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Authors: Melanie Finn

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BOOK: The Gloaming
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‘They weren't goats,' he says.

There's a nasty pause.

‘They were children. Playing football. The propeller killed some of them and mutilated others.'

I have my sandals on now.

‘And their parents put a curse on me. That's what I was trying to tell you. They cursed me.'

‘I have to go.' I walk out of the bar. I hear Gloria's hard laugh. Harry calls her an old hag. I hear him demand, ‘Why'd you take her to the caves? That bloody awful place.'

‘Oh, you and your stupid curses, you filthy old drunk.'

Up the steep steps, I'm on the road now, walking south along the headland. The road is sporadically lit by the houses. The streetlights have no bulbs, and I wonder who would want their gaudy brightness exposing the sweet wrappers, cigarette packets, cow dung. Let us find relief in obscurity and this still quiet strip of potholes, hemming a continent, defining the end of something and the beginning of something else. For just a moment, rest, then continue the stolid walk of the unforgiven. Drink and drink, for in the bottle there is absolution.

Is that what I must do, then? Drink?

Or seek some other form of self-annihilation?

The shadow of some other curse.

You and your stupid curses
.

Why did she take you to that godawful cave?

When did the couple realize they were going to die? Was there something beyond fear, to be entombed in the sleepy, absorbing dark? They reeled back through that morning, looking for the moment when their trajectory fixed in time. A specific set of circumstances aligned, locked in place.

Perhaps they reached the end of the driveway and turned back because they'd forgotten the phone bill. Seeing the dog, panting and excited, they decided he could come after all. Perhaps they forgot the leash. Perhaps it broke.

At this end of the road, the houses don't have lights; there is only the occasional glow of a kerosene lantern. I pass the
dukha
where a woman sells eggs and soap. And other commodities. I have seen her walk with men toward the abandoned mansion behind her stall. She makes no effort of allure—she wears curlers and flip-flops. Her big, loose breasts sway recklessly beneath a dirty T-shirt. She scuffs her feet on the sandy earth as she takes her customer to an old bed in the back with no sheets. I imagine her scratching her nose as he works toward his conclusion.

She is in her shop, almost a silhouette in the
chiaroscuro
light. Her chin is in her hand, the whites of her eyes very bright, her skin very black. The shop contains her and frames her like a Vermeer, with that densely suggestive narrative. She sees me but slides her eyes away, uninterested.

Now the bitumen surrenders to the sand track. In the darkness I step carefully, trying to gauge the depth of the potholes. Jamhuri has put on the outside light. I call his name as I open the gate and there's silence. I call again, louder, and finally he answers in a rush, ‘Mama!
Karibu
!' and hurries around the corner to give me a salute. I can see the wrinkles on his cheek from where he's been asleep. He escorts me to the door, and I step inside. I'm thirsty from my walk, so I go to the sink.

There, on the sideboard, is the box, the flaps frayed, the messy knots of sisal string. Did I put it there? I feel certain I didn't. But in the next moment, the next breath, I can't be sure. Did I forget?

Or is the universe arranging itself? Moving objects, shuffling them, dealing them like cards, ha ha ha: a cup, a child, a dog. If it can move a car toward a bus stop, it can surely move a cardboard box.

Something flickers at the edge of my vision, like a face at the window in a horror film. I turn, look out. But there's no one. Of course. Only Jamhuri, shuffling in the dry leaves of the tulip tree.

And in the breathless silence I put out my hand to touch the box. But it moves through the cardboard—as if through a hologram. I pull my hand back and hold it with the other. Again, I reach out. This time I feel the rough paper, the shape of the box: corners, angles, planes.

I go to the door. Step out.

‘Jamhuri,' I say. ‘Jamhuri.'

 

Arnau, April 19

The cup, the black grounds therein. I almost welcomed the little routine: how I would wash the cup tenderly, and put it back in its place for next time. This was our slow waltz, a kind of courtship.

But today: he hadn't drunk the coffee. The cup was on the table, still full, the dark brew still lukewarm. The chair was askew. Not how he normally left it, neatly returned against the table.

I went from room to room, trying to figure out if he'd been there, too. And what he'd done. I wasn't ready for change. I was dwelling in time like a nest.

Everything was just as I'd left it. As I lifted the cup from the table my sleeve caught on the chair and I spilt the coffee all over my skirt. I was a good housewife, and under the sink I kept a bottle of seltzer for such mishaps. I crouched down, pulled open the cupboard door. The seltzer stood among the extra dish soap, laundry detergent and white vinegar. But as I took it in my hand I noticed something else: a large roll of duct tape. The heavy silver kind.

I hadn't bought it. I was sure Tom wouldn't have bought it. And even if he had—for some unimaginable reason, because what on earth would Tom do with duct tape?—I felt sure I would have known it was there.

Perhaps Mr Gassner?

I could hear both Gassners downstairs. The French doors were open to the first real spring day. Sounds drifted up, a stray Gassner cough, the clatter of cutlery being put away, the inevitable TV.

Perhaps Mr Gassner, what? Came up here and put a new roll of duct tape under the sink?

The plastic wrapping was intact. I held it for a while, wondering what I should do and what it could mean.

I just put it back.

 

Tanga, May 31

Jamhuri leaves me at the edge of the track.

‘Just go, Mama. Someone will meet you, someone will take you to him.' He is already backing away. He doesn't want anything to do with this. He has no idea what's in the box, but he knows it's something important, something that brings a white woman to a lonely stretch of coastline with evening drawing close.

To Mr Sese.

The path leads into a grove of tall, thin palms. Goats nibble on patches of rough grass that manage to grow on the pale sandy earth. Beyond the palms, the path disappears into thick bush. I try to reassure Jamhuri again, but he turns on me with frightened eyes and hurries down the track. It is several miles back to the main road.

I take off my shoes. The path invites bare feet with soft, yielding sand and the gentle sway of its route. I can just hear the sea. The leaves of the palms clatter in the barest breeze. Something of Jamhuri's fear has stayed with me like a trace of his sweat on my skin.

As I near the tangle of bush, a boy appears. He wears a white shirt, enormous on him, so that he seems a scarecrow. I sense I've seen him before, but there are so many ragged children. The boy looks at me with intense, unashamed curiosity. I am a blue elephant in a pink tutu. I am a circus grotesque wearing bells.

‘This way, this way.' I know it can't be the same boy from Butiama, only another boy saying the exact same thing. I see the shirt is torn at the back, almost entirely, revealing the sinewy black body beneath. ‘This way, this way.'

The path threads the scrub, making sudden, inexplicable turns. After several minutes we burst onto a dry, white inland wash. Bicycle tracks crisscross the sand, originating from the low shed of a salt works on the other side. I imagine men with bare hands gathering the salt residue from the high tides, rendering it slowly in the steaming vat. I imagine the merciless salt on their rough hands.

Halfway across the wash, there is an island of ragged trees. As we approach, I see ribbons tied to branches, strands of tinsel, bits of colored cloth. I glance around: we are alone. Except, of course, for the man in the trees.

The boy looks at me again. Stares. Perhaps he's never had the chance to examine a white person. Our skin is like the underbelly of fish. ‘This way,' he says, gesturing to the island grove. I reach in my pocket, find some coins and hand them to him. He smiles and runs off across the sand, the gap in his shirt flapping open. I step into the trees.

There is litter on the ground—the torn wrappers of incense sticks, empty bottles of rose water, shredded newspaper, dead matches, the caps of Sprite. The scrubby trees shed their leaves eagerly, and I smell the decaying leaves as well as the smell of the old man, which is—surprisingly—Old Spice. Mr Sese wears a Mao-style polyester suit, town shoes and thick glasses. He steps forward, shows me to a chair. ‘Madam, welcome.'

He is not some mad-eyed Rastafarian in rags and beads. He looks like a librarian. ‘Would you like some tea?' The flickering light glints off his glasses so that for a moment I cannot see his eyes, which are thick and pale with glaucoma. I can hear Dorothea: So, he has no medicine for that.

Mr Sese offers me a cup in one hand, holding a large red thermos in the other.

‘It's just tea?'

He laughs, ‘Yes, just tea.' He pours. ‘I cannot give you medicine without knowing your complaint.' He sees I don't quite understand. ‘Just as with your medicine, with mine there is a different treatment for a different ailment. Would you like me to test the tea?'

I take a sip to make his point. Then I hand him the box. ‘This is why I'm here.'

He opens the cardboard flaps, glimpses inside, and shuts the box with scrupulous objectivity. ‘And how did you come to be in possession of this?'

I tell him the story: Magulu, Kessy, Dorothea. ‘She's a doctor, a proper doctor, but still it frightened her.'

‘Madam, I'm an improper doctor and it frightens me.' He peers over his glasses. ‘Your friend, she appreciated the powerful nature of this spell.'

He puts the box down on the sandy earth. He considers his words. ‘This magic finds the person for whom it is intended.'

‘But I have it.'

‘Yes.'

I shake my head. ‘I only took it because they didn't want it. Dorothea and Kessy. They were afraid.'

‘It was not for them.' He is matter-of-fact.

‘Then who was it for? It came on the bus.'

Did it? I think back. Was it a Thursday? Kessy said some children found it on the roundabout. And then Martin, and then Martin—

Slowly Mr Sese shakes his gray head. ‘Madam, the nature of such magic is very sly. It uses people. And it has come to you by whatever means. It has come to you.'

‘It wasn't intended for me,' I say, deciding to stand, to leave.

‘Then why have you kept it?'

‘Because of Dorothea. She asked me to help.'

‘You could have just thrown it away. As you don't believe. Yet, you brought it all the way to Tanga. To me.'

The boy, I think, the boy in the white shirt.
The
uchawi
will direct you
.

This way, this way.

‘How can I throw it out?' I look at Mr Sese. ‘It was a person. Isn't there a ceremony? Can't you take care of it? That's why I'm here, isn't it?'

He puts his hands up as if to slow me down. Then he closes his eyes and mumbles under his breath. I'm relieved that he looks ridiculous.

Finally, he opens his eyes. ‘They are okay, the dead. Don't worry about them.'

I take my wallet out of my bag. I'm pulling out two crisp, bank-fresh bills. ‘Is twenty thousand enough?'

‘But the living. The living are always the problem.'

As he doesn't take the money, I put it on his chair. I start away, and he says, ‘He is coming for you.'

‘What?' I look back at him. He is a charlatan, chanting gibberish and cleverly deducing that a woman with a box of body parts might be disturbed and frightened. She is easily persuaded that someone might be after her.

Is this Gloria's work? Martin's?

His voice is low, a librarian's whisper. ‘He has already come.'

‘Who? Who are you talking about? How much did they pay you?'

‘I will try to help. Yes, I will do what I can.' He reaches out for me, and for a moment catches my hands, holds them in his. They are extraordinarily warm.

But I pull away, hurry back across the salt pan. The wind has dropped, so the dusk is still and deep, and the light almost lavender on the white sand. I retrace my footprints and find the path that takes me to the track. I want to be in the white cottage, the door closed: home, this new idea. The act of returning home is redemptive: through the gates, across the threshold and we may begin again, we may be the better, wiser person than when we left; forgiven and forgiving.

On the main road, I wait for a taxi. Surely, there are taxis on this stretch. But none arrive. I begin to walk into the quickening dark night.

People watch me as I pass. But I can't see them. They exist beyond the hem of light cast by buses and cars. I know they are selling dried fish and mangoes on wooden tables. They are laughing, dissenting over politics and the behavior of relatives. They are casting spells and buying curses. They are placing offerings in caves, among the roots of baobab trees, imploring, requesting, hoping for an alteration in the scheme.

The taxi slows, dogs my heels from a dozen yards before I realize it's there, a white Toyota Corolla. I peer in at the driver, but the headlights of an oncoming car blind me, stun my vision. I can't see anything but the negative of the light.

‘Raskazone,' I tell the driver. ‘Past the Yacht Club.'

I get in the back. The taxi moves forward. There's the smell of cigarettes.

‘How is old Mr Sese?' Gloria asks chattily. ‘Has he been helpful?'

She is revealed now, hands resting casually on the steering wheel. For a moment I say nothing. I clench my fists so that my nails dig into my palms. I feel uncertain: that odd wavering sensation. The coming in and out. O-o-o-o-o-o.

BOOK: The Gloaming
3.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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