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Authors: Nadine Gordimer

Life Times (9 page)

BOOK: Life Times
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‘Miss Tetzel's up here to look us over. She's from Cape Town,' Alister explained.
She turned to Temba with her beauty, her strong provocativeness, full on, as it were. ‘So we're neighbours?'
Jake rolled one foot comfortably over the other and a spluttering laugh pursed out the pink inner membrane of his lips.
‘Where did you live?' she went on, to Temba.
‘Cape Flats,' he said. Cape Flats is a desolate coloured slum in the bush outside Cape Town.
‘Me, too,' said the girl, casually.
Temba said politely, ‘You're kidding,' and then looked down uncomfortably at his hands, as if they had been guilty of some clumsy movement. He had not meant to sound so familiar; the words were not the right ones.
‘I've been there nearly ten months,' she said.
‘Well, some people've got queer tastes,' Jake remarked, laughing, to no one in particular, as if she were not there.
‘How's that?' Temba was asking her shyly, respectfully.
She mentioned the name of a social rehabilitation scheme that was in operation in the slum. ‘I'm assistant director of the thing at the moment. It's connected with the sort of work I do at the university, you see, so they've given me fifteen months' leave from my usual job.'
Maxie noticed with amusement the way she used the word ‘job', as if she were a plumber's mate; he and his educated African friends – journalists and schoolteachers – were careful to talk only of their ‘professions'. ‘Good works,' he said, smiling quietly.
She planted her feet comfortably before her, wriggling on the hard chair, and said to Temba with mannish frankness, ‘It's a ghastly place. How in God's name did you survive living there? I don't think I can last out more than another few months, and I've always got my flat in Cape Town to escape to on Sundays, and so on.'
While Temba smiled, turning his protruding eyes aside slowly, Jake looked straight at her and said, ‘Then why do you, lady, why
do
you?'
‘Oh, I don't know. Because I don't see why anyone else – any one of the people who live there – should have to, I suppose.' She laughed before anyone else could at the feebleness, the philanthropic uselessness of what she was saying. ‘Guilt, what-have-you . . .'
Maxie shrugged, as if at the mention of some expensive illness, which he had never been able to afford and whose symptoms he could not imagine.
There was a moment of silence; the two coloured men and the big black man standing back against the wall watched anxiously, as if some sort of signal might be expected, possibly from Jake Alexander, their boss, the man who, like themselves, was not white, yet who owned his own business, and had a car, and money, and strange friends – sometimes even white people, such as these. The three of them were dressed in the ill-matched cast-off clothing that all humble workpeople who are not white wear in Johannesburg, and they had not lost the ability of primitives and children to stare, unembarrassed and unembarrassing.
Jake winked at Alister; it was one of his mannerisms – a bookie's wink, a stage comedian's wink. ‘Well, how's it going, boy, how's it going?' he said. His turn of phrase was bar-room bonhomie; with luck, he
could
get into a bar, too. With a hat to cover his hair, and his coat collar well up, and only a bit of greasy pink cheek showing, he had slipped into the bars of the shabbier Johannesburg hotels with Alister many times and got away with it. Alister, on the other hand, had got away with the same sort of thing narrowly several times, too, when he had accompanied Jake to a shebeen in a coloured location, where it was illegal for a white man to be, as well as illegal for anyone at all to have a drink; twice Alister had escaped a raid by jumping out of a window. Alister had been in South Africa only eighteen months, as correspondent for a newspaper in England, and because he was only two or three years away from undergraduate escapades, such incidents seemed to give him a kind of nostalgic pleasure; he found them funny. Jake, for his part, had decided long ago (with the great help of the money he had made) that he would take the whole business of the colour bar as humorous. The combination of these two attitudes, stemming from such immeasurably different circumstances, had the effect of making their friendship less self-conscious than is usual between a white man and a coloured one.
‘They tell me it's going to be a good thing on Saturday night?' said Alister, in the tone of questioning someone in the know. He was referring to a boxing match between two coloured heavyweights, one of whom was a protégé of Jake's.
Jake grinned deprecatingly, like a fond mother. ‘Well, Pikkie's a good boy,' he said. ‘I tell you, it'll be something to see.' He danced about a little on his clumsy toes, in pantomime of the way a boxer nimbles himself, and collapsed against the stove, his belly shaking with laughter at his breathlessness.
‘Too much smoking, too many brandies, Jake,' said Alister.
‘With me, it's too many women, boy.'
‘We were just congratulating Jake,' said Maxie in his soft, precise voice, the indulgent, tongue-in-cheek tone of the protégé who is superior to his patron, for Maxie was one of Jake's boys, too – of a different kind. Though Jake had decided that for him being on the wrong side of a colour bar was ludicrous, he was as indulgent to those who took it seriously and politically, the way Maxie did, as he was to any up-and-coming youngster who, say, showed talent in the ring or wanted to go to America and become a singer. They could all make themselves free of Jake's pocket, and his printing shop, and his room with a radio in the lower end of the town, where the building had fallen below the standard of white people but was far superior to the kind of thing most coloureds and blacks were accustomed to.
‘Congratulations on what?' the young white woman asked. She had a way of looking up around her, questioningly, from face to face, that came of long familiarity with being the centre of attention at parties.
‘Yes, you can shake my hand, boy,' said Jake to Alister. ‘I didn't see it, but these fellows tell me that my divorce went through. It's in the papers today.'
‘Is that so? But from what I hear, you won't be a free man long,' Alister said teasingly.
Jake giggled, and pressed at one gold-filled tooth with a strong fingernail. ‘You heard about the little parcel I'm expecting from Zululand?' he asked.
‘Zululand?' said Alister. ‘I thought your Lila came from Stellenbosch.'
Maxie and Temba laughed.
‘Lila?
What
Lila?' said Jake with exaggerated innocence.
‘You're behind the times,' said Maxie to Alister.
‘You know I like them – well, sort of round,' said Jake. ‘Don't care for the thin kind, in the long run.'
‘But Lila had red hair!' Alister goaded him. He remembered the incongruously dyed, artificially straightened hair on a fine coloured girl whose nostrils dilated in the manner of certain fleshy water plants seeking prey.
Jennifer Tetzel got up and turned the gas off on the stove, behind Jake. ‘That bacon'll be like charred string,' she said.
Jake did not move – merely looked at her lazily. ‘This is not the way to talk with a lady around.' He grinned, unapologetic.
She smiled at him and sat down, shaking her earrings. ‘Oh, I'm divorced myself. Are we keeping you people from your supper? Do go ahead and eat. Don't bother about us.'
Jake turned around, gave the shrunken rashers a mild shake, and put the pan aside. ‘Hell, no,' he said. ‘Any time. But—' turning to Alister – ‘won't you have something to eat?' He looked about, helpless and unconcerned, as if to indicate an absence of plates and a general careless lack of equipment such as white women would be accustomed to use when they ate. Alister said quickly, no, he had promised to take Jennifer to Moorjee's.
Of course, Jake should have known; a woman like that would
want
to be taken to eat at an Indian place in Vrededorp, even though she was white, and free to eat at the best hotel in town. He felt suddenly, after all, the old gulf opening between himself and Alister: what did
they
see in such women – bristling, sharp, all-seeing, knowing women, who talked like men, who wanted to show all the time that, apart from sex, they were exactly the same as men? He looked at Jennifer and her clothes, and thought of the way a white woman could look: one of those big, soft, European women with curly yellow hair, with very high-heeled shoes that made them shake softly when they walked, with a strong scent, like hot flowers, coming up, it seemed, from their jutting breasts under the lace and pink and blue and all the other pretty things they wore – women with nothing resistant about them except, buried in white, boneless fingers, those red, pointed nails that scratched faintly at your palms.
‘You should have been along with me at lunch today,' said Maxie to no one in particular. Or perhaps the soft voice, a vocal tiptoe, was aimed at Alister, who was familiar with Maxie's work as an organiser of African trade unions. The group in the room gave him their attention (Temba with the little encouraging grunt of one who has already heard the story), but Maxie paused a moment, smiling ruefully at what he was about to tell. Then he said, ‘You know George Elson?' Alister nodded. The man was a white lawyer who had been arrested twice for his participation in anti-discrimination movements.
‘Oh, George? I've worked with George often in Cape Town,' put in Jennifer.
‘Well,' continued Maxie, ‘George Elson and I went out to one of the industrial towns on the East Rand. We were interviewing the bosses, you see, not the men, and at the beginning it was all right, though once or twice the girls in the offices thought I was George's driver – “Your boy can wait outside”.' He laughed, showing small, perfect teeth; everything about him was finely made – his straight-fingered dark hands, the curved African nostrils of his small nose, his little ears, which grew close to the sides of his delicate head. The others were silent, but the young woman laughed, too.
‘We even got tea in one place,' Maxie went on. ‘One of the girls came in with two cups and a tin mug. But old George took the mug.'
Jennifer Tetzel laughed again, knowingly.
‘Then, just about lunchtime, we came to this place I wanted to tell you about. Nice chap, the manager. Never blinked an eye at me, called me Mister. And after we'd talked, he said to George, “Why not come home with me for lunch?” So of course George said, “Thanks, but I'm with my friend here.” “Oh, that's OK,” said the chap. “Bring him along.” Well, we go along to this house, and the chap disappears into the kitchen, and then he comes back and we sit in the lounge and have a beer, and then the servant comes along and says lunch is ready. Just as we're walking into the dining room, the chap takes me by the arm and says, “I've had
your
lunch laid on a table on the stoep. You'll find it's all perfectly clean and nice, just what we're having ourselves.” '
‘Fantastic,' murmured Alister.
Maxie smiled and shrugged, looking around at them all. ‘It's true.'
‘After he'd asked you, and he'd sat having a drink with you?' Jennifer said closely, biting in her lower lip, as if this were a problem to be solved psychologically.
‘Of course,' said Maxie.
Jake was shaking with laughter, like some obscene Silenus. There was no sound out of him, but saliva gleamed on his lips, and his belly, at the level of Jennifer Tetzel's eyes, was convulsed.
Temba said soberly, in the tone of one whose goodwill makes it difficult for him to believe in the unease of his situation, ‘I certainly find it worse here than at the Cape. I can't remember, y'know, about buses. I keep getting put off European buses.'
Maxie pointed to Jake's heaving belly. ‘Oh, I'll tell you a better one than that,' he said. ‘Something that happened in the office one day. Now, the trouble with me is, apparently, I don't talk like a native.' This time everyone laughed, except Maxie himself, who, with the instinct of a good raconteur, kept a polite, modest, straight face.
‘You know that's true,' interrupted the young white woman. ‘You have none of the usual softening of the vowels of most Africans. And you haven't got an Afrikaans accent, as some Africans have, even if they get rid of the Bantu thing.'
‘Anyway, I'd had to phone a certain firm several times,' Maxie went on, ‘and I'd got to know the voice of the girl at the other end, and she'd got to know mine. As a matter of fact, she must have liked the sound of me, because she was getting very friendly. We fooled about a bit, exchanged first names, like a couple of kids – hers was Peggy – and she said, eventually, “Aren't you ever going to come to the office yourself?”' Maxie paused a moment, and his tongue flicked at the side of his mouth in a brief, nervous gesture. When he spoke again, his voice was flat, like the voice of a man who is telling a joke and suddenly thinks that perhaps it is not such a good one after all. ‘So I told her I'd be in next day, about four. I walked in, sure enough, just as I said I would. She was a pretty girl, blonde, you know, with very tidy hair – I guessed she'd just combed it to be ready for me. She looked up and said “Yes?,” holding out her hand for the messenger's book or parcel she thought I'd brought. I took her hand and shook it and said, “Well, here I am, on time – I'm Maxie – Maxie Ndube.” '
‘What'd she do?' asked Temba eagerly.
The interruption seemed to restore Maxie's confidence in his story. He shrugged gaily. ‘She almost dropped my hand, and then she pumped it like a mad thing, and her neck and ears went so red I thought she'd burn up. Honestly, her ears were absolutely shining. She tried to pretend she'd known all along, but I could see she was terrified someone would come from the inner office and see her shaking hands with a native. So I took pity on her and went away. Didn't even stay for my appointment with her boss. When I went back to keep the postponed appointment the next week, we pretended we'd never met.'
BOOK: Life Times
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