My father used to be a notorious gangster, and my mother was the rebellious, unconventional type.
For most of my childhood, that was simply the weather inside our home.
It was loud when it wanted to be loud, careless when it became inconvenient, and utterly uninterested in the sort of routines other families seemed to treat as sacred.

No one checked whether I had packed my schoolbag.
No one asked what I had learnt that day.
If I came home early, nobody questioned it.
If I came home late, they assumed I had found something useful to do.
My father, Tô Mãnh, believed independence meant allowing a child to solve nearly every problem alone.
My mother, Liễu Yến, believed children became weak when adults watched them too closely.
Between those two philosophies, I grew up unnoticed.
Then, when I was twelve, I brought home a report card.
The evening had been damp and grey, and the narrow kitchen smelt faintly of cigarette smoke and boiled water.
My father was seated at the table, one tattooed arm stretched beside an ashtray.
A blue dragon wound from his wrist towards his elbow, its head disappearing beneath his sleeve.
My mother stood near the kettle with a cigarette at the corner of her mouth.
I placed the report card on the table.
Neither of them reached for it at first.
School papers arrived often enough, and most disappeared beneath unpaid bills, takeaway menus and old receipts.
This one remained visible because I did not move away.
My mother noticed my hand still resting on it.
“What is that?”
“My report card.”
She picked it up and looked at the first page.
Then she turned it over.
Then she turned it back again.
Her eyes narrowed.
“How do you read this?”
I pointed to the marks printed along the top.
“Literature, 98. Maths, 100. English, 99.”
My father’s head lifted.
“What did you say?”
I repeated the marks.
His tattooed arm came down on the table hard enough to rattle the mugs.
“She went to school for a whole month?”
“Yes,” my mother said.
She sounded offended by the evidence.
The kettle clicked off.
Steam faded against the tiles.
My father put out his cigarette, lit another and looked from the paper to me.
My mother held the report card beneath the light as if she were checking whether it had been forged.
“Mr Tô,” she said, “could the hospital have given us the wrong baby?”
He considered the possibility.
That was the part that hurt.
Not because he suspected anything, but because he treated the question with such genuine care.
After a few seconds, he shook his head.
“No.”
“How do you know?”
“That stubbornness is yours.”
My mother glared at him.
“Mine?”
“Yes.”
“You are the one who was surrounded by fifty-seven pupils from School No. 3 and insisted on fighting them one at a time.”
“That was courage.”
“That was refusing to run because people were watching.”
“It worked.”
“You were in hospital afterwards.”
“That is not the point.”
Their argument moved away from me, as arguments in our house often did.
One sentence became another, and soon they were debating a fight that had happened years before I was born.
I waited.
Eventually, they remembered the report card.
They looked at me together.
My father stood, walked round the table and crouched in front of my chair.
His face became very serious.
It was the expression he used when discussing money, favours or promises that could not be taken back.
“Niệm Niệm,” he said, “tell me the truth.”
“Yes.”
“Has anyone bullied you at school?”
“No.”
“Has anyone tried to take money from you?”
“No.”
“Has anyone threatened you?”
“No.”
He searched my face for the hidden answer.
There was none.
“Then why did you not skip school?”
I thought carefully before replying.
“Because I like going.”
The kitchen went quiet.
Not ordinary quiet.
It was the sort of quiet that arrives after someone says something too strange to challenge immediately.
My father slowly stood.
He walked to the balcony door and stared through the glass at the damp roofs beyond.
His back seemed heavier than it had moments earlier.
My mother joined him.
She placed one hand on his shoulder.
“Try to think more broadly,” she said.
“My daughter likes school.”
His voice was hoarse.
“Yes.”
“She enjoys it.”
“It appears so.”
He turned to her.
“Liễu Yến, have we raised her incorrectly?”
It was the first time I had seen my parents examine their choices as parents.
For one brief moment, I believed the report card had changed something important.
I imagined they might begin asking about lessons.
Perhaps they would learn the name of my teacher.
Perhaps my father would stop using school attendance as proof that I lacked imagination.
I should have known them better.
The next afternoon, my father took me to a tattoo parlour.
The place smelt of disinfectant, ink and old smoke.
Sheets of designs covered one wall.
There were dragons with open jaws, tigers with bright eyes, snakes wound around knives, flowers threaded through skulls and flames designed to climb an arm.
My father pointed at them with the satisfaction of a man offering a child a generous treat.
“Choose one.”
I looked at him.
“One what?”
“A tattoo.”
“I do not want one.”
The answer struck him harder than my marks had.
“Why?”
“Because I am twelve.”
“I was twelve when I got my first tattoo.”
He rolled up his sleeve.
Beneath the blue dragon was an older design, faded and uneven.
It was meant to be a snake.
One side of its body drifted away from the other, giving it the expression of an animal that had lost confidence halfway through moving.
The tattooist looked over.
“Mr Tô, I told you years ago that one was crooked.”
“Be quiet.”
My father tapped the snake.
“It still looks impressive.”
“It looks surprised,” I said.
The tattooist coughed to hide a laugh.
My father ignored him.
He led me through every design on the wall.
I refused the dragon.
I refused the tiger.
I refused the flower, although he said my mother might approve of that one.
I refused a tiny star that he insisted barely counted.
At last, he accepted defeat.
On the way home, drizzle stippled the pavement and gathered on the shoulders of his coat.
He rang my mother.
“Liễu Yến, it failed.”
“What failed?”
“She will not get a tattoo.”
There was a brief silence.
Then my mother said, “Useless.”
She ended the call.
My father stared at the dark phone screen.
“I raised you to make your own decisions,” he said.
“I made one.”
“That is not the point.”
The following day, my mother took control.
She brought me to a billiards hall where green tables stood beneath bright hanging lights and every sound seemed sharper than it should have been.
Balls cracked together.
Cues tapped the floor.
Conversations lowered as my mother walked in.
She picked up a cue and placed it in my hands.
“Come on,” she said. “I will teach you.”
“I have homework.”
“You can do it later.”
“It is due tomorrow.”
She rested both palms on the table.
“Is homework more important than billiards?”
“Yes.”
Her expression broke.
My mother was not a woman easily wounded.
She could be shouted at without blinking.
She could be insulted and answer with a smile that made the other person regret speaking.
But my answer left her staring at me as if I had rejected the family itself.
She crouched and held my face between her hands.
“Niệm Niệm,” she said, “has school brainwashed you?”
“No.”
“Then why are you so well behaved?”
I had never thought of myself as well behaved.
I simply preferred outcomes that could be predicted.
Homework completed became marks.
Marks became ranking.
Ranking became money.
I told her the final part.
“The pupil who comes first receives a scholarship.”
Her hands loosened.
“How much?”
“£3,000 a term.”
My mother rose slowly.
For several seconds, she said nothing.
A man at the next table missed an easy shot because he was listening.
My mother glanced towards him.
He looked away at once.
Then she turned back to me.
“£3,000?”
“Yes.”
“Every term?”
“Yes.”
Her entire argument rearranged itself.
“That changes matters.”
She returned the cue to its rack.
“Carry on coming first.”
That was the first time I had ever persuaded my mother without pleading, crying or raising my voice.
Ability had convinced her where obedience never could.
Money was the closest thing our family had to a shared moral principle.
From that day, my parents stopped trying to make me a delinquent.
They did not become conventional.
My father did not begin attending parent meetings with a notebook.
My mother did not put my timetable on the fridge.
No one packed fruit into a neat lunchbox or reminded me to revise.
Their care simply changed direction.
My father bought me pens in bulk because he had heard serious pupils used many of them.
Most were the wrong colour.
My mother kept my scholarship letters in a biscuit tin with cash, spare keys and several receipts she refused to throw away.
When I studied at the kitchen table, they lowered their voices for nearly ten minutes at a time.
That was love in our house.
It was rarely elegant.
It was almost never quiet.
But it was there.
The problem was that love inside a home does not control what waits outside it.
On my first morning at secondary school, the pavement beyond the gate was crowded with families.
Parents adjusted ties and smoothed school jumpers.
Some checked lunch bags.
Others repeated reminders about behaviour, punctuality and homework.
Children stood with stiff shoulders, pretending not to need any of it.
I arrived on the back of my father’s modified motorbike.
The engine announced us before the gate came into view.
Heads turned along the pavement.
My father braked sharply near the entrance, one boot striking the ground.
He looked delighted.
I climbed off and removed my helmet.
“Remember,” he said, loud enough for several families to hear, “if anyone bullies you, ring me.”
“There is no need.”
“Why not?”
“Because fighting can lead to arrest.”
He frowned.
“And?”
“A disciplinary record could affect university admission.”
He stared at me.
The engine continued rumbling between us.
My father had faced groups of men without stepping back.
He had argued with people who carried knives.
Yet the words university admission left him completely defenceless.
Around us, the watching parents made quick decisions.
A man in a dark suit drew his son two steps away.
“Keep your distance,” he murmured.
He spoke quietly.
Not quietly enough.
I pretended to adjust the strap of my bag.
My father did not notice.
He was still trying to understand how the possibility of a future record could outweigh the immediate satisfaction of winning a fight.
“Ring me anyway,” he said at last.
“I will.”
He nodded, satisfied by the promise, and rode away.
The sound of the motorbike faded.
The looks did not.
There are names that open doors.
There are names that make strangers smile before they have met you.
My parents’ names did neither.
To my father and mother, Tô Mãnh and Liễu Yến belonged to old stories.
They were stories about fights, defiance, fear and survival.
To other people, those stories were warnings.
I had not taken part in any of them.
That made no difference.
By the time I reached my classroom, the rumours had arrived first.
“Her father is Tô Mãnh.”
“The tattooed one?”
“The one who used to control people around West City?”
“I heard he was arrested after a fight.”
“I heard it was more than one fight.”
“Do not sit beside her.”
Whispers moved quickly because no one believed they were responsible for where they ended.
Each pupil only passed on what someone else had said.
By the end, the story belonged to the entire room and to no one.
I chose the first desk by the window.
It offered the best light and the fewest distractions.
The chair beside me remained empty.
Pupils filled the seats behind and across from me.
No one chose mine.
I placed my pencil case on the desk.
I opened my textbook to the first lesson.
Rain marked the window in fine, slanting lines.
Outside, coats moved through the courtyard beneath umbrellas.
Inside, the room smelled of damp fabric, paper and floor cleaner.
The whispers continued.
They were not loud enough to challenge directly.
That was deliberate.
Cruelty is often most comfortable when it can pretend to be concern.
“She looks normal.”
“That does not mean anything.”
“Do you think she fights?”
“She gets top marks.”
“That is strange.”
“Maybe her father forced the school.”
I read the first paragraph of the lesson.
Then I read it again.
The words stayed clear even while the room moved around them.
Studying had always given me something my family could not.
Rules.
A correct answer did not care who my father was.
A mark did not lower its voice when I walked past.
A page did not step away from me at a gate.
The classroom door opened.
Our teacher entered carrying a register.
Mr Liu was over forty and wore glasses with thin frames.
His shirt was neatly pressed.
His expression suggested a man who valued order and expected the room to do the same.
Conversations stopped.
Chairs scraped.
He placed the register on the desk and looked across the class.
His gaze moved from row to row.
When it reached me, it paused.
Only half a second.
No one else might have noticed.
I did.
Recognition entered his eyes first.
Then caution.
Then something harder to name.
He looked away and began the lesson.
His voice remained even.
His hands did not.
When he turned a page in the register, the corner shook once against his thumb.
A few pupils saw it.
Their attention shifted from him to me.
The empty chair beside mine suddenly felt larger.
I kept my eyes on the textbook.
My father believed danger announced itself with engines, threats and raised voices.
My mother believed it could always be met by refusing to show fear.
Neither of them understood this kind.
This danger arrived politely.
It wore glasses.
It held a register.
It looked at a twelve-year-old child for half a second and made an entire classroom wonder what it knew.
Mr Liu called the first name.
A pupil answered.
He called the second.
Then the third.
Each response came quickly.
The ordinary rhythm should have softened the room.
It did not.
My name waited further down the page.
I watched his finger move towards it.
When it stopped, the class seemed to stop with it.
Mr Liu lifted his head.
For the first time that morning, he looked directly at me.
And before he spoke, I understood that my marks, my scholarship and every careful choice I had made might not be enough to separate me from the two names everyone already feared.