Â
Rather ominous. Typical. Always makes herself larger than she is at times of crisis.
8 July 1979
Has snowed again. Light sprinkling lower down than yesterday just like castor sugar. Can smell it clean white sheets piled up in the sky. A. always excited by weather conditions. Have to give hr extra jobs to keep her occupied. Should perhaps increase the size of her herds a bit so that she has more to see to. See the first letters to Jakkie are already written & lying ready for posting on the sideboard.
9 July 1979
Perhaps I should really try again this year to make something special of Agaat's birthday (31!) now with Jakkie gone like that & doing his own thing I get the feeling that the diary-keeping doesn't really make very much sense any more. Don't have that much to report on any more. Agaat is Agaat. I think I made the best of hr that I could. More I think than many other people could have managed. Can't complain apart from that. She's now quite a housekeeper & keeps a sharp eye on all aspects of the farming. Perhaps with Jakkie finally gone there will in any event now be less occasion for tension here in the house & she'll from now on be able just to live with us without strife.
Â
Maybe bake a large chocolate cake? Place a nice bunch of flowers in front of hr door as a surprise & on the 12th drive with her to Witsand? She's so fond of the sea when it rains. So many shades of grey & white she always says such an almost black sea.
16
W·H·O S·T·A·R·T·E·D T. F·I·R·E O·N M·O·U·N·T·A·I·N, I ask.
I look at the alarm clock. It's taken ten minutes to spell out, even with Agaat's abbreviations of articles and conjunctions.
Do you think it was me by any chance? Agaat asks with her eyes. She looks away quickly.
Yes, I signal, according to our customary code. One blink with both eyes.
She looks at me just long enough to catch my reply.
Hottentot madonna, she says.
She pushes at the side of her cap, she grasps the stick of the duster more firmly, she lets me continue, she taps on the chart. After every tap she looks at me. A tap B tap C tap D tap.
D is right I blink with my right eye. It must be so boring for her. Then she ticks from A again. I stop her on I, I is right.
And then she has to start tapping again from the beginning, as far as D. D·I·D We again spelt âdid'.
D·I·D Y·O·U S·T·A·R·T T·H·E F·I·R·E . . .
In the hayloft? she completes my sentence. Quite correct, that's what I wanted to ask. She places the duster upright in the corner. End of conversation.
I should have stuck to the weather, to the rainfall figures, the sheep-stealing statistics for the year of Our Lord 1996. I should have kept to pure farming matters, to how she wants to run things henceforth here on Grootmoedersdrift. I should have known that by this time.
She comes to stand by my bed. She folds her hands on her stomach. Her reply comes direct and without hesitation.
The cream separator, she says, to ensure that it works properly, place it on a solid foundation and make sure that it is dead level. If a
machine separates badly, that may be because it is turned too fast or too slow. The speed can be adjusted only when the milk-supply tank is half empty. If a first-class machine does not separate properly, it is because the supply tank is out of balance and vibrates excessively, or because the centrifuge is not calibrated in the spring when the milk is poor and again in the autumn when it is richer. Watch the spout where the cream runs through. If the cream tends to cover the spout, the speed is too high for the quantity of milk passing through the supply tank, if it emerges from the spout in scallops, it is being turned too slowly. If the cream falls from the spout into the cream dish almost but not quite perpendicularly, that is in the case of the vast majority of creamers about the right consistency. In any case rinse the supply tank regularly with skimmed milk.
Farmer's Handbook. I was asking for it. Douse the fire with cream. Extremely original. What argument can I bring against that? She will recite all her texts to me rather than talk to me openly.
I flicker my eyes. Bravo! that means.
She ignores me. She bends to unhook the urine bag. She drags the chamber pot under the open tube to catch the drops. Tip, I hear it drop on the enamel, tip.
Leroux first came to fit the catheter for the urine bag and then came to make the hole for the gut bag. Home surgery with local anaesthetic. Agaat's decision. The wound was supposed to heal first before the bag could be attached, but it wouldn't. Now every time she empties the bag she has to perform a major disinfection around the stoma. She enjoys it. All my orifices interest her. The more I have the better.
I had to be moved as little as possible, was the consensus. The pan was too high for me. So lower the madam. That was what Agaat decided. Make a hole in her side. She threatens me every day with the feeding tube in my trachea as well, but I refuse. I don't want another artificial portal punched into me. I don't want to eat anything more. I want to talk. There's a lot to talk about. Now that we've found a way with the alphabet chart.
She holds up the full urine bag for me to see. Dark yellow, almost amber-coloured it is, but not clear.
Cloudy, she says, but it makes the bluest blue.
She opens the stoep door, holds the bag far away from her, walks out with small brisk steps. I watch the mirror. There she is in image now. She knows the range of the reflection, she'll see to it that she stays within it.
Douse the fire with cream, put out the flames with my last dark fluids.
I mustn't complain, I was asking for it.
The hydrangeas are deep purplish-blue, just the colour for my funeral arrangements. That's what she wants to say with the whole palaver of emptying the bag so conspicuously. She knows I can see her in the mirror. There are other hydrangeas around the corner as well where she could go and empty it out. But these are from the mother stock. Here she learnt to empty her own little chamber pot.
That's the kind of risk I run since I've been able to talk to her. Her punishments become subtler. The message is: Your influence will be felt for a long time yet, even unto the capillary roots of the plants of your garden. I'll keep up the old traditions for you.
I see her crouch down between the leaves. Only her behind sticks out.
I understand, Agaat. You turn your arse on the last conflagration that you've perpetrated here in the sickbay.
She stands back. She examines her handiwork. Beautiful voluptuous, purple orbs of flowers.
Pissy, pissy in the pot, who makes the bluest of the lot?
Am I imagining things, or is she shaking her head there?
How dare I ask her such things? Imagine, she an arsonist! Am I going out of my mind now?
Go ahead and shake your head, Agaat. I know it was you. Who else?
She puts the empty bag down on the lawn. Here come the little scissors from the top pocket of her apron. She snips one, two, three, four, five flowers. She moves out of range. She'll go round the back to the kitchen to put them in water, then go and select a vase in the sitting room. Perhaps I'll be lucky. Perhaps I'll be given flowers next to my bed today. That will teach me to keep my questions to myself.
I wonder about the timing of the sudden appearance of our new means of communication. The old alphabet chart. Would she have remembered it all of a sudden out of the blue? A technique she read about long ago in the pamphlets and conveniently forgot about? Or did she avoid it because she was too tired? Because she realised she would be empowering me in my last moments here where I no longer hesitate to speak my mind? Because she could guess what would come out, what had to come out between us?
Perhaps it will never come out, perhaps there's even less of a chance now than before. Perhaps that which has to be said has nothing to do with the truth.
And do I myself know what it is? Is the truth beyond what happened or didn't happen, what happened how and where? Beyond the facts? I'm the one who's being tested to see whether I have the words to arrive there.
Perhaps it was the maps that gave her the idea. The place names. The pointing at the dots of the towns till I nod, yes, tell me about Protem, tell me about Klipdale, what happened there, what we did there, who we saw there.
Shall I ask her? How did you come upon the idea of hanging it there, the alphabet chart, the old yellowed, varnished cardboard sheet with the fold down the middle, with the ornate capitals and the Bible pictures and the scenes from the history of salvation, stiff prophets and visions amongst grapevines and sheaves of corn?
I could ask, now that I can pose questions.
Why did you keep it till now? After all, you've known all along that I'm itching to talk, you could surely have guessed that I'm lying here brooding over all my life?
I could confront her with it. Perhaps she'd only wave a little blue book in front of my nose. Because she did find it after all then, the third parcel. About her first life on Grootmoedersdrift. Barely alive and I her source of life.
Now it's the other way round.
Me dying and she to accompany me.
Who's going to give in first? On the facts of the past? Or does our assignment lie here in this present?
Here I'm cutting my own throat now, she said when she hung up the alphabet.
Did I hear aright? She whispered it on the inhalation.
Here I'm cutting my own throat now.
But whose throat is it really? It's my spelt-out words that she has to pronounce for me, it's my sentences that she has to complete aloud for me.
Who'd want to bluff at the end? That everything is in order? Forgive and forget and depart in peace?
Perhaps it would have been better to have kept to eye signals to the very end, without any chance of a retort on my part. Perhaps we could have brought the matter to a workable conclusion if we'd resigned ourselves to the list of questions?
Are you cold? Are you hot? Are you hungry? Are you tired? Too dark? Too light? Do you want to poo? Do you want to pee? Do you want to read? Do you want to listen to SAfm?
Yes and no.
But it's getting more complicated. Now she's added to the alphabet auxiliary lists on slips of paper, opening phrases and conjunctions. She's stuck them up there close to hand around the chart, short cuts by which we can arrive more quickly at the point. They stir and rustle with every
draught or current here in the room, they flutter up and down when Agaat walks past, the loose slips, as if they were alive.
I am, I wish, I fear, I hope, I believe.
Because, but, and, nevertheless, notwithstanding, even so.
Necessary conjunction which betonkeneth concord, who wrote that again?
Milla. Jak. Agaat. Jakkie.
I'm no longer hungry, and I'm beyond tired . . .
Whom did I love in my lifetime and why?
I have, I will, I can, I want. Or not. I would be able to. I would have wanted. If I could have it over, then . . . What might have been.
There's a whole grammar developing there on the wall. Every day there's more of it. Question mark, exclamation mark, swearword, dots to mark an implication. A skeleton of language, written down in print and in script with a Koki chalk, bigger, more complicated than Agaat on her own, than I or the two of us together could think up. If it had to be fleshed out as well . . . muscles, skin, hair, nerves, glands . . .
How, when, who, why, what . . .
But my nerves are extinct and my muscles are moist cotton wool, my hair grey strands, my skin worn, my glands dry dumplings. My secretions trickle out of me through tubes. My poo and my pee are no longer my own. My sphincters no longer open and close me. I am one might say permeable.
Why would she want now of all times to invest me with language?
Up, down, under, before, behind, above, in.
Or perhaps âinvest with' is the wrong expression here.
Goad with, perhaps.
She is the one who takes up Japie. She can put him down whenever she wants. Or she can pick him up and walk out and go and dust somewhere. Or she can turn him round to point his stick at the map.
Japie mostly stays in the corner of the room. She holds him in the left hand, she always starts from the beginning again, she points, letter by letter. A is for Adam, B for Babel , C for Christ, our Redeemer and Lord. She looks at what I signal and she points and she points until there's a word, three words, half a sentence, and then she starts guessing.
Don't put words into my mouth, exclamation mark, I then have to spell out for her. Don't anticipate my meanings, don't impose the wrong stress, wrong nuances on me. Exclamation, exclamation, exclamation!
My protest is not of much use. She gets impatient when it takes too long. She wants to make my sentences flow for me. She wants me to sing. She's looking for a rhythm. A march from the FAK.
Onward, onward, ever onward, by forest and by foam, ever shall we wander, ever shall we roam.
I can see it in her face. Shift-boss habits. She taps the beat on the railing of the bed. Then the words come.
Don't shirk! There's a nation to lead, there's a war-cry to heed, there's work! There's no glory or fame, there's no compromise tame, there's but following the hot bright flame. Come on!
If I have managed to produce something, an exposition, complete with nevertheless and notwithstanding, it's my turn to exert pressure. Then she must reply. It's only common decency, her responding, I spelt out for her. But she often remains quiet. Or she says, next sentence please. Or she shrugs her shoulders, which means, you answer it yourself. Or she puts down the duster and walks out. Or she looks at me until I shut my eyes.