NINE
Fiela, all this time I have neglected you in my thoughts. What was I thinking of? Love, pleasure, like a sixteen-year-old who has gone to bed for the first time. For me, perhaps it’s the last. Soon it will be the day of your trial. Do you have a lawyer? Is he gifted? Good or bad, how can he manage to defend you if you don’t tell him a thing? If you keep everything locked up inside?
One bright, peaceful morning when the sun was gamboling across the light wooden floor, Faustin suddenly announced he was leaving for the airport. She wouldn’t see him for several days. He had to be in Johannesburg for a meeting of paramount importance concerning his nomination, he explained in a mysterious voice. Ah, the famous nomination. Nominated to what? Nominated by whom? Nominated for what? Rosélie knew nothing about it. Yet, hearing him constantly mention it, she had begun to wish it for Faustin, like you wish for rain on cracked, parched earth, crying out from drought.
Johannesburg was somewhat mythical, the forbidden city. Unlike Cape Town, clinging to its whiteness, it now belonged to the blacks. Businessmen, reputable and disreputable, crooks, small and big time, artists, real and alleged, and creators of all sorts streamed into the city. In came the jobless tired of being out of a job in the former bantustans, the miners tired of scraping the belly of the earth, and the farm workers tired of working themselves to the bone on the white man’s farms. A hybrid and dangerous population had come into being. In Johannesburg life was no blue chip. Anything went.
Stephen went there every May to attend the annual conference of the James Joyce Association.
Oh yes, they discussed Ulysses and Finnegans Wake in Jo’burg!
Once the workshops were over, the international specialists barricaded themselves in their three-star hotels. One time Stephen had strayed from the beaten path and had only managed to escape with his life from four strapping muggers by handing over his wallet, his gold signet ring, a present from his father at the age of seventeen, his chain bracelet, and his watch, which, although purchased duty-free at Frankfurt Airport, had cost him a fortune. Despite these misadventures, Rosélie was convinced Stephen was only too glad to spend a few days alone. What did he do over there?
To make up for this unexpected departure, Faustin kissed her tenderly, claiming:
“I won’t be away for more than a week.”
Such an assurance didn’t mean a thing. Unlike Stephen, whose every movement was programmed in advance, you could never predict Faustin’s next move.
Life then resumed its former rhythm. Dido, who, in her possessiveness, had not taken kindly to being deprived of her morning conversations, set off again for the bedroom with her tray, her heady cups of coffee, and her newspapers. She opened the shutters triumphantly, then began reading the Cape Tribune and other dailies.
Fiela’s trial had started. She still had not opened her mouth. Two young white defense lawyers, officially appointed to the case, did not look like much, but were bravely struggling to do their best. They called to the stand a number of witnesses who testified to the good works of their client. They gave evidence, for example, that she cured hopeless cases with the remedies she dispensed free of charge.
Curandera like me. When did you discover this gift of healing? Did you put it to better use than me, safeguarding your loved ones from misfortune?
One photo showed her on the bench of the accused. Sitting straight as an i. Her face impenetrable. Not in the least aggressive. Her incomparable eyes sparkled. Over the rest of her face there sat a mask of indifference, as if all this agitation was none of her business. For the first time there was a photo of her stepson, the accuser. A twenty-two-year-old unemployed with a mop of hair whom she had raised and treated like her own son, all the witnesses agreed. What had happened for him to turn against her in such a way? He could only speak of her with words of hatred and bitterness.
Dido folded the paper and went on chattering. Willem, come to bury his father, wanted to take his mother back to Australia. He had made his money selling hardware in Sydney. Sofie refused to follow him: she couldn’t abandon Jan lying under the oaks at Lievland. So Rosélie was not the only one to feel herself tied to a land because of a dead man. What a grip the deceased have!
That week Rosélie paid more attention to her patients.
Like you, Fiela, I have neglected them. I ought to be ashamed of myself. What can I expect of this man? I won’t get anything more than I’ve been getting. A little pleasure, let’s say even a lot. And that’s all.
One morning, dressed in her magician’s finery, carefully starched and ironed, she received Emma and Judith, her favorite patient, although she had put her off twice.
Patient No. 12
Judith Bartok
Age: 8 years old
Schoolgirl
Judith, daughter of Emma and cousin to Doris, was her mother’s pride and joy, although life had been hard on both of them. Judith was all Emma had left from a man who, having sponged off her for ten years, had cleared off to Maputo. There he had found a job that paid well and a woman to spoil him. One afternoon when Judith was coming home from kindergarten, although she had been told never, ever talk to strangers, she had accepted a piece of chewing gum from a man. He had immediately piled her into a car with his accomplices and dragged her to a plot of waste ground where she was then raped half a dozen times. The police had never even traced, much less identified the gang. As a result, she had been struck mute. If you touched her, she would curl up like a sensitive plant and cry. Her calvary lasted a year. All on her own, Rosélie had returned her speech to her and brought back, at times, a semblance of a smile to her lips. Do we need compassion and love in order to heal? Are miracles made of that? When she ran her hands over the little abused body, endeavoring to establish an equilibrium, Rosélie relived the scene where the girl’s childhood had been lost, and her eyes brimmed with tears.
How can we escape the circle of our hell?
We are broken and crushed and our hair turns white before its time.
Fiela, you had no friends. Like me. You made do with the herbs from your garden. You met Adriaan one Sunday at church. He was very different from you. Always joking. He made you laugh. He looked at your body. For the first time, a man took an interest in you. I know what it’s like. You were in seventh heaven. Nevertheless, two years after your wedding he gave a belly to the neighbor’s daughter. Martha, a girl of fifteen. You suffered the martyr, but you didn’t show it. You took the baby in, baby Julian. You raised him. You made a man out of him to the best of your ability.
While Emma sat down in the kitchen with Dido for a cup of coffee, both berating the wickedness of life and its constant surprises, the session with Judith began. The allotted time never varied. While measuring by touch the flow of her energy and redistributing it where it was needed, Rosélie questioned her. About school and its daily ennui. About catechism and its weekly ennui. About piano lessons and the torture of scales. About dancing and the torture of points. At least she loved karate, which, according to Emma, taught you how to defend yourself. Halfway through she would regularly ask for a story in her acid-drop voice. Rosélie had already embroidered endlessly on the adventures of Rabbit and Zamba and Ti-Jan L’Orizon, which Rose used to recount to her in her childhood on those evenings when Elie, having deigned to dine at home, was getting ready to sleep in her bed and probably make love to her. At those moments, gone were the tears and instead, her voice soared up from the first floor to the attic, light and joyfuclass="underline"