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The
watcher
No Violet Bulawayo, Munyori Literary Journal
July/August 2009
http://munyori.com/mkhabulawayo.html
He stands by
the window, an old revolver in hand, and watches them come up. Even
in the boiling sun they walk as cats do in the rain: drenched, timid,
careful. Walking like whispering. Zimbabweans. Just crossed over
- he has seen others like them. Many others. Watching from this
same window. Seen them seep into his country like water. He knows
he will see even more; they never stop coming, they are a tide.
His window faces
a tight-fisted stretch of open country - all brown and dry and un-giving.
And then there is the dusty road that spans like God's belt
all the way to Johannesburg and beyond. Red and endless. Always
the Zimbabweans emerge like apparitions from the bush after crossing
the broad Limpopo River. When the Limpopo is full he can stand at
this window and listen to it heaving, churning log-bearing muddy
waters like a strong-limbed washer woman, famished crocodiles holding
their breath somewhere deep inside her belly.
But this has never stopped
them, the Zimbabweans. They plunge into the Limpopo, sometimes drowning,
and, if they survive, rise like mists from the water to cut holes
in the border fence into his country. Then they plough through the
jungle, and then eventually onto this very road that runs in front
of his house. Headed to Jo'burg. What puzzles him, what he
would really like to find out, is how they leave no footprints on
the earth, make no mark, and drop nothing. And how it is that when
they walk, like whispering, they do not cast shadows on the earth.
He has been standing
at the window long enough for him not to know how long it has been.
But what he knows with certainty is that he needs to sit down and
rest his screaming knees. Yet somehow he cannot pull himself from
the window, so he merely shifts the weight on his feet, holds the
gun tighter. He dug it out of his storage after that boy Jo told
him how some of them had tried to break into his house the week
before. Bloody criminals. If they think they can just break into
his country, and then into his house, he will show them. Just let
them try it. Let them try.
His late wife MaMhlophe
would disapprove of the gun; she would probably even go out there
and give them food and water. MaMhlophe. MaMhlophe who gave without
thinking. MaMhlophe who believed every despair could be mended like
a damaged fence. MaMhlophe whom beggars knew by name. Thinking of
his wife, and her kindness, almost makes him put the gun away in
shame, but he tells himself that even his MaMhlophe would not have
enough kindness for this. Not for a country vomiting hordes and
hordes of its people into theirs. No, MaMhlophe, with all that kindness,
enough of it to bury the broad Limpopo, would not be prepared for
this.
He caresses
his graying beard and reminds himself he is not intending to do
anything bad; he is just doing what anyone would; standing at his
window, watching, and holding his gun in case he has to use it,
after all these people are not just people. They are also illegals
- criminals; even the sun itself knows that.
An insect lands
on his forehead and he slaps it dead without thinking. Pha! He wipes
it off with the back of his hand. He can see them clearly - they
are close now. The tall one in the red and black T-shirt carefully
looking about him, and for a minute he thinks the man is looking
right through the window and into his eyes. He tenses, tightens
his hold on the gun. And then he sees the man turn and look back
at the other two. What is he saying to them?
He can see
the strain scattered on the man's face. Fatigue. And maybe
desperation? Or whatever makes a tall man with a small, round head
and twigs of arms choose to get up one day and walk away from everything
he knows, walk to another country where he has to move like he is
there and not there at the same time. Then comes the fat, short
one in the white shirt and green cap, the one walking with a limp.
What happened to that one? Did he leave his country like that, to
make it all the way to South Africa on that foot?
It is the fat
one's carriage that makes him loosen the grip on the gun,
makes him almost drop it. Even with the limp, he reminds him of
his one childhood friend, with that proud gait of a lion. See how
he holds his arms at his sides. See how his head perches on his
neck. Those poised shoulders. Just like his own friend, Zuma. He
almost smiles, thinking of his boyhood, distant, gone now. He has
not seen a resemblance like this and it makes him dizzy. But no,
this he is looking at is not his friend. He remembers the gun. Grips
tighter.
And then comes
the woman. The brightness of her yellow dress matching the red road
and going quite well with the brown country; matching so nicely
he almost wants more than anything for them to stop, stop right
there in the middle of the road so he can take it all in. She carries
a basket in her arms, and it is the way she carries it. Carries
it unlike he himself has ever carried anything or seen anything
carried. He watches her and he is suddenly curious, suddenly hungry
to know what is in the basket. What can be in there that makes this
woman without a country carry an ordinary basket like she owns everything
there is to own, like she carries God?
Walking like
cats in the rain; drenched, timid, uncertain. He sees them dodge
pools of water from the rain that is not there. No rain, just the
sun. Directly overhead, all bared teeth and fierce and roaring.
They are moving away now, but he still holds onto his gun. They
pass the little anthill, then towards the baobab tree. He knows
they will stop there. They always stop at the tree, all of them,
like they have seen the baobab in their dreams, somebody - an ancestor
perhaps, telling them as they sleep, as soon as you cross and follow
the red road running through the settlement you will see a baobab
broader than hope and there you are supposed to rest.
And they rest.
The woman and the tall one sitting down, their backs to him. The
fat one standing, leaning against the baobab. They do not look like
resting people. They are there and yet they are not there, like
they left their tangible selves back in their country, left them
tucked away in empty matchboxes and then slid inside old, falling-apart
shoes for safekeeping.
And then he
hears it. It takes him by surprise and he almost smashes his head
against the window. His ears thunder. Thunder. The grip on the gun
again. He sees the dust leap from the ground, flying all over, and
then the jeep boiling towards the baobab. He catches himself shouting
and he does not know what he is shouting, and at whom he is shouting.
But he is standing at his window, shouting, and no one will hear.
They are running now. The woman first, and then the tall one, then
the fat one last. Running like spilling.
He sees the
jeep jolt to a stop, and the border policemen pounce on the fat
one. He must have been toppled to the ground because he can see
the policemen's black batons rise and fall, rise and fall
towards the ground: beating, pummeling, flogging. He watches the
batons, the bodies, the arms rising and falling, rising and falling.
Like a river breathing. After a while he begins wondering when it
will stop, surely the fat one must be subdued by now. He has to
be, all that clobbering.
But the batons
rise and fall, rise and fall like the roar of an injured lion, and
he just stands there, watching, his hand tighter than ever on his
gun, suddenly wanting for it all to stop, for them to stop because
somehow to him it is no longer the fat one they are clobbering now,
but his own childhood friend Zuma, and can hear his screams for
help in that voice he knows so well, can see the blood oozing from
the cuts, taste his friend's fear, feel his raw, beaten flesh
in the hand that is also holding the gun.
And then suddenly
the beating stops and they pick him up, toss him in the back of
the jeep, and it takes off down the road. All he can see is dust
now. Mushrooms of clouds of it. He thinks of the tall one, and the
woman. Will they be caught? Will they be flogged? What will the
woman's dress look like after they roll her in the dust? He
waits and waits. And then finally, a cloud of dust again and the
jeep charges down the road like a terrible beast, going back the
way it had come. More dust and a rush of yellow is all he sees.
The basket. He remembers the woman's basket, remembers her
fleeing the jeep without it.
The basket.
He rushes to the door, unlocks it, and hurries to the baobab, not
feeling the sun mauling his back, not feeling the ache in his knees.
The basket. He finds it under the tree. A newspaper whose red letters
scream "Zimbabwe is mine" stirs inside. He pokes with
his gun, pushes the paper aside. He is not prepared for the two
little eyes that quietly watch him, not prepared he is dazed and
his heart roars. He stands there looking at it and looking at it
and looking at it, until he finally crouches and picks it up, letting
his gun drop there in the dust and not stopping to retrieve it because
he knows that to shield the baby from the sun, he has to hold it
with both hands, hold it close to his heart like he is carrying
God.
* NoViolet
Bulawayo is a second year MFA student at Cornell University. Her
short story, "Snapshots", was a finalist for the 2009
SA PEN/Studzinski Literary Award. Find her at Namgcobhar, her blog.
http://namgcobhar.blogspot.com/
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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