Authors: Jassy Mackenzie
For my best friends and poker buddies Camilla, Garry, Nicky, Sean, Jenny, J, Moira, Phil, and Bouille
Chapter 1
T
he white Toyota Camry was waiting outside the gate when I arrived home on a sweltering afternoon in late January. It was the third day of the heat wave that had sent temperatures rocketing into the thirties all over Gauteng, withering gardens and melting tarmac and sparking dire warnings from the Water Board about the unseasonably low levels of water in the Vaal Dam.
The driver's window was wound all the way down so I could see the car had only one occupant â a slender Indian man. As soon as he saw my Renault turn down the long, sand panhandle he scrambled out, brushed at his trousers as if removing evidence of crumbs, and pushed a pair of dark glasses up onto his head.
So inoffensive-looking was he, that, despite the fact that this was a city where strangers were almost always treated with suspicion, I nursed my car over the drainage hump in the driveway, opened my door (the electric windows had stopped working in November), leaned out and asked if I could help.
To be honest, I'd thought he was probably lost. I live in a semi-rural area where signposted road names are more the exception than the rule, and by some strange law of physics, or perhaps the suburban tidal system, a lot of the drivers who do get lost end up making their way down Bottlebrush Avenue, where I live.
He reached back into his car and pulled out a blue cardboard folder and then walked over to me. It was his demeanour more than anything else, plus the fact he was carrying that official-looking folder, that made me realise â with a surprising thrill of fear â that his presence signalled bad news.
âMrs Caine?'
His voice was polite and respectful, but it was the use of my name that made my stomach clench.
âYes, that's me,' I said. Abruptly, the peanut-butter sandwich I'd had for lunch turned into acid and began eating away at my innards. A trickle of sweat inched its way between my breasts, which were crammed into a bra that had been the right size a year ago. Suddenly, my vehicle felt claustrophobic. So did my life, actually, but at least I could get out of the car.
âExcuse me,' I said. I opened the car door all the way and wriggled my bare feet back into the pair of smart but hellishly uncomfortable court shoes I'd worn to the meeting with the employment agency and kicked off on the way home to make driving easier. He moved aside politely as I climbed out and stumbled over to the spindly bushwillow tree we'd planted a few years ago and which had never really thrived. Then he followed me into its insubstantial shade.
âMy name is Mr Ramsamy, and I am employed by the City Bank Home Loans division,' he informed me. âI'm sorry to trouble you at your residence, but I am here to deliver a letter of final demand. I have been trying to get hold of you on the phone but neither of your numbers appears to be in service.'
He was right â they weren't. My business number wasn't working because the company who'd employed me had been liquidated four months ago, and my cellphone wasn't operational because it had been cut off just last week due to non-payment. I'd fought valiantly to try to save it. A phone was something I had dreaded being without, but it had been one of the final victims of the landslide of debt that had started way back at the beginning of last year and had reached terminal velocity in December, when, in a thunder of rocks and boulders, the cliffside of my finances had collapsed.
It would be wrong to say I hadn't expected someone like Mr Ramsamy to turn up at my gate at some point. Of course I had. I'd spent sleepless nights wondering when the worst would happen, although I had envisioned something more dramatic. A platoon of lawyers, possibly accompanied by a cohort of tough-looking debt-collector types, who would invade the property en masse and, with warrant and subpoena in hand, literally capture the territory.
Even so, I was discovering that the reality of Mr Ramsamy's slim and unassuming presence was far worse than any of my imaginings had been. Final demand ⦠Home Loans division ⦠and he had brought the documents to my gate. The rusty, wrought-iron gate leading into the palisaded four acres of land that was everything I owned.
I stared at him helplessly, panic boiling inside me, the clamour of my frenzied thoughts making speech impossible. The feeling was similar to what I'd experienced this time last year when the paramedics had called me to tell me that my husband had been rushed to
ICU
after being involved in a serious road accident. A dizzying sensation, an overall breathlessness, as if all the oxygen had been sucked out of the air.
âI'm very sorry to inform you that the bond repayments on your home are now seriously in arrears ⦠no response to the bank's phone calls ⦠registered mail not collected ⦠need to get the repossession process underway â¦' I stared at him without really seeing him at all as he recited so pragmatically the chain of events that had brought him here.
âYou should have received this letter at the end of December, but we've been experiencing delays due to our backlog,' he continued. âSo, because of the backlog, the bank needs to action this as a matter of urgency. When would it be convenient for you to come into the branch?'
The fact that there were high numbers of other home-owners in the same predicament as me gave me no comfort at all. Despite the harshness of what he was saying, his voice was gentle. I supposed the backlog had given him a chance to develop something of a bedside manner, which I suspected was designed to defuse violence. Even so, for one crazed moment I felt like grabbing him by his shrimplike shoulders and shaking him until his teeth rattled, just to try to stop the flow of those awful words.
âWhat can I do?' I blurted out. âIs there anything I can do to save my home?'
Mr Ramsamy gave a small frown.
âWell, if you were to pay the arrears in full, you would be able to avoid having the property repossessed.'
Dear God, by now the bond payments must be more than six months in arrears. There was no way ⦠no way.
âWhat if I could make a part payment?'
Now his frown deepened.
âYou'd need to discuss that with the Home Loans department.'
âIf I don't pay, how soon will I be evicted?'
âIt would probably take around four months for the judgment to be handed down and the property attached by the bank. After which it would be resold.'
âBut how would the bank sell it when the property market's not moving?'
âMost repossessed properties go to auction. The plots often get sold on spec to a developer. They're always looking to buy up land cheaply, especially out here in the more rural areas, what with the subdivision laws up for review in the next few years.'
My dear, tranquil plot of land going under the hammer, bought by somebody who would bulldoze the house and the stables, uproot the trees and ravage the grass, only to build a block of thirty concrete-paved cluster homes in their place. The idea filled me with horror.
âI'll make a plan,' I gasped. âI'll do my best to get the payments up to date as soon as possible. Please, just give me this last chance.' I found myself blinking tears from my eyes and I suppressed my sobs with an effort, worried that if I allowed myself to start crying I simply wouldn't be able to stop.
âI'm sorry, but it's not my decision, Mrs Caine. You'll need to speak to the Home Loans department, and you must do so within the next fortnight. Your failure to communicate with the bank has created a serious problem. In the meantime, you need to sign here, please, to acknowledge receipt of this letter.' He handed me a pen and I scribbled a vague approximation of my signature on the lines he indicated.
âContact the bank as soon as you can,' he urged, shuffling the paper back into the folder.
âThank you for your time and â¦' He paused, staring at me. Suddenly, I saw myself through his eyes. A slightly overweight, tearful woman with a strip of regrowth along the roots of her dyed hair, standing between the driver's door of a battered Renault that looked as if it might have done service in Beirut, and the rusting front gate of a property whose bond payments were now critically behind.
Oh god, I'm pathetic.
Was this what I had become? And why had I been unable to prevent it?
âI hope you can sort something out. I'm truly sorry for your predicament.' He finished in a more gentle voice before climbing into his immaculate Camry and reversing carefully down the driveway.
Now blinded by free-flowing tears, I somehow managed to drive through the front entrance without scraping either the gate or the car. I barged my way into the house, not even pausing to greet the four cats, who had artfully arranged themselves in the sparsely furnished living area.
I stumbled upstairs and collapsed into the tatty office chair in front of my computer. With my hands shaking so badly I kept pressing the wrong keys, I connected to the non-password-protected wireless Internet that belonged to one of the neighbours and waited for my banking site to upload, to see if, by some miracle, any money had materialised in my account.
While I was logging on, two new email messages downloaded to my inbox. Both were âThank you for submitting your cv; we regret to say â¦'rejection letters for the last two jobs I'd applied for.
I'd been hopeful about both, but I hadn't even cracked the nod for an interview.
And my account was just as overdrawn as yesterday. No miracles. Not surprising, really, considering the number of times I'd taken the Lord's name in vain over the past few months. In fact, truth be told, I was probably right at the top of the smiting list.
I sat there, staring blankly at the minus signs. The only thought that had any clarity to it was how smug my hateful older brother Roger would feel when he heard the bank had foreclosed. The younger sister who he'd always predicted would never make good, now finally proving him right.
Unless â¦
unless â¦
there might still be some way I hadn't thought of, a way I could prove him wrong.
Chapter 2
T
he following morning, armed with a notebook and pen and a strong cup of coffee, I sat down at the plastic dining-room table. Here, I planned to take cold, hard stock of my financial situation before putting together a workable plan to redeem myself. I'd applied for twenty-two jobs since my retrenchment. Of my applications, fifteen had been rejected and the remaining seven simply ignored. It wasn't that I was a bad copywriter, it was simply that right now, in the recession, advertising agencies were cutting back. Which meant they weren't hiring. More specifically, they weren't hiring people who'd spent twelve years working for the same small, run-of-the-mill company and had no relevant degree.
âIt would be easier to place you if you had some proper qualifications,' one of the recruitment consultants had bemoaned.
âDoesn't experience count?' I'd asked her. âI mean â what difference does a three-year degree make when I've been working in the industry for four times that?'
She'd shaken her head regretfully. âIt makes a lot of difference. In this economic climate, employers want to be sure they're hiring the right person. Which reminds me, I wanted to ask you about this period of time on your cv, back here after you'd finished school, where you have no work experience listed. Were you really travelling abroad for that long?'
âOf course I was,' I said, with some haste. Then, more defensively, âLook, that was nearly twenty years ago. Nearly twenty years! Is any
HR
manager going to be interested in looking so far back? It's not like I'm applying for a job with the
FBI
. You can't expect me to account for every minute of that time.'
Her frosty silence had confirmed that yes, she could. The interview ended a few minutes later.
So there it was. A misspent youth, and look where it had landed me. I was both unqualified and unemployable.
At this point, with the piece of paper in front of me still blank, my budget calculations were interrupted by a persistent tapping on the kitchen door.
It was Goodness, the gardener and groom who'd worked for me for more than a decade, who lived with his family in the humble, threeroomed âflat' that backed onto the stables, and whose main job was to care for my two now-retired horses and to try to prevent our four acres of land from turning into the Serengeti.
He informed me, in polite and sorrowful tones, that we were down to the last two bales of hay.
Through the open door I could hear the faraway drone of rush-hour traffic from the main road leading to the Sandton
CBD
, and the closer, more aggressive revving of engines from the rat-runners who used the country lanes as a shortcut. Lucky them, I thought. Lucky them, going to work.
âThanks for reminding me. I'll organise another delivery as soon as possible,' I said, making sure to smile.