Daniel went to Malaysia and by July 1992 he was living on Pulau Sibu, leaving me alone on Male’ to wind up our businesses. 

I stood staring at my own personal Survivor Island in the South China Sea and contemplated the 10 years I was being sentenced to, rather than the usual 42 days of the Survivor Island contestants.  At 39 years of age and 5 months pregnant I was quite sure this scenario was not included in my childhood dreams. It was 15th July and we had just signed the agreement with the landlord in Johor Bahru. I had refused to go to Pulau Sibu before we signed for fear of chickening out if I actually saw what we were undertaking.

“Remind me why we’re here.”

“Because it’s so beautiful and because it’s Malaysia!” beauty obviously being in the eye of the beholder, in this case my husband. “Here” was an extremely dirty mainland beach, alive with sand flies, looking out at an island that I thought probably resembled a craggy outcrop somewhere in a remote part of Scotland on a bad day.   The sea was full of white caps and it looked like rain was imminent.   I had been assured that July is the middle of the high season with bright blue skies, nothing but the gentlest of breezes and a sea like a duck pond.

The small speedboat we were about to board looked none too safe.   Not that we had to go far on the small speedboat, just out to a rather disreputable looking bumboat that was bobbing up and down belching foul black smoke from it’s rear end.   The prospect of getting out of the speedboat and into the bumboat was not appealing.     As previously stated, I do not consider myself an outdoors sort of person and certainly not an adventurous sort of person.   The fact that I had spent the last seven years of my life in the Maldive Islands in bare feet with no makeup and was now condemning myself to another ten years of island life was just one of God’s little jokes.   I therefore would not feel happy about the next hour of this journey even under normal circumstances but these were not normal circumstances because I was pregnant with my first child.   The two hour road trip from Johor Bahru to Tanjung Leman bouncing through plantations in an old mini bus type thing with lousy suspension and worse air conditioning had not agreed with me. Furthermore my legs and feet were starting to resemble something the Michelin Man could be proud of and I was not feeling terribly agile.   I was calculating the odds of having the life crushed out of me and baby between the two boats when a grinning Daniel asked,    “Are you ready darling?” hugely enjoying the whole thing.   I slapped on my best gung ho smile, not for nothing all that air hostess training!   “Of course, how exciting.” Having reached the bum boat and before I realised what was what, my husband, a strong chap used to lifting heavy weights, simply threw me onto the bumboat “to be on the safe side”, can’t think why I had been worried, I should have known he’d have a plan.

The trip had just gone from bad to worse as far as I was concerned.   The bumboat smelt of oil and diesel fumes and certainly hadn’t been cleaned since it was built, somewhere before the last war by the look of it.

“Isn’t this wonderful?”

“Absolutely!” My jaws were beginning to hurt from the effort of smiling.   All I can say is it’s a shame my Lord and Master didn’t have a plan for getting me off the bumboat at the other side.   Having spent a delightful hour or so ploughing through the waves over to Pulau Sibu we were greeted by the sight of a spindly wooden structure swaying its way out from the shore.   It occurred to me that in a fight between this structure, otherwise known as the jetty, and the bumboat, the jetty would lose.   This did not deter our gallant captain from heading straight for it.   I was stationed at the side of the bumboat and told to standby.   The bumboat was now alongside the jetty and smacking up against it as the breakers were rolling into the shore.   I eyed the poles of round jungle wood that one was supposed to climb to the top of the jetty.   They looked suspiciously slimy and treacherously slippery to me.   Luckily I had worn boat shoes, knowing myself to be notoriously klutzy when it comes to boats I wasn’t taking any chances.

“OK, go.”

I stepped off the boat and onto the nearest pole, my hands grabbing another pole further up.   At the same instant the boat was pulled away from the jetty by another wave, my feet slipped off the pole and I was left hanging.   I turned my head slightly and realized the boat was just about to come back and do the crushing job I had been worried about earlier.   My beloved’s face was looking somewhat horrified but he was bellowing in what I took to be Malay.   I hadn’t heard him speak Bahasa Melayu before but he obviously had not lost his command of the language because at that instant I felt several pairs of hands grabbing my wrists.   Having been fairly small chested all my life my swelling breasts had become a thing of fascination to me and I was looking forward to breast feeding.   I was also enjoying having a cleavage for the first time in my life.   I suddenly wished I were as flat as a board as I was heaved over each pole and then finally over the splintered wood that comprised the planking on the top of the jetty.   I lay there like a beached whale wondering if my boobs were still in one piece or, if I dared to look, I’d find them torn into the bloody shreds they now felt.   I finally rolled over onto my back and looked into the inquisitive faces of my rescuers.   Five pairs of bemused eyes all seemed to reflect the same, possibly contemptuous, thought, ‘so this must be the new boss’s wife’.

I’m popping in this brochure as it was the one that the landlord used to advertise Sea Gypsy pre the Wills’. It doesn’t look terrible and people actually paid to come and stay. I decided they must have used it as a camp site (time proved me right as all our first guests came loaded with pillows, sheets, towels, food & drink, etc.). There was general consternation when I asked for a towel, they finally found me one that looked like a dirty tea towel, when I asked about linen stock they looked confused. I threw the pillows out of the shack we’d been allocated as they were alive and piled all the clothes we had with us on the mattresses so that they wouldn’t touch our bodies.  For some strange reason there were fences everywhere and I wondered if it was to keep people in rather than out? I couldn’t try the food as it was too spicy and apparently the only thing to drink was Tiger (naturally), luckily the water was drinkable (as it still is). The kitchen fascinated me, not only because of the very low asbestos roof, making enough noise to wake the dead when it rained, and stifling heat but because the staff seemed to use it as a lounge, with chairs, guitar and of course smoking. The sink didn’t appear to be plumbed in so all that went into it was routed outside via an open gutter. Rubbish was left open and then, when enough, was burned pretty much anywhere at random. Consequently there were rats everywhere and cockroaches spilled out of any cupboard opened. Health and safety would have shut them down in a heartbeat, I felt like burning the place down and running for the hills (or in my case the flat land since the Maldives doesn’t actually have any hills). 

Daniel assured me that by the time I returned to Malaysia he’d have the resort built and everything organised. I could have cared less, I had already made my mind up that what he really wanted to do was build the place but that he would HATE being a hotelier. I left for the Maldives feeling that my sojourn on Pulau Sibu would be short lived, meanwhile I had more important things to think about, like what on earth I was meant to do with a baby? How often and at what time does a nappy need changing? How often and at what time do you feed it? I knew the very person to ask.

I had the great good fortune to meet a very highly qualified nanny in the Maldives. She was working for a friend of mine who owned four resorts there and had a baby boy. Nancy, Daniel and I became great friends and on her days off she would come down to ‘town’ and stay with us. One mile long and half a mile wide with unpaved streets, 80 mosques and no building taller than the tallest palm tree, Male’, the big city, was not atypical of a capital city. However, when you live on an island that takes ten minutes to walk around it’s a veritable metropolis. I remember on one visit Nancy and I were terribly excited to go to the opening of the first supermarket and got even more excited when we found out they actually had trolleys. I also remember my prize purchase was a tin of John West Kipper Fillets (talk about coals to Newcastle!).

I sat Nancy down at our kitchen table, got out a pen and paper, told her I was pregnant and then demanded she gave me a list of what I needed to buy and the answer to my questions, reference nappies, feed, etc. So horrified that I would actually kill the baby she immediately told me she would come to Pulau Sibu (knowing the islands from previous travel) at the beginning of 1993 to teach me what to do and thus save the child. I cannot begin to tell you of my relief and finally relaxed.

It’s hard to remember what life was like pre cellular phones and free video calling but in 1992 being apart meant practically no communication. Although at that time Sea Gypsy had a perfect radio phone line for international calls the cost was prohibitive. I missed Daniel so much and was dying to see him for what I thought would be a two week romantic stay in our newly rebuilt resort before we headed off to my mother’s home in Florida for the baby’s birth and a lovely Christmas. From the (infrequent) phone calls I gathered things were going well and he was obviously enjoying himself enormously, despite missing the great love of his life… no, not me, scuba diving, he had no compressor as yet!

Daniel met me in Singapore and we had a wonderful couple of days, however I felt all might not be well in paradise. As we arrived on the island I instantly understood this would be no romantic idyll, what I did not know was that I (singular, as in not part of a couple) would spend the next two weeks trawling around Johor Bahru looking for linen, cutlery, crockery, etc. or that my toe rag of husband had changed his ticket and would not be flying to Florida with me (where’s the angry swearing emoji when you need it?). Not only was the resort still a building site, when I asked about mundane matters like taking reservations, menus, laundry, etc., etc. Daniel brushed it off as though it was nothing because it wasn’t “his department”, except marketing, I wasn’t to worry about that.

At 17 I had gone to work in a hotel in Austria as a bar maid, that turned into a summer season as a skivvy in another hotel and a third season promoted to silver service waitress. In London I was assistant to the Food & Beverage Manager of a large casino, also moonlighting in the casino VIP lounges & bars for special events. In other words I had a background in F&B, plus I had worked in various offices and been an air hostess, all of which (apparently) made all things to do with the actual running of the resort “my department”, including the accounts.

The heck with it, I didn’t care, I’d do my part until he couldn’t stand it any more and we’d leave. In the meantime I waddled around JB in the heat to find what we needed, came up with some plans for admin and ticked off the days till I could fly out. We didn’t stand a hope in hell of opening in for Chinese New Year which was 23rd January 1993 and I still hadn’t seen any sign of marketing from Daniel.

Daniel made it to Florida two days prior to Richard’s (quick and easy) birth on 18th November 1992 and all too soon our amazing holiday and Christmas was over, we flew back to Malaysia on 2nd January 1993 with our precious son.

It was then the reality of our situation hit me like a cartoon anvil flattening Wile E. Coyote and I felt just as dazed. It wasn’t standing once again on that dirty mainland beach looking at Pulau Sibu in pouring rain. It wasn’t that this time the monsoon seas were so rough we couldn’t land at the resort (well, we couldn’t even if it wasn’t rough as there was no longer a jetty, that spindly structure fell down annually). It wasn’t that my pathological fear of boats made me believe I was taking my precious six week old baby on a death trap or even having to climb another slippery bamboo jetty at Coconut Village to walk through to Sea Gypsy. It was the broken bridge over the mangroves which meant we had to wade through them knee deep in yuk, knowing all the while that the only thing waiting to greet us the other side was a wooden hut in a rat ridden, snake infested dump without any home comforts and not even the chance of decent milk to make a proper cup of tea!

Will I make Daniel’s life a living hell for inflicting this upon us or will learn to love the outdoor life? To be continued next month…

If you have been, thanks for reading x

October 2020, No. 1

“How did you end up here?” a constant question from guests at Sea Gypsy, a good one, I often wonder myself?  Had anyone asked a teen Linda would you spend 28 years running a resort on a small tropical island in the South China Sea there would have been a categorical and resounding NO!

A favourite 1938 Punch cartoon entitled The British Character:  Adaptability to Foreign Conditions would appear to sum me up. Another anomaly considering I was born in Norway and applied for British nationality at the age of 19, but that’s another story.

The story of why is really one about my husband Daniel Wills and not about me at all.

Daniel was born in Singapore, the son of a British expatriate planter whose father and grandfather had also been in Malaya, as it then was.   The plantation was in the state of Johor and Daniel had grown up loving the country and the people.   Like most children of expats he was packed off to boarding school at a very young age but spent the long holidays playing on and around the plantation.   His first language was Bahasa Melayu and his heart was truly Malaysian.   His upbringing was very Somerset Maughan and I used to love listening to the stories of his young days, like trekking through the jungle with his family in full evening dress carrying a trifle to the next planter’s house for Christmas dinner.

Daniel and I had met in the Maldives some years earlier.   I had set up and was operating a flying ambulance service and he was running a large dive base.   Our relationship was one of those strange things that are hard to fathom or explain.   Quite apart from the fact he was eleven years younger than me, our beliefs were just about 180 degrees diametrically opposed on any given topic from religion to politics, from music to literature.   Lively debate was a healthy feature in our household but not arguments.   We each respected the other’s opinion and enjoyed our discussions.   Daniel adored the sea, lived for it since learning to dive at the age of 12, and made his career out of being in it one way or another.   Apart from being a very qualified commercial diver he was a sporty, swimming, sailing, rugby playing, jungle trekking sort of chap that couldn’t stand cities and got lost trying to find his way back to the car park after the cinema.   He hated living in Europe with a passion and only ever wanted to live in Asia.  I only ever wanted to live slap bang in the middle of Chelsea and wear evening clothes.   If I ever felt the need to commune with nature I read National Geographic.   That way you don’t get dirty or sweaty and it doesn’t smell.   Why I was even living and working in the Maldives is a long story and not one for this blog.   Suffice it to say I never quite plan my life, it just sort of happens to me and I go with the flow.

Daniel had always wanted to “go home”.  We had a successful commercial diving business in the Maldive Islands when a friend asked if he’d like to visit an island in Malaysia with a view to starting a dive base at a resort that was under construction.  Daniel jumped at the chance of perhaps opening a dive base at this new resort as a way of getting a foot back into the land he loved.   I was completely happy with our life in the Maldives and didn’t see this new venture as much of a threat.   I thought it would just mean owning and operating the dive base in Malaysia as part of our existing commercial dive business.    Daniel could commute and we would stay put on Male.

So off went hubby on a jolly to look at putting a dive base in this Malaysian resort and came back a week later having taken a ten year lease on 5 acres of beachfront jungle property.  He had fallen in love with the resort where he had stayed, or rather the piece of land the so called resort was situated on, and asked the owner if we could lease it (after quite a few Tiger beers in the early hours of the morning I imagine).   The owner not being too slow to spot a complete idiot when he saw one (even if he was also full of Tiger beer) produced a draft lease in short order and was ecstatic at the thought of handing the place over.   He was sick of running it after seven years, we really should have asked why.

Friends and family used to believe that I wore the pants in our house as I appear to be independent, am fairly loud, say what I think and had generated my own income rather than be an employee since the age of 27.   And of course I was so much older than Daniel.   In truth he ruled the roost but there was no fist of iron.   He was simply so nice about everything, so loving and kind that I never had the heart to disagree with what really made him happy.   Also he was an exceedingly good breadwinner and didn’t mind if I didn’t want to work, which I felt gave him the right to decide where and how he was going to win the bread, so to speak.   At the end of the day if building a beach resort with a dive base in Malaysia was what my husband wanted to do, that’s what we’d do.   But don’t think that didn’t stop me telling him, long and very loud, ad nauseum (literally in my case) that he would absolutely hate running a resort once he’d built the damn thing!

Daniel set off almost immediately, leaving a very disgruntled and hormonal wife to close down our life in the Maldives.  He was having the time of his life creating his idea of heaven, I was busy being completely unamused whilst winding up our business and destroying my nest when I should have been building one.  I caught up with him two months before my due date only to discover a building site with no cohesive plan of how anything would actually be done and never a thought about sheets, towels, crockery, cutlery, menus, etc. Apparently that was all “my department” so I spent two weeks crawling around shop houses in Johor Bahru and then did what any self respecting mother to be would do in that situation, went home to my mother.  My mother happened to be living in Florida at the time, Daniel managed to arrive two days prior to his son Richard’s birth, and we both had so much fun baby number two was instantly planned for the following monsoon!

Having opened in February 1993 the marketing comprised of Daniel visiting Raffles Marina, the Tanglin Club and the Singapore Cricket Club and announcing “Dan’s back in town, why don’t you all come up to the island?”.

By April 1993 I was pregnant again and by June 1993 Daniel told me he didn’t want to run a resort on Pulau Sibu (enormous will power stopped the “I told you so”) from which time he was constantly on the move looking for what he’d really like to do.  Here I should mention that a great friend on mine, Nancy, a highly qualified and sought after professional nanny, had followed us to Pulau Sibu from the Maldives in 1993 to teach me how not to kill a baby, since I’d never wanted children and apparently had no natural instinct for being a mother whatsoever.  Nancy became a very important part of the Sea Gypsy story and she was one of the reasons it was so easy for Daniel to keep leaving the island in 1993.  She moved on in October 1993, not realising how soon she’d be returning or for how long.

Our daughter Jade was born in January 1994, again in Florida, and by the time I returned to the island in April 1994 I knew our time on Pulau Sibu was drawing to a close, and that was absolutely fine by me.  In June 1994 Daniel was offered an excellent position at a fantastic new (not yet opened) Marina in Desaru, good salary, house, car, expenses and great prospects. Wonderful, just near the ferry to Singapore, I was finally going to have it all!

In mid August 1994 I received a message that Daniel had come off a jet ski, which I found odd as he hated them.  Apparently they’d been putting buoys in to act as markers for slalom races at the official opening of the marina and Daniel had decided to test them out.  The accident happened at 2.30 pm but there were no other managers on duty and no SOP for accidents at that time. It was midnight before we got him to the first (supposedly) good hospital in Johor Bahru, where they proceeded to butcher him.  Moved to Singapore the following day it was already too late, he fought the good fight for six weeks but died of septicemia at the end of September 1994. He was 29 years old.

I said this would be the story of how I “ended up” on Pulau Sibu, however it really doesn’t explain why with no home on the mainland, no boat other than a tiny 40hp, US$50’000 in debt and two babies I decided to stay on Pulau Sibu. That story is for next time.

If you have been, thanks for reading x