Read The Satanic Mechanic Online
Authors: Sally Andrew
CHAPTER FORTY-NINE
When Lemoni was calm and pretty again, Ricus asked the rest of us: âSo how has it been going with the self-forgiveness?'
Dirk spat into the ground, Fatima held her hand over her eyes, and Tata poked the tip of his kierie into the sand.
I said, âIt is not easy. To forgive myself, I must tell Henk what happened. But when the time comes to do it, the words just run away.'
Ricus nodded, and Fatima said, âForgiveness is not just something to give yourself. You must take action first. I have been a coward. I must do an act of courage. That is how I can forgive myself.'
âDoll,' said Lemoni, âyou were brave with those satanists. You hit that devil-woman's knife to the ground.'
âThank you.' Fatima gave a small smile and shook her head. âBut it was not enough.'
Tata Radebe cleared his throat and said, âWhat you say is true, Mama. Because I was afraid, a good man lost his life. My umoya will be free when I save a life. A good life.'
âFok,' said Dirk. âThere is nothing I can do to make up for the bad things I have done.'
Ousies put some wood on the fire, and orange flames jumped up.
âAnd I'm not just talking about all those dead okes in Angola,' said Dirk. âI know there is no way to make that right, but that is not the thing that sits on me, here, every day.' He banged on his chest with hands like the claws of a falcon.
We all looked at Dirk, who was now watching the fire. A rock pigeon cooed gently.
âNee, fok,' he said. âI cannot forgive myself for what I did to my wife. And our son. Never.'
Another pigeon replied to the first one. Doo doo doo.
âNever,' said Dirk.
Both pigeons cooed together, loudly.
âHow can I?' He looked at Ricus. âI don't even want to.'
âTell us about your son, Dirk,' said Ricus.
âMy wife is dead. I didn't kill her. But I may as well have. I treated her like crap. And now she's gone, and I can't make it right, no matter what I do.'
âWhat is his name?'
âJamie, his name is Jamie.'
He looked into the fire again. The rock pigeons were quiet now, like they were listening, but there were other birds making little chirpy sounds. Ousies got up and started that quiet sweeping behind our chairs.
âI dondered her when she was still pregnant,' said Dirk. âKicked her. The doctors say there was some genetic what-what, but I know I fucked him up. He came out all fucked up. Cerebral palsy. He's in a home. In George.'
âDo you love him?' asked Ricus.
âI . . . Fok off. Of course.'
âWhen you think of him, is love the biggest feeling in your heart?'
âFok, man. What are you saying? Of course I care about him, he's my boy.'
âWhat is bigger in your heart? Love? Anger? Guilt?'
âOf course I feel fokken guilty, man; I fucked him up. And I'm angry. With myself, not with him. He's a good boy. A sweet boy. He looks just like his mother. I visit him. When I can. Sometimes I feel too bad to go, so I stay away, you know.'
âDirk, your son needs your love. If your heart is full of guilt and anger, you cannot give it to him. For the sake of your son, for the sake of the mother of your son, you need to forgive yourself. Because then your heart is free to love.'
Dirk closed his eyes and his face went all red, as if he had stopped breathing. It started to get full like a balloon. Then something exploded;
spit shot from his mouth, and his whole body started shaking, but he was silent. Then came the sound. First a small sound, like a little boy trying to get breath, and then a chugging like a steam train as the tears and snot poured down his face. Ousies gave him a napkin and then another napkin, and he filled them with his sobs.
We sat with him for quite a while. His back curled over, like he was protecting a young animal on his lap. He cried, and then he was quiet. The rock pigeons cooed, and we sat with him. Then he cried some more. In my mind, it was difficult to forgive him, but somehow my heart did it so easily.
After a while, he wiped his forehead and his cheeks, and blew his nose. He looked around him as if he was seeing us for the first time.
âI love that boy,' he said.
CHAPTER FIFTY
Ricus was a good counsellor. He knew when it was time to be quiet and time to say something, and when it was time to eat.
He turned my pot of fritters next to the fire, then pulled a long fat thing out of the black cast-iron pot and laid it on the grid on top of the coals.
âThis won't take long,' said Ricus.
âWhat
is
that?' asked Lemoni.
âPofadder,' said Ricus.
Lemoni squealed and swatted at the air with her hand. âEw. How disgusting!'
You shouldn't be rude about food, but I felt sorry for her, so I explained, âIt's sausage.'
âI am not eating puffadder,' she said, âwhatever way you cook it.'
âNo, no,' said Dirk, who was more sorry for her than I was. âWe're not eating snake. It's just the name of a kind of thick sausage.'
âOh. It still looks gross.'
I frowned, but Ricus just smiled and adjusted the sausage on the grid.
âBefore we eat,' he said, âbring your awareness back to your body and your senses.'
I could smell my pumpkin fritters and hear the sausage grilling. I heard Mielie bark and looked up to see her herding her sheep towards the kraal. The sun was falling, and the long white thorns on the trees were now a reddish colour.
Then the sun was gone, and there was just a bloody smudge in the
darkening sky. Ricus dished up two plates with sausage and pumpkin fritters, and gave them to Ousies.
âFor Johannes and Kannemeyer,' he said.
Johannes was behind the red Mini van, tidying up, packing away his tools. Henk was further away, and Ousies walked out into the veld with his food.
Fatima helped Ricus to serve Lemoni, Dirk, Tata and me. Dirk ate all his sausage in the time it took Lemoni to nibble on the edge of her pumpkin fritter.
âThis fritter is divine, koukla,' Lemoni said to me.
âAnd the pofadder is excellent,' I said to Ricus, when I had swallowed a juicy mouthful. âRoasted coriander seeds?'
âJa, crushed. And dried thyme,' said Ricus.
âAnd Worcester sauce,' said Dirk.
âYou have made pofadder, then?' Ricus asked.
âJa, once, on a hunting trip.'
Lemoni cut off a small piece and chewed. She nodded, like it was not bad.
âWhat meat is it?' she asked.
âSpringbok and kudu,' said Ricus.
âLiver, heart and kidney,' said Dirk. âStuffed into the intestine.'
Lemoni coughed and some of her mouthful might have come out. But at least she didn't say anything. And she did eat up all of her fritter.
Ricus gave us napkins and cleared up the plates, then Ousies collected the napkins and swept us towards the fire. My pot was still there, with leftover fritters inside it.
As I joined the fire circle, I heard Henk call âKosie' and saw a dark figure chasing what looked like a dog and a lamb. I guess Henk had been distracted by his dinner, and Mielie had taken the chance to herd Kosie to bed.
We stood around the fire, looking into the coals. Tata, in his dark suit, almost disappeared into the night. Just the moonlit flash of his white T-shirt beneath his jacket made him visible. Lemoni was holding her handbag under her arm and cleaning her fingers with her handkerchief. Ousies offered her another napkin, which she used to polish her
fingernails, then Ousies took it back again, adding it to her bundle of napkins. She dropped a handful of dried thyme on the fire and then began that song that sounds like distant winds and birds that live deep in the forests.
She threw the pile of napkins onto the fire, and we all disappeared in the smoke. I closed my eyes so they wouldn't sting. Far away, Henk shouted âKosie!' again. There was a clanging of Johannes and his tools. The sound of a truck on Route 62. An owl called, joining in with Ousies's song. Whoo hooo.
Then there was a short sharp sound.
Very loud. Like a car backfiring. Or a gunshot.
I stepped back out of the smoke and saw Tata, his hand to his heart. Ousies was catching him from behind as he fell. His fingers slipped, and I saw the hole leaking red onto his white T-shirt.
The weight was too much for Ousies to hold, and she lowered him slowly to the ground. The napkins caught fire, and the light flared across Tata's face. He had a small smile on the edge of his lips. His eyes were wide open, staring.
I waited for him to blink. But he did not.
CHAPTER FIFTY-ONE
Ricus fell to his knees in the sand and pressed a napkin to the heart wound with one hand and put his fingers on Tata's neck with the other. Ousies crouched on her haunches and rested her hand gently on top of Tata's head.
âFok,' said Dirk.
Lemoni, her fingers pressed to her mouth, said, âXriste mou!'
âAllah yerhamo,' said Fatima.
âHenk!' I shouted.
Johannes appeared in the circle of panel vans with a spanner in his fist. Henk ran in with a gun in one hand and a lamb under his arm.
âNobody move,' he said, aiming the gun towards our small circle at the smoking fire.
The lamb wriggled, and he put it down. Henk pulled a torch from his belt. Lemoni clutched her handbag to her chest, and Fatima wiped her hands slowly down the sides of her dress.
âI mean it, stay still,' said Henk.
He shone a bright torchlight on us, and Dirk blinked like it hurt his eyes, and again said âFok.'
Henk turned his light onto the circle of panel vans that surrounded us, and onto the moonlit veld beyond. The lamb ran under the black Defender van. The rest of us stayed very still.
âWhat happened?' said Henk, looking at me.
âTata,' I said. âHe's been shot.'
âHe's gone,' said Ricus, still pressing the napkin onto Tata Radebe's chest.
The napkin had a stain like a red flower.
âWho shot him?' said Henk.
Fatima said softly, âI couldn't see.'
Lemoni said, âIt was from behind me, I think.'
âThere was smoke,' I said, âfrom the fire. I closed my eyes a moment. It sounded close. Very loud.'
âJa, close,' said Ricus.
Henk swept the torch across us and let it rest on Dirk.
âPut your weapon down slowly, on the ground,' he said.
It was then I saw the pistol that Dirk was holding by his side, just behind his thigh.
âNo,' I said. âNo.' I'm not sure if I said it out loud or if it was a sound drumming inside me. No. No. Ousies was singing a soft song that went with my drumming.
I could not accept Tata was dead. I could not believe that Dirk . . .
Dirk put his gun down on the ground.
âPut your hands in the air. Take a step back. Now,' said Henk.
âFok, nee,' said Dirk, shaking his head but stepping back and lifting his arms up as Henk picked up the gun on the sand.
Henk sniffed the end of the barrel before putting the pistol into a plastic bag.
âYou can smell I haven't used it,' Dirk said, âI was justâ'
âWait,' said Henk, who was now on his cell phone.
Henk barked orders in Afrikaans into his phone. The sight of Tata Radebe lying there on the ground, and the sound of my heart beating
No No No
made it difficult to listen, but I heard him calling for an ambulance, for Piet Witbooi, and a team for this and that.
Mielie barked in the distance. Everything was happening very slowly and also very fast. The song of Ousies made time stretch in a strange way. Her voice was like a jackal from the other side of the Swartberge that was singing to its family far off in the Langeberge.
It felt like she was singing about the life of Tata. His birth and his growing up, and all the things he had done and felt and lost.
Henk did not silence her, but when he spoke again, she sang more quietly; the sound hummed in our bodies.
âDon't move,' Henk said.
âI didn't shoot him,' said Dirk.
âYou have the right to remain silent,' said Henk, as he knelt down and put his fingers on the neck of Tata. âAnything you say can be used against you.'
Tata and Dirk remained silent. The song of Ousies filled the air again. Henk shone his torch around our feet, at the mess of our tracks around the fire. Then he stroked his torchlight over the sand that Ousies had swept with her broom.
âWho else has got weapons?' he said. âNow is the time to give them up.'
Ricus reached for his belt. âI have got a revolver.'
âAnything else?'
âA knife in a sheath at the back of my shoe,' said Ricus.
Henk removed both these weapons from Ricus and put them in Ziploc bag.
To Johannes he said, âPut that spanner down, on the chair over there.' Johannes put it down. âThen come stand over here with the others.'
The crickets had now joined the sounds of Ousies. She was still squatting beside Tata, singing the song of his life.
âTannie Maria,' said Henk, âI need your help searching the women. Starting with this big handbag here.'
Lemoni's eyes went wide, and she clutched the bag tighter.
âOpen it up, ma'am,' he said to her.
âYou want better light?' said Ricus. âWe can turn on the headlights.'
Henk nodded.
âJohannes,' said Ricus, and Johannes started towards a panel van.
âHe stays,' said Henk. âI haven't searched him yet. You go.'
Ricus turned on three sets of panel-van headlights; we all blinked like rabbits, and Henk put his torch back in its pouch.
âTannie Maria,' he said. âTake the bag and empty out every item on the chair. Look for weapons of any kind.'
I did not take the bag but waited for Lemoni to pass it to me.
âBe careful,' she said.
I'd never searched through another woman's handbag before.
When I carried a bag, it was just for keys, a small hairbrush and my lipstick (and maybe some pills). Lemoni's had a lot more. A whole make-up kit. A cell phone. A mace spray, which I held up to show Henk because it was a weapon. A big purse with money and cards. A little velvet box.
âPlease,' she said as I opened the box, âdon't drop them.'
Inside was a pair of earrings for pierced ears. The sparkled like giant drops of water in the panel-van lights. I showed them to Henk and put them back in the box.
âAny other weapons?' he asked us all.
The owl called Whoo hoo.
âMaria, pat these two women down.' He pointed to Lemoni then Fatima. âLook for a gun.'
I looked at him, and I looked at them. I did not like playing policewoman, treating my friends like criminals. Henk gave a quick angry shake of his head, his moustache trembling. He glanced at Tata Radebe lying on the ground. âWe are going to find the killer,' he said.
âYou don't think one of us . . .' said Lemoni, but she lifted her arms up so I could run my hand down her sides. Her clothes were so tight, I could see there was no place to hide anything, but I patted here and there, in case.
Henk searched Johannes with one hand while he held his gun in the other.
When I got to Fatima, she shook her head. âPlease. My religion. You can search, but you mustn't touch. It is not . . . clean. We can go somewhere, I will take off my dress, and you can see I am hiding nothing. But you must not touch me, please.'
I looked at Henk.
He shook his head and said, âYou can't go anywhere. But we'll all turn our backs.'
So they did. And Fatima took off her scarf. Her hair was in thick braids, with a big woven bun at the back of her neck. She lifted her long dress right up, showing me a short frilly petticoat. She might have been hiding all sorts of things under there. But the look in her eyes was so pleading that I did not have the heart to say anything. She was
blushing; I would also blush if someone made me strip like that, even if my legs weren't as hairy as hers. I felt sure that it was her body she was hiding and not a weapon.
âOkay,' I said, when she was respectable again.
âNow her,' Henk said.
But Ousies was still busy singing, and I did not want to interrupt, so I said, âIn a minute.'
Henk frowned but he did not insist. He carefully removed the gun from inside Tata's jacket and put it in a plastic bag.
Ousies had finished the story of Tata Radebe's life and was singing another tune now. Her head was back and her throat was open, and it sounded like her voice was being taken away by a dry wind. Her one hand was on Tata's forehead and the other flapped up into the air like an escaping bird. She was staring up into the sky, like Tata had done when he watched that mantis fly up and up.
I looked at the moon, and Ousies's voice gave me goosebumps that ran down my arms and legs. She was guiding the man's soul away from his finished body, up to the stars. She made soft joyful sounds, like a young jackal that's found its family after being alone a long time. Coming home.
Ousies clapped her hands and blew onto them. Then she stood up and raised her arms for me to search her. She carried on humming quietly.
Her body was bony, and her clothes were thin. She was hiding nothing. Her skin trembled, but I don't think it was fear; it was the song vibrating through her.
When I was done, Ousies squatted back down on the ground. As she folded in half, a long cry squeezed from her. Her voice no longer held the wind and the stars but the grief of a woman mourning the death of a man. A good man who had been killed.
All this time, her song had been holding my heart and had made it warm and soft like freshly baked bread. Now she gently tore it open.
But only I could hear myself crying, because the vans with their sirens were arriving now, and they buried every other sound.