Agaat (54 page)

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Authors: Marlene van Niekerk

BOOK: Agaat
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clear out! clear out! the whole caboodle is up for auction then you who remain behind can start afresh from scratch throw out the silver hand-bells for the table-summons for whom would you want to ring it anyway? the red copper and the brass the ornaments without reason throw them out! porcelain dogs! dark-brown diana with the wolves at her hem! reading nursery couple on the half-moon table, what a misplaced idyll! the silver coasters engraved with canadian swamp cypresses where in god's name does it all come from? the drift the vlei the mountain pictured oval mirrors stuck-together vases woven hangings birth-plate of delft blue take it give it to him when he comes or wrap it in foam and bubble-wrap and post it to the north gathered lamp-shades blown-glass necks of preening swans framed portraits the talcumed bloom of my great-grandmother my great-grandfather's waxed moustache mustard-yellow curtain tassels pewter ashtrays copper indian shoes cast-iron doorstops compotiers on precarious stems behold all this work of their hands cast cavities forged fillings riffled
textures ornate weights leather upholstery chintz velvet macramé nests where spider and mite and self-satisfaction breed dense banal things that give a name to nothingness clear out the wardrobes! court shoes shift dresses wrapover skirts culotte pants double-breasted jackets bat-sleeve coats cable-pattern jerseys button-front cardigans raincoats windbreakers church hats beach hats pantyhose maidenform cross-your-heart bras step-ins panties don't give it to the servants they'll just fight about it select for the kitchen the essentials do away with the multitude of mixing-bowls the meat-mincer the dough-paddles endless breadboards sharpening-rods redundant knives wooden spoons plates from broken sets with autumn leaves empty bottles under the sink old pyrex dishes blackened pots the thick-lipped lieberstein cups the cracked römertopf the stained porcelain the worn gilt edges the faded glazing the lidless soup tureen the stopperless carafe the old enamel jugs the buckets and the cans and the zinc tubs with the slow leaks the sixty labelless frisco tins the brasso and the silvo with nothing as last dregs throw away the plastic bands and pieces of string and used sheets of silver foil the bags full of bags full of bags plastic paper string I must die in a year
16 May 1968
A. now measures Jakkie every week—Friday evenings much ado about his supposedly growing so fast. Have just again observed the operation there in the passage she calls it keeping up-to-date the ‘growth rate'. He has to take off his shoes & exhale & open his ribcage & stand with his heels against the skirting board & his back up straight & his head to attention against the ascending ladder of pencil marks from each preceding birthday.
 
Suspect it's just an excuse that A. thinks up to touch him because of course he's starting to get shy nowadays. She presses & pushes his shoulders & neck & knees as if she's trying to stop him from changing sometimes I'm scared she's doing him some harm & then she brings the ruler & places it square & level over his crown & makes a small pencil line. Have just seen her holding him round the throat with hr strong hand while he's standing bolt upright against the wall with eyes shut tight. But you're growing way past me now you're going to get an Adam's apple just like your father just feel this almighty thick gullet.
What are these other lines? I hear Jakkie ask there at the end of the passage. Reply: low-tide mark depth of the drift height of the time length of the shadows who can tell? it's an old house maybe it's your mother who was measured there or perhaps your grandmother.
 
Who posted letters here? asks Jakkie & he clappers the copper flap of the post-slit. Internal correspondence says Agaat perhaps there was somebody in quarantine she says. What is quarantine? asks Jakkie. That's when you don't know what disease someone's suffering from then you isolate them otherwise they infect the healthy people then they communicate only in writing because talking is too dangerous because the germs live in the breath.
 
In passing I got an almighty look from A. What does she want me to say? What would Jakkie make of it if he knew? Does she want to protect him from the knowledge? Or does she want to protect me? Or herself? Suspect in any case J. has already told him everything. Although perhaps he'd rather hush up the past from his son.
 
Concerning Jakkie's birth there are several stories. One story is that A. changed into the noonday witch & caught him on the pass & stuck his tail into a pillowslip & chopped it off with an axe before de-hairing him further. But there are also always new stories & there is the last bedtime story that must always remain the same & of which I never can make out the ending.
 
I suppose it's time for the facts of life. Wonder if I should leave that to J. Perhaps A. has also in that left us far behind. Saw her the other day standing there on the front stoep with him hr little hand on his shoulder & pointing with the other hand down there by the river the stallion pawing his front legs in the air trying to get on top of the mare.
15 July 1968
A. & Jakkie's games—something about them I find disquieting nowadays. Do so badly want him to mix with children of his own age. Time that he went to school again.
 
They call each other from long distances. The game is apparently to see who has the finest hearing & turns up within a reasonable time. Sometimes it's a terrifying hissing deafening between-teeth-whistling & hammering on the yard gong in season & out of season & a sounding
of the lorry's hooter fit to wake the dead. Put a stop to that the shouting with the hands in front of the mouth is bad enough. What on earth could fascinate them so about it? The one or the other vanishes into thin air & then the agreement is apparently to leave something behind in the vanishing-place like a handkerchief or a bottle-top (as proof of how far you could hear). The latest variation is the ram's horn. The notes don't really vary much. Sometimes though the duration of the notes & the intervals sometimes longer sometimes shorter. Just now again I was standing on the front stoep & heard one of them sounding up from somewhere in the mountain. Lugubrious it sounds plaintive it must have been A. she has a tremendous lung capacity from blowing fires into life in her fireplace & then very faintly from somewhere behind the ridges Jakkie answered. To & fro went the calling on the horn a code if I had to guess. What could the message be? Without content it would have to bore them very quickly but apparently they can carry on with it into all eternity.
12 September 1971
A. learns everything with Jakkie from his schoolbooks, asks him his idiomatic expressions & his multiplication tables. He teaches hr what they sing at school. Land of our fathers. She knows more verses of The Call of South Africa than he. You're making it up! he says & she shows him in black and white in the old FAK. You sound just like a donkey when you sing she says stay in tune now! Do hope he retains his love of singing after his voice has broken. A lyrical tenor I would guess.
16 September 1971
Am all of a sudden not allowed in the bathroom when Jakkie is having a bath. Not J. either. No, he's too big now says Jakkie but not for A. no she's allowed. In & out with pyjamas and clean towels all bustle and display for my benefit. Sits with him on an apple box while he baths & chatters (have already removed the chair from there to discourage hr but she takes no notice). Had to go and fetch a bag of down in the little store for two new pillows and stuff them there in the backyard otherwise J. will complain of the mess & then I saw through the steam the movements. A. adding water or getting up to wash his back. Then I heard him ask her: Where do you come from? what does your name mean? Long stories she spins him. Couldn't make out everything. She teases him he laughs and giggles he persists with his questions. A. says: I crawled out of the fire. Isn't true says Jakkie you're lying he says. Is true she says I was dug out of the ash stolen out of the hearth fell out of
a cloud came up with the fennel washed down in the flood was mowed with the sickle threshed with the wheat baked in the bread. No seriously asks Jakkie what kind of a name is that? nobody else has a name like that. Baptised like that left like that. But it's actually A-g-g-g-g-gaat that goes g-g-g-g like a house snake behind the skirting board. Gaat Gaat Gaat says Jakkie, sounding the g in his throat as if he's gargling, it's a name of nothing. That's right says A. it's a name of everything that's good. It's everything and nothing six of one and half a dozen of the other.
 
So there she was singing him an odd little song with Scripture thrown in an odd tune I'm writing it up here what I remember of it. Perhaps J. is right A. not a good influence on Jakkie. Can't put my finger on it. After all she got it all from me but what she makes of it is the Lord knows a veritable Babel. Doleful in a way that makes me want to hide my head somewhere. This person!—how in God's name did she get like that?
I'm the ear of the owl
I'm the eye of the ant
I'm the right of the rain
The song started off quite low & went higher & higher & faster & faster. Made me think of a choral piece. Which composer? Can't think that I would ever have told her about it can hardly remember it myself it was so long ago at university. I write your name on the sand & the snow on the white loaf of my days. Everywhere on everything that is dear to me, I write your name. And by the power of this word I shall start my life anew. I was born to call you by your name: Freedom. Something like that. But A.'s song was about something else. Couldn't make head or tail of it.
I stand sentry at the meal of the mealy-mouthed jackals (here she
sings in high head-tones)
I'm the meal of the first milling
Rejoice oh young man your joy is short-lived
I'm the rising of the dough
The lump in the throat
I'm the mouth of the mother
I'm the faith of the father
And the babble of the baby in the bath
Come come bath in my hands
my hands my song of deformity (could that be? perhaps I mis-
heard here? & it just went on and on)
I'm the riches of the ridges
The palms of palmyra are mine
Where's the what of the wattle?
Where the fen of the fennel?
With me!
I'm the end of the river-bend
And the breadth of the Breede
I'm the why of the whynot
I'm the where of the nowhere
I'm the blood of the bluegum.
Stop stop! Jakkie shouted please stop that's enough! No that's what you wanted isn't it! A. said now you must listen! & she teases him because he doesn't want to get out of the bath naked in front of her & he can't run away & he just has to stay and listen there until she's finished singing & then she sang even louder to irritate him & then she patched together a little tune with talking in-between a whole performance there in the steam condensing ever more densely on the windows.
I'm my brother's keeper
His white apron strings
And the ash that turns to ashes
I have the tongues of fire of men and of angels
The riddle of riddle-bread I know
But my tongue is a stake in my mouth
Coals of fire I heap upon my head
Yes, less than lesser
The least amongst you
Bushwillow cedar and wild olive
The turn of the wheel is
the curl
of the tip
of the maidenhair fern
am I
On and on it went in that vein. Jesuschrist Agaat says Jakkie but you really can sit and sing a lot of shit on a box get going I want to get out now! but I heard him just now mutter-muttering in his voice that's starting to break—my child!—growing up so fast!—there in his room heard him singing over & over on A.'s contrived tune her heathenish song that carries on to all sides.
the why of the whynot
the where of the nowhere
the mouth of the mother
the faith of the father & the blood
the blood of the bitter bluegum.
14
A church hat, a stuffed lynx head, a ram's horn, a silver sugar-bowl, a braying-stone, a mouldboard. What a mess here in my room. I no longer want to look at anything, no longer want to be distracted by the light of day, the things of the light. They press on my eyeballs when I open my eyes. From now on I'm keeping my eyes shut, from now on I am gazing at the inside of my eyelids.
Unseeing in a more silent silence, in the black-red of shut eyes I want to lie, a cello in its case, in this made-to-measure niche that my body has become for me, here I want to dream my way to that whiter light of which the book of death speaks. Here I want only just to hear the last hurried footsteps in the passages, and there far away in the front of the hall, behind the last door swinging shut, the sounds of tuning, the concert, that without me may at last commence. I want to drift away from it all, replaced by a substitute who is following the conductor's baton out there with shining eyes.
This savage parade, the last illuminations.

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