‘If we pick them up together that will be easier,’ Blanchaille said.
‘Do your own work yourself,’ Joyce retorted.
Blanchaille began lifting the body of a young man, seizing his left arm and his right leg and carrying him across the stoep, hearing the blood drip as he shuffled across the open space. The man was a terrible weight. ‘I cannot do it myself, nor can you. We must help one another.’
Joyce didn’t even bother to look at him. She grabbed hold of the ankle of a plump woman with a gaping wound in her chest and simply dragged her across the ground in a slew of pebbles and dust. Blanchaille heard the woman’s head bang on the edge of the wooden stoep as she hauled her on to the bare boards.
‘Heads all the same way!’ Schlagter yelled.
After that Blanchaille followed Joyce’s example, seized a leg or an arm and turning his head away hauled the body to the stoep. Only the children he carried.
It was backbreaking labour and eventually Blanchaille could stand it no longer and went to Schlagter. ‘There are so many, this is going to take a long time.
‘Well, get on with it then.’
‘Perhaps we could have some help?’ Desperation made Blanchaille bold.
Schlagter shook his head. ‘My men are on watch.’
‘Watching for what? These people are dead,’ Blanchaille said.
The Colonel smiled. ‘When you’ve been in the police force as long as I have, you’ll learn to be very careful before jumping to conclusions. These people may look like they’re dead, I grant you that, but how do we know that some of them aren’t pretending? Lying low? They’re a sly lot these township people, I can tell you that from the years of working with them. What happens if some of them are just waiting until I order my men to put their guns down and go and start carrying the bodies? Then they jump up and attack! No man, I’m not taking any bloody chances.’
‘These people are dead,’ Blanchaille insisted.
‘Says you! I’m in charge here and I’ll decide who’s dead or not.’
Blanchaille went back to work.
‘We will never escape,’ Joyce snapped at him bitterly.
‘Why should they want to hold us? Once this is finished we’ll be out of here.’
‘You think there aren’t other townships, other bodies? They’ll take us with them. Or perhaps they’ll shoot us.’
She spat, a globule of moisture in the dust. What an odd collection of belongings littered the killing ground: there were quantities of shoes in different sizes and colours, some matching pairs as well as abandoned single shoes; there was a baby’s pushchair, rusted, in blue leather, but still usable; there was, besides, a petticoat touchingly embroidered with pink lace, pink lace finely worked; a pair of spectacles with one lens smashed; a set of dentures, the teeth clicked shut, a bizarre solitary expression of naked obstinacy, the teeth presented an air of invulnerability which reminded him of that unyielding almost jaunty bravado that skeletons wear; and then, somehow most touchingly of all, there was the up-ended kitchen chair lying on its side as if someone had leapt from it only minutes before and left in a hurry. These small domestic details were more sad, and somehow more vocal, than the torn, shapeless bodies. The work was very hard. Joyce continued to drag the bodies to the stoep. He lifted some of them despite the strain and his aching muscles but he was now moving very slowly. Things changed when he came across a mother and child killed by a single bullet. The child was strapped to its mother’s back in a red and blue blanket, tightly knotted. Their combined weight was too much for him to lift and he was forced, reluctantly, to try and separate the bodies but their blood had soaked the blanket and the knots would not budge. His hands slipped and reddened. With a snort of impatience Joyce came over and seized the mother’s hands. He took her feet and between them they carried the bodies to the stoep. Joyce would have laid the mother out, face down, with the baby above but Blanchaille was revolted by the unnaturalness of this and gently turned the woman on her side so it looked as if mother and child were curled up asleep.
Perhaps this sign of gentleness softened Joyce, for she took up the next body with a brisk nod at Blanchaille, indicating that from now on they would clear the field together. Hoping this was the beginning of better relations, Blanchaille set the chair back on its feet, as if it would preside, become a witness, over their business. Joyce seemed to understand and approve of this gesture for there is always some comfort in extreme situations in the restoration of an even temporary normality. In the course of his work Blanchaille learnt something of bullet wounds. Learnt how the entry point may be smooth, how the speeding bullet may draw threads of clothing with it into the wound and the bullet, often encountering no obstacle on its passage through the body, burst out with ugly force from shoulder or neck. Or it might take a wildly eccentric course through the inner organs rebounding off bone to emerge in unexpected places, anything up to a foot above or below the point of entry. Head wounds could be particularly severe, seen from behind.
He went to Colonel Schlagter. ‘You said that these people had been attacking your men.’
Schlagter eyed him warily, ‘Well?’
‘A lot of them have been shot in the back.’
‘Christ man, what’s that got to do with it?’
‘Well it looks like they were running away.’
Schlagter shook his head. He laughed grimly. ‘Front, sides, back – what the hell does it matter? Look, you’ve never been under attack. Let me tell you that when you’re being attacked you don’t stop to ask what direction the people are running in. Anyway, like I told you, they’re a crafty lot. I mean for all you know some of them turned round and were running at us backwards. Have you thought of that?’
Blanchaille admitted that he had not.
When at last all the corpses were laid out on the long wooden veranda in front of the police station and an armed guard posted, ‘just in case’, Schlagter came over and thanked them for their work. ‘You have been an indispensable help. You have served your country. All these people you see lying here will now be counted and photographed and their relatives will be brought to identify them, and afterwards they will be allowed to reclaim the members of their families. This is a strict procedure because the enemies of our country like nothing better than to inflate the figures of those killed and to claim that all sorts of people have been killed when they know this is a lie and a slander.’
The armed police were stood down and relaxed visibly. The Saracens left. Schlagter directed Blanchaille and Joyce to a stand-tap behind the police station building and asked them if they’d like to wash their hands.
Joyce washed first, holding her feet under the tap and then scrubbing ferociously at the blood stains on her white dress, folding handfuls of gravel into the material and rubbing it harshly, catching the water in a great scoop of her skirt like a prospector panning for gold and in this way she managed to reduce the vividness of the blood marks, but the stains remained.
Dust to dust, ashes to ashes, so the story went, Blanchaille reflected. Only it wasn’t like that, not here. It was blood to dust and dust to mud and mud to water and away down the ditch with it. He watched as Joyce scrubbed at the blood which had caught in the cracks of her nails using the wet hem of her dress.
‘I think they’re going to let us go now.’
‘You? Think! This is the new life you promised me. When I see how it starts, God knows how it will end!’
Blanchaille stepped up to the tap conscious of her rage, of her eyes boring into his back. He cleaned his face and his hands as best he could and rubbed rather hopelessly at the blood stains on his clothes but only succeeded in darkening and spreading them. When he turned again, Joyce was gone. He was not surprised and doubted whether anyone would have tried to stop her. Well, she would have a great deal to tell Makapan when she returned.
He walked to the front of the police station and, as he had expected, no one took any notice. He picked up his suitcases, one in each hand and one, bulky
and uncomfortable, underneath his arm and began moving towards the front gate. Away to his right a group of policemen in shirt sleeves were playing a game of touch rugby using a water-bottle as a ball. The kitchen chair stood where he had left it, surveying the killing ground. He barely got out of the front gate before he collapsed, exhausted. He sat down in the dust on his suitcase beside the road.
And then I saw in my dream that a man driving a yellow Datsun estate stopped and offered him a lift. A short and balding man with a pleasant smile whose name was Derek Breslau. A commercial traveller for Lever Brothers dealing in ladies’ shampoos. The inside of his car was so heavily perfumed it made Blanchaille swoon and he could barely find the words to thank him for his kindness.
‘Don’t mention it. Couldn’t leave a guy sitting by the side of the road outside a bloody township. Normally I put my foot down and go like hell when I pass a township. You never know what’s going on inside. Gee, you took a risk!’ He examined Blanchaille’s bloodstained, muddied clothes with interest.
‘My bags are heavy and I can’t go very far at a stretch.’
‘Well, keep away from the townships.’
‘It’s a funny thing,’ said Blanchaille, ‘but I always believed that the townships were peaceful now.’
Breslau nodded. ‘Well it depends on what you mean. If you mean the townships are peaceful except when there are riots, then I suppose that’s correct. So I suppose you could say the townships are peaceful between riots. And I must say they’re pretty peaceful after riots. If we need to go to the townships that’s usually when we go. They have a period of mourning then, you see, and you got time to get in, do the job and get out again.’
‘I suppose then you could also say that townships are peaceful before riots,’ said Blanchaille, trying to be helpful.
Breslau thought this over and nodded approvingly. ‘Yes, I suppose that’s right. I never thought of it that way. But leaving all this aside, the truth is you can never be sure when the townships are going to be peaceful. You can drive into a township, and I have no option since I do business there, and find yourself in the middle of a riot. You can find yourself humping dead bodies or driving wounded to hospital. You can find yourself dispensing aid and comfort.’
‘Aid and comfort?’
‘Sure! That comes after the riots, usually, when they’ve laid out the victims and the relatives come along to claim them. It’s an emotional time, as you can imagine. What they usually do these days is to get the priest up from the church and he gives each relative a blessing. Well one day I arrived just as the blessings had started. They didn’t seem to be comforting people very much so the police officer in charge commandeered me and my vehicle and all my samples and he suggested that each relative should also get a sample of my shampoo, plus a blessing. Of course they weren’t my samples to give, but on occasions like this you don’t argue. Well, I stood next to the priest and he gave the blessing and I handed out the sample. Of course there was no question of matching hair types. I mean you can’t stop the grieving relatives and ask them whether they suffer from dry, greasy or normal hair. I mean that’s not exactly the time and place to start getting finicky. Can I drop you somewhere in town?’
Blanchaille mentioned the suburb where Bishop Blashford lived.
‘Sure. Happy to help.’
‘What disturbs the peace in the townships?’
Breslau shrugged. ‘Everything – and nothing. Of course the trouble is not having what they want, and then getting what they want. Like I mean first of all they don’t have any sewage so the cry goes up for piped sewage and they get it. Then there’s no electricity, so a consortium of businessmen organised by Himmelfarber and his Consolidated Holdings put in a private scheme of electrification. Then a football pitch is asked for. And given. And after each of these improvements there’s a riot. It’s interesting, that.’
‘It’s almost as if the trouble with the townships is the townships,’ Blanchaille suggested.
‘You can’t not have townships or you wouldn’t have any of this,’ the salesman gestured out of the window at the blank and featureless veld on either side of the road. ‘Cities have townships the way people have shadows. It’s in the nature of things.’
‘But we haven’t always had townships.’
‘Of course we have. Look, a township is just a reservoir. A pool. A depot for labour. I mean you look back to how it was when the first white settlers came here. You look at Van Riebeeck who came in – when was it – in 1652? And he arrives at the Cape of Good Hope – what a name when you think how things turned out! A bloody long time ago, right? What does Van Riebeeck find when he arrives in this big open place? He finds he’s got to build himself a fort. He finds the place occupied, there are all these damn Hottentots swanning around. Anyway he sees all these black guys wandering around and he thinks to himself – Jesus! This is Christmas! What I’m going to do is sit in my fort, grow lots of vegetables and sell them to passing ships. And all these black Hottentots I see wandering around here, they’re going to work for me. If they don’t work for me they get zapped. So he sits there at the Cape and the black guys work for him. Afterwards he gets to be so famous they put his face on all the money. It’s been like that ever since.’
‘But he didn’t have a township.’
‘What d’you mean, he didn’t have a township? The whole damn country was his township.’
Ever cautious Blanchaille got Breslau to drop him not outside Blashford’s house, but at the foot of the hill on which the Bishop lived. The salesman drove off with a cheerful wave, ‘Keep your head down.’
Blanchaille picked up his cases and began the slow painful ascent of the hill.
Puzzled by this conversation, in my dream I took up the matter with Breslau.
‘Surely things aren’t that bad? That’s a very simplistic analysis of history that you offered him.’
‘Right, but then it’s a very simplistic situation. There is the view that we’re all stuffed. We can fight all we like but we’re finished. The catch is that if anyone takes that line they get shot or locked up or whipped. Or all of those things. That’s how it was. That’s how it is. Nothing’s changed since the first Dutchman arrived, opened a police station and started handing out passes to the servants.’
‘Can nothing be done to improve conditions in the townships?’ I persisted.
Breslau laughed and slapped the steering wheel. ‘Sure. As I told the traveller. Lots can be done. Lots is done. Ever since the longhaired vegetable grower arrived from Holland, people have been battling to improve the townships. But after the beer halls and the soccer pitches, the electric lights, the social clubs, the sports stadiums, the literacy classes and the best will in the world, the townships are still townships. And townships are trouble.’
‘Even when they’re peaceful?’ I asked.
‘Especially when they’re peaceful,’ said Breslau.
CHAPTER 5
They walked in the Bishop’s official garden. Ceres, Bishop Blashford’s ample black housekeeper, had allowed him to leave his suitcases in the hall and sent him out to join His Grace with the warning that he would be allowed no more than ten minutes before His Grace took tea.
Blashford, the unspeakable Blashford, his open face ringed by soft pale curls, had in his younger days played first-class golf: no doubt clouded the sports-writers’ prediction that he would have gone on to international competition had the Church not selected him first. He was that rare hierarch, an authentic indigenous bishop, born and educated in the country. By choosing a sportsman for this important appointment the Vatican had shown that it understood where the springs of religious fervour truly lay. Now his neatly shod feet pressed the grass. He was wearing what he called his gardening clothes, a fawn suit and panama hat, by which Blanchaille understood him to mean not those clothes in which he worked in his garden but walked there before tea, a trim, elegant figure with a fair complexion which reddened easily in the sun. His black, heavily armoured toe caps
glistened, the double knots of his laces showed like chunky black seaweed as his shoes broke free from the bunched wave of his flannels. There was a brief gleam of polished leather with each assured step he planted on the smooth unwrinkled surface of his beautiful lawn. The end of the official garden was bound by a line of apple and peach trees and behind them a thick pyracantha hedge showed its spikes. Heads held high, wagtails sprinted through the splashes of sunlight beneath the fruit trees, their equilibrium secured by the rocking balance of their long tails. They shared Blashford’s dainty-footed confidence.
‘Well, Blanchaille?’
‘I’m leaving.’
‘What?’
‘Parish, priesthood, country. The lot. I’m in a position of a bride whose marriage has not been consummated. My ministry is null and void. In short, I’m off.’
‘I’ve been expecting you to call. The volume of complaints from your parishioners in Merrievale these past weeks has reached an absolute crescendo. Complaints had been laid with the police about political speeches from the pulpit. It was only with the greatest difficulty that I managed to persuade the authorities to allow the Church to deal with this in its own way.’
‘You needn’t have bothered. I also have friends in the police.’
‘We all have friends in the police, Father. The question is will yours do what you ask them?’
He could feel the heat the Bishop gave off as he became angrier. He was vibrating like a cooking stove. He hissed from a corner of his mouth: ‘It’s not like leaving a party, you know. Or getting off a bus. Father Lynch is behind this I’m sure.’
‘Father Lynch has never regarded me as a priest. He sees me as a policeman. I’m beginning to realise he knew what he was talking about. My relationship to the Church is that of a partner in an invalid marriage. The thing is null. I wanted to attack the Regime so I followed the only model I had – Father Lynch. I took holy orders. I would have done better learning to shoot.’
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