Agaat (69 page)

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Authors: Marlene van Niekerk

BOOK: Agaat
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Where exactly you wanted Agaat, was what you asked yourself while you read the labels.
Albertas (old orchard) thick syrup 1970, Clingstone (old orchard) in brandy syrup 1971, Quince jelly 1973, Prickly-pear syrup 1975, Fine apricot 1980, Whole-fruit apricot and peach pickle (curried) 1981, Peach pickle (chilli) 1981.
Every preserving-jar in front of you on the shelf Agaat had handled, the picking, the peeling, the slicing, the boiling, the bottling, the labels were all in her upright handwriting.
Wholefruit kumquat jam (front orchard) 1972, Lemon marmalade 1972, Bitter orange marmalade, Wild watermelon (Gdrift, dryland),
Sourfig cinnamon-sugar syrup (Witsand dunes), Green-fig (Pink fig tree) 10 October 1980.
You felt dizzy. For a moment the fall was a definite possibility. You supported yourself against the shelf.
Then you saw Agaat beneath you, head buried in one of the garden books that you'd set out on the table, the strong hand firmly clamped around one leg of the ladder.
Are you managing here? she asked. I see here they also talk of colour schemes.
The tone was sticky with sanctimoniousness. You were recalled from the faint to sudden fury. You could sweep off the whole shelf of bottles with your arm onto her head. She wouldn't even know what hit her. A cluster bomb of preserves.
Jakkie phoned yesterday, she began, her voice low.
He says they called him on the carpet to ask who this Agaat-person is and why her letters arrived sometimes open, sometimes gummed shut. They're scared of sabotage, he says, but he doesn't understand it, because it's mainly the other side's people who are sent letter-bombs, he's scared his superiors will think he's turned wrong or something and it's the secret police who want to eliminate him. He says he's had it with war. He says he has nightmares.
That's how your garden began.
After her deposition Agaat took the garden books to the outside room and made her own study of them. You kept thinking of the letter. Would she have seen it, you wondered? Would she have looked in your bag? When she went to take out the new pills from the chemist? You tried to remember when you'd eventually gone to post it, tried in vain to recollect licking and resealing it.
In the evenings after supper when Jak had gone to the stoep, Agaat would come and sit with you at the dining room table and make recommendations and see to it that you planned it all in the finest detail until your eyes were ready to fall shut. Then she made strong coffee which in turn kept you from sleep.
Take an extra Valium she'd say if you complained.
She persuaded Dawid to help you with the big things.
Jak stood on the sidelines, now and again when you weren't looking, lent a hand when Dawid asked him.
You had a strong pump installed at the dam and on Agaat's recommendation had a reservoir built for the summer on the rise behind the house. She saw a small bulldozer and scraper at Barlows in town and you hired it to construct the terraces.
Of compost material there was enough. You had big heaps made up from manure and straw from the stables. Agaat pushed a length of steel wire into each one and went and felt it every morning. It mustn't be too hot, otherwise it kills the microbes, she learnt from her book.
She reckoned that the farm hotnots, as she called them, were too idle and too few for the garden work and at her insistence you got a team of convicts from town to dig trenches, stack stone walls and dig out the flowerbeds three feet deep to improve the soil texture with additions of compost.
Agaat cooked great pots of rice and pork for the convicts and kept them lively with jugs of sweet Frisco every three hours. With a short quirt she walked to and fro behind the lines with the guard to see that there was no idling.
When it's spring again
, she taught them, and the second and third voices of the refrain, day in, day out.
She had more or less burnt herself out by the time you were ready to go to Starke Ayres in Grabouw to buy seed and bulbs and trees and shrubs.
Those were your best times together, those excursions, those long hours in fragrant nurseries with your reference books and looking at the exotic flowering-habits and feeling the leaves of all the unfamiliar plants. And the names of the roses that you translated for Agaat, crepuscule, evening twilight, and explained, Mary Stuart, queen of the Scots with her long jaw, and wine-red Mario Lanza that she knew from your record with the songs from
The Student Prince
. Overhead the moon is bee-a-ming, you hummed together there in the nursery avenues. For the first time you had picnics again alone together, in the rose gardens of Elgin, in parks, on a bench under the huge wild fig tree with thirteen trunks, Ficus craterostoma in the botanical gardens of Kirstenbosch.
Cold sausage, sandwiches with thick butter and apricot jam and coffee with condensed milk from the thermos flask, Agaat's favourite picnic fare. Together you sat on the old green travelling-rug in the Gardens, after you'd shown her the statue of Jan van Riebeeck and the Castle and the fountains in Adderley Street and the flower market where the Malay women tried to speak to Agaat in their Cape tongue and she didn't really understand them.
People stared at you, the formally clad servant and the older white woman, as if you were a psychiatric patient, they looked at you, let out in the custody of your housekeeper.
See, I told you I'd show you Cape Town one day, you wanted to say, but you thought better of it.
She read your mind.
Well, would you believe, here I am actually seeing Table Mountain, she said and swallowed the rest of the sentence.
Let's go for a drive, you said, then you can see it from the back as well.
With the map on her lap Agaat followed as you drove across Kloof Nek and read the names out loud of the corners and the bays and the heads. Lion's Head, Kommetjie, Kalk Bay.
Beyond Simon's Town you stopped at a little nature reserve next to the sea and went to show her the penguins.
Agaat's face at the sight of the waddling nestling colony, to see her face as she gazed at the great world passing her by, the tanker on the horizon, the streets, the buildings, the shifting peninsula with its two horizons. On the way home she didn't say a word.
 
After the structures of stone and wood had arisen in Grootmoedersdrift's new garden, you did most of the work yourselves, sowed the seeds and planted the seedlings and thinned them and transplanted them from the seed trays and made cuttings and tied up the tendrils and scattered the snail poison and sprayed the roses. And now and then transplanted a thing that wasn't in the right position, or grafted a little struggling tree onto a stronger trunk.
Without Agaat you couldn't have managed it, you said in your little speech at the first spring celebration the following year. At Agaat's suggestion you presented a garden festival and fund-raising drive for the border soldiers. You invited the local branches of the WAU and the Women's Mission Union and the Southern Cross and the tea-drinking was opened by the dominee's wife with scripture and prayer and closed with a hymn.
You peeped at Agaat where she was standing behind the cake table with her hand held in front of her stomach. Her eyes weren't shut during the prayer. And with the closing hymn she stared straight into the blue sky and swayed lightly on her heels as she sang along, her black-and-white clothes sharply etched against the purple irises in the bed behind her, her fine descant floating above the hymn there in the open.
O goodness God's ne'er praised enow, who would it not profoundly move.
who unpacks the boxes from bockmann independent living aids? see the fat green letters on the brown cardboard it's fall 1994 land of hope and glory who cuts open the brown packing-tape? who pulls off blocks
of foamalite and plastic packaging? it's metal tubes chrome rods support surfaces who reads the instructions? who click-clacks the pieces into one another there they stand my externalised skeletons my walking frames one with legs one with wheels
tarantula or fortuna
choose!
who grabs the spider by the head? who shows the way? this is how you do it you lean forward on the crossbar who says it's like walking with a little table but without the top? don't look at your feet your feet are of no importance you drag them after your legs you keep straight you make a rigid knee the other one is like walking with the tea-trolley but without the tea you roll ahead you drag behind the wheels are braked you can adjust them if they turn too easily you fall
who shall tell the walker from the frame? and the wheel from the revolution? the imitator from the imitated?
who walks demonstration laps on the red polished stoep? who turns round at the furthest point with retracted chin with pursed lips? who cries soundlessly without tears?
I see she makes a rigid knee she flattens her feet she drops the arches drops her shoulders they bulge under apron bands her knuckles show white on the chrome
we'll take both she says
the frame for the morning the wheels for the evening we support your last steps so god willing twofold.
Wednesday 16 December 1953 quarter past three (day one Day of the Covenant!)
The great clean-up has begun. She's still groggy with the valerian. I thought I'd grasp my opportunity. Cut off the hair and washed with tar medicine and then with shampoo and applied ointment. Bad ringworm. Fiddled out the gouts of ear wax with matches and cotton wool and cut the nails. Big struggle to get the teeth brushed. Gums inflamed, lots of rotten teeth. Milk teeth fortunately, must be extracted, the whole lot while we're about it. Disinfected the mouth with extract of cloves. The whole body first rubbed with oils and then soaked in a hot bath for half an hour, afterwards scrubbed down with hard sponge and nailbrush and soap. Scabs, raw patches everywhere. Half limp, the little body. Eyes keep falling shut. Look at me, Asgat, I say, everything will turn out all right. Must think up another name.
Dried well and the whole body rubbed with oil again, all the nicks and cuts disinfected and covered with plasters. Full of little black moles. Must have them looked at, some of them don't seem right to me. Privates extremely tender and inflamed. God knows what happened to the creature, discarded, forgotten. Tomorrow to the doctor so that he can have a look at her. Who knows she may have all kinds of diseases. Must get inoculated.
 
Pox. Diphtheria. Polio. Can't have an infection erupting here on the farm.
 
Made her bed in the back room. No window, door can be locked. Immediately fast asleep. In old pyjama jacket of Jak's. Quite lost in it. Gave her another double dose of tranquillisers so that she can sleep for a long time. Suffering from shock it seems. Suppose to be expected.
Still 16 December half past eight
It's dead quiet but a different kind of quiet to the usual. As if the house has acquired an ominous charge. Went to see, she's out like a light.
 
Have brought something huge upon myself here. Feel exhausted/weepy/ angry with myself or something.
 
Jak goes about grinding his teeth chronically. Selfish, he mumbles, what about me? I wait for the explosion. I'm trying to think of a name that will suit her, that she will take as her own, something not too far from what she's used to. Agnes, Aggenys, Anna. Perhaps then Aspatat provisionally, it's better than nothing and it's better than Asgat, ash-pit, ash arse, good Lord above!
18 December ten o'clock
I must force her to eat, clamp her between my knees, force open the jaws with one hand, push spoon between the teeth, tip, quickly press the mouth shut. With the other hand rub the throat to make her swallow. Only thin milky porridge, lots of sugar. Won't chew anything. Put down a bottle with teat next to her, she doesn't even look at it.

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