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Authors: Christopher Hope

Darkest England (32 page)

BOOK: Darkest England
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So it was, at last, that I stepped into the Palace. All it took were the coins I carried in my apron pocket, the last of ex-Bishop Farebrother's donation to the developing world. Giving them up brought me double pleasure. Both entrance and relief – for how heavily they had thudded against my tender parts with every step I took.

On entering the Royal Apartments among the excited herd, the first thing to strike me was that the Sovereign had adapted our method of game control. But whereas we preferred a line of wooden stakes, each flagged with a fluttering ostrich plume, between which the herd of buck moved in docile lines towards the buried pitfalls, dug deep and covered with grass to conceal the long drop on to the sharpened stakes, the Monarch operated a system of guide ropes to direct her visitors and ensure they did not stray.

In the first of the apartments we gazed in wonder, expecting, I suppose, some early signs of Royalty, if only an equerry, a chamberlain, a beefeater a knight or a lady-in-waiting. But it was quite empty except for large plush chairs and sofas, and white-face clocks that muttered to themselves like women chipping eggshell for bracelets. Here and there, on polished tables, stood bowls of fruit, carved from wood cunningly painted and very beautiful (for they had been great carvers until they laid low their forests).

In general I would say that the Royal Furnishings were every bit as opulent as those of the ‘Best Price' Burial
Society, whose showrooms I have visited in Zwingli – without, of course, the plastic floral wreathes of pink roses and Namaqualand daisies.

The only sign of human habitation were a number of mannequins standing in dark corners, whom I took at first to be pages. On closer inspection they proved to be statues of little black boys, barefoot, with red lips and wide white eyes, half-naked, holding candles or bowls of fruit. No doubt they were intended, these little frozen pages, to remind the Sovereign of her extended family, the Children of the Sun, across the seas.

I turned my eyes this way and that, sure that the gracious Sovereign would be with us at any moment. Great stiff portraits, by which their painters signified the sitters to be both Royal and dead, looked down their waxen noses at our party as we moved from apartment to apartment. It must be soon, I thought. A roll of drums, a flourish of trumpets. Suddenly we would be urged to prostrate ourselves for the arrival of the Queen of England.

But she did not come. Under flowering lights branching from high ceilings, whose leaves were chips of glass, through caverns measureless to man, we moved in silence.

Like the dreamers who see again in their sleep the long-vanished herds of buck that once thronged the plains, and rise from their beds to try to follow them, so we moved like sleepers ever closer to the pitfall. My brain was beating out the refrain: will it be soon? Will it be now? Will it be she?

But my heart now glimpsed another spoor entirely. What the others did not see I saw, what the others seemed quite unafraid of terrified me; for, with every step, we grew nearer our departure point. If she did not come soon, we would be shepherded out of the back door and into the wilderness.

Still she did not come.

I hung back. I could not do so for long without detection, I knew, but I had suddenly one of those revelations which the gods send their favoured hunters when, sick with hunger, they must decide whether to move on to the next stony, empty, heat-struck hill on a day when not so much as a locust has passed their nose. When the hunter risks all and sees not with his eyes but feels in his heart, in his side, in his hooves, the signals of approaching game, long before it appears, feels its breath in his lungs, its fur on his nape. I knew in my heart that
she
was close! At any moment she might appear.

Once again, I was mistaken. I had assumed a welcoming presence. I had believed that in buying a ticket to the Palace I was assured of a Royal meeting, or at least a greeting. And so did the other foreign pilgrims. For otherwise it seemed that our money had been taken under false pretences. But I began to see that this was to confuse our ideas of honour with those of a very different culture, for which the idea that you got what you paid for was lacking in grace and subtlety. The Sovereign existed, for most of her subjects, in rare sightings and distant glimpses; many had never seen her at all. Her corporeal presence was not at issue. She was more a form of faith. A foreigner might object, saying, ‘But she's not there!' Yet that would be to miss the point. In her very absence she was present. And the English, quite properly, felt that if it was good enough for them, it was good enough for everyone else.

It was no longer good enough for me. As so often in the past, my hunting skills came to my aid. From each bowl of fruit we passed I removed a single item, a pear, an apple, a toothsome peach, and hid them beneath the crown of my tawny hat. The ostrich-hunter who plans to catch that
sober bird will disguise himself in her plumage; he will wait for the brooding mother to leave her eggs and take a little walk in the veld. Sitting very still on her eggs beneath his cap of becreeping feathers, he is indistinguishable from the true bird. His arrow at the ready, he waits for her return.

Just so. As the departing herd wound slowly between the guide ropes towards the exit, I slipped under the ropes and melted into a darkened corner, where I took off my hat and extended my right arm. Then I grew very still. They have very poor eyesight, and virtually no sense of smell; my ruse, I felt sure, would not be noted. As I stiffened into immobility, in the shadowy corner, I had become just another little black pageboy, arm outstretched, proffering a bowl of fruit. Bowing – and I think Beth would have approved – but not scraping.

How long did I wait? I cannot be sure. All day long troops of visitors, the greater and the lesser deceived, migrated through the royal apartments, along tightly controlled game trials, eyes searching for a glimpse of their desired quarry, gasped at the chilly, empty magnificence and departed – disappointed. So lifelike was my camouflage that no one paid any particular attention to me, except a mother who reminded her child to be grateful, for there stood a member of some tribe so poor they used their hats for plates.

Evening fell slowly, in the unwilling English manner, and I heard the Palace doors begin closing, one by one. This was just as I had suspected; after all, I knew that the public washrooms in Zwingli close their doors at sunset, and great ventures resemble each other. Keys turned in locks; visitors came no more. Silence returned abruptly, just as it does when the swallows, those creatures of the rain,
who dance on their tails in the evening air, feeding on insects we cannot see, suddenly at sunset vanish with the dying light.

Grateful for a chance, at last, to relieve the cramp that had built up in my forearm after hours of motionless hat-bearing, I was rubbing my muscles when I became aware of footsteps approaching, and there entered the room a chambermaid, carrying a kind of flywhisk, being a short stick surmounted with feathers, which she used for dispersing dust. With many a sigh, she busied herself tidying away the litter left by the departing visitors, stooping to retrieve sweet wrappers, wiping fingerprints from picture-frames, plumping up the pillows on gilded chairs where I knew none had sat, since across each seat stretched a length of twine to discourage such liberties.

This busy cleaner now crossed to me and, to my alarm, began vigorously dabbing her feather stick into every crack of me: my nose, my mouth, my armpits. The vexatious plumes descended lower and lower until I thought my composure should shatter when suddenly my blood froze, I felt no more the feathers' furious fingers. Her face! Perhaps in years it was a little more advanced, and a trifle more careworn, but the features were unmistakably those painted on the Coronation mug I had been shown at the inaugural meeting of the Society for Promoting the Exploration of the Interior Parts of England, in what now seemed several lifetimes before.

She wore a Royal-blue housecoat. Emblazoned on the breast pocket was a golden lion and unicorn fighting for the crown. Her hair was tied up in a headscarf, and when she spoke the tail of the scarf lifted as a wagtail's feathers do when it sprints across the grass.

Perhaps I started? Who can say? At any rate she abruptly
stopped dabbing at me with the infuriating feathers, pressed her ear to my chest for a moment, leapt back a step or two, very slowly retreated to the window and then, in a moment I shall savour for the rest of my life, the Queen of England addressed her loyal servant, David Mungo Booi.

Her voice, I should say, was regal; being high, small and taut like fencing wire, bending under the pressure of her queenly enunciation, it resembled the cry of the fish-eagle.

If I had come about taxes – Her Majesty declared – I was wasting my time. She had paid what she could. I would not get blood from a stone.

I said I had not come about taxes.

She put down her duster. Had I come to tell her that another of her Palaces was on fire? Well, she had this to say. Let it burn! She had only recently effected for repairs to a burnt Palace;
1
every tapestry, suit of armour, picture, she had paid to have restored without a penny from the public purse and precious little sympathy from her subjects. Despite appearances to the contrary, she was not made of money.

I expressed the hope that her Palaces would endure for a thousand years.

In that case, said the Monarch wearily, there could be only one explanation for my visit. What had her children done now? Hanky-panky? Kiss-and-tell? Secret phone calls? Bare-breasted shenanigans? Well, she was just not, repeat
not
, interested. And I would not have a penny from her. The royal offspring were old enough and ugly enough to look after themselves. Enough was enough!

I said I wished her family nothing but long life and many children.

I thought she rather flinched at this and I hastened to reassure her that my embassy had nothing to do with the matters she had been kind enough to mention; rather, it was my privilege to come to her as the first ambassador of her loyal Red People.

Her manner changed remarkably now. Declaring this to be fascinating news, and taking a little pair of silver scissors from her handbag, she snipped the white tape that protected the chairs and, patting a seat, pink as sunset and deep as an elephant's yawn, she invited me to sit beside her and tell her where in her former empire her Red People resided.

Back in the ages when my people
were
, I replied, we lived in the north-western reaches of the Cape Province of South Africa.

Cries of delighted recognition greeted my reply. She too had been to the Cape. And it was in the Cape that her great-great-grandmother had fought the ‘Bores'. (Her tongue had difficulty – as ours does – in saying the names of our enemies, the Boers.) Her family had happy memories of these fellows, as they did of all the peoples they had fought and crushed. She had met several Bores while on her visit to my country as a young princess. Sadly, she had not met any of my Red People, who, she was sure, were absolutely fascinating.

She had a great gift for making one feel oneself to be the centre of her undivided attention. Her comments, warm and flowing, effortlessly relieved one of the responsibility of saying anything in reply. She pronounced herself absolutely delighted to meet a Red Man who could tell her more about the tremendous advances in my country. The black chaps and the Bores had hated one another, had they not? Yet now they were the best of chums. Wasn't that
tremendously encouraging? And soon, she heard, everyone would be living in houses with four bedrooms and free telephones. Wouldn't that be tremendous encouragement to the rest of the world? She could not imagine how I had managed to tear myself away. How very, very touched she was by my gift of a hatful of fruit.

Did I plan to stay long in England? And had I brought other gifts, for her royal collections?

My answer dried in my mouth; the memory, still so raw, of my lost suitcase, and its treasures, assembled with such devotion by my trusting people, cut me to the quick.

What I had brought, I said, was a great gift of her great-great-grandmother to my people. What I had lost, alas, were the gifts of my people to Her Majesty.

I listed the treasures I had hoped to lay at her feet: a bow of the finest
gharree
wood, strung with sinew cut from the eland's hide; reed arrows, beautifully light, their heads of flint and iron bound with grass; a pair of ceremonial firesticks, so ancient it is said they were made in the First Times, when animals were still people, and had belonged to Kaggen himself; and the chief of music; the singing string, the Bushman fiddle, called the
gorah
, whose song is as sweet as she-rain after long drought; a rich necklace of ostrich-shell beads, threaded with ant-bear hair, fit for a royal throat; and two dozen copper leg-bangles that women prize: three of the choicest poisons in the world; as well as hides, honey and cups of tortoise shell.

Lowering her voice, she urged me to think no more of my loss. What she was about to confide was not to go beyond the palace walls – but my lack of native gifts came as a relief.

Mr Booi, murmured the Sovereign, we own more mummies, bottled infants, golden death masks, pickled
hearts, Attic marbles, sacred phalluses from a dozen extinct tribes than we know what to do with. Not to mention axeheads, arrowheads, maidenheads, shrunken heads, assegais, wampum belts,
khukris
, feathered headdresses, jade daggers and assorted yellow idols, saved from their owners' ignorance and brought home for safekeeping, often at great expense, in our Royal Museums.

It had been the enlightened policy of her missionaries, she graciously explained, and her explorers, soldiers and traders, to remove native artefacts to England, where they might properly be appreciated. That policy had been all very well at the time. But unscrupulous peoples, she feared, had taken advantage of this enlightened policy by encouraging her missionaries, explorers, soldiers and traders to take entire temples and tombs home with them.

BOOK: Darkest England
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