This Mournable Body
Tracey pushes her trolley beside yours, commenting on the price of produce in relation to its quality, which she judges is on the verge of extortion, entirely fuelled by unrestrained corruption. You change the subject, asking about girls you both knew who were in your class. Tracey is still in touch with a few and gives you scraps of news. Neither of you has much shopping to do and you agree to catch up.
After delivering Leon’s pineapple and Nyasha’s groceries, you join Tracey for drinks at the Mediterranean Bakery next to the cinema. It is her treat. You marvel at the grace and ease with which your companion obtains his attention and extracts a menu from the waiter. She pores over the café’s offerings for a few minutes, after which she declares she is uninterested in the burgers with chips, the chicken with chips, the pork chop with chips. The quiche is an option, but in the end she decides against it. You agree that you are not interested either. In the end your decision is not to eat, but only to drink.
“I remember what yours is,” Tracey smiles. There is a patina of nostalgia in her voice as she orders two double gin and tonics. At the same moment, without a word, you both burst out laughing, recalling Steers, D’Arcy and MacPedius Advertising Agency happy hour on Friday evenings.
“You look as though you got through everything in one piece, though,” Tracey says, squeezing citrus into her glass in an old habit. “And you’ve lost weight. That’s great. I’m really glad. You’re looking magnificent.”
You nod. “I’m doing all right. You don’t look so bad yourself.”
“I’ve been looking out for you for a while now,” Tracey says. “This place is a dorp. I thought I’d bump into you at some point. Well, it’s happened, although it took a while.”
She gazes at you directly and says, “You’re not married, are you?”
When you do not answer, she lets the moment pass. You speak about school again, how you would have liked to keep in touch with more old classmates, and then turn to conversation concerning how the country is going to the dogs. You keep the waiter busy. You giggle. The sun goes down.
Hours later you sway on rolling paving stones, making too much noise and patting the black velvet of night, in an effort to say goodbye. Tracey finds everything bloody hilarious too and guides you by the elbow to her red Pajero after you accept her offer of a ride home.
She stops at a traffic light, telling you it got so bloody unbearable at the agency she had to leave after you did. At the corner of Churchill Avenue, the robot’s red light flickers and goes out, leaving you in darkness. Across the intersection, three or four streetlights in a row are burnt out, then comes one that glows. In the dark spaces between the puddles of weak yellow light, flying insects whirl and hurl themselves against the windscreen, following their instincts for brighter places.
Krr-rr-rr, krr-rr-rr, the crickets shriek when the SUV pulls up at Nyasha’s gate. Silence does not appear to unlock the padlock. You climb over the sagging barbed wire and careen up the cratered mealie-cob drive toward your cousin’s house.
CHAPTER 14
For the first time since you left the hostel, or rather since you left the advertising agency on the pretence of marriage, your heart beats calmly in your chest. After your period of troubles, events are finally conspiring for you and not against you. This development that you desired so strongly is due, of all things, to your meeting with Tracey Stevenson. Scarcely allowing hope, you had prepared yourself as well as you were able for a much longer delay, only to have your wait shortened by your former colleague. Promising to keep in touch, she wrote down your number and gave you hers. You are satisfied that, concurring affably with everything she mentioned, displaying neither rudeness nor resentment, you played your part in reordering your affairs. You credit your first meal in the dayroom at the hospital for this beneficial improvement in your disposition. It was there that Widow Riley, confused as she was, revealed to you how perceptions, including of one such as you, do shift. This opened a crack in your estimation of yourself, through which you began a lethargic climb away from the lowliness to which you considered both born and condemned. Alone in your room, you laugh softly at the way the old woman took you for her daughter Edie. At your cousin’s, your new cheerfulness is further encouraged by your growing relationship with your white, German relative.
You are, you observe with satisfaction, the only member of the household who enjoys such contentment. Mai Taka enters the kitchen on Monday making an effort to appear grateful for the excursion. The poor performance is easy to see through and Nyasha soon extracts from the help the news that, yes, she did sit down with little Taka on the evening of the outing to charm her boy with Anansi’s antics. Silence, however, had barged in and forbidden Mai Taka to fill the boy’s head with foreign nonsense. The next day he took Taka away with him. Mai Taka had not seen either of them since and would have been at her wit’s end had she not received a message from her sister-in-law, whose son worked a few roads down, that Silence had deposited the boy with his grandmother, but that since he had not left any money for the boy’s upkeep, Mai Taka should forward enough for the school levy, as well as Taka’s birth certificate if she wanted the boy to continue with his education. Silence himself did not come home, so that she suspects he had spent the rest of the time in the arms of his fourteen-year-old lover. Mai Taka announces that she is relieved to have been spared a beating and observes it is like a blessing in disguise that her husband seems to have absconded. In conclusion she declares her only regret is not having taken her son to her own mother, but she philosophizes there is not much she can do about it, as a child, when the father is known, belongs to the paternal family. Concern over Mai Taka adds to Nyasha’s worries over her workshops and her family.
For your part, uplifted by inner serenity, you surge with energy. There is not much into which you can channel your new vitality. You take to stargazing at night when the family has retired. You consult a children’s encyclopedia that Nyasha and Leon have bought your niece and nephew, hoping for useful diagrams, but it is in German and concerned exclusively with the Northern Hemisphere. When Cousin-Brother-in-Law learns of this, he remembers an old Birds of Africa he purchased while in Kenya. It takes him several days to find it, but when he does, you spend long stretches with Cousin-Brother-in-Law’s book and binoculars sitting on your little balcony, ticking off in pencil against their photographs the species that visit your relative’s garden. Each morning you wake much earlier than has been your habit to hum softly if shrilly the birdsong of a turquoise-breasted starling that sits in one of the custard apple trees by the garage and chatters. You pop into the garden to see whether you can identify any other avian company and when this is done, you return to make yourself a cup of coffee.
“Mangwanani, Maiguru! Marara here?” Anesu and Panashe chorus as you enter one morning soon after the outing to the cinema.
You step over the glistening annelids on the floor and pick up a bottle of filtered water, which you empty into the kettle.
“Panashe, for goodness’ sake, get on with it.” Nyasha scowls at her son, appearing not to have heard your murmured greeting. Your nephew stares back at his mother, who, day by day, is growing more frazzled.
Anesu swallows a mouthful of porridge, wearing a contemplative expression.
“You sometimes have a tummy ache, right?” she asks her brother eventually.
Your niece keeps examining her brother. A drop balances on the rim of his eye, then splashes out.
“You have one now, don’t you?” Anesu demands. “It’s hurting, isn’t it?”
A flood of tears soaks Panashe’s face.
Anesu turns to her mother and says in an accusing voice, “You see, it’s when you shout at him in the morning. That’s why. It makes his tummy hurt.”
“I didn’t shout,” says Nyasha curtly. She slits open a packet of red sausages that she intends to pack for her children’s snacks.
“You did, Mama,” an adamant Anesu points out. “That’s why he hasn’t done his shoelaces.
”
“You, young lady, and you too, Panashe, get on with it,” Nyasha orders. “I’ll do the shoelaces when he’s finished eating. He’s got to get some breakfast inside him.”
Anesu balances her spoon on the edge of her plate. “It’s only because he’s frightened,” she says.
She takes another mouthful of porridge before she continues, “He’s done them before. He just doesn’t want to go to school today. That’s why he can’t remember how to do it. He doesn’t want his tummy to ache. Mama, his teacher makes his tummy ache too because she always hits the children.”
Your cousin dabs a red sausage with kitchen paper, packs it in cling wrap, as though she has been concentrating on the task too intently to hear. A moment later, she puts the food down in shock.
“Hits? The little ones?”
“In Germany it is illegal,” says Cousin-Brother-in-Law.
Your cousin looks as though she is about to sob, once again situating herself beyond your understanding. Weeping alongside a first grader—even nearly doing so—is a nauseating act of ghastly femininity. You have no desire to expend energy on sympathy for a minor matter of corporal punishment. Women in Zimbabwe are undaunted by such things. Your cousin, on the other hand, has been enfeebled by her sojourns first in England then in Europe. Acquiring a degree in political science at London School of Economics, another in filmmaking in Hamburg, and coming back to Zimbabwe where no one wants her to have either has caused her disposition to grow yet more fanciful. Zimbabwean women, you remind yourself, know how to order things to go away. They shriek with grief and throw themselves around. They go to war. They drug patients in order to get ahead. They get on with it. If one thing doesn’t turn out, a Zimbabwean woman simply turns to another. Your head overflowing with such thoughts, you are pleased that your meeting with Tracey and your subsequent peace of mind over it prove that you are a true Zimbabwean woman. You suppress a shudder of pity for your cousin, who, notwithstanding her education and ideals, will never amount to anything. Nyasha does not belong. Like her husband, she is a kindly import. For the first time in your life you feel significantly superior.
Nyasha walks across to Panashe and pulls his head to her stomach as though she believes that the other side of it is the only place the little boy will be safe. Since he is sitting at the breakfast table, this is uncomfortable for your nephew, but he endures.
“Because of our past, we are people who understand how instincts can easily become brutal,” says Cousin-Brother-in-Law. “We know such a thing must be stopped before it begins. We do not allow teachers to beat other people’s children. Nobody is allowed to beat children.”
“How are the children taught?” you ask. “How do they learn anything?”
Your cousin, who as a teenager was herself brutally beaten by her father, closes her eyes.
“Are you afraid of your teacher?” she asks her son when she looks about the kitchen again.
The boy shakes his head. A tear caught on his eyelash splashes to his lip.
“Yes, you are,” Anesu insists, scooping honey into her milk. “You cried on the cricket pitch on Tuesday.”
Panashe’s tears drip faster.
“Tell Mama!” orders Anesu. “Tell Mama and Papa why you don’t like your teacher.”
Nyasha and Leon exchange glances.
“Tambudzai, what kind of society do you have here?” asks Cousin-Brother-in-Law. “What kind of country do you build when children are raised in fear?”
“People aren’t afraid,” you say. “What we are is disciplined. We know how to behave properly most of the time. We know how to teach people to do it.”
“She scolds me,” Panashe says to his mother. More tears roll down his cheeks. “If I don’t understand, she says, you silly boy, why don’t you understand. And she beats all the children.”
“Does she beat you?” asks your cousin. “And the correct information is,” she goes on, turning to her husband, “there’s a law against it here too.”
“Well, if there is a law, it doesn’t seem to make it illegal,” Leon smirks. He drums his fingers on the table to the rhythm of his favourite Fela.
“Once she did. She did once,” Anesu reveals calmly. “Once she hit him.”
“A boy did toilet in his pants, Mama,” your nephew gulps. “The teacher hit him. With a hosepipe. Colin did toilet. It smelt bad. The teacher hit him and Colin did toilet because the teacher hit!”
Now tears roll quietly down Nyasha’s cheeks. “This is a peace-loving country,” she grunts.
You nod at Cousin-Brother-in-Law.
“Full of peace-loving people,” Nyasha goes on, either ignoring you or not having seen you. “You read it every day in the newspapers. I hate to think what people do to their children in one that isn’t.”
You pour your coffee, finding that this little family is too emotional about everything, takes Western values about many matters too seriously, and this is—well, somewhat primitive.
“Skin them as soon as they do anything wrong,” says Leon. “And make designer handbags out of them for the generals’ wives. That is what they will do with them when they stop being peaceful.”
Nyasha gives Leon a look, and he says, “Yes, I am telling it. I have to tell this because, as a German, I know. This kind of thing has been done.”
“He didn’t mean it, Panashe,” Anesu bursts out after there is a pause. She leans over to her distraught brother. “He was only joking, weren’t you, Papa? Nobody makes things out of children’s skins.”
“Don’t worry.” Nyasha dribbles honey into Panashe’s cup of warm milk. She holds it to his mouth. The boy pushes his lips together fiercely.
“Panashe, I’m going to tell the head teacher a thing or two,” Nyasha declares. She wipes away the boy’s tears with the back of her hand. “That woman belongs in jail.”
“Don’t go,” your nephew cries. “Mama, please don’t go and tell the headmaster. He will … he will … skin me!”
“He will not put her in jail,” says Leon. “You know, Nyasha, here no one ends up in jail if that is the place they should be.”
Cousin-Brother-in-Law pulls his son onto his lap.
“Don’t worry about that teacher anymore, Panashe,” he says. “I will go with your mother to talk to the headmaster. Your shoes, your breakfast, anything at all, don’t let the teacher or the headmaster or anyone at all stop you doing anything,” he says. “No matter what.”
Leon scoops up porridge from the spoon Nyasha has discarded. Slowly Panashe opens his mouth.
You concentrate on your cup to avoid taking part in the conversation. You are stirring sugar into your coffee, in preparation for leaving the kitchen as soon as possible, regretting having been drawn into the family’s conversation, when the telephone rings.
“For you,” Mai Taka calls.
Gratefully heading out of the kitchen with your mug, you take the receiver from her hand.
“Hi, Tahm-boo,” the voice says. “It’s Tracey Stevenson.”
You set your cup down on the telephone stand slowly, so as not to be overwhelmed by what you have wished for and waited for. You are still all but stunned that your patience has paid off.
Tracey is very gracious. Without mentioning either your leaving the advertising agency or your meeting at the supermarket, she informs you she has contacted you to make you an offer. You ask for a moment to fetch pen and paper.
On your return, having rushed up to your room, you take down the organization’s name: Green Jacaranda Getaway Safaris. No, you do not have an email address. Although it is still early days of the Internet, and not even Nyasha has it, you are ashamed. Tracey suggests a meeting in which she will give you more details of the post she has for you. Your fingers quiver. You still them, forcing yourself to forget the past and concentrate on the present moment. You record the place and time of the appointment. Tracey Stevenson was your boss. She is to be again. Beyond those two facts, your future beckons. You must hold on to your tomorrow at all
costs.
Cousin-Brother-in-Law will not hear of you travelling to your appointment at another café in Avondale by combi and insists on driving you himself. You do not learn as much as you would like about Green Jacaranda beyond that it is a start-up dealing in environmentally friendly entrepreneurship solutions over a range of programmes. Your work in administration will include project management. Besides a salary that you are sure is several times what your cousin makes with her training, the deal includes accommodation, which, Tracey explains to you, is not an expression of the goodness of her heart, but a business decision that enables her to obtain appreciable tax benefits. Tracey asks you to report at the office on the first day of the following month. Auspiciously, in the last year of the millennium, you return to the ranks of the employed and see your prospects stretch out before you.
The day that Tracey requested you move is the last day of Nyasha’s new workshop. Your cousin is tired. By the time you are to leave, Mai Taka has not come up from the servants’ quarters.
“They’ll be well occupied for a couple of hours,” Nyasha says with grim satisfaction. “Now that they can’t figure out what to write sensibly about themselves.”