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Authors: Helen Fielding

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“Hi, Rosie,” he said, without looking up.

“Hi,” I said quietly.

“Damn.” He leaned back and wiped his forehead, then started again. He did it at last.

“OK, let's talk.”

He guided me a little distance away. “You've spoken to Betty?”

“Yes.”

“It's pretty bad, but contained.”

“Are they still coming because of locusts?”

“Yes, but they're all from the same area. It could just be a pocket, touch wood.”

“What about the cholera? Don't you think we should be isolating the lot?”

“They've been tested and they're clear. I don't think we should fill up the isolation unit with people who don't need to be there—”

“I just think we've got to be very careful, you know how these things can happen. Have you started immunizing for measles?”

“We were going to,” Betty chipped in, joining us, “but Dr. O'Rourke said—”

I glared at him. He was being a bit too bossy, considering he'd just arrived. “We have immunized,” I said, “every single refugee against polio, measles, diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, TB. The last thing we want is an epidemic. We should do all the new arrivals today.”

“Dr. O'Rourke said the health workers should do it,” Betty concluded breathlessly. “It's done.”

Henry had opened up the feeding center again. The mothers were sitting in lines on mats, feeding the children out of orange plastic cups. These were the worst cases. The three gigantic metal cooking pots were out again, and Henry and Muhammad were talking to the cooks.

I put my hand on Henry's elbow. “How is it going?”

“Ah, Rosie, old stick. Fine, fine. Forward to the breach, all hands to the pump, etcetera, etcetera,” but he wouldn't look at me. He was very pale, with bags under his eyes. Muhammad was standing behind him. There were beads of sweat on the brown skin of his temples. We all knew how easy it was for things to slide out of control, for disease to start wiping people out like flies.

“Have the health workers told the new arrivals about defecation zones? Are they keeping them away from the river?”

“All been done, old girl.”

“We must talk to RESOK, Rosie,” said Muhammad. “The serpent of fear is slithering amongst them.”

I shot him a look.

“I'm sorry. I mean, they are a little nervous.”

I wanted to check the pharmacy to see how we were doing but it was locked, so I walked back to find Henry and asked him to deal with it and then I went to Muhammad's shelter and sat waiting for the RESOK people to arrive. It would be a tricky meeting. RESOK were the Keftians' relief organization, and not supposed to be political, but they were very tough, and keen on their rights. My back was aching from the journey. I could feel sweat trickling down it. The only thing which was good was that the system in the camp seemed to be working well. Everything was organized and under control.

Muhammad came back with O'Rourke.

“He wanted to be at your side for this,” Muhammad said to me with a sly look. O'Rourke looked uncomfortable.

The meeting was a heavy, long-drawn-out affair, with coffee first, then slow conversation, interpreted on either side by Muhammad. O'Rourke was not saying anything. He was sitting opposite me behind a table, giving me a look or a nod from time to time.

I decided to give it to them straight, and told them the situation just as André had told it to me. This created some uproar.

“The feeling is that if certain areas have food for six weeks and no new arrivals then some of that food should be here now,” said Muhammad. “They are asking why you have not brought it with you.”

I tried to explain, but they all started shouting again. I couldn't blame them. I tried to imagine what would happen if the food ran out: all these bolshie young guys changing into starving stick people. Muhammad starving. I couldn't allow that to happen—but how could you single out one life as more important than another?

There was another outbreak of shouting, most of it directed at me.

Suddenly O'Rourke banged his fist on the table and stood up.

“Jesus Christ,” he yelled. “Don't give the woman a hard time. She's doing everything she can. You've seen the way it's worked today—like clockwork. That's down to her. Yes, you're right, it is ridiculous that we haven't got a food convoy arriving this afternoon but it's not her fault. Where is your sense of decorum?”

There was a stunned silence. O'Rourke coughed, looked down and gave a wry look and a wave of his hand at Muhammad. “Do translate.”

Muhammad translated. There was silence.

“Carry on, Rosie,” O'Rourke said.

I was rattled. The ex-pat women tended to be treated as honorary men by the refugees, but still it was sometimes a struggle to maintain authority, and O'Rourke's playing the knight in shining armor was the opposite of helpful. I carried on anyway. I told them, with more confidence than I felt, that if the arrivals stayed steady we'd be all right till the ship came. Muhammad stood up and made a speech. There was much murmuring and nodding amongst the RESOK officials. Then the meeting was declared over and they filed out, shaking my hand politely, and clapping O'Rourke respectfully on the back.

When they had gone I turned to him. “Thanks,” I said, “but I don't need you to fight my battles for me.”

“Oh, Jesus. I'm sorry. I'm such a clod. I just thought you had a lot on your plate. I was trying to help.”

“Stick to your own job, buster,” I said, then smiled, and he smiled too. It was fine, really.

Just after the sun had set I had to drive back up to the compound. The whole of the sandy basin was radiating a peach glow which seemed to come from the earth itself rather than the sky. The wind had dropped, the smell was of earth and smoke. Figures were moving about contentedly, goats being herded, a man trotting along on a donkey—too big for the donkey, feet almost trailing on the ground. A camel was making its jerky way across the plain, the long neck and jutting chin moving in and out. Shouts came over from
the camp, kids playing, laughter, goats. I remembered how it used to sound, and how it used to be. I thought back over the last four years, the feeding, the building, the training, the immunizing, all the work which had gone into making this happy valley. And above, against the reddening sky, a heavy mass of cloud was funneling towards a point, like an omen.

It had been at the same time of day that I had first looked out over Safila, back in November 1985. I was on a hurried mercy dash with Sir William's books. I was like a tourist, taken from airport to air-conditioned hotel, and then being given a tour and shown the sights. There were no huts then. The refugees lived in tents, which had been wrapped in white plastic during the rains so that sand hung in the folds and the effect was very soft. I remember thinking, from a distance, how beautiful it was. I remember simply being happy to be in Africa and away from home.

CHAPTER
Nine

I
've fallen in love with you but I'm not
in
love with you.” “But you said you loved me.”

“I adore you.”

“That's not the same thing.”

“You could say it is a love affair.”

“So you've
fallen
in love with me but you're not
in
love with me, so while you were falling you sort of swerved off and landed in something else.”

“Rosie, if you're going to start being stupid . . .”

It was a mad, familiar dance, where Oliver would duck and dive and twirl, hold his fluctuating feelings above my head, drop them near my hand and whisk them out of reach. What was I doing? Trying to pass or fail? As if the way he felt had anything to do with what I was worth. As if love was something you earned like a merit star, and if I followed every single instruction in every single magazine that month, took in only raw vegetables and hot steam, cleared all cellulite, dressed in Nicole Farhi, made my own pasta, studied advanced sexual gymnastics, never crowded him, always supported him yet was a self-sufficient person in my own right, excelled in my career without being intimidating, dyed my eyelashes, read all existing books on Cubist painters, and dressed up in naughty bus conductress's outfits, Oliver might decide he was
in
love with me rather than just having fallen for me, even if he didn't
exactly altogether love me just yet. Of course love doesn't work like that, otherwise nobody but girls in adverts for small hatchback cars would have boyfriends.

We had started a row about where our relationship was going, just after the moment when we should have left for a Famous Club lunch at Julian Alman's. This was one of our favorite ways of making ourselves unhappy. It was always me who started these conversations—mainly because Oliver's behavior made me so insecure. If you ask where a relationship is going too often the question has a habit of turning into where the relationship went. Unfortunately, however, God has given women an inbuilt irresistible urge to insist on knowing where their relationships are going, and to force their partners to discuss the matter at length whenever they are late for something.

Having reached an inconclusive impasse on the love front, Oliver and I moved on to clothes, and in particular my outfit for today. Oliver did not like my clothes. He never said so in so many words, but it was clear. Oliver had excellent taste and lots of money. I had always been unsure about what I was wearing on every occasion but had never seriously bothered about it before. I just lived with it, the way you live with always thinking you are overweight. But now the clothes issue nattered away at me, giving a spoiling tinge to every meeting with Oliver. He had helped out by buying me a little black Alaïa dress, in order that I should look more exactly like all the other women at the functions we attended. Although this was a casual Sunday lunch I ended up squeezing myself into the Alaïa corset-style garment, just for the sake of confidence.

“Do you think I look fat?” I said.

He sighed. “No.”

I climbed up onto a chair and inspected an imaginary roll of fat in the dressing table mirror.

“YOU ARE NOT FAT,” he shouted through clenched teeth, as I twisted round to try to look at my bottom.

What happened to my generation of women? Who doomed us to spending our entire lives wishing we were half a stone lighter? I wasn't anorexic, bulimic, or anything else you could put in a
textbook but I still managed to see everything I ate as an indulgence, and eating it an act of weakness. God, what a thing to remember now.

In the car, mentally bruised and exhausted like ancient warring beasts, we moved on to major-row-trigger number four, which was me going out to Africa. The more miserable I became, the more eager I was to go and the more determined Oliver was to stop me. I couldn't understand why at the time. Partly, I think, he just didn't want me to go away for a fortnight. Given that he claimed not to love me or be in love with me or whatever was going on in his head, he was inconsistently jealous, both of all the other men in the world, and of my time. But most of all I think he wanted me to stay as I was, with my life totally revolving around him, backing him up, with nothing that I was doing particularly important to me. He had sensed that if I went out to Africa then all that would fall apart and crumble away. He was very astute.

The row raged on in the car. Every couple has rows. Rows when you're tense because you're late, rows when you're drunk, rows when you're fed up, rows when you're tired, rows after parties when one of you gets jealous of the other for flirting. Rows don't need to matter. But Oliver was so clever, so eloquent and so cruel that our rows would completely destroy me, and leave me feeling that my personality and everything I believed in had been taken away. I used to want to tape-record them and play them back to someone else to prove that I wasn't mad. I was terrified of him when he was in row mode. When we got to Julian Alman's, I sat shrunken down in my seat, staring straight ahead, not saying anything, hoping he would simply go away.

Oliver said, “Fine, if you're going to be like that you can sit in the car,” took the keys and went inside. I sat there limp with misery for half an hour before I could rouse myself to get a taxi home. Later that evening he came round and started talking about how much he'd like to have children with me. Two days later he stopped calling, without explanation, and didn't answer my calls for four days. When he eventually rang, he told me he loved me and I asked when we would meet. He said he couldn't find his diary and
disappeared for another two days. The following week it was all on again.

Sometimes it is hard to remember why I loved him so much. He was clever and funny and beautiful and I fancied him with the sort of driven chemical desire which won't lie down. Oliver was unstable but he was never, ever, a bore. And although I grew to hate it, in the beginning it was fun going out with a celebrity. It was fun feeling smug when we were out and everyone wanted a little piece of him, and I was the one on his arm. It was fun knowing that Hermione was jealous. It was fun telling my mum I was going out with a man on the television. It was glamorous going to all the dos and meeting all the people. If I hadn't gone to Africa I would probably just have accepted Oliver's lunacy and carried on.

I was in and out of Nambula within four days on that trip in 1985. Just four days.

Once Sir William knew that
Soft Focus
wasn't going to film the trip he decided against coming, but he did put a lot of his own money into buying the food. All I had to do was make sure that the Ginsberg and Fink logo featured in all the photographs. It was plastered on the food sacks, stuck on the sides of the food lorries. I had boxes of carrier bags and bookmarks all sporting the company logo.

On the way from El Daman airport I watched from the taxi as we drove past failed idea after failed idea: the ornamental park by the river with walkways and archways all covered in sand, the enormous painted sign, festooned with leopards and lions, saying El Daman Municipal Zoo with a gaping hole in the fence beside it. We passed the deserted Municipal Crazy Golf overrun with goats. I looked at the taxis with doors hanging off, the piles of rubble by the side of the road, a group of women walking along arm in arm, laughing, dressed in torn dirty robes and shoes with the straps hanging off them, the El Daman Municipal Ministry of Works with the driveway cracked, the pillars of the entrance broken and smears of mud all over the once-white interior. I felt liberated. I thought that here was a place where it was all right to be only all right; to have grandiose fantasies which came to nothing.

I was driven from office to office that day, with Malcolm introducing me and organizing my permissions. I sat in his jeep, pulling my dress from my body to let the air in. I leaned back, fuzzled and exhausted with the heat and I thought that you couldn't ask too much of yourself or anyone else here. You didn't have to dress up, make up, look perfect, be whizzy, marry a handsome prince, succeed. You could have a go at things without a whole world of people who were charged up, fine-tuned to performance pitch and better than you at everything, staring coldly at your every hiccup and stumble. A part of me that had been lying scared in bed could at least get up and walk around outside here. It was entirely selfish. I was thinking that Africa could do a lot for me.

Even when I first arrived at the camp, I didn't understand what I was dealing with. I stood admiring the view for a while, then walked back to join the photographer and the SUSTAIN people who were standing talking just by the entrance to the compound. A lorry was driving towards us on the road. It was brightly painted with an open rear surrounded by metal rails, to keep the cargo in. A terrible sound of human voices was coming from it. As it passed us, I saw that the back was packed like a cattle truck with human beings, who were so thin that their heads were like skulls. As it was driving away a body slipped out between the slats around the back and crumpled onto the ground, and a woman still in the lorry gave a cry and stretched out her arms towards the body, while the truck carried on driving away. The body lay in the road near to us: the neck was broken and the head bent to one side.

For a long time afterwards, I tried not to remember those two days I spent in the camp. I had been shocked when I watched the BBC coverage of the Ethiopian famine in November 1984, Michael Buerk's terse, haunting script: “Dawn, and as the sun breaks through the piercing chill of night . . . it lights up a biblical famine, now in the twentieth century. This place, say workers here, is the closest thing to hell on earth.”

I was shocked when I watched Live Aid, and saw the footage of a starving child trying to stand, with the Cars song playing in the
background. But that was a safe breed of shock: something was being done, the stars were on the case, you could send your fifty quid and know that you cared and you were doing your bit. It was never going to be allowed to happen again.

This was the shock of feeling for the first time that the world had no safety in it, that it was not governed by justice, and that nobody who could be trusted was in control. It was the shame of feeling that I shared responsibility for this horror and of breaking down, and ceasing to function in the midst of an emergency where I could have helped. It was impossible to eat. It was impossible to sleep. Panic had seized me. I felt that I had the guilt of the whole world on my shoulders. I thought I was going to be found out, blazoned across the newspapers, sent to prison. It was as if I had glimpsed a corner of some massive, dark crime in which I was implicated and punishment would follow.

Back in London the panic did not end. It was Christmas time, and I sat in festive houses feeling like a small child at grown-up parties, hearing the voices drift farther and farther away, feeling incapable of talking. The city seemed to be strangling itself, a maze of streets choked and jammed with too many cars, too many shops, too many restaurants, too much of everything. It made me claustrophobic. It made me want to scream. I used to incense Oliver by going outside to sit in the car. I used to sit, watching the rain on the windshield thinking of the African night, of the big sky, rich with stars, and wanting to go back.

In short, I became a complete pain in the arse.

“Champagne?” Julian Alman held up the vintage bottle cheerfully. “Merry Christmas,” he said. The price tag was still on it: £27.95.

“I'll have a glass of water, please.”

Oliver sighed.

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