A
Losberg Diary
It is yet another sobering Thursday dawn in
the township, early birds are catching taxis to various places of consensual
servitude, and school children are throwing buckets of filth ridden water down
drains or on dried up patches of lawns scattered like islands in the middle of
dust roads.
The previous night was serenely horrid with
wailing dogs howling at the moon and some blurting speakers playing mundane
music on repeat.
So the morning feels like a curse of stale
light, as first rays of the day creep through my stringy curtains.
Infants cry a couple of shacks down the
street; others run water into steel kettles from my neighbor’s tap.
Unashamedly miscreant young women walk out
of their yards still in pajamas to manicure their nails starting their calm and
pleasant days of gold-digging.
A senile twenty something year old boy with
a dislodged steering wheel from a car wreck makes his rounds about the shack
city.
With pouted lips spitting sounds of a
rundown engine, and with invisible gears in hand and Flintstone like heel
brakes crushing dust particles, he stops in front of one strange yard.
He parks his imaginary automobile by
dropping the worn wheel clasped in dirt black hands, and enters a shack
hurriedly like a messenger of horse bet winnings.
The sing song of early morning toils fills
the air, with distant hooters calling on late farers to sprint towards their
gaping doors.
It is on a winter’s chill such as this that
one often dreads the outside lavatory with mixed feelings of rage and an anus
gurgling flatulence.
But bowls have no master, and trudging
along with a cigarette at hand and a shriveled up newspaper, I exit the humid zinc
house, into the bluest sky hanging over tin roofs of yet another ghetto
penitentiary.
In no time, school children would be
singing anthems, leaving unemployed single mothers to start their gossip cabals
and excursions towards fat cake vendors.
Among corrugated walls on termite smitten
wooden logs many have made naively charming homes with migrant mine-workers.
Once sexy sirens of our juvenile wet
dreams, many are now burdened by triads of infants without paternal bonds,
loose souls in search of cuddles and warm cum.
Their shrill voices always calm a mind
ransacked by infernal dreams, dreams which often require a woman’s touch to
sweeten their grip.
One always finds households with up to six
young women, stranded in droves fending for life through one night stands, or grandmother’s
pension or even children’s social grant.
They would be head-wrapped in stockings,
veracious bodies clad in worn rosy gowns received as gifts from first lovers
who left them belly filled with sperm and futures deferred.
But with their eternal strength, they waltz
still their heels in woolen loafers and
buttocks swung towards main roads of this dead place.
Little children still homebound and
unafforded kindergartens start their daily alchemies, pilling heaps of soil in
designs of their imaginings while radio speakers boom their day’s doses of
tragedies.
Like midgets stranded between pillars of
rusted steel, they chase after dogs and falling over their steps giggle
uncontrollably smeared with soil and bruises.
I overhear one urchin screaming to its
mother that dogs want to urinate on her and upon my slow exit from my ritual
ablution vigil, Matsekela slinks into
the yard, hung-over and buzzing, asking for coins to add up for a beer.
He believes what caused his condition is
the sole cure for it, a myth believed by many in our township, just as we also
know that every bar of soap does any cleaning chore.
We gather two empty bottles into a plastic
bag; dexterously enough not to have the two clicking against one another so as
to wake up the whole neighborhood to our alcoholic escapade.
The street is gaining pace, and ladies with
bags flung over sloppy shoulders kick stones with polished sandals while their stay
at home men yawn about their makeshift lawns and fences.
Patchwork gates slide aside for it is a
norm to have uninvited visitors at 8am here, and at the tuck-shop we find a
scrubbing dusty-kneed sister who does not even bother to question a purchase of
liquor at this hour.
Then the day begins in a place where even
flies buzz louder than airplanes, and with my friend another binge to stupefy
senses commences.
It is four hours and eleven beers in Lebelo’s shack that we sense the midday
sun balloon exploding over our shadows, while he viciously keeps aflame a
lecture about a Jesus who was born of an extra-terrestrial bloodline.
LKJ keeps thumping in my chest, I am about
to gloomily pass out.
We were hungry having not eaten a thing
since the ferocious tour started, and burning froth scrapping tripe was
building an acid mine in my stomach.
But Lebelo
was at his element and could care less about drowsy ears floating in his stuffy
shack, a stoned philosopher full of fermented malt and barley.
He spontaneously bursts into a jumbled verse
in a language of his own mustering – Twagah
Fofo, and the recital borders on a séance with an un-exorcised spirit that
possess any man who dares intone these incendiary syllables.
He suggested a local brew of ginger beer
mixed with a tinge of battery acid, and I digressed, followed keenly on my
heels by my staggering friend – the sole friend alive from my childhood spent
on these decrepit streets.
Snaking our way home around the corner felt
like a pilgrimage to Mecca, and the blazing heat that renders winter infernal
for a couple of hours smeared mirages on the red soil and double visions
assailed us like punch-lines from a sickening joke.
He suggests we hustle for another beer at a
shack nearby, and I decline citing rumors that when you buy one beer at that
backyard shebeen, you will never stop going to same house in spite of all
others.
A fridge full of beers piled on a long dead
body of Jah knows who, that ought to unnerve even the best atheist alcoholic
this side of the Losberg Mountain.
It is at such horrendous times that Matsekela and I get assaulted by zealous
recollections of our Nyayabinghi
days, speaking a dialect that simulated Jamaican speech, we sang and chanted
hypnotic hymns in stupefied nostalgia.
I was born here, among garbage piles searching
for razorblades and lost dolls for my sisters in the company of scavenging
goats and stray dogs.
***
Up the road comes Matlakala, a one time girlfriend to our Rastafarian guru, now dead
of that disease.
Knock-kneed and buxom in her tight fitting
American Flag print dress, she is that ever cheerful soul, a crude beauty
commonly lusciously built, once schooled in a preparatory for imbeciles.
There is no jester better on my street, as
she now manages to find enduring anecdotes to humiliate us drunken louts from
today onwards.
Her dimpled face dotted with ripe pimples,
she always looks too innocent for her age.
But perhaps we all cannot bear signs of
innocence, once we tasted the bile of life’s dish.
Matsekela decides to pass on and head home, and I intend to slump on my
unmade bed to resume slumber and ease the throbbing hunger chipping my insides.
It nags me that I have recently heard
people whisper about Tlaki’s
deteriorating health condition and physical abuses she endures under metallic
stacks of knuckles of one known Air Force
Four Gang member, but all I care to bring to mind are happy memories she
brews on every smile she shares.
Her last donor of disease, the whip
wielding lover, is now said to have been arrested a couple of weeks ago, sentenced
to 15 years for the murder of a foreign shop owner among other rewards.
Rumor has it that he would organize gangs
of milk-faced initiates still nursing clotted penises, to raid and rob various
shops believed to be owned by maPakistane.
And stories of the event of his arrest
leave nothing to the imagination as I recall dozing off slightly, before my
mother knocks on the door I locked after finding it unlocked and nobody
insight.
Then follows slurs about my incessant
binging, raucous remarks from a hurt mother seeing her son lose control over
his lost life.
And it hurts me as well, to see my abandon
and reckless behavior ruining my best years.
I obviously feel compelled to restore some
semblance of order in my life but I often fail.
Strange that such erratic change of
temperament starts with a fight with a woman in one’s life, as that was the
case for my sobbing and self-flagellation.
This has created a monster that often
cranes its rear during those drunken bouts of obsolete courage to face failures
in life, looking into my empty soul and seeing a million soggy eyes.
And as all men make vain attempts to
conceal their pain, these sessions with my friend around these arid avenues of
a depraved township have somewhat called myself to myself in a drastic manner.
In between stints of melancholic dozes of
tormented sleep, the past couple of dreamless nights have provided me with some
introspective moments which border on being spiritual epiphanies.
My inner core seems to want to crawl
through labyrinthine reservoirs of my animus – that monster carved in my image,
with a tongue that burns and words that can topple mountains.
Slow as the process was, one would
understand that long standing denials of such an entity co-existing with my
‘normal’ self could take a while to acknowledge, I feel I have however reached
a precipice of discovering the nature and reasons that engendered this virulent
alter-ego.
I am a monster of my making, which I can
accept first and foremost.
But as with all social beings, much of my
psychic abnormalities have been cleaved from my surroundings and more
incidentally familial relations.
Ok, there are undeniable traumas existent
within everyone born into poverty, and those scars are what characterize
poverty as an unspoken genocide.
Genocide of inter-relational faculties in
any disposed person breeds reclusive persons; genocide of moral ideals creates
socio-paths and narcissists.
Genocide of personal emotional acuity that
is often already paralyzed by ages of depravity gives rise to sentiments of
inferiority.
And I now realize that the worst abuses
that many hurl are bred by a feeling of inadequacy, and more so, a feeling of
never being adequately understood for furnaces of emotions reeling within their
breasts.
And when one person, (considering that we
all are inundated with these scars); when such hurt entities engage in any form
of union, the inevitable is the entropic catastrophes of constant aggression
and reciprocal attitudes to deal with such aggressions.
Like the lady in the next shack who wails
each night from a barrage of icy slaps, these and other secrets cannot be
hidden through thin tin walls that stand inches away from one another.
She screams languid recitations of curses,
and boils water on a paraffin stove to defend herself and her children, but as
always, the contraption loses her war before it could become a swift weapon in
the hands of a woman in travail.
I remember mother used to do that ritual,
when assaulted by her shaft-sinker lover during our stint in another slum which
was aptly named Phumasbethane.
Hers, like those of the woman next door is
a defense mechanism that is resilient and not easily overcome, that can be
transplanted onto her children vicariously through exposure, as it took years
of socialization and actual encoding into what one can call her ‘emotional
DNA’.
And this mechanism is endemic in all
downtrodden minds as science tells us, because starved people can be creative
people, for they often are the ones who dare peek behind curtains of life’s
tragic shadowy characters.
But creativity and its weight on an
incapacitated creator can also be a well spring of criminality.
Men’s wanton actions are their
responsibility, yes, and for the mean emasculations of their dreams, who will
forever bear karma’s yoke of awe besides their women?
Yet the monster fathomed by a patriarchal
system that made pillars of shackled men, raised by single mothers who
transposed her responsibilities to the youngling due to migrant labor and other
criminal endeavors, that is I.
A medley of cries and yells of commands at
my siblings characterized my adolescence; I therefore suppose that the cruel
nature of my nurture has its genesis there among such corporal rituals.
And mingled with mother’s chiding voice and
my inner screams for resolutions I cannot name, I drift into a dream that is
more a nightmare than anything I have dreamt before.
I dream I am stranded in a city made up of
many cities and towns I have once visited, but only certain sections of such
places are molded into one mazy space in which I feel lost and trapped.
Sleep echoes through inebriation and all
types of bad thoughts begin as I am summoned by familiar concoctions of music
that stream from wide open doors to shacks receiving owners returning from
their servitude.
The blistering heat of winter sweat under
stale blankets fog my eyes, and I stumble over my laptop playing Miles Davis
odes to some unknowable heaven.
The day draws to an end when I awake from
my torpor five hours since Matsekela
left, and screams of children playing hop scotch fills my brain with mucus
smeared images of happy brown discards of a generation without a future.
Inside my shack, I have not cooked yet and
the evening is knocking beats on a night that is a prelude to the weekend, but
hunger persists.
With the fridge empty and unplugged to save
units of electricity rations purchased with piss and sweat from illegal
connectors, I begin preparing our staple diet of porridge and onion gravy.
Mother is gone to a vigil for a girl who
died a week ago, whose family could not afford to bury in time.
This she tell me when she returns, eyes
streaming with pain, because this was only a twenty three year old child, who
had four children now left with their grandmother in a rundown RDP house.
School uniforms converge for dust lessons
outside as children gear for sunset games, and other mothers scream for their
rascals to change or something like that.
And the night begins with me sober, an
insomniac at a rope’s end, thinking hard about life’s comedy and other lesson
bought with tears.
***
The most intricate of wonders about
location life is the near absent lack of music in all random forms and ethnic
intonations.
One shack would unleash its latest find on
the record market and two shacks down the street another novice from the rural
areas would be hurling traditional beats into a cacophony of disconcerting
noise.
Then there are children singing along in
all kinds of broken cords and harmonies, with every third house having its
concert enjoyed by vagabonds lounging in the heat of a winter morning’s sun.
Women would have swept their sections of
the street during their early morning resolve to clean their yards and catch a
load of death notices and news about exposed witches.
Patches of clean portions would be seen
running along the dusty road, also announcing a house whose girls are untidy
and spoilt.
Clothes would be hanging on wires tied to
poles and nappies always spoke of newborns mushrooming all over the slum.
And when the sun has risen to a bored
craze, there would be that droning hum of repetitive songs gone wordless in
failing speakers.
Stepping outside, only the rusty glare of
sun rays bewilder me about my whereabouts, then I remember I am home.
After a long shuffle under lace draping and
newspapers on worn table tops, vases decorating makeshift side tables made of
empty shoe boxes and an asbestos plank, through my mother’s purse, a coin to
get me two drags of wood tasting cigarettes is fished.
I rush to the nearest shop and smell that
sordid air breathed by all desperate souls around, colorful stenches of
uncollected garbage and clogged drainage drums.
Bucket lavatories leaning for dear life
against falling fences, stand hidden in backyards of the most transparent
squalor.
Then, a sudden flash of memory about Osama Bin Bade’s arrest hits me smack on
my nauseated face.
It is said that, or more precisely, Lebelo paints a picture of one
ingeniously daring attempt to escape by one evangelically dreaded and revered
criminal who groomed apprentices for knife fights.
Bin
Bade is an alleged member of a malicious gang that
specializes in prison breaks, sanctioning escapes and orchestrating some of
infamous rackets in the prisons of this region.
But it always takes one little profoundly
inane mistake to get caught.
The story goes that after infamous
escapades by his incensed initiates, an ID document belonging to a foreign
national was among the inventory they brought with their loot one evening.
After the inevitable depletion of the
winnings, which normally takes a day or two, the gang was in desperate need for
cash.
That is when a genius idea pops up from one
girlfriend of this feared leader of prison riot brigades, which suggests that
the document be returned for a ransom.
And during those torturous withdrawal
stages when nyaope is being drained
from one’s body, the idea could very well seem sober and legitimately
achievable.
It goes without saying that police were
informed and an investigation team sent to the shack identified through the
girlfriend’s incessant visits.
But the chase that ensued is what seems to
be the climax of the story according to various orators.
When police car veered around the corner to
our street, a whistle contest seemed to have commenced.
This served as a warning call employed by
the gang – a precise and distinctive whistle, which is echoed by tens of pursed
lips of rampaging children made men by a blade.
The culprit sprung from his comfort and
made for the back of his shack, cutting through shrubs dried up on rusted
mattress springs.
Up this fence, through this gate always
found behind neighborly neighbors’ shacks, past that shack only to see a white
police officer sprinting the lap behind him with red-eyed rage.
Any smoker’s problem during an unexpected
need for flight is their lungs; chest heaving coals and volcanic air while the
body attempts to consume as much oxygen as diabolically possible.
And they do collapse, or feel as though
they are collapsing, a feeling resembling folding knees under a good tackle by
a former rugby player turned law enforcer.
The black detective didn’t try to make
pursuit at all, on condition of his stomach as the joke goes.
He rather opted to hobble through a field
of potholes in reverse, then forwards, scrapping their vehicle on glass islands
on the roads while losing kidney life in the process.
Eventually cornered and in cuffs, he was
ceremoniously ushered into the back of the vehicle, saluted of course by his
reverent comrades, apprentices and foot soldiers.
It now occurs to me that this is tuck-shop
where the news became a story that formed a legend that is worshipped by tens
of young boys leaving school for initiation schools and wishing for stints in
prison to get their numbers.
I mean, I have no ill feelings towards the
resourceful brother; besides, he even gives me cigarettes on credit at times of
desperate cravings.
The day snails along like growing shadows
of black boxes slated on red soil of my street of oblivion, I have come here to
rescue myself from my hand and the sneaky twittering of birds adds some respite
to my urban torment.
And with intermittent hooting of faraway
taxis and whirling whines of exhausted engines that never travel further than
this township, I decide that last night’s left-over food could be a feast to a
staggering mind and calm to a growling stomach.
Mother is not here again, must have left to
lend a hand peeling vegetables for the funeral cuisine that often turns into a
feeding scheme with catholic resolve and manners.
She will at least eat with the rest of the
women who venture tirelessly every weekend to some bedside of a bereaved
parent, or to some wedding or dowry negotiations.
I have become accustomed to women sitting
side by side with grumpy old men on behalf of their sons pleading for a bride
who will soon turn out to be wench milked by every erection around 99.
Ninety
Nine.
Ninety
Nine is the name that has clung to this place’s
persona, a shack extravaganza, cramped and hatefully dark.
Many families without houses were forever
being relocated from one plot of a veteran boer harboring resentment for the
free kaffir, to another under operations campaigned by lousy municipal workers
during electioneering time.
Together during that year of our lord 1999,
when gold mines were employing a lot of non-tax paying migrant labor, hundreds
of loiterers from Phumasbethane and
unknowable hordes of newcomers were brought here and given stands to build
their ramshackle homes with temporary hopes for brick houses.
Today it still stands, neighboring a grave
yard, were many of our loved ones lie unattended.
Boulders scattered about shacks located at
corners of streets have become hangout spot, where drug peddlers chill after
dark, and cigarette and vegetable vendors own by day their wares shriveled like
faces of torn aging fruit.
Yet another Friday prepares itself steadily
as the day leers past noon, schools are out and easy catch walks the main roads
with nagging slowness of purpose.
They are caught in the heat of gossip, boys
pester the willing and giggles show clumsy grins teething for a brutal night to
introduce Saturn’s day.
I decide to take a walk, having lost hope that
Matsekela would show up with a plan
again.
It is repulsive how we clamor for treats
such as satellite televisions only to create galaxies of antennas on our ocean
of shacks.
Down and beaten boys in pants that look too
young for their age stand leaning against ‘fuse boxes’ with smart phones
lisping hits from hip hop degenerates making more money than most African
states.
Women get off taxis carrying bags full of
just diets sold cheaply at plastic retail stores or taxi rank kiosks made for
the sole purpose of those who always forget important items.
Cars that would otherwise be parked near
kitchen windows or in backyards of houses start rattling their bones as the sun
calms its blows and a chill consumes the air again.
The night becomes a pot stewing in the
final heat of a hearth of rags, and you can see hurried aims twinkling on faces
of those with plans.
It is always a rhythm we follow each week
and month, either on the winning side of the coin war or not.
Those with broader smiles and puffed up noses
salivating from KFC toxins must have received their weekly wages, and obviously
children will run fastest after their heroes with a prize bull diced into hot
wings of force-fed chicken.
Some child beats an odd rhythm on a trash
can, and I decide to turn back, literally turn right around and head in the
same direction I was coming from to a point of walking right next to my
previous footsteps printed on dry earth.
I see others stretch wires out of doors
opened for the exit of loudspeakers for the night’s chorus of mayhem and I know
I will not have a pinch of sleep again tonight, but I have no plan of escape.
Where is Matsekela? We could make a plan together; go to a loan shark and
buy liters of plonk and listen to music until we pass out under a tree we like
in his mother’s yard.
Unlocking the door and sitting in the cold
splendor of rags tied into a doll house in a junk yard, it was then that I felt
that all life is a garbage heap that is only surmounted by those who can turn
rubbish to gold.
I needed gold, and here was a trash town in
the middle of nowhere named after a year that is of no import.
Perhaps it was named after a radio station
as often suggested, I am not certain, but what the hell, it has youth with
radios on and drinking behind steel paneled windows in a privacy that they
believe exists for them in a world which allows nobody a secret.
And that senile urge to sleep during the
mid hours of an afternoon buries me with reminiscence, silhouettes of a woman.
Self-flagellation begins.
Mother should be back to check if the shack
has not burned down with me drunk on a pint of Skipa sea ntekana.
***
Battery powered light bulbs flicker through
nail holes, corrosion holes and other holes, trailing out doors of fortunate
families who managed to raid a broken down car before others.
Candle light battles on in other
over-crowded steel cages, and the music gains pitch in the silencing trauma of
a night.
Faults and mistakes are made up for in the
dark, through night-long binges and orgies involving young girls who were ten
when you were twenty-two.
The rhythm is humming the night away,
dancing in the coals of brokenness dressed in designer clothes, with names
misspelled at the labels.
I need to get out also, and brace my eyes
for toils only reserved for veterans of this place, seeing in the dark, because
I hear people greeting me without any idea of their identities.
This dark part of a township in the darkest
shadow of a spooky mountain is for the brave, and I know of many who have lost
their lives on its sewer drench muddy pits.
I have heard of grown men losing their
penises to machetes wielded by blistered boys who considered circumcision at a
hospital a sacrilege.
That way,
ba ho etsa pholo, as they
would say.
Then Matsekela
arrives unannounced, announced only by my creaking gate clearly tossed by a
drunken hand who could not make the custom-made locking mechanism.
And so another night begins.
Mbhaulas flicker embers from rags torched for warmth, with fire lovers
spreading scotched knees over flames that warm not their bodies, but merely
sending them into reveries.
Dancing flames tell stories of a dancing
night just beyond the dark, in glitter-ball dazed venues with tiled floors
which can never seem to absorb any crime.
Around these fires they listen to the
racket and think hard about humming moths of their glowing minds.
Underneath prickly branches of an ancient
peach tree we stand counting notes for financing of a wild ride into a broom
breaking mess.
Matsekela
always has the road map, which tavern to start off
with and which has more comfortable couches for customary blackout stunts.
But the one with slippery white tiles bears
rancid recollections for my head pounding with dub-stepped sounds heard from
the back seat of a car we hopped into without who it belonged to.
Where we were headed, a friend died
grotesquely on tiled floors which could not hide the blood spilled from his immaturely
slit neck and wounded arm.
Shrill screams of girls sent terror-stricken
juveniles off dance floors, their chair, crates and worn couches.
This was a place where old antipathies
could be avenged by mystery assailants holding a grudge inherited from your
long dead uncle.
I remember the rush for a single door by
hundred of matadors frenzied by beer and cheap whisky.
Others scurried towards the lavatories and
others invaded the sacred DJ booth, turned the glass box into a cell or some
glittering sacrificial shrine.
He twitched a couple of times after we (his
friends) had returned for him after realizing the rush was away from a life and
death struggle of our concern.
He died with bloody hands smearing evidence
on most of our heads, jackets and pants; leaving only his name baked with black
stains on our memories.
The tiles would be clean tonight, or
already soiled by new dirt and blood spilled from bottles and plastic cups
which seem to be ever refilled by a magic trick.
But we were headed there, huddled together,
wind-parched in car without a windscreen, towards the only one decent hangout
in a shabby town with shabby hangouts.
We knew what to expect but we felt a new
anticipation with every turn and speed hump.
Self-immersion.
Unblemished thighs swinging tranquilly to
songs of abandon, losing their chastity and morale on dance floors because they
were cheated of the better views of life coveted.
Sleazy teen twerkers breaking pelvic bones
to twitter lisps, and spicy fingers of a disc jockey tracing movement on
mixers, even thought we knew he did nothing.
Heads bobbed, and sultry moves brushed
against erect penises of wall flowers, and the bile of stale drink simmering in
my stomach whirled with the Technicolor lights facades creeping on bodies and
floors and ceilings and walls.
Music eventually gets inaudible, and only a
thumping in the gut, like echoes that ransack bone marrow, smelting their
threads.
***
I am woken up by biting chill singing
through slits and holes in the shack walls, a whirling wind rattling the wires
on the roof and other mysterious sounds blend with glacial gusts as I find
myself underneath a pile of pillows.
Molten head fixed against a stained sheet,
sliding under rock hard pillows stuffed with old clothes and still knowing that
the pangs of winter are only clutching a morbid grip around town.
I need a fix beyond food, a joint, a quart,
something because masturbating would be sacrilegious in this satanic freezer.
I brace myself with courage of a horse
yielding its load and lapping silent waters of a putrid stream, and unhinge the
lock and exit silently, knowing mother has heard me.
She would have wished to talk about the
funeral I suppose, but I can’t stomach foreign melancholy when my stew is
hardening and loosing taste.
Outside, Sunday is gloomy, broody clouds
darkening crisp skies with a rage chorusing dust rising like plumes towards
heaven.
Silhouettes of draped women in the
whirlpool of dust and brazen air make for a haunting sight, but on I must go in
this glazy light to pay Lebelo a
wakeup call.
He is already up, watching pornographic
videos at 7am, headache and fever building fires under his skin.
He says his condition can only be remedied
by vodka, after one confusing night of celebrating a 90 year old ladies
birthday.
That turns out to be where he went after
stretching me at my home front, in the wee hours of dawn, having blacked out
several times during our bored binge in a place that cried with the blood of
our maimed friend.
Clouds were getting darker when we ventured
into the dust storm, teeth grinding grains of sordid coal and burnt rags from
garbage heaps still simmering their last embers of night fires.
Even goats were confused in their favorite
ditches, with passage ways filling with stray walkers trying for shelter from a
blistering wind from a wet sky.
Light crept in intervals to remind us that
it was day during this nightly clime when we reached our destination; and we
were warned that we would find booze very scarce on this day.
And indeed shelves were near empty, fridges
holy in their sanctimoniously fluorescent light bulbs.
Compromises were necessary, so even the
meanest blend would suffice for fuel to a day of worship and hymns and
supplications for those laid to rest the day before.
Somewhere must drafted in the wind, obscure
and muddled up with wafting bellows of taxis for an ever travelling populace -
the curse of departures.
Many were returning to cities and other
outskirts, chasing florid avenues of suburbia for the grime they eventually
carry home in loads over weekends.
Others were temporary workers, for the lord
of course, like that old man we meet just outside the liquor store, lamenting
his worn-soles of righteousness, evangelizing drunks who braved the cold
winter’s blows for swigs of satan’s piss.
We see many around here, and Lebelo voices his disdain for them,
which he actually showed to this self-same man a couple of weeks ago by way of
a flying brick intently propelled for collision with his skull.
Dogs dangle torn plastic bags dripping of
offal and tripe; flies cannot disturb them with their nosy flights in this
turbulent clime.
One, and then others loom like spies in a
town defamed by its dog population.
Dogtown it could be named, because every
yard has a breeding bitch that barks and howls and snarls all kinds of terror.
Some neighborhoods are said to be ambushed
by infestations of rats, but ours chose a deck of puppies and is now left
gripping of an epidemic of hounds.
Brown shabby tailed dogs, saggy nippled
dogs and ever horny dogs.
My neighbor’s three-legged dog that
unnerves me with its pleading eyes every time the clink of plates being washed
echoes through the shack.
Dogs that breed puppies that seem like illegitimate
children, stray hounds afraid of nothing human.
Adopted dogs from white masters who went on
holiday, puffy and cute poodles lost by maids who are now beating up their
children for not keeping them on leashes.
Lebelo says exterminatory measures were proposed by the powers that be,
dished out in a form of a feast where the dogs were systematically poisoned.
I still wonder if there were feeding pits
or some unfortunate volunteer had to walk a jaw snapping mile with fatal
buffets aimed at being the last meal for salivating dogs.
But the plan had backfired I hear, because
the poison functioned more like a laxative and the dogs’ hunger grew in
atrocious proportions.
The dogs ate grass and vomited all over the
streets, lawns and yards.
They fed and got fat on rotten rodents who
stole their poisoned meals turned delicacy, mated and littered thousands of
bastards wishing for savage kicks on blistered ribs.
But fuck dogs, and that lone donkey
wondering the dusty scene.
We are headed to Setlamatlama to share spoils of our quest for nourishment, so dogs
can take over town as they have with our sleep.
And we hope this plague of canine
scoundrels will never be legends of a place gone in tatters, but guardians of
junk pile of bones where new-born scavenging dogs can dig for new masters.
***
Through the misty view of soiled skies and
whirlwinds, a young man appears followed by a band of about fifteen dogs.
Soon after his dreadful marauding band of
assortment of iron grinning canines passes our agitated skins, noses sniffing
our fear floating violent with the air, we see a band of sangomas enter a yard
of shacks.
This conspicuous yard is the only one that
seems quite large, and one could see that these are those first stands
allocated those moved to this here Extension
One.
Setlamatlama, as one of the born and bred breeds of this hallowed grave is no
stranger to quarrel.
And as we eventually find out, he has had a
bout with one sangoma boy at that compound.
Ninety
Nine is a shack heap, not too old but not too young
either.
But Extension
One has seen an interesting evolution happen in a rather quick span of
time, between the hiring and the firing of uprooted mine workers.
After its pandemic of shacks mushrooming in
the swampy farm of a deserter were proving an eye sore for electioneering
pundits, town planners had to device a way of building the matchbox houses for
these people in a way of keeping promises made by dead or dying presidents.
These measly, two roomed apparitions were
to contend with space cramped by shack architecture, so the result was the
yards became smaller, allowing for ‘informal extensions’ of these paralyzing
dormitories for the plebian.
But with time and bonuses and pennies paid
after retrenchments, some people forced new designs against the perilous walls
of asbestosis roofed pet cages.
Shacks leaned against bricks to make for
kitchens and extra bedrooms as families burst with illegitimate children and
growing sons who could stand not their pregnant sisters and proselyte
step-fathers.
This eventually created an intriguingly
frustrating sight of erratic design esthetics, patchwork houses created by
persons who though not entirely unintelligent, could often times seem too
pompous for their worth.
Stingy young men with expensive clothes and
stuck up girls who seem prettier than many yet frustratingly morose, these were
the characters of the youth in Extension
One.
A place of pretend affluence strained by
the glaring irony of brick and shack sculptures which are their eternal yoke of
unrealized dreams.
Even the holes in my underwear make life
unbearably cold, each icy slap spiky with every step in the moaning wind,
makeing anticipation a castration.
We decide to tear open two left over
sachets of Sambuca, once lost but now found in Lebelo’s coat pockets, and we are not the only ones on a prowl.
Wiry louts smacking of brutal attitudes,
the ones with guts to jot slurs with excrement on lavatory walls, walk with
bravado, among these plumes of soil that leaves every dog blurry eyed.
And on we walk after sips and wanton
littering on a sordid street swept by some demonic wand of winter shudders.
We arrive at Setlamatlama’s house burning with Sambuca oiling our empty stomachs,
and he prepares a joint for us as we mix the beverages in amidst chatter about
last night and the weather and the loss of dignity.
The floor bedecked with Old Buck, Vin Coco and Mokador, we
commence another stunt at this early Sunday hour, hymns from a nearby church
calling angles to our side.
***
The feud is said to have began at a
tuck-shop around the corner where an effeminate young man in sangoma regalia
was in the company of yet another sultry teen seductress also in the process of
initiation into the rites of healing.
Like any hot-blooded lout, Setlamatlama decided to lay his tongue
bare on the woman’s ears, with exotic coaxes of erotic yearning he felt for her
person.
She was flattered it appears, but as is
custom among apprentices of those sanctuaries for the mentally deranged and
spiritually adept, she was declining his advances.
So, further persuasion was necessary, he
thought.
Only to find a bevy of flung arms screaming
insults, this young man with a bow-leg defending his fellow ritualist.
In the manner synonymous with infuriated
women, he beat his thigh in utter indignation and exasperation; Setlamatlama on the verge of uttering
humiliating guffaws that eventually burst out disturbing other customers who
joined the mirth.
The two were utterly stone cold jinxed by
rage, his frothing mouth spitting more ancestrally charged curses indulging Setlamatlama’s future consorts and
demeaning his virile escapades with women who will never be satisfied.
Setlamatlama lost his cool soon after that slur, and hurled a hailstorm of fists
and a barrage of slaps on the shrieking midget crouched between him and his
prospective girlfriend.
Red and white drapes danced about a heap of
incensed traditionalists in a Muslim establishment.
This tuckshop had never witnessed taut
thighs in frequent and crazed stamping and arms of a drum beating midget
showing beneath the mayhem of cloth and skin.
She was defending her friend of course,
also starting her own adage of spellbinding utterances, her voice becoming
hoarse as of a man with rusted lungs.
That was Setlamatlama’s cue to leave the scene of his sacred crime against
the bearers of unspoken gifts, and as he tells this story, he keeps referring
to the yard of witches as though all poverty in this town is bred by their
maladies.
His phone rings, and he answers it
hesitantly.
The caller on the other end is Dragon, demanding his ration of WorldCall airtime to peddle in some
Potchefstroom prison cell.
Setlamatlama excuses himself, something nefarious in his eyes, to go and serve
his life-time debt and make a quick purchase, but with us well aware of the
weather war outside, we recede in on our beer crates and volunteer to stay and
wait.
***
Witches come and go, so does the saying
confirm around here on the outskirts to purgatory.
And
in this neighborhood, a number of covens have strung to life aligned with the
dead who are summoned at any whim of the living.
Gullible children join sects governed by
shriveled up old women; youngsters deranged by a variety of causes but always
told that they are spirit induced.
There are those castrated boys with botched
circumcisions, their bodies having turned on them, scarred and creased with
lashing marks.
They often become staggeringly psychotic
and end up in the arms of self-proclaimed prophets and healers, pitiably
violent and with crafty schemes of their own.
Seeking a pure measure of compassion, to
kindle and quench furnaces of confusion enveloping their obscurity, these
eunuchs would find mother figures among wenches whose aims are to retard every
reservoir of innocence.
Boys would be inducted into thievery using
totems and artifacts left around unsuspecting victims.
I recall one boy speaking of a command to
kill his entire family in order to gain all the riches for which he yearned.
The vastness of need that could wring
slovenly children like these into weapons, leads many to suicide and others
more deeply into darker corridors of diabolical caverns.
Secret gatherings at midnight in townships
such as Dunusa are their common
excursions undertaken ominously after dusk, and here hordes of initiates and
master witches sanction activities so calumnious that death dealt by their
words is more sacred than any scriptural fortitude.
Devil’s minions that wallowed the neighborhood
into perpetual debts by those who believed in mystery safes with currencies of
any wishing; they were getting rich but not their novices who undertook the
criminal exploits of wealth acquisitions.
These were some acrid smelling elderly
leeches, ones with rotten tomatoes pierced with rusted needles stashed under
their beds, needled rosy plums left with moss and dust threads of mould
replicating these lobotomized seekers of solace.
All these tomatoes representing souls of
initiates, who succumbed to temptation, can be auctioned among seasoned
manipulators, at a bargain.
Bloodshot and melodious symphonies pictured
in the wake of this army, what were they hiding?
Among the waded walks of cries by girls who
let go, jokes of an empire that expired through fiction created in computers,
break into happiness in bottles.
***
As fate would have it, the parable of the
boy and the witches begins with a chance meeting at a taxi stop, where an
elderly woman approaches a decrepit young oaf unloading sacks of junk yard
collectibles he sell at a bargain.
The woman informs him of her dream, in
which he featured drastically; a soul in lament, bewitched by his aunts who
buried parcels of muthi under a tree
they offered on some Arbor Day.
He must visit her the following day she
says, bidding the puzzled man wondering if the truth exposed by this candid
encounter could be his saving grace.
It is always a wonder that, once under the
spell of vain desire one would see only their pain even when painted in colors
of a million lives.
The witch says he has been assailed by
terrible nightmares, made of colossal monsters at his rear bearing the image of
his step-father.
This man has him as a mpundulu sent by his paternal family to wreck havoc on the life of
his mother and her forsaken offspring.
Cruel undertakings and deeds the
step-father has meted on his younger sister are whispers muffled by revving
engines and afternoon chatter, naming an incestuous secret that would shatter
his family.
The boy walks away from this dismayed encounter
with a heavy heart, intent of avenging his kin and reclaiming illusory wealth
hidden under spells of a step-father hell-bred.
On the appointed day of his visit, he is
asked to strip naked in clear view of two women in red and white drapes,
hypnotized by humming obscenities and hymns that rouse sorcery of the dark
kind.
In a metallic tub filled with cold water
mixed with pink then yellow powder, wooden cuttings and bits of aloe, he is
asked to bath his person unleashing his skin from cloaks he inherited from his
step-father’s inequities.
After this teeth-grinding experience
comprised of fear and rage and glacial freeze, he reclines upon a scarcely
carpeted floor in abandon, waiting for the slit guts of a white chicken to be
sprinkled on his toes, legs, loin, chest, neck, face and hair.
Smeared in caking blood and gore, he is
covered with a blanket over a boiling pot of bitter herbs, steamed thoroughly
and dizzy, from where he would emerge for yet a smoke sacrament over a burning
plate crackling with mpepho.
The boy would eventually be allowed to get
into his trousers and shirt, relief that he yearns for much lesser than the
unveiling of his fortune after a barrage of ritualistic disgraces.
Then the witch and her apprentice sit to
tell tales of a dismembered life, and laying blame on ancestral sins forgotten
but not by the earth.
Ill wishes from loved ones are laid bare
for him to see, he believes this lie that is truth about families black.
His step-father was first to be found in an
open grave, after a week in the brittle cold of a bitter winter, slain on his
way from a binge and left bleeding in a hole agape among many waiting for
funerals.
The boy and the witches devised many
targets for their acquisition of illusory wealth preached as the ultimate reward
for darkest work; they pricked tomatoes with needles and named their enemies by
name in curses.
But on the day of the discovery of the
body, the neighborhood craved blood.
Hordes of vigilantes went hunting witches
and promising stakes in forms of burning tyres, they gathered on dusty streets
with brutal rage and murder.
The boy was found hiding under shrubs
growing not far from Masakeng, where
herd boys thought him mad and deranged and deserving of no shelter.
On that day his piss, vomit and blood streamed
from an assortment of orifices, and no under-god came to an alchemical rescue.
He cried with his mother also wailing from
pains of a womb’s fruit being slaughtered by angry mobs, when he eventually
agreed to name and shame his coven, leading heaving men and women, boys and
girls on a mission of cleansing.
Few know the whole tale, but it is said
that many witches were arrested but released soon after, with many police
officers being clients of this dark trade.
Dockets were lost, and the murderer
sentenced to hefty lengths of time to die a slave to prison wardens.
Lebelo recites this somber tale in between gulps of a prison-cell
concoction we have been blistering our intestines with when Setlamatlama returns from his mission
for one infamous Dragon.
His exacerbation is written in the wrinkles
drawn by the cold air outside, leaving an ashy lip and graying skin hanging on
a shivering man seeking a sip of liquid fire.
And once with the last sip we lay the
bottles on their sides, we take leave after a stint of laughter about Setlamatlama’s love interest, who could
very well be one among the vile creatures scaling our shacks in the wee hours
of night.
***
There is no bravery in watching stinging
dreams drown into fiery wells at gardens of hopelessness.
There is no hope in resting with clumsy
replicas of faded aims that lay rotting in minds’ secret chambers like
treacherous money, pollutant cars, whorehouse fashionable accessories and dry
beverages.
When all seem unattainable, we all wallow
in self-pity that tells us that we are satisfied by the hunger of our claims.
Others beget strength, and others become
vengeful; seeking counsel of demons and darkness without the grace of love that
is loyal to your kin.
Brother maims brother, sister poisons
sister; an earth allowing for nothing good to survive in man.
And as I swerve into my street seeing Lebelo from a distance, I see how
poverty bends the noblest will of man, turns it into a suspicious craving that
remains unquenched, if only by blood.
The fleeting relief of inebriation calms
with the dawning of sour recollections and introspection, and the afternoon sun
seems to make a sham of earlier gusts.
Just as violent as the morning’s inclement
weather was, the afternoon sky crept scandalously blue above us cloaked in a
purer light than that which seemed hellish.
I, having allowed dominion of vagrancy to
extol all strength from me, am I not guilty of inglorious acts of self-neglect.
I have been swallowed by this perpetually
suffocating stench of frothing wishes, mine seeming too meager to voice to the
gods who breathe upon the mighty earth with its desolate children.
What honor would I have bestowed my
careless final attempt at changing my predicament?
Honor in love?
Honor in living not by the modesty of
earthly desires but an iron lust that will see me kill and steal?
Plumes of lost clouds gravitate towards the
horizon as the sun sets in a haze of orange, silvery violet lining on edges
looking like contours of men with grandiose gestures and power.
It is beautiful in the slum, children
playing among frolicking teens and dogs and goats.
This moribund hum of township life
preparing for sleep reminds me that we all live this horror without pride, but
nevertheless live it without shame.
Putrid smells of burning rags and tyres
welcome dusk’s mysteriously colorful entrance, and monotony of life drills its
lethargic soup into exhausted souls.
Glossy disguises of muses seeking better
pastures and fatter pockets will fade into pillows soaked with tears and
perfumed sweat, while masturbating men will be warmed by orgiastic visions of
movie stars pinned to walls of their prison shacks.
Tin drum fires will burn silhouetting
vagrant boys lounging at random corners, secrets will be loosened from their
holds through boastful harangues, and maybe an arrest will ensue in the bosom
of this night.
A week will start again from the beginning,
yet tonight I will cozy under my flimsy blankets staring at the steel shack
walls covered in a tapestry of catalogue pages and magazine evangelism that
speaks of my inadequacy as fender for my stead.
This night will bring yet another torrent
of missed moments relived in lyrics of exorbitantly illiterate songs, blaring
thorny tributes to wealth that assault our glaring shame and calling us the
conquered.
Dogs will wait for night watchmen and bark
insults at apprentices and novices delivering omens to unsuspecting sleepers,
and the sky will be darted with stars brightly streaming in an eternal ode to time’s
leash.
I will dream another dream within this
nightmare we call living by virtue of its continued appearance on earth’s stage
filled with monsters and morons: I will dream a dream that will be false to any
cunning and wits, and me.
A Junkyard
Diary
Fofa is a snuff snorting vagrant, patron
saint of scavengers and madmen of Kokosi.
Skin tattooed in prison rites and rash
scars that never heal, his bachelor brain couldn’t comprehend a union with the
opposite sex.
Every neighborhood has its population of
mad-people, some said to be bewitched, whose shadows have been stolen by
sorcery, others whose minds have been deranged by chronic sicknesses yet living
with infected positives.
Fofa was one such poisoned glow in virtual
darkness of this group of derelict and excommunicated vagabonds, walking
corroded streets in blazing daylight with high steps of warriors who face
unseen assailants.
These people often build communities, slimy
shelters erected in junk yards or shrubby bush patches, well-resourced as per
their needs, with families sprouting among the broken remains of human
discards.
Dishwasher boxes and industrial Styrofoam
make for materials of Fofa ramshackle abode, roofed with thick, opaque red and
green tinted plastic sheets.
Furnished scantily with a tattered queen
size mattress or the remains there of, a paraffin stove and box that serves as
a table, during the day the dazzling play of green and red light makes his
shelter comforting.
It is one among at least nine in this
stinking heap of manure, this place is precariously located between the town
where white people reside and the township where the black are incarcerated.
Ditoting is a buffer zone that is more symbolic than colored areas situated
to separate the two spheres of animosity from dangerous proximity and
confrontation.
Here we find mainly women toiling from
dawn, huddling throwaway toys and dresses, others keeping their minds away from
the flies and maggots by imagining rewards of recycled products of utility and
excess.
Men, the battering force that carries the
bundles of card-boxes and sacks full of broken glass to recycling plants that
pay starvation rations that keep the family at the dump happy for a day, often
return torn and inebriated, facing children too young to dream of fresh loaves
of bread.
Fofa lives among these ruined lives, happy
in their merry gathering around bond fires made of wood gathered from broken
wardrobes, closets full of secrets to success.
Once treasured objects would lie crushed
among fodder that will fan the flames warming these faces, dream objects
reminding them also, of deranged paths they had once glimpsed and lost, but
still yearn for in the deepest of their sickly club.
He made his home among charred bits of
stewed rubbish and rotting entrails of dead pets, discarded ornaments, among
lost persons wishing never to be found, himself a fugitive from himself, after
a fifteen year stint in prison.
But he had returned, living, when many
return dead of heart or of body and soul.
He was also not mad, not the common place
madness of dirty clothes and unkempt persons trailing caked and oily blankets
while reciting monologues to their invisible company of floating ears.
He was mad, yes, but in an enticing frolic
of a jester intoxicated by some inexplicably juicy joke only he heard and
understood; for he wore a smiting smile that often turned to a sour grimace
that meant to remind inmates of their station.
Yes, he often mistreated some scavengers on
this field of forsaken treasures and skeletons because he seems to have been a
self-appointed supervisor by merit of his prison creed.
A sharp tongue characterized this fellow
and whomever he deemed impetuous would be ostracized by this tight commune of
fools and misers.
Malice was formulaic of most of their sly
dealings and with Fofa as the oracle tax collector; he had many privileges
which go beyond any dignity preserved for even married men and women.
He never went to his mattress hungry or
without a warm sumptuous body to warm his frozen person enraged during errands
in his field or among ‘normal’ residents of Kokosi.
But he was a formidable storyteller, a
jester who could reclaim mirth onto the face o a sphinx.
This man was also here by choice and will,
not as aftermath of devastating poverty or need for shelter, but a lust for
money and a certain degree of looting the last preserves of those deemed
sociable.
He could talk coins out of any pocket,
cigarettes out of fingers’ frozen clutches at winter stakeouts, he could sip
any bottle dry and empty brimming trolleys with a steamy loaf of bread left for
his zealous efforts.
Everyone knows Fofa and his amiable
demeanor has conquered numerous fans into his rostrum of cheering voices, an
ardent garden attendant and car- washer, the buzz of any tavern and early dawn
ancestral ceremonies.
He had a conspiratorially valid reason for
residing it this junk yard – early birds do catch fattest worms of course, and
in his case, being first to scale through a garbage truck on its arrival after
night shifts was like being to find treasure at the end of a rainbow.
And he was correct in his assumptions about
voluminous benefits of his feat, because he also collected an extensively
elaborate library of encyclopedia and erotic novels cast away by teens who
outgrew adolescent crushes and muscle bound caresses.
History books about unknown worlds and
vanished ones, maps, atlases, magazines and other contraptions of nostalgia now
lying dead among slain excesses, would be found scattered on his queen size
mattress, bibles in a variety of languages strewn across a paint streaked
canvas covering his dirt cold floor.
And still on the subject of history, this
junk heap is said to be situated right above the ruins of the ancestral village
of this present sterile Kokosi, and it was cordially named Makweteng.
Orators of old depict a communal place of
mud huts and corrugated steel shacks built by servants and farm workers during
heydays of the infamous gold rush whose fever gripped this area like a
pandemic.
With
unspoken brutalities witnessed by residents of these areas since time
immemorial, a weird aura seeps from every rock lingering in our presence at
this oppressively grave garbage field.
But above this village which was
uncompromisingly decimated by powers that be during some expansion of Fochville
in some late 1950’s, now stood a hunting ground for fenders and fidgeting
hoarders, and in the midst of this vortex was Fofa’s life drumming forth after
years of reeking cells and brutal farms.
One would wonder how many graves of
bloodlines that make up this township lie under a heap of garbage and putrid
landmass, because even today, people speak of ghostly sightings near and around
this rotting compound, where Fofa arduously was making a living home.
Only those brave enough to face the dead were
welcome into this reclusive community, and many had come and gone taunted by
spirits and self-inflicted paranoia, but for those who remained a bond of
brotherhood developed and no shame was ever worn on faces of these haunted
people.
But it must also be said that his shelter
was the biggest in the junk yard, a bookshelf housing various books, two china
plates and a glassful of spoons.
Some leftover sachets of salt and other
spices piled in an ice cream container, a steel kettle and dish on a three-legged
table balanced with bricks, all these appliances and clutter was arranged in a
clinically precise manner.
When I first encountered Fofa, these were
luxuries that he boasted about among his peers around the township when on
hunting prowls for loose women.
I didn’t completely believe he lived at the
junk yard when we were first introduced at one of those obvious incidents of
traditional gatherings with bottomless fermented ginger barrels.
But today, pigeons tossing carcasses and
clawing meals from bones while cooing incessantly, rats scurrying about in hide
and seek jostles; I realize that his sibilant hymn accompanied by crackling
coals of dying fires is actually music each dawn for Fofa, as he had begun to
name his school of master-less fliers barorisi
ba morena.
A chorus of hums and groans croaked through
beaks unloosening strings tangled around claws, heaving chest sacks and gnawing
through bone until blood trickles.
Here, even birds have tasted blood, their
own flesh cannibalized during feats with knotted wool dangling like razor sharp
ankle bracelets.
Some which eventually mutilate their own
troubled toes would be seen limping about wings wrestling rags and garbage while
their toil, similar to that of women and children here, goes unabated even
under the blazing heat of December days.
Three whirlwinds crawled over a garbage
heap sending plastic shreds dancing raucously like unanchored kites above sober
heads, and it was at this hour of rapid toil that a truck full of gardeners and
recyclers rode into the yard to the welcoming whistles of those awaiting its
deposits.
And I was among them, among damp putty in
black bags, broken twigs and garbage bags seeping their brew through grimy
holes torn by soot and slime of other nutritional and industrial refuses.
Acrobatics were exhibited by those who
found these rides rejuvenating, children chased after dust plumes discarded by
wheels of this worn truck looking rackety and about to collapse with us holding
for dear life and breath.
Then we saw Fofa as we approached the
garbage dump, commander of this army of rodents and persons without shame;
running, rummaging and chiding those who dared scale through the rubble before
his initiating turn.
The day goes down eventfully as always,
with minor hushes and boisterous laughter at senile jokes about anything found
in the rubble, soiled panties, torn bra straps, make up accessories and food
packets, needles and condoms.
Here, poverty is a choice for the hygienic,
because food stuffs, sealed cans of preserved assortments of nourishment,
bottled water thought to have rotted perhaps and a load of toys and scrapped
coloring books could be salvaged from this mound of wrecks and discarded fulfillments.
Pule, an all time madman of this soppy
township always visits the junk yard at intervals that are interspersed between
his long walks through townships streets muttering secrets to himself, and now
he was huddled over a browned broken cake mixed with burnt tyre remnants.
After inspecting the cuisine delicately
with his black nailed fingers, we see him munch on through our distracted
chatter about where to unload our toxic cargo.
Another truck unloads hot ashes from a
steel container, with chains rattling and the engine moaning for dear death
after a life of carrying homes, belongings, coffins, foodstuff and broken
trees.
Fafo shows our morose elderly driver a spot
and directs the truck’s reversal with seasoned and masterly antics, his zealous
moves, waving arms and dangling hands signaling a halt, that soon the truck
tips over its rear and another heap grows upon a old ghost town underneath – Makweteng.
Earth, who tends to conquer everything with
her gravely grip, makes mud of most things, but others resiliently survive any
microbial assault and in turn launch their own death on the self-same earth.
Junk yards are epitomes of dead earth,
scars of breathless soil, yet they also have their own pulse born of
radioactive debris and bubbling acid foaming in pools among wood carvings and
kitsch paintings.
Fafo seems disinterested in this mess of
blistering slime and advices any handler to put their tattered gloves on; but
most don’t have such luxuries of protective garments for fingers which need be
nimble around elusive treasures.
And he stands on a tin drum hailing passing
women and children, quarrelling with the driver of the useless mash that kills
even dogs but still jesting about crippled children soon to be born from loins
burned by invisible heats of the Losberg
Junk Yard.
***
There is one thing about people who have
been incarcerated that sticks out like a sore thumb; they have an insatiable
appetite for dominance, and this translates into a venomous strictness that
borders on mania.
For a person who chose his place of
residence so accordingly, it could surprise some that he was as clean a house
slave, meticulous about detail and tidiness of his orderly disorder.
He wanted nothing moved without his
knowledge; he wanted things done at only his command.
A bully and a jester who could make you do
the most debasing stunt in front of all your peers, while reciting a narration
that calls for the tragedy to always wear a cloak of humor.
But somehow since our meeting, his mean
streak never flounders my way; yet I can tell that his comrades in these piles
of dung are a bit intimidated by him, and his prison tattoos and exclamatory
voice.
A Big 5 stalwart who traversed many a
numbers in prison, scars and death threats, friends maimed in dirty bathrooms
and salesmen blossoming among womanized men.
His story is one among many, but what he
recalls of his last seven days in prison is conversation at campfires and
prison raids, when one is left in solitary confinement, such heroics make
silence a friendly listener.
Yet beneath this veil of stoical demeanor
was very contemplate being, who could wonder the junk yard under a bright moon,
star dust and rigid figures towering in the cover of a stream of light in a
shadow.
He could sense tinges of laughter welling
from within at some sinister encounter, a jester who always thought to see the
lighter side of life’s misery.
Nevertheless, the tale of those ‘last days’
is something that I found to the most profound parable of a man who has just
found freedom for the first time in 15 years.
Spogo
and Tleketleke
On this dark and moonless night, I sit with
friends talking about Spogo and Tleketleke, two mundane drugs with
sinisterly diabolical after-effects that have gained precarious notoriety among
vagabonds of Kokosi.
They say cheap as this pill is, Spogo can knock you out for well over 48
hours, that is after a trip that leaves mouths drooping sooty saliva and brown
mucus.
You aught keep an empty bucket nearby for
constant deposits of piss, spit and drool, because one’s dreamy motor-reflexes
tend to be sedated and uncontrollable, leaving fluids drib drab out like urine
coagulated with stale sperm.
Faint heart beats, an excruciating hunger
from a stomach that does not allow food, or maybe only bites of soggy potato
chips bought with ten cent coins.
And avoid water by any means they say, even
though dehydration would be taking its toll, because it will biliously catalyze
chemical reactions on your chaffed tripe.
This concoction is disastrously infamous
for its physio-transformative traits, like skin color changes which render
habitual users coal black and skeletal, protruding eyes and bulging joints, a
forty year old man looking like a kwashiorkor sufferer.
Most are stone-cold killers of this cursed
place, since after the blackout, a brutal resurgence of wakefulness deepens the
impact of withdrawals.
They would prowl the streets, buzzing for a
fix and blood with which their sanity is purchased.
Undeniably, a majority of users are teens,
aimlessly initiated into a virile life of prison terms and nightmares inflicted
by wailing souls of those killed in the line of duty.
Tleketleke on the other hand, though malicious as Spogo, is characterized by contrasting euphoric dispositions for
those who inhale its purplish smoke.
Numbness assails one from the first dozy
sniff of this sordid air coiling from tin foils burned with ever grumpy
lighters, and then soon after, most would opt for sleep, peaceful and
stupefied.
But when you hear recitals of horrid dreams
they find themselves incapacitated to awake from, one knows that this drug
creates a perfect purgatory where comatose participants feel sour razor pains
without willing their bodies to wretch out of the mire.
In a township surrounded by eleven mines
and incredible poverty and desolation, no dream should be peaceful, I guess.
So, most dream of death, others of suicides
and disgusting overdoses, all these experiments undertaken unrepentantly on
these eternal stone roads of life’s perilous terrain.
Not all are murderers of course. Some are
herd boys who live with cattle in ramshackle kraals on the outskirts of this
bestial township, ones who are mid-men to calves during their staggering first
steps.
Others opt to take long walks to unknowable
destinations, pounding heads drenched in dog piss and vomit.
One is said to have walked all the way to
Losberg mountain; that cursed scab on the edge of a meteor crater near
Vredefort and saw unicorns and large snakes while bathing in a pond.
He is said to have returned convinced that this
mountain was among the first stations of terra-formation by whatever crashed.
He believed there were still creatures
living in and on the mountain, some unseen and others seen but disbelieved.
Fleeting imaginings of fragments of
extraterrestrial rocks, micro-organisms, and organic matter that still linger
in caves unopened in those peaks should have an effect on any population.
This place could an experimental site
emitting psychically disturing effects on dreamers of a necromantic chapter of
this ground’s soul, and many are haunted I still believe.
And all I witness in wonder are these
downtrodden people of a rundown place of a million year old death, on a world
heritage site dying of crude claims.
The Tleketleke
gangs, clad in their ferociously unique fashion trends are a mark of savagery.
Pants cut way above the ankles, outgrown
shirts hanging for dear life.
Canopies of woolen hats folded on tips of
scarred clean cut scalps; they do look like rascals from a fifties film gone
ghetto in the new millennium.
And they do score, known among peddlers as
the most trusted customers, young and eager, with blood fresh for the
picking.
This is a generation of discontent, raging
at pillars of power and vending machines filled with passing aspirations of
their concocted lusts, bulldozing libraries with matchstick cannons and plastic
machetes, clearing clinics of experimental pharmaceuticals and statistical
journals of hordes unwittingly dying.
And it has to be admitted that this vicious
cycle of drug binges and death is undoubtedly affecting young women as well,
vulnerable descendents of brothel types and victims to rape when in euphoric
comas.
A ninety’s brand of shebeen queens, skimpy
vixens looking like a cast of soft-porn films, these are defiled children
escaping nightly from their newborns.
They gather among loafers and other junk
personalities to quench a drought of dreams, even with nightmares lived with
morosely in the dark hours of solitude.
Rank smell of sleep in their armpits and
odors of wet dreams and cum from forgotten intercourses; they live a story
frozen in a loop and with Spogo or Tleketleke by their bedside – all is
well in hell.
A
Misadventure At A Tavern That Loves People
A disquieting sunset before another night
of a full moon, the sun a red ball sinking into a westerly pitch of pink foamy
scatterings of clouds; it is weekend in sleepy Kokosi.
From the east, a full moon rises, bright
and glowing, obstructed only by slim clouds serenely drifting in high winds.
There is a chill in the autumn air, and the
smell of rain lingers with every whiff of draft sweeping through the dusty
streets.
Above the Apollo lights, a storm brews,
plumes of dust rising crimson like a wave against the moonlight, a colossal
blanket riding high above heads bobbing towards places of leisure.
Another raucous evening starts at Thandabantu, music thumbing skins of tired
mineworkers with swollen pockets, while young breasts erect their nipples to
the chill of colorful beverages.
Everyman seems horny here, the full moon
gone menstrual in all thighs seated on crates and young boys burying cases of
Lion Lager and pangas to impress schoolmates.
The DJ booth is a precarious cage, smaller
than a cell of a birdcage in a zoo, and once in a while bottles are flung
against the metal bars, having missed a head of a would-be victim by an inch.
Looking about, familiar bruised faces of
jobless vagabonds that can be missed in any crowd sip on Milk Stout in gangs, each greedy gulp causing rage to the one who
bought the beer.
Blood is always about to curdle here, and
as anticipated a rumble begins rhythms of House Music wizardry, dust rattles
tin roofs and shacks shake on their poles.
A nose is bleeding among some gang of
frantic big-spenders, plonk in floral boxes waved over braided heads of fat
women fighting with slender girls, hurling bottles and plastic cups at their
unkempt weaves.
A drizzle begins in time to save the music
from drowning under thunder and womanly spite, but haunted streaks continue to
crawl ragingly across a biliously clouded sky.
Smudgy puddles form under dancing feet,
stomped black and sprinkled in bottle caps, blood and piss washing off the
walls.
All die-hard drunks are mesmerized for
those few munities, a brawl and a rising moon floating in a bulge, red on the
far end of the storm to whence winds seem intent on chasing for a ball
hastening its ascent up the black expanse.
Screeching screams of girls pretending
superstitions cause mayhem to gain pitch, men howling like wounded dogs in
mimicry of werewolves, all this with piercing wails of the one who lost a nose
and the bass rattling torn speakers with serenaded thuds.
The joke was horrendous, considering shacks
were being uprooted in nearby Ninety-Nine, yet the DJ kept on point, providing
soundtracks to the dismal anecdotes of a fun night in Kokosi.
Gathering chains of uncertain morality
about my feet, I choose to leave with others who bet their last on a night well
spent, but friends start streaming in, rushing from the rain I was intent on
battling.
And it is then that the rain begins to pelt
harder, whizzing bellows of an angry breath of demons raging on the night of a
full moon and fanning homicidal tendencies haunting inebriated teens.
Accents begin to change with curses hurled
at thunder spilled by drenched rap fanatics, mouths damning acts of nature in
rhyme improvised over anthems on caged decks and ghetto rants of fame.
Night of blood commences, this place will
see many crucified for its future wealth, body parts lost in debris of broken
bottles and crumpled potato chip packets.
Ambulance lights will soon illuminate this
concrete stage of our stupefied euphoria, stretchers wheeled in crushing toes
of revelers in a daze of song.
The sales booth’s ever tiny at this ‘tavern
that loves people’, more now with rain frothing on vomit of quick drinkers, and
you know logic has gone out of circulation when three people queue to buy a
single bottle.
But my friend and I wade through that mess
of arms tossed for attention, among names hailed like deceased generals of
unknown personal wars.
We get our set of Black Label quarts and tiptoe back to our corner perfumed by piss
and shit under a noisy tin roof, our view from behind women’s dancing backs a
carnival of lopsided asses stuffed in faded g-strings, chocked by glittering
plastic belts.
Talk about global warming, mineworkers with
constant nosebleeds and weekly wages, women working at an explosives company
and the moral merits of Fanakalo as a
language of indenture.
We’re incensed by this lack of tangible
options in township life, where we could not even score a lay for a night this
cold, purged from the mainstream mentality of motivational speeches and
emotional gambles.
But eventually the mess catches on and we
are huddled on crates among juveniles flaunting their hard earned wages from
stints of crime or exploited labor.
We thus proceed killing hours with jailbirds
and fugitives from unschooled laws of Bogroep - that infamous jail that forges
unpaid laborers for farmers from prison populations.
A rope that will drag us into the mires of
depravity laying woven by desensitized youths telling us about rapes, about
plots to slit a warden’s throat, and their garrulous talk about girls they gang
fucked behind beer crates one night of binges at this tavern.
Last night one of them nearly died, they
say.
He lies in hospital while they blaze last
roaches of long dead joints crammed into bottle caps, rolled into leftover
shred of telephone directory books.
Never call a man a cripple in front of his
crew, that’s the rule.
And as the story goes, there were bottles
flung against a scar ridden head in retaliation to such slander.
Lost they might seem, but they ride a crest
of a high wave propelled by instant cash from loan sharks and victims of
muggings turned to unmarked graves in municipal cemeteries.
There is even gossip among young men here
about lost dockets, police officers who have AIDS, about who are addicts and
pimps; and who is smuggling marijuana from Swaziland or the newest dealer with
first-grade Tleketleke.
Talk of brawls with mates who couldn’t
stomach their liquor, bouts of bloodthirsty fits of rage when a friend was
stabbed for having suspicious money to afford a bottle of Three Ships.
These are the common harangues of bored
boys in filthy backyard shebeen rooms, sock stench suffocation beyond relief of
cheap air-freshening tags and tobacco smoke.
And once the rain had subsided, we decide
to leave the raucous company of sterile chatter and Tlokwe carton beer bingers,
with their supine women trembling in the sobering chill.
Skidding on mud and puddles hiding in
passageways to anywhere, we camouflage with colors of night under blinking
street lamps and a startling moon after a hail storm.
Others are nursing wounds as blood mingles
with flowing streams of sewage, nauseating melodies of mediocre leisure keeping
nightmares alive for many left gathering remains of shattered shacks.
The night sky breathes crystal air and a
gentle draft wafts between soaked dog pens, forgotten napkins on wires and
puppies shaking stubborn droplets from rabid fur coats.
A gang sings prison anthems and slogans in
the distance, a couple staggers from around a corner, feet sliding on sodden
grass patches, dizzy from a steamy quickie behind a pile of crushed bricks.
We have a night to remember we remind
ourselves and laugh; the morrow yet another beast to feed with our perpetual
defeat and failing tricks.
But we love the people here, downtrodden
ghosts and their lucid squalor; tracing our steps through morbid streets
towards other distractions like homes and mattresses to unfold.
Three
First Borns
S’cefe
On his 28th birthday, Scefe’s
bowlegged father bludgeoned him to a pulp for calling his mother a witch.
A terror to innocent gazes of women and
children; having bled innumerable times in knife duels and gang attacks, he’s
his father’s monstrosity tamed by sticks and steel pipes.
First born among six, he is son to a
loud-hailing street evangelist, a staunch moralist who has baptized half the
youth of this township.
His children are meant to lead by pious
example, by being teachers’ pets in class and aspiring for aviation vocations acquired
through military service.
A scar-riddled head, ever clean shaven for
hair to never grow in unsavory patches that make him resemble a leper, he is
now a formidable drunk among his peers.
Most are always on the receiving end of his
avalanches of careless punches toned by mine-dump gravel shoveling and
municipal bucket lavatory disposals.
Kissed too many a pavement in his short
life, bearing a testament of vacant gums, a bruise he bears with every smile –
an image cultivated in tortures.
Growing up among five sisters made him a
protective ogre rumored as castrated among young initiates vying for his
born-again house of sorority.
Yet S’cefe lost his cards in a game of
breaking virginities, now an uncle to three nephews and a niece, bastards he
curses every night of his brute rage after gurgling on backyard brews and
left-over beer spittle.
Once engaged to a teenage fling and badly
let off a leash for a pot-bellied mine supervisor, he has ever since loathed
mines and any prospect of working there for love’s sake.
A type of irreconcilable grudge with
whoever is a beneficiary of steamy shifts in sordid shafts dug once by
forefathers who lived a legacy of tuberculosis and radiation poisoning, a
worthy baton left for their young.
‘Lamagoduka
aziz’cefe.’ S’cefe would say in clear view of sweaty men stewing in hard
liquor, tortured by blue balls and a lust for young thighs, lost away from
their slovenly wives stuck in aimless homelands and squatter camps.
On his 32nd birthday, S’cefe and
his three friends hijacked a beverage delivery truck, drove it through ogling
squatter camp louts, in search of gullible customers and loose girls to
impress.
To dispose of their merchandise, soft drink
cargo sold like peanuts to adrenalin flushed school children and greedy
tuck-shop owners who negotiated ridiculous bargains and stocked crates for the
festive season.
But word got around through tracker devices
and other monitors spying from fruit stalls and dingy hair salons that S’cefe
is ghetto Santa and he came to town early.
The culprits were sourly paying for debts
buried with uncles, snitched by vengeful women impregnated on one night stands
or high school bonking parties organized by heirs to impounded taxi fleets.
And when news reached his father’s holy
ears, hell walked on two crooked legs wielding a sjambok and machete handed
down from times of hostel massacres and peerless riots, a deadly messiah pent
on flagellating a heathen.
He dealt a wanton medley of blows on
S’cefe’s dyslexic brain, hoarse tongued and doing the police a favor, he
claimed.
Nobody disciplines his flock – that was his
mantra when S’cefe’s mother intervened shielding her strange fruit that fell
first from her tired branches.
Convulsing in tears and pleading to no
avail, paraded before enemy and foe, S’cefe was thus disgraced by his father,
among hooligans of a township that dreaded the buffoonish sight of him.
That was three years ago, before he was
diagnosed with schizophrenia, before his headaches needed more than marijuana,
before his rage could make him talk to himself in broad daylight.
Before bilious monologues directed at his
cursed father became his uncensored script; before slurs unto his haggard
sisters prostituting themselves in the same tavern that staged spoils of his
soul became his mantra.
These infernal tirades became customized
offences ever since, among other innocent mishaps like exposing his giant limp
penis before children playing in mud and garbage piles, or burning paraffin at
a tuck-shop that supposedly owed him small change.
These headaches sapped his brain of dignity
and decorum, on his face left only twitches and a feature-less gaze filled with
inner struggle and desertion.
And when the sun tilted one October
afternoon over a rusty backyard hangout, being known as a staunch supporter of
a skull and bones soccer team, he dared make a comment about some golden team
player’s lack of skill and something flared up.
Okapi’s swung from fluid hands that knew
anatomy, plunging and plucking, carving slits on supine arms and legs staggering
over metals rails of security gates crowded by onlookers.
The brutal news of his death travelled
rampantly from tavern to township folk, tears swelling in eyes of the
sympathetic, and joy blinding his victims to the cruelty of his death by the
hand of a mob of soccer fanatics.
Last moments of slipping breath, neither
defiant nor clawing for life, he is said to have died contented with aims
tossed aside at this end of another first born in a wasteland of constant
births.
London
He was christened London by his father, slept in a partition behind a make shift
kitchenette of a shack once located in the liquidated camp named Riverside.
Alone on his mattress until he was seven
when Elizabeth who was six joined him in the kitchen hideout, they were
inseparable, but only during school as they were in different classes.
A bright eyed child who played alone with
gadgets of his making, he also became known as Madopa, a hoarder of junk
magazines and obsolete encyclopedia discarded by the well-read.
After his pantsula father died in a rock
fall in one of the mines, London, his sister and mother lived a life considered
forfeit, disguised in shabby eccentricity and dreams of a former beauty-queen
who once dated a sought after bachelor.
Moving from one settlement to another,
among stints of boarding in backyards, they were eventually allocated a stand
to build their shack.
Tending to a sickly mother and hungry
sister, London carved a home for his loved ones and resolved to never be
distracted by need nor fall into trappings of quick fixes.
Piously respectful, a tickler of infants
along his every path, yet slightly afraid of dogs who he suspected of being
ever rabid, he was a model burned by his mother’s failed dreams of affluence.
But when most people fail in their aims
they blame the devil and witchcraft, and Zion Christian Church becomes a haven
for most, together with the dying young begging for prayers to postpone their
dates with the ripper.
The duo had become avid stompers since time
immemorial, iconic in exhibition of spiritual fervor that often galvanized
other congregants to heights of exhilaration from healing songs.
They were called ‘the anointed’ by many,
and were zealous interceders, attending services in tempest or cold blizzards
to ration blessings for the elderly.
On their way to church one Sunday, burying
a surging excitement of children wearing humorless grins anticipating hymns and
chants, they were hit by a taxi swerving on slippery potholes swelling with
dirty water after a hail storm.
Avoiding splashes of filth from falling on
their church green and gold uniforms made their strut through the street a bit
discordant.
Lacking attention for nothing either than
the mud they neglected to observe other concerns, and only screams from horrified
mothers who anticipated unfortunate events to unfold, made them look about in a
terror that stupefied their sense, and as he tells the story, they both froze.
How he forever recalls that sweetly curious
being whose company he loved to walk through muddy summer days of
Modderfontein, her lucid mind that always questioned and possibly made him as
driven to inquiry and observation.
He lost his arm and she her life rolled up
in bloody mingled wet soil, mud caked to their heads, hers still as a rock
while he wailed at his dismembered arm to crawl back in place.
If fighters live to die so the innocent may
survive, then he was no soldier on that day, but a scared fourteen year old
writhing in the grip of ripped flesh and bone.
After long stints in hospitals and a
barrage of insults from rowdy oafs, he reconciled to carry his life
single-handedly with a new vigor.
London Madopa became an itinerant seller of
assorted delicacies like magwinya and éclairs, a functionary who oiled his
mother’s creaky wheels, for she was aging not too gracefully after years of
debauchery, binge diets and a bad heart.
Broken radios, kettles and small appliances
were his prized collections those high school days spend ripping the trivial
and expendable trifles and reassembling them for a meager fee.
He never passed a discarded battery-cell,
having shown us many experiments where we exploded these devices.
I recall that once black goo escaped after
long periods in the colas, we filled the smudge in tin-cans to later remodel
them into weird sculptures and toys for young ones.
After matriculation, it was no surprise
that he went on to study physics at Potchefstroom University, and travelled
many countries as a young prodigy for scientific minds languishing among us who
are of unfortunate births.
Now 34, waving a stunted arm at my camera
at his wedding celebration, I recall that I got acquainted to London Madopa in
Primary School, a sporty soul who was always whistling a hymnal melody.
Left-handed genius with a penchant for
Archie Shepp found buried in his late father’s records, he developed a vision
beyond poverty’s wars by which he was assailed, and that vision became a light
that guided his escape from the township prison.
He soared above depravity, carried by winds
of jazz storms that inaugurated stars to his naked eyes, now he is an
astrophysicist, envied by many inevitably uncultured and irredeemable children
of the township who see him as a snob.
He was his mother’s pride, a colossal feat
for a single woman tending to mean means, at trials with life’s tribulations
and constant rules which work against any attempt by the frail.
Just as she carried herself with that air
of self-assured importance, looking at others with superior answers for their
inexperience and feebly secure arrangements of small town life, he grew to look
undefeated.
And today, he defeats the stars,
constellations and galaxies with an eye bred in dusty streets of a place known
for killing dreamers.
Nnana
Her younger brother Pampangtjie was
arrested for possessing a pistol in 2008; a boy of 16, just a couple of days
after her 22nd second birthday, wielding it at his mates in drunken stupor.
On his return from stoutskool, he couldn’t
keep out trouble, as political rallies for manifestos by new parties in a
democracy made of glass became his favorite past-time.
He has been a member of three political
parties, while Nnana has never even voted; a revolutionary spirit filled with
commercialized hopes inherited from dead stalwarts.
Promised lucrative posts as councilors and
commanders, many who stuffed armored boxes with crossed ballots learnt deceit
of political charlatans through ordered massacres of women begging for water
and clinics.
When he turned 28, he had paid with his leg
for sloganeering during some botched service delivery protestations that
rendered him paralyzed and wheelchair-bound.
She tends to his crushed body now, a
swollen leg bulging with pussy stews that ooze copiously, scabs rotten with
skin that dries smeared with expired salves and bandages flaking off
disgustingly.
16 rubber bullets can crack ribcages
irreparably, making breathing a noisy feat; but Nnana has developed a patient
empathy that resembles a mother’s courage for her despondent brother.
She is all he has and all she has in a
world where being an orphan is commonplace, a light burns in their RDP house
flickering testaments that life draws its strength from all souls.
She enjoys his company hugely, his chatter
and pontifications about workers’ rights and capitalist gallows piled with
black fathers and sons.
Pampangtjie was well versed in struggle
polemics, having spent his time seated among books bought in thrift shops and
pawn garages before dropping out of university.
A weary voice that nevertheless spoke
ceaselessly, he kept Nnana’s eyes fixed on her dream of starting a salon, in a
township where there was an oversupply of hairstyles in shebeens.
Nnana however, had her fun as stokvel
mistress, together with friends from Toekomsrus, travelling west rand mine
dumps in search of golden opportunities at marriage or other tactical careers.
After stints of bagging real cash from beer
sales at hostels, their stokvel grew in strength, organizing trips to coastal
cities during holidays and attracting men vying for made women.
Big spenders in flashy cars bought on
credit proposed marriage on many occasions, for men seemed to fall in love with
her on first night acquaintances – spellbound by a charcoal black skin
glistening with beauty that haunts.
And she fell for a biker - a rush after a
foxy target that was in every hunter’s sights.
Polished lies of a sleuth made a bed of
roses for Nnana, after thrilling rides among street lights of unknown suburbs
and freeways she would never travel again.
For a monster bears no markings of ill
intent, so her biker was an epitome of fast love.
Unable to disguise a riff of anticipation
one night, she asked if he intended to marry her someday.
That turned out a bad idea during a
whirlwind love shared through bodies in tantric collisions and nervous groping
at unisex lavatories of over-priced restaurants.
When that candle-lit dinner ended, she knew
her home address, once forgotten with friends she left with a doomed business
she could not stomach and despised.
Biting her words that she will never return
to township life whatsoever, with bags strewn across a jacaranda clad street
under golden streetlamps, she told the cab driver to take her to Wanderers Taxi
Rank.
That was the year her brother was
paralyzed, after a memorable rejection that stunted her ego, making a nun of
her to a point of supplication and devout service of her unfit sibling.
Her service to Pampangtjie would vindicate
her sinful condemnation sanctioned her by their dead parents she thought, to
perhaps dredge out remorse from tacit faces of those who might have to bury
them when they can never see another sun rising.
Naturally, funerals then exerted a
fascinating pull for Nnana, for she tried to attend one every Saturday.
Unfazed by whatever awful exchanges between
relatives or chorus-leader contests between women in mystery journeys of the
betrothed, she was preparing a smoother path for their departure.
She was a decent singer herself, she’d been
told on occasion; but she never felt worthy of being accompanied in praise,
even when death summoned all to the disquiet of mourning.
And it was after one such funeral on the
outskirts of an arid river cutting the township in half that she met three men,
one a familiar face of childhood flings gone into wet sands of her deserts of
lovers.
His anger had never abated it seemed, as he
began denigrating her for not giving herself to the trivia of his advances.
It was thus that up a hillside, near farms
and a cemetery, a bared throat of a woman being violated was choked with her
panties, her head yanked back as men overlooked angels and spat at their birth.
Her cold remains were found stabbed 16
times and raped in no known order, by other mourners passing nearby, those who
opted for meals queues after washing hands off the aura of graves that clung to
all who are certain to die.
When the police arrived at the scene,
others were already planning their attires for the next farewell trip of yet
another young life snuffed undeniably by death at the hands of those who are
familiar.
The
Funeral and A Strange Death
1
When a hearse passes down your road you
ought to sit down, squat or bend a knee as one wishes not to be in the sights
of the angel of death riding a black limousine through a depraved township.
Another Friday of returning corpses to whom
we must show respect, otherwise your mother’s breast will fall into the pot it
is said.
This day, a somber procession cruises down
this muddy street, where death knocked a couple of nights ago never to leave
without a prized soul awaiting relief from chronic pain.
As every street has a matriarch, or a
number of such love stricken women who seem to wear midwives’ uniforms on their
deepest of hearts, the departed was one remembered by many as a woman who
sewed.
Her remains now stuffed in a bulgy casket,
one wonders of the mammoth task those who washed her body must have undertaken.
MmaSontaha mended clothes and souls, yes;
all rags most of us inherited from white children through our mothers’
thieveries having went between Sis Dee’s nimble fingers for resizing.
A myriad church uniforms she also sewed,
from decorous Wesleyan Red and Whites to AME penguin attires for stout women of
worship; ZCC greens and gold, for all ages and creeds in the vast tapestry of
African spirituality as expressed in various colors.
In my morbid recollections of how swift
death is, came another life affirming realization which stood to confirm that
without dying, no-one would have proof of having lived.
It is said that she had grown rather
horrendously fat, never having left her house for nearly three years, but still
paddling on her SINGER sewing machine till the wee hours of dawn while her
obesity grew to suffocate all her veins.
When news spread the secret tragedy that
befell a family without sustenance, among stokvels and burial societies
entrusted with money from her frail hands, rumor had it that there was no
certainty about who will carry the cost of the funeral.
Distant relatives and children who drifted
to greener pastures were still to be contacted, but as norm has it, it was upon
the women of this decrepit street to summon their wits for the rescue of this
dire situation.
There were disheartening, dried screams and
frozen tears shed by those who looked after MmaSontaha before she was
hospitalized, and their tales were as defeated as their remembrance of her final
breath taken at Sybrand hospital.
A strange collision of memories rises like
rabbles of living things in my forgetting mind, and on this day, these women
were patching her last dignity with loins and blankets, candles lit in secret
rooms were her box was to wait until its decent into the horrid oblivion of
earth.
Young women hurrying about with tear soaked
eyes preparing tea for parasitic pastors in faded blazers and bulky bibles, we
also thinking fondly about this woman who clothed their illegitimate infants
and naked brothers.
And as new hopes and new despairs can never
divert attention from such dramatic events as MmaSontaha’s death, and as no
loss deserves lesser expressions of affliction, this event however saw many
relieved that she was no longer in pain.
Hymns
were chanted in shadows, in rooms masking silent cries and agonizing heaves;
and tents were being erected on the street while silent mourners began
streaming towards the vigil.
Smugness and falseness of tongues that triumphantly wagged were
perturbed when the relatives of the deceased arrived in hordes, through whose
eyes no defeat could be deciphered.
They were rather a proud people, not fazed
by the depravation they suffered under death’s merciless hand, their energy
contaminating even those easily brought to tears by even a mere sight of an old
photograph.
And I felt like man who wanted to discover
the origins of decay, when flesh has swum over the precipice of longevity
towards a rapid discarding of lustful memory.
Her age lost in birth records of stars,
this shedding of flesh that once harvested light and a wade into darker ponds
of soul is the mystery of our pious fears, and ever since childhood, I have
imagined a different scenario either that that of blond angels and golden
streets.
I beget that death is a gate we cross
without invitation, a time of no longer looking towards the sun, a seeming end
to the existence of exactness and realness.
And yes, physical pain can be a chronic
insult to the body and to empathize with the aggrieved, now I could understand
their talk about having contemplated anesthesia or some assisted suicide as a
final gift to their mother.
As is normal in this small township, traces
of common ancestry linger among generations who never left for other opportune
lands and you could hear many speaking about connections and matrimonial
allegiances to the deceased, others even uttering scolding remarks about
incestuous boys who impregnate their nieces.
After sweltering cries to heaven spewed by a
preacher with a tongue loosened by pain and fear, close relatives begin
speaking in memoriam of this lady who helped many mothers build their first
shacks when men were stolen for labor camps.
Gossip
mongers hardly dampened the conviction of her children to give their mother a
memorable funeral, and by the hour of the vigil’s dispersal many a folk from
around the township were sharing fond memories brewed in delirium after loss.
Listening
with mounting excitement to their stories, while standing among idle young men
who offered the elderly seats, I realize how even the scepter of death could
never crush the ever blossoming courage of downtrodden people, these poor black
debris of freedom’s orphanage.
The
troubled calm among listeners to a souring prayer made me realize how death
also serves to make the divine seem plausible, for even the most ardent of
atheists dozed under shut lids while a litany was hailed heavenward by a pastor
drunk on faith.
His
faith that he could pray for the deceased and resurrect her was an inexcusable
insult, but the congregants conceded to remembering in fondness MmaSontaha’s pride and demeanor even during the most trying of times.
Before
many left, a throng of women clad in shoals and blankets queue towards the room
where the deceased rests guarded by her kin.
Brave
women, who would huddle through the gnashing silence that will fill the room
only disturbed by sobs of the night, drenched in thoughts of words hardly
spoken to her when she was still alive.
With
the unknowability of the after-life making it a perfect destination for those
who see death as transition from a thorny world to the next, I pondered the
last moments of a person suffocating, strangled by their own clotting blood in
arteries and varicose veins.
Perhaps
in their immense pain a euphoric serum is spread across their poisoned bodies,
sedating all edge and nerve shattering collapse of internal organs and brains
deranging themselves.
But
I can never be certain because only death is witness to his own deeds and
aftermaths thereof, and only in death would I know what dying feels like.
Does
my accepting the act of dying with gleeful abandon ascertain my surrender to
death?
Death;
that elixir for those entering shadowy gates of heaven – an intoxicating pinch
that awaken us from a phantom slumber in the warm holds of flesh.
Death;
a starry eye leading souls through caves of resolute memory, frozen memories
about themselves and others - a torch shedding mirages of un-chosen and unlived
moments in time.
And
when age does not become me, would death be a better absolution with all
illusory safety of the body dissolving into space dust yet inevitably, tomorrow
will be Saturn’s day and the hearse will loll down the sloppy road towards an
ignoble cemetery.
Sermons
will be recited by hearty pirates of scriptures, and last tears will fall on
clumps of soil strewn by weary hands on the defeated MmaSontaha.
Prayers
will monitor the soul’s rise towards new lands and in no time, when all have
forgotten the brute nurture of death, township life will skip on hot coals of
uncertainty with a reasonable melancholy that makes all fear graveyards just a
little more intimately.
***
Gusts
of impatient winds roar through dried streets on this dusty day and blobbing
tents shaking on their pillars welcome congregant mourners in best black shades
of funeral suits and dresses.
Attires
sewn by her hand adorn worshipping ladies who own every Thursday, who on this
day will pay their tribute to the seamstress of the clergy.
Priests
struggle out of rackety vans with gagutum gowns clumped uneasily at the waist,
bibles and verses for servicing death readied by pamphlets sold every Sunday
during tenths’ collection time.
I
will however not make the journey to gravesite as is our custom as men of our
homestead, but my respects will be tailing the humming throng pacing behind a
dark limousine towards the mud gates of heaven carved in the earth.
As
a child, I attended numerous funerals, my grand-father’s included; and yet
there still lingers some sour memories of that death which impacted my disdain
for such displays of fictitious affection.
From
an early age I was aware of hypocrisies that mar such events, with even the
worst of enemies allowed a day of watching and ogling the defeated laying in a
plywood coffin.
Concealed
delights and mocking sympathies from siblings of the deceased told behind
mobile lavatories or among sizzling pots and rancid smoke; we can all relate to
such galleries of inner monstrosities that are laid bare during funerals.
But
as an innocent child who felt robbed by mysterious carriers of loved ones
towards stingy angels and devils, I realized how just as man never appreciates
one in life, the pretense of appreciating a man in his death is a cunning
slander.
It
later occurred that in maturity when I asked some of my relatives to take me to
my grandfather’s grave, not one of them could remember beside the old man who
was herding nearby, who once knew grandfather and was in attendance on that
fateful day.
It
was to this incendiary memory that I believed that those who bury their dead do
so out of a mere obstinate compulsion and opportunistic revenge for their
untold malice; and as this crowd follows a corpse to Neverland, I wonder who
are harboring sinister smiles beneath pious tears.
And as the throng slinks
past the corner house, as slight calm engulfs everything, children have stood
up to hide from the hush that surrounds infinitesimal
space left by the many souls who attended the funeral.
For as her life occurred as a spot in the one wide daub of existence,
she was now on her sacred chariots towards continents
in the sky, I hope.
And if
there be life in the unseeable, then envying the dead is truly a pardonable appreciation
of the doddering expanses of their unending journey and a glimpse at the secret
of immortality.
2
A
Strange Death
Among those whom wisdom
distinguished from the common people, was one young man who grew to become a
dexterous blacksmith and immaculate welder.
After years working as a boiler
maker in one of the exploitative firms of rural Losberg, he was diagnosed with lung
cancer.
Surgeries removed the rotten
lung and doctors prescribed medication which proved toxic over the duration of his
rations.
And one Saturday, as a hearse
was departing for the gravesite carrying his deceased neighbor, he became very
sick and an ambulance was called in the heart of a boiling day by his
panic-stricken wife to take him in for observation at a nearby hospital.
When people returned from the cemetery to dismaying news of
the sudden emergency, many started mumbling about witchcraft, about how death
always strikes twice, where one death is like an
ordinary shower that eventually becomes a cloudburst of misery.
Exhausted priests were summoned
to say prayers for the sick, and while others queued for overcooked vegetables,
interceding pleas were wailed and the departed beckoned to rebuke death’s hand
reaching too close to home.
Cheap prophets
squirmed into prestige and emolument by lazy worshippers also joined the prayer
campaign, earnest and devoted falsifiers of truth with their sensitive
prejudices, disregarding the gravity of the funeral rites over which they have
just presided.
But
late Sunday afternoon, reports came from the house of the sickly that he had
committed suicide by jumping from the 7th floor of the hospital.
The shock caused by the news made me wonder why such a death should be
of lesser repute among black people, and after being buried for moments in profound meditation I realized
that death by own volition is a concern mainly for those pent on descendents and
bloodlines.
I could
speculate about reasons for his suicide, but those would be mere assumptions
without merit or proof.
But it
is said that upon being given intravenous medication he went utterly berserk,
and his
collapsing vestiges of sanity rent through his body a dual persona, poles in
conflict, which the jumper won.
To
imagine how suicide holds a spectacular status among taboos of our
superstitious folk, first as it dishonors the travails of one’s mother, then
castrating progenitors of each bloodline and engendering a genetic mutiny, I
could only think of his young wife’s dismay.
A glint
lingers in The Kid’s, who tells me the news as I visit him later after the
funeral and my hair stands on end as I began to wonder if in this parable of
three consecutive deaths on one streets meant some ferocious peril for me.
This man was
a friend to every soul on this street, greeted every elder with a concern of a
devout monk, and also spilt prophesies of bright futures to many a derelict
youth who had lost hope to binges and cheap drugs.
And as with
all that lose their supposed god through such untested devilry, I found it
difficult to reconcile suicide as a brave act even though I doubted the
existence of divine witnesses.
That there is a mortal resistance to everything unpreventable, that
the sole cause of most profound pain is the negation of the evident, is a small
truth I came to hold as dear and sacramental.
***
Then it
occurs to me that like automatons led by a cloud of misinformation by day and a
pillar of frightened prayers by night, mankind now seems in a frenzy of someone
who yearns to stop death.
I wondered if our resistances would dissipate voluntarily in the face
of a proven fact of death in the face of all oppressive dogmas assaulting our cosmic
pilgrimage.
But I was left to disbelieve such a possibility, as I am afraid
humanity will not acknowledge death as that which should be their primary
pre-occupation in life.
Man will continue to invent phantasms that negate scientific logic and
facts regarding death experiences, while meta-scientific truths about the
existence of souls, no matter how un-divine, will be relegated to the realm of
neo-mystical myths.
All internal distances of the soul’s journey prior and during its
tenure in flesh, if viewed as sedimentary layers which have fossilized the most
rigid substance of the soul’s memories, can be deciphered once one has exited
the plane of the flesh.
And if dreams can be more than just wisps of the super-real
experiences of the soul, why can’t the soul therefore be a protagonist more
suited for climates of the dreamscape?
All illusionary vainglories of common suppositions about the soul’s
immortality and its eternal bondage to a divine god can be faulted, because I
would even argue that there is but a single soul that perpetually reincarnates
itself through billions of species living on this planet.
Death may be admired as a vehicle to the after-life but it is not a
trustworthy one as it is continually providing souls with new openings and
closings to life’s various levels, and forcing oneself through one gate to the
after-life does not mean cowardice or abandonment of orderly lore.
The remotest regions of the soul could possibly lie in those gulfs
between living in flesh and living beyond flesh, or in those moments of death, where
one is finally able to perceive their soul’s likeness which would be
euphorically overwhelming.
But how sad, that the
allegorical personage most responsible for the success of all spiritual
religions – the soul, is shown the least amount of charity and the most
consistent abuse by those who most unctuously preach the rules of altruism.
If the soul does not acquire
stringent discipline through self-flagellation or fasting, it is suggested that
that soul will dissipate and or lose its inner infernal purity, but I disagree.
I believe all experience, no
matter how grueling or pleasurable, is capable of imparting great knowledge to
a soul on a journey of self-discover.
I believe that if a soul becomes
inextricably engaged in a brutally frank talk with itself about the repression
of its humanity's carnal nature, all phony pretenses at piety in the course of
an existence based on dog-eat-dog material pursuits would fall by the wayside.
Should we
then think of the soul as an organism that needs no base, a gleam that will
shatter, that needs nothing of finality?
When
all unmannerly derisions of religion are hushed could we recapture man's mind
and carnal desires as objects of celebration by a soul departed?
Should
the soul be preoccupied with flattering one little god, or exhort his hearers
to forsake their altars upon which had burned unheeded lights?
The
soul is inextricably bound up with all the other aspects of being, among its many
other transcendental functions,
and should therefore aim at triumph over awful odds
against the flesh. A soul foaming
with new expressions is only free once the coils of his little moral horizons
relax their constrictions, and only then can he redesign all fruits of life’s
unexpected oases into miracles, incredibilities of lives and of sanctified thoughts. Dogmas that have solidified out of the vaporings of poisoned minds
will henceforth never drag the soul under currents of intransigence. And with regards to suicide, the sharpened horns of this dilemma, will
the deceased be punished by militant angels with a darkness of night and a
blackness of the unborn? Or will they be celebrated as those who dared practice death while
anticipating its untimely arrival? *** As I stand now glaring at crowds and their unfocused priesthoods gathering
for Friday evening vigil, choral cliques clap rhythms of praise while large
automobiles cram the street jostling little children from their sunset games.So enthralled are the women with head wraps and shawls around
their waists, all momentarily devoid of sanctimonious platitudes as suicide
warranted no sympathy.
The Kid
and I had stood by as preparations were made to receive the corpse and the
family was
so overawed they hardly dared look into his face and most ran outside sobbing
inconsolably, that I could only imagine what they had laid eyes upon.
Prayers were coughed up
banishing infernal demons and wrong angels and profound feeling was aroused in
me, who was contemplating his own mortality on a mirror of death.
The yard was saturated with an
intense awareness of death, and later I wondered what specific preparations I
should make for guiding my dying.
It is yet another dubiously
chaotic day in Kokosi, with everyone else strangling their weary struts on dust
for their rendezvous with cologne drenched mates and possible husbands to bury.
Teenage girls were flaunting
their summer wear, thigh glossed by slim sweat paraded to mourners whose eyes
could not be diverted from sorrow.
Mumbling mother hissed their
disgust and holy words slouched over diced vegetable and unkempt peels, while
men sat in sour silences, eyes gasping for breath of young air fanning the
night with virginal perfumes.
The dead was to be buried still, and life
would collapse into its normal dream and illusory factions of the living dead,
and raucous debauchery was the order of yet another December’s evening in a
place where rosters of the dead circulate through church meetings.
As the hymns begin solemnly
under a red and white tent illuminated by a dizzy bulb crowded by moths and
other insects, I slink back into my reverie and awe, clarity slowly gripping my
gut, and absence of thoughts, linked inextricably with each other in one taste
of rot.
Three
Last Borns
Orion wheels through stardust on a windy
night tailing reluctant virgins, and a bitch gives birth to a litter at the
back of our silent shack filled with snores of children dreaming of large
hounds howling menacingly at the slow feet.
Rattling shack-roofs and screeching fences
fend stray dogs from a hideout chosen for fresh nuisances on four legs, to be
fed and stoned by cherished palms of never-minding caregivers.
And on this night, a man is being raped by
two boys at the back of a tavern, clubbed with sticks and beer crates, wounds
gushing motley grease and blood backed by heaving breath and dusts of his
struggle.
Scanning sordid skies that bore cold
witness to his desecration with bleak and worn gazes, he vowed revenge beyond
the brutality of prison as the police would only ridicule his castration.
The tale begins with an unwise young man
binging until the wee hour of dawn at a cesspool named Crocodile Inn, an
infamous splatter of excremental smudge on the tapestry of a serene extension
in a turbulent township.
Spending his fortnight’s wages in a stupor
of first time worker sugar-rush, swinging about town in search of promiscuous
loves of teenagers, he became prey for picking in bloodshot eyes of blanketed
men concealing oaken sticks and Okapi blades.
He apparently stared at the wrong girl
among the many morose faces dancing in clear view of eyes stripping their half
clad thighs looking for nearby shacks to spend the remnants of a stormy night.
His fate was sealed when he decided to
leave the mayhem, and without questioning the shadows following his wrangling
steps through puddles of muddy water – he was soon spitting turgid blobs
waggling in puddles lit by a million lightning strikes.
No covert surveillance was ever necessary
for these rookie boys bound to fall short of their saving graces, as they just
lunged in attack of a man who was condemned to a night without stars.
Once the beating had reached a frenzy and
the victim stiffened and grunting while titters of laughter behind poking
sticks rang lowly, Smanga moaned muffled screams that went to the marrow of any
humane ribcage.
While he writhed in a pulp of broken bones
and mangled sinews, one biy maniacally ripped his trousers down belt buckle and
all, and had his sordid rounds on limp buttocks of a man who came to grip
shrubs crawling on rusty wires.
Time to peddle excuses for this display of
brutal bestiality could not be his concern, as he eventually raised his bruised
body from silent mud, with a resolute aim to eternally rein apostolic anathema
on this duet of last borns.
Codenamed Skhova, he was first of the
sordid offspring bred of initiation clans intoxicated by their taste for human
blood, a slight young man, nondescript but as murderous as a serpent that you
could cradle for a pet.
Untrusting and arrogant, his small round
eyes always on the roundabout, glancing over beer bottles and stuffy ashtrays,
he was one who always managed to smuggle any weapon into a place of revelers
who wished for no pain but mere muscle strains from dance moves.
A stout and ridiculously short man;
potbellied from acid concoction from backyard grannies with recipes for fast
acting beverages, lips always dried, painfully cracked with nobody ever daring
to stare at them – let alone women.
In their muddled thoughts, akin any crude
demeanor of dogs, they are said to have returned to the same tavern to finish
last sips of warm beer left untouched even by aloof girlfriends waiting smugly
in their shabby bed of rosy death.
A disturbed family was waking up to the
moans of their last born son who lost his first money earned as man, a
cherished beacon of a fading bloodline wrestling locked braces of poverty.
His secret was to be their own and never be
spoken again, as he was to continue life seeing his nemeses waltzing to dreary
rhythms of a shameless people paralyzed by disconcerting circumstances.
The name Smanga ripened on his shoulders to
be yoke that crucified him in a disgustingly traumatic exhibit, because even
though his mother believed the tragedy’s viscid scars, she still was
dumbfounded by this brand of cruelty dished unto her womb’s skin.
It was to follow that a very unrelenting
sangoma was ruefully consulted by the family, to return the morbid favor to
their son’s assailants and those whose blood coursed through their veins.
What followed the avaricious bargain made
with a witchdoctor are explicitly wondrous tortures which were to be borne to
the grave by the two defilers; faith shattering testaments of the heavy hand of
enraged ancestors coupled by an infernal wrath of spellbinders.
***
Privy to this abominable secret was
Phonyoka, another derelict vagabond born with an incurable skin condition that
left his entire skin seeming covered in flakes resembling dried mud.
Incessantly scratching, sandpaper wearer
who spent his school days hiding from mirrors and mocking bullies, he could
never make friends, hence his strange camaraderie shared with Skhova.
Pressed against skin were puss-filled
growths the size of marbles, vile even for the most religious hearts; rousing
such disgust that it was always decided he would occupy the rear desks at
school, and over time growing a habit of loving the backseat of a taxi.
Having spent his childhood mocked and
terrorized by others, he grew harboring a simmered vengeance creamed upon his
crustily black skin; and it became his resolve to inflict unforgettable wounds
on others.
And now incredibly haunted by the ever
glowing smile of their victim sometimes seen at tuckshops, taverns and taxi
ranks, dribbles of sweat often unashamedly creep down their sour armpits
wilting in the heat of castrated rage.
Smanga never went to the police, that they
guilefully comprehended; and only the thought of their transgression being
wanton gossip among township loafers and former jail-birds was what made their
hair stand on end.
Entitlements of their violent natures that
sparkled in their eyes were fading with each meeting of these infamous friends,
as they were now seldom seen together among habitual binge masters and shebeen
guards.
Memory vilified their cruelty and recalling
the screams which were loud enough to wake a child intoxicated by cough
mixtures, to which no-one woke; those sounds shrieked in their guts as they
gulped many their final beers over the following weeks.
The uncomforting bulgy stomach is said to
have started growing like a tumor, and Skhova began to be terrified of open
spaces, and over a period of nine days he was not seen outside his shack behind
his mother’s RDP house.
A faded old coat huddled behind the door
bolted with a chain and a lock, the key slipped therein, was the first he set
aflame after dousing his property with common household accelerants.
Harnessed against a bed post and more
paraffin doused over his person made his attempts at escape futile, and what
unimaginable slippery moves that drained strength from a body choking on
curtain and mat smoke.
When the fire was finally extinguished in
the late hours of yet another day of fierce gales of winds, puss riddled
blisters under Phonyoka’s skin were becoming miniature explosives detonated by
an unknowable trigger.
A leper and charcoal skeleton, polluted
youngsters who refused to accept the inevitable; that a fierce penance was to
be paid for their evil, was sanctioned in sorcery.
Blisters became like flames bouncing
against Phonyoka’s skull, and he became demented with volcanic migraines which
required him to keep his eyes shut tightly with a towel and belt.
And over some weeks, these bilious crowd of
sores groping through his scalp left a bumpy terrain of filthy skin strung with
flimsy hair strands, his dreams drenched in sweat as he was always tried to
disentangle his friend’s corpse from the ruins of the fatal fire.
Being an alcoholic and independent of
charity was no shame any longer, and headaches mattered the least when nights
were nigh and the tedium of growing shadows relented to giving him cover from prying
eyes.
To acknowledge his failures, fragility and
catastrophes, he had to drink uncontrollably, and with each day’s tension, fear
gripped him and aloneness in any crowd was a safe bet.
And on
the seventh week after Skhova’s death, the perversity of chance events had
him there at the tavern grappling with small mercies of
a passersby, having noticed Smanga throw a kerchief at his feet to wipe his
oozing face.
Eyes misted and narrowed, he sat on the
edge of a crate in a dark corner of his favorite place on earth, sipping slowly
his only beer as dark purples were smearing the afternoon sky.
Jostled between terror and fantasy, he
thought he was imagining the aberration of a man who haunted his waking hours.
But an obstinate puzzle was only sliding
into place; his death was riding on the magnificence of time’s fast drift,
dejected and sour, a heinous frown cutting its forehead.
Haunted by his mortality, it seemed easier
to quicken his own death through drink and infamous drugs; a soul stealing the
last snores of sleep in stupor and cold black dreams.
And one night after weeks of storms and
growing shrubs when cockroaches were stretching wings in flight to new
colonies, he hung himself with copper wires his uncle had stolen from power
stations.
Around the eleven mines of Fochville,
everyone knew without word having gone around town for many a good soul that
depart each day, and his was left not mourned nor cursed, for cursing the dead
is anathema for those willing a life.
Epilogue
On
My Street
There is a house with windows the sad
bruised eyes of a whore,
A shabbily rotted wooden door wailing like
a taciturn baby’s mouth.
A Cyclops house with half a face, rolling
out a gravel tongue;
Some rusted caravan attached to its rear
like a malignant tumor.
A walled-in house with spikes of glass
fragments atop to deter birds or sordid men;
Standing on a corner, flanked by derelict
shacks and wobbly dog pens.
On my street, garbage tombs scatter on
dusty pathways, strangled by time and
Disused doors bolted shut and distilling
resemblances of stubborn gags.
A house with a rooftop veiled in canvas
anchored by broken wheelbarrows,
With four doors precariously smashed in
places where windows once panelessly stared.
There’s a roofless house, abandoned and
torched now housing the forsaken;
A house of gang brands and defecations,
weeds cracking concrete walls frailly.
A house in company of eleven car wrecks,
oil strewn grounds with carcasses of engines;
Glass doors riddled with bullet holes and
careless burglar bars; unshackled pets yarning.
A house of tombstones, grinders and sand
papers carving last minute memorials,
Ever drenched in white water and soot, as
stones cry before their bereaved.
A house sporting colors of games and allegiances
to what’s not at stake,
A house with stolen gnomes and drooping
sculptures behind serrated wire meshes.
A house of assorted bricks patched together
unevenly, a house of two elderly sisters who pray
Guarded by giant dogs and a riddle of a
garden in an arid clime and radioactive soil.
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