by Tony Park
The car screamed down the street. Mike willed it to go faster so he could cross the road and get away from her cloying touch, and the smell of her cheap perfume and sweat. He felt her little hands on his back. ‘Enough!’
When he spun around to confront her, he saw the change in her eyes, the set of her pursed mouth. The gap between the top of the kerb and the road was bigger than an Australian street, probably to cope with the monsoonal rains. As she pushed him, hard in the ribs, he started to topple. Silly bitch would kill him if he fell in front of a speeding car. ‘No!’
1
SOUTH AFRICA, ONE MONTH LATER
A Highveld storm, Liesl Nel thought, was like watching the end of the world, the glories of heaven and the horrors of hell fighting it out across the skies, all played out in three-hundred-and-sixty degree Imax and surround sound.
Liesl drew on her cigarette, closed her eyes and let the nicotine and the deep-bass boom of the thunder soothe her. The lightning penetrated her closed lids, the flicker and the noise that followed reminding her of muzzle blasts and gunfire. When she opened her eyes, the faux Tuscan villas of the estate and the rolling hills beyond were seared white with a burst of light.
She recalled, as hard as she tried not to, how she’d actually thought bodies looked artistic sometimes; the white lime turning the grimacing, reaching cadavers into marble statues. Back then, the camera’s viewfinder had been her filter, distancing her momentarily from the reality of the mass grave, though it couldn’t block out the smell. That’s when she’d taken a cigarette from another shooter, an army photographer, started smoking and stopped believing. That was in 1994. She hadn’t stopped smoking – or started believing again – since.
Liesl exhaled and hoped the chill of the rising wind and the first fat drops of rain would blow away the memories and wash away the guilt. It was coming back to Africa that did it; it resurrected the bodies every time. An up-market walled estate on Johannesburg’s western outskirts was a world away from the guns and the graves and the killing gangs in Rwanda, but it was still Africa out there, beyond the honey-rendered walls topped with electric fencing. The biometric fingerprint security at the gate and the roving armed response patrols wouldn’t save her. She was already dead.
A rap on the window pane startled her, like the pop-pop-pop of an AK on automatic. She started and spun around, and saw Sannette laughing. She was tapping a champagne flute against the glass of the French door. ‘One more, hey, before we leave?’
Liesl checked her own glass. Empty. ‘Ja, why not.’ Booze wasn’t the answer, of course, but it sure as hell helped.
*
A lion roared, but not like in the movies. Richard thought it was more like a wheezy, bronchial groan. Nothing in fiction could portray this continent as it really was. The cat was a long way off, and early with its call – perhaps eager for sex or food. A purple-crested turaco squawked and clucked in the tree above the thatch roof of the surgery. That was more his Africa: annoying birds rather than kings of the jungle.
He looked at the note on his desk. He’d scrunched it into a ball but hadn’t been able to toss it in the bin yet. He unfolded it, smoothing it out on the desk calendar blotter left by some pushy drug-company sales rep. 18h00, ten minutes. J.
He checked his watch and scratched his stubbled chin. It was five-thirty or, as a South African would have written it, 17h30. He picked up the piece of paper and held it to his nose, drawing in his breath deeply. It wasn’t perfumed – that only happened in films, didn’t it? But he didn’t need the scent, or the reminder.
‘Mrs van der Merwe is outside, Doctor,’ his receptionist, Helen, had said two hours earlier, after she’d knocked and stuck her head around his door.
Helen’s husband was a trails guide in the Kruger National Park, as Janine van der Merwe’s had been until he’d transferred to the SANParks criminal investigation division. These days he tracked poachers, not game. Rhino poaching was getting out of control in the park and Lourens, Janine’s husband, was away from home a good deal. Lourens was used to dealing with predators, of the two- and four-legged variety, and he was invariably heavily armed.
‘Tell her I’m busy with a patient.’ He had, in fact, been trying to tie a fishing lure.
Helen had raised her eyebrows. He’d stared at her until she’d closed the door. Bloody hell, he realised, it would be all around the staff village by nightfall. He should have seen Janine there and then and told her that it was over, that he’d made a mistake.
Helen had knocked on his door again a few minutes later. ‘She’s just left. I told her you were still busy with a patient. She left you this.’ Helen had passed him the note.
Richard folded it now, instead of crumpling it, and wrapped it around two of his fingers. What to do? he asked himself. He knew the right answer, but he also knew what she wanted him to do. He checked the time once more. Five thirty-two. Decision time soon. There was another knock and Helen entered. ‘I’ve got a tourist in the waiting area, just come in. He thinks he’s been bitten by a cobra but he’s not quite sure.’ Helen pronounced the last three words in what she no doubt thought was a good approximation of an upper-class English accent.
‘How can you not be quite sure if you’ve been bitten by a snake?’ he muttered, slipping the note into his top pocket. Helen shrugged, but she’d seen the gesture. She handed him the form with the patient’s particulars.
He wondered if she had read the note. Helen was snoopy and gossipy, but would she read a note from a patient to a doctor? Probably.
The British tourist, Raymond Philpott, aged twenty-two, newspaper journalist from Enfield, had walked to one of Skukuza’s camping ground ablution blocks, drunk after a lunchtime braai and too much beer in the sun.
He slurred his words. ‘It – the snake – was on the door handle. I thought it was a bootlace or something, but when I reached out to open the door, it reared up and struck me.’
‘I see,’ Richard said, adjusting the lamp on his table and holding the man’s hand up close to it. ‘Big snake, was it?’
‘Big enough.’ He could tell the tourist felt foolish. ‘Like a bootlace, not a shoelace.’
‘They’re quite active this time of year. It’s the summer heat. Most of the snake incidents I deal with are when someone surprises a Mozambican spitting cobra and it spits in their eye. We don’t get many bootlace-sized snake bites. What colour was it?’
‘Brown. Maybe green. Greeny brown. What do you think it was? My mate thought it might be a cobra.’
‘I can’t see any evidence of a laceration, not even a scratch, and if you had been bitten or grazed by a poisonous snake you’d be in a good deal of pain.’
‘Umm, it feels a bit numb,’ Philpott said.
Probably the dozen beers in the sun, Richard thought. The young man’s skin was red and his eyes were bloodshot. He’d had a fright, but what he needed now was a litre of water and a lie-down. Richard told him as much.
‘You’re English?’ Philpott said.
Richard nodded.
‘How did you end up here?’
Richard sat back in his chair and clasped his hands across his stomach. ‘I ran away from the UK to avoid an embarrassing and potentially costly malpractice litigation suit brought on by my addiction to prescription drugs, and this was the only job I could get, giving malaria tests and bandaids to tourists and staff in a dead-end backwater of Africa. The billings are rubbish, but I do get a nice house in the staff village. I had a leopard in a tree in my front yard last week.’
The man blinked his red eyes a couple of times, then started to laugh. ‘You’re joking, right? Nice one.’
‘No, I’m not joking. The leopard was in my front yard. Will there be anything else?’ Richard asked. He could see the drunk man was trying to retrace the last couple of steps of the conversation in his mind.
‘You were joking about the malpractice stuff, right . . . and the drugs?’
Richard said nothing.
‘Well, if you
think I’m all right, I’ll be off then,’ Philpott said. He seemed to have forgotten all about his snake bite. Richard saw him out and told Helen to draw up his bill. He thought about Janine, and how weak he was.
‘Goodbye, Raymond. Watch out for snakes in the gents, all right?’ he said to the man as he left. He checked his watch. Ten minutes to six. He could make it, and see Janine. Sometimes honesty was the best policy. He’d tell her it was over. Or perhaps he’d do her over the bonnet of her car.
VIRUNGA MOUNTAINS, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO
‘Vite! Vite!’ They called him ‘Vite’ because he was speedy.
Vite ran through the banana plants as fast as he could, but he was young and his legs were short. The illegal charcoal makers who chased him yelled to each other as they tried to outflank him. He screamed in fear. They had just killed his mother with a bullet.
Vite and his family had stumbled into the tree poachers’ operation on the edge of the rainforest and the charcoal makers had seen them both as a threat to their work and an opportunity to make some good money. The men operated on the edge of the national park, illegally cutting down native trees and gums that had been planted for timber. Charcoal was the main source of heating and cooking fuel for millions of people and there was never enough of it. The men dug big pits and set their timber on fire, then covered it with mounds of earth and let it smoke until the virgin timber was turned to black charcoal. Vite and his family had also been raiding the gum plantation – for food – so they were competitors as well as a valuable commodity in their own right.
‘A droit,’ one of the men yelled.
Another laughed at the chase. ‘Oui. Il est là!’
Fronds lashed at his face and ears and he panted as he moved through the shadowed labyrinth between the trunks of the trees. A low-hanging bunch of fruit smacked him. He shrieked. There was more gunfire further behind him.
Vite had seen his mother falling, her arms flailing, as the bullets knocked her down. The rest of his tribe had bellowed and cried and scattered as fast as they could. His father, a giant fellow, had charged at the men and tried to retrieve the body of his mother, but the men had opened fire with guns, forcing him and the rest of Vite’s family to seek refuge back in the rainforest. Vite had been cut off and his only option was to run into the banana farm. Now they were after him.
The straggly lines of banana plants gave way to the thick green orderly maze of a tea plantation. Pickers with baskets on stooped backs straightened to watch the chase, a welcome break from the drudgery of their job. The tea shrubs were up to the waists of the men who chased him, but Vite was small enough to be completely hidden by them. He slapped the shrubs out of his way as he ran and ran.
The men called to each other, confused now, and even though Vite had the cover of the tea shrubs, he was getting further and further from his home on the mountain. The men had spread out in a skirmish line and some of the tea pickers had seized the excuse to set down their baskets and bolster the ranks as beaters. They yelled and whistled. Vite ran down the hill then up the opposite side. His small heart was pounding and he had stopped screeching to conserve his breath. He had never been this far away from his troop before.
At the crest of the next hill he came to a road. He considered crossing it and pushing further into the tea plantation, which continued just as thick and green on the other side, until he spotted a line of tin-roofed timber huts off to the right. Smoke curled from a pipe in one of them. It would be risky, turning right and running along the gravel road, but it might allow him to outflank his pursuers and double back towards the safety of the forest.
Vite took the road, which soon led him between rows of farm workers’ huts and past a smouldering fire. A woman in a brightly coloured wrap, her head in a turban, yelped with surprise as she emerged from her home and saw him darting across her path.
The woman stood there for a second, confused by the sight and the noise, but ducked back into her hut when the two men came pounding along the muddied track that led from the banana farm. One carried a panga, the other an AK-47. The woman knew the killing power of the weapons, each as terrible as the other in its own way. The men slowed. She pointed down the trail. The first man nodded and they set off.
Vite watched this all happen from his hiding place beneath a stack of old mealie sacks behind the hut next door to the woman’s. He’d darted around the building as soon as he’d passed her and she hadn’t noticed. His little chest was heaving. He could move as fast as his name implied, but not for long. He was used to spending his days close to his mother, perhaps playing with his cousins, tumbling in the grass or climbing trees. He was exhausted and he was hungry.
A dog growled. Vite scrambled towards the mudbricks, dragging a sack with him as partial cover. The dog was mangy, its protruding ribcage studded with fat black ticks. Drool dangled from its bared teeth. It barked.
‘Silence,’ the woman called. She rounded the hut and looked down at him, then back along the pathway where she had sent the men. She had seen his escape, but she had not betrayed him. The dog growled again and the woman slapped it on the snout. She reached down and Vite cowered from her. He was too tired to run, though, and surrendered to his fate as she placed her hands under his arms and lifted him.
Vite had no idea if there was anyone in his extended family left alive or free. He squealed with hunger and terror, but as the woman brought him to her he started to calm. He clung to her, as he would have done to his mother if she had been there. She was all he knew, and he missed the protective embrace of her long arms. This woman’s arms were not as long, and they were not covered in warm hair, but they were black. Vite nestled into her.
The woman made cooing, soothing noises and told him, in French, to be quiet, for his own safety. Vite laid his head against her breast. In the distance was the occasional pop-pop of gunshots, but these sounds soon died down. She held him away from her and looked into his black eyes. ‘What am I going to do with you, little gorilla?’
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA
Sitting in the Qantas club at Sydney Airport, as unseasonal rain lashed the window, she tapped on the screen of her iPhone and updated her Facebook status: Carmel Shang now has a chimp named after her. How good is that?
It was silly, she knew, to post such a cryptic message. Her thirty-nine friends – a pathetic number according to her niece Chloe – would all comment now, asking for more details. It would start up a chain of inane small talk, but Carmel took happiness where she could find it in her life, and Henri’s email had made her smile.
There would be little joy waiting for her back in Africa, other than the visit to Henri’s wildlife rehabilitation centre in Livingstone on the Zambian side of the Victoria Falls. Although she’d been to the continent fifteen times, nearly always for work, Carmel had never been to the falls, so she was excited about seeing them. And about meeting Henri in the flesh.
They’d first met online, on a web forum called ‘Safaritalk’, where like-minded people with an interest in Africa and wildlife conservation commented on issues and socialised virtually. Carmel had mentioned that her work had taken her to Rwanda and Tanzania, and Henri had commented that he had grown up in Rwanda. He’d contacted her, via a private message, to ask her what she thought of the country these days, post the genocide of the mid-nineties, and from then on they’d been in regular contact.
Henri had asked about her background, saying that Shang didn’t sound like an Australian name to him. She’d explained that she was an ABC – an Australian-born Chinese, the descendant of a Chinese man who’d immigrated during the nineteenth-century gold rush and married a Scottish woman, and that she was as Aussie as they came.
Henri told her he was trying to get his privately run wildlife rehabilitation centre to a point where he could open it to the public, and when she’d enquired about his funding arrangements and offered to help in whatever way she could, he’d invited her to visit next time she was in Africa. He’d cajoled her a bit, and she’d re
lented. It would do her good, she thought, to spend a bit of time with someone committed to doing good in Africa, rather than just dwelling on past horrors, as she usually did.
Plenty of people, herself included, had tried to make sense of the mass slaughter that had taken place in the tiny central African country, and to try to apportion blame, but Henri had proudly, and at times controversially, stated time and again that he cared more for the innocent animal victims of Rwanda and its neighbouring countries than he did for people who would take up arms against their friends and neighbours.
A little talk bubble flashed up on her screen, informing her that Henri Bousson had just commented on her status. She worked out that it must be about midnight, the night before, in Zambia. She opened the message. You deserve to have a chimp named after you. Thank you for your support.
She smiled. She hadn’t done that much, only donated a few hundred dollars. The chat box popped up on the bottom right-hand corner of her screen. It was Henri. She experienced a little jolt of surprised pleasure.
Hi, he typed. Where are you, at the airport?
Yes, she replied. Late there?
Oui.
She didn’t know what to type next. Her flight would be boarding soon. She would arrive in Johannesburg at about four in the afternoon, stay overnight at the D’Oreale Grande at the Emperor’s Palace casino near the airport, then get the Comair flight to Livingstone, Zambia, at eleven the next morning.
I’m looking forward to meeting you, he messaged, filling the void.
Me too.
A lot.
An announcement came over the club’s PA, telling passengers the flight to Johannesburg was ready for boarding. Carmel picked up her laptop bag and hooked it over the handle of her small wheeled suitcase. She only ever flew with carry-on – it was too much of a risk and a hassle hoping that checked-in baggage would make it past the Johannesburg baggage handlers intact, let alone all the way to Zambia, Kenya or Rwanda. She held out the phone as it needed to be almost at a full arm’s length these days in order for her to see, and tapped the screen as she walked out of the club and onto the escalators.