two radios stand face to face, quarrelling quietly. Only the female voices rise now and again in bitter laughter above the machines.
Father says that he must find the station master to enquire why the train has not come. âCome with me,â he commands. I find the courage to pretend that it is a question but I flush with the effort.
âNo, Iâm tired, Iâll wait here.â And he goes. It is true that I am tired. I do not on the whole have much energy and I am always out of breath. I have often consoled myself with an early death, certainly before I become an old maid. Alone with my suitcases I face the futility of that notion. I am free to abandon it since I am an old maid now, today, days after my fifteenth birthday. I do not in any case think that my spirit, weightless and energetic like smoke from green wood, will soar to heaven.
I think of Paâs defeated shoulders as he turned to go and I wonder whether I ought to run after him. But the thought of running exhausts me. I recoil again at the energy with which he had burst into the garden only weeks ago, holding aloft Die Burger with both hands, shouting, âFrieda, Frieda, weâll do it. Itâs all ours, the whole worldâs ours.â
It was a short report on how a Coloured deacon had won his case against the Anglican Church so that the prestigious St Maryâs School was now open to non-whites. The article ended sourly, calling it an empty and subversive gesture, and warning the deaconâs daughters that it would be no bed of roses.
âYouâll have the best, the very best education.â His voice is hoarse with excitement.
âIt will cost hundreds of rand per year.â
âNonsense, you finish this year at Malmesbury and then thereâll be only the two years of Matric left to pay for. Really, itâs a blessing that you have only two years left.â
âWhere will you find the money?â I say soberly.
âThe nest egg of course, stupid child. You canât go to a white school if youâre so stupid. Shenton has enough money to give his only daughter the best education in the world.â
I hesitate before asking, âBut what about the farm?â He has not come to like the Wesblok. The present he wraps in a protective gauze of dreams; his eyes have grown misty with focusing far ahead on the unrealised farm.
A muscle twitches in his face before he beams, âA man could live anywhere, burrow a hole like a rabbit in order to make use of an opportunity like this.â He seizes the opportunity for a lecture. âIgnorance, laziness and tobacco have been the downfall of our people. It is our duty to God to better ourselves, to use our brains, our talents, not to place our lamps under bushels. No, weâll do it. We must be prepared to make sacrifices to meet such a generous offer.â
His eyes race along the perimeter of the garden wall then he rushes indoors, muttering about idling like flies in the sun, and sets about writing to St Maryâs in Cape Town.
I read novels and kept in the shade all summer. The crunch of biscuits between my teeth was the rumble of distant thunder. Pimples raged on my chin, which led me to Madame Roseâs Preparation by mail order. That at least has fulfilled its promise.
I was surprised when Sarie wept with joy or envy, so that the tears spurted from my own eyes on to the pages of Ritchieâs First Steps in Latin. (Father said that they pray in Latin and that I ought to know what I am praying for.) At night a hole crept into my stomach, gnawing like a hungry mouse, and I fed it with Latin declensions and Eetsumor biscuits. Sarie said that I might meet white boys and for the moment, fortified by conjugations of Amo , I saw the eyes of Anglican boys, remote princes leaning from their carriages, penetrate the pumpkin-yellow of my flesh.
Today I see a solid stone wall where I stand in watery autumn light waiting for a bell to ring. The Cape