CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

Our arms were wrapped around each other as we shuffled from the stoep into the house. He was walking backwards, pressing me against him with one arm and stroking me with the other. His fingers moved slowly over my neck, my arms, my back, my bottom. I turned out the kitchen light as we came in. There was still the stoep lantern, so it was not totally dark. But Henk was moving backwards, and his attention was on me.

‘Watch out,’ I said, as he bumped into the kitchen table. In steadying himself, he knocked the lid off the soup.

I tried to put it on again, but his grip on me was too tight, and my arms weren’t long enough. There were not many insects at that time of year, so I let it go. I ran my hand over his warm chest, feeling the hardness of his muscles and the softness of his fur.

We moved past the kitchen area, to the lounge, where he stopped and cupped my face in his hands and looked into my eyes. Then he bent down and gave me the longest, slowest kiss. His moustache was silky and friendly. Pleasure moved through my body, and the strangest sounds came out of my mouth. Happy sounds.

Henk lifted me up and laid me down on the couch, and smiled and slipped off my shoes. He stroked my thighs where they met the bottom of my dress, and stroked the swell of my breasts where they met the top of my dress. And then he stroked the bits in between.

When the happy sounds of my body got quite loud, he undid the buttons on his cotton shirt and took it off. I could see the shape of him, and the coppery hairs on his chest. He took off his shoes and big leather belt and his trousers, and knelt beside the couch and worked on me a little more. I stroked his head and the muscles on his shoulders. It was the right kind of lighting not to make me feel too shy. I heard a clopping sound, and there was the kudu standing at the kitchen table. It had beautiful dark markings under its eyes, and big spiral horns. It started lapping at the pot of soup. My body stiffened, and Henk sat up and looked at my face.

‘Okay?’ he said.

‘Just thinking I should put the lid on the pot,’ I said.

‘Later,’ he said, working my dress up and my lace panties down.

Henk was very convincing, so I closed my eyes and let my body get happy again. Henk moved me into an interesting position and started to lower his whole body onto me. But then, just as he got close, in the most intimate way, I had a flash of Fanie, even though my eyes were closed. When I opened them, I still saw Fanie’s face, red and puffy, instead of Henk’s. And I had memories of things that had happened. Not a memory, a flashback – like the doctor said – as if it was actually happening. All over again.

I was years away from Henk. I shouted and pushed him off me, my whole body shaking.

Henk knelt beside the couch and pressed my head to his chest while I trembled against him.

‘I’m so so-so-sorry,’ I said.

‘It’s okay,’ he said. ‘It’s okay.’

Slowly Fanie’s face dissolved, and I could see Henk again. And the kudu. It was still there. It walked a few steps closer. I saw the thin white lines on its grey coat as it looked down at us; its big ears were pricked up like it was worried.

‘It’s okay,’ said Henk again.

My shaking turned into tears. The kudu twitched its ears in a kind way, and I let the tears flow.

The kudu gave a little snort and turned away. It flashed its white fluffy tail and trotted out of the front door.

‘I’ll get you some brandy,’ Henk said, when the crying had stopped.

He went to the kitchen and turned on the light. Everything was much too bright. While he stirred a spoon of sugar into a small glass of brandy, I wriggled myself into a sitting position and adjusted my dress. I hid my panties under a cushion and put my shoes back on. I joined him at the kitchen table and put the lid back on the butternut soup. The kudu had not eaten much.

I drank the brandy Henk gave me, and it made a hot line to my belly button. But I still shivered a little. I starting cleaning up, collecting the dishes. Henk joined in and did the washing up. Every now and then, he put a warm hand on my arm, but I did not respond.

When it was all tidy, I made us coffee, and we sat down at the kitchen table. Henk sat opposite me, leant towards me and cleared his throat.

‘I’m sorry,’ I said, ‘I’d hoped . . . I’ve been doing better, really—’

‘It’s all right,’ he said.

‘I see things,’ I said, running my hand across my eyes. ‘Things that aren’t there. Bad things from long ago, happening again right in front of me.’

Henk nodded and opened his mouth to speak.

‘I know, I know,’ I said. ‘I must get counselling.’

‘I spoke to the woman at the police station who does crime-victim counselling. She says you can go see her anytime.’

I took a big sip of my coffee although it was too hot for big sips. When I’d swallowed, I said, ‘Henk . . .’

He held both hands around his coffee cup as he looked at me.

‘I am okay after the kidnapping,’ I said.

He frowned and shook his head, saying, ‘Maria . . .’

‘Really I am. It’s not that which is causing the trouble . . .’

Outside the frogs and toads were calling to each other, but in a careful way, as if they weren’t sure if there was a snake around.

I sighed and said, ‘I didn’t want to bring him into our relationship. But I guess he is here anyway.’

‘Who?’

‘Fanie. My late husband, Fanie.’ I took a sip of my coffee.

‘Are you still in love with him?’ asked Henk.

I snorted some of the coffee out of my nose. ‘Sorry,’ I said, cleaning up. ‘No, no, it’s not that.’

Henk sipped his coffee and waited for me to speak. He’s an experienced policeman. He knows how to interview a suspect.

I heard the rustling of the leaves of the trees outside, then felt a cool breeze come in the window, and I shivered. I was the suspect. I could not tell him everything, but I had to tell him something in my defence.

‘Fanie was not a good man. He was not good to me.’

I didn’t want to tell him the whole truth about Fanie. To speak of Fanie to Henk felt like pouring dirty oil into a clear pool.

‘Did he hurt you?’ said Henk.

I nodded, looking at my coffee.

‘Did he hit you?’ he asked, and as I glanced up at him I saw anger in his eyes.

I knew the anger was for Fanie, but I took it for myself and felt ashamed.

Henk gestured towards the couch.

‘Did he . . . rape you?’

I didn’t answer him. There was just one toad now, making a strange croaking sound, not a happy mating song.

‘I shouldn’t have told you,’ I said. ‘I feel so . . .’

But I couldn’t tell him what I felt. Dirty. Ugly. Scared. Guilty. I didn’t have words for all the feelings. All the feelings I wanted to keep out of my relationship with Henk. The toad was quiet now. And the wind was still. The silence was hurting my chest. I was holding my breath.

‘Maria,’ he said. I still wouldn’t look at him, and I still wasn’t breathing. ‘Maria.’ He leant forward and tilted my face towards him and looked me in the eyes. ‘It’s not your fault.’

Then my breath escaped from me with a big sob.

We slept together in my bed. Well, he slept, and I lay in his arms, not sleeping much. Me in my nighty, and him in his white boxer underpants. I did not have nightmares, but my mind was thick with bad memories, and my heart full of difficult feelings. There was still some of that citrus liqueur pudding, Henk’s Favourite, in my freezer, and I knew it was just what I needed. But when I moved to get up, his arm tightened around me, held me closer to him. So I stayed there, tasting this new kind of comfort: a warm body, strong arms, furry chest, the soft sound of his snoring. I let him hold me while the muddy pool of feelings was churned up by that long-ago storm. Outside my window, the wind was blowing, rustling the leaves. A warm breeze pushed through the gap in the sash window: the kind of wind that brings rain. I lay in Henk’s arms until the early birds started to sing. I waited for the churned pool to settle, to get clear and calm, but it did not.

Henk had to leave early, no time even for coffee.

As soon as he was gone, I dressed and prepared my breakfast, which I ate at the stoep table. I hardly noticed the soft falling rain, and the way the veld and the gwarrie tree disappeared in the grey drizzle, because my attention was on my food. I didn’t take my diet pills, because I wanted to eat up it all up: a big plate of warm Henk’s Favourite.

When I had finished, I sat there for some time, feeling a little sick but at the same time much better. The fear and the shame were gone, buried by sweet citrus pudding. The smell of the wet earth was wonderful. I was grateful to the rain for falling. I didn’t need to cry any more, the sky would do it for me. After a while, the rain cleared and the veld looked bright. The gwarrie tree was a fresh dark green, and birds were flying around in its branches. With the air washed clean, I could see far into the distance. Past the big red slopes of the Rooiberg, to the long blue line of the Langeberge.

When I was ready to stand up, I went to my chicken hok. My hens were fluffing their wings and scratching at the ground, and they came rushing out as I opened the hok door. I threw a handful of crushed mielies onto the lawn for them. Then I went inside and fished in my handbag until I found a little piece of paper with a number on it.

I sat down beside the phone table in my lounge and dialled the satanic mechanic.