6692 Pisces the Sailfish
Transcription
6692 Pisces the Sailfish
6692 Pisces the Sailfish 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Curse, Coincidence or Creator? by Don Darkes 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Createspace Edition Copyright 2012 Don Darkes Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author. This work is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. If you enjoyed this book, please show your appreciation and support this author by either recommending this book to your friends and/or purchasing any of his other books. Thank you. Copyright © 2012 Author Name All rights reserved. 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Dedication. This book is dedicated to my family and especially to Anne Merryfield, my Knight in shining armour, without whom this book would not have been possible. You are Family indeed! FIGURE 1 BILL, L UNA, DON, M ORGAN, DIANNE AND ANNE. (L UNA WAS BORN AFTER THE EVENTS IN THIS STORY ) . 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Table of Contents Dedication................................................................................................. ii Table of Contents .................................................................................... iii Why? A note from the author ................................................................ 1 Chapter 1. Revenge................................................................................. 3 Chapter 2. Jamais vu .............................................................................. 4 Chapter 3. No Time to Change .............................................................. 5 Chapter 4. Pisces Casts her Spell .......................................................... 9 Chapter 5. E.T. and Tortoise ................................................................ 12 Chapter 6. Theresa’s Justice ................................................................ 14 Chapter 7. Manning Up ....................................................................... 16 Chapter 8. Diver down ......................................................................... 20 Chapter 9. Heads Up ............................................................................ 23 Chapter 10. Wednesday Legs............................................................... 30 Chapter 11. Puppet on a String ........................................................... 33 Chapter 12. The Tok-tokkie ................................................................. 45 Chapter 13. Revenge of the Sandblaster............................................. 48 Chapter 14. Golden Ivory .................................................................... 51 Chapter 15. Tortoise meets Sailfish and the Duck. ............................ 55 Chapter 16. Saggy Party ...................................................................... 60 Don Darkes Chapter 17. Red Sky in the Morning .................................................. 62 Chapter 18. Necklacing at Granny Dawns ......................................... 64 Chapter 19. Mouths of Babes .............................................................. 68 Chapter 20. The End of Mankind ....................................................... 70 Chapter 21. Pisces Stirs ........................................................................ 73 Chapter 22. Up the Creek .................................................................... 74 Chapter 23. Bucket Brigade ................................................................ 76 Chapter 24. Chicken Pops ................................................................... 78 Chapter 25. The Walruses Sing ........................................................... 81 Chapter 26. Teacher Munro’s riddle................................................... 86 Chapter 27. Sinking Feeling ................................................................ 91 Chapter 28. Bitter Pills......................................................................... 93 Chapter 29. Spicy Runaways ............................................................. 104 Chapter 30. Green Mambas Crossing .............................................. 113 Chapter 31. 52092 Unexpected Guests ............................................. 117 Chapter 32. Pisces Warns .................................................................. 119 Chapter 33. Landfall .......................................................................... 123 Chapter 34. Dawn Ritual ................................................................... 124 Chapter 35. Pied Piper ....................................................................... 127 Chapter 36. Watch Lemur ................................................................. 130 Chapter 37. No-Name Island. ............................................................ 134 iv 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 38. The Gold Magnet ........................................................... 137 Chapter 39. A New Leaf ..................................................................... 151 Chapter 40. Garden of Paradise ........................................................ 159 Chapter 41. 6692. Pisces Day ............................................................. 163 Chapter 42. Bowled Over ................................................................... 165 Chapter 43. Plat du Jour .................................................................... 168 Chapter 44. A Stitch in Time .............................................................. 172 Chapter 45. Pisces Returns ................................................................ 176 Chapter 46. The Book of Gnomes ..................................................... 182 Chapter 47. The Frogman Arrives .................................................... 184 Chapter 48. Childs Play ..................................................................... 187 Chapter 49. Vigil ................................................................................. 189 Chapter 50. Déjà vu ............................................................................ 191 Chapter 51. Bread sans Fish .............................................................. 193 Chapter 52. Avenue of Baobabs ......................................................... 197 Chapter 53. The Prophesy.................................................................. 200 Chapter 55. Postscript. Killer Prawns. ............................................. 203 Author Biography ............................................................................... 209 v Don Darkes FIGURE 2 THIS SIGN STANDS AT THE NORTHERN TIP OF M ADAGASCAR NEAR TO WHERE THE WW 2 INVASION FLEET LANDED AND NEAR TO WHERE I BEGAN ANOTHER ADVENTURE FOLLOWING THE EVENTS IN THIS BOOK . T HIS STORY IS TOLD IN THE SEQUEL, 2ND. TIME L UCKY vi 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Why? A note from the author Why 6692? It is a date. June sixth, nineteen-ninety two. That was the day I discovered that the only possessions of value are Love and Family. Somehow, every June sixth since then, I have experienced something that has given me pause for reflection or reminded me how easily I could have lost my Family due to my own selfishness and the misguided belief that money and prestige were more important than their love and respect. Why Pisces the Sailfish? My boat was one of thirteen vessels, all built by the same yard. Each one was named for a horoscope or star sign. She was named Pisces when she was launched and later gained a history and a reputation that I did not care for. I decided to change her name but was told that it is bad luck to rename a boat. I prefer to err on the side of caution. That is why I effectively renamed her by painting a Sailfish outline over her name, symbolically transforming her from a Star Sign into a Fish and effectively renaming the boat. Although I claim not to be superstitious, I cannot ignore the uncanny coincidences that some would regard as a curse or a jinx. I choose to see these events as the results of my prayers being answered in Profound and Mysterious ways. Why Curse, Coincidence or Creator? Please read this true story and then decide for yourself. Why did I wait for twenty years to write this book? Despite encouragement from family, friends and from complete strangers, I refused to tell my entire story while I waited for someone that I hated, someone that I tried to murder; to die. During all that time our poisonous secret remained trapped inside me like the key log that holds its fellows prisoner inside a logjam. Ten years prior to the writing of this book, after a short story, based on one of the opening chapters, reached the finals in a daily newspaper's annual True Short Story competition; I was inundated by requests from its readers for the rest of the tale. An 1 Don Darkes informal survey of their motivations revealed that many feel trapped in lives that they hate and fantasise about sailing away from it all. Others dream of travelling or experiencing adventure, but most lack the courage to act. I believed them when they told me that they would enjoy my book and perhaps draw caution or inspiration from it. Nevertheless, I could not write about it. On June 6th. 2012, almost twenty years after a traumatic event described in this book, I read a long awaited obituary and the dam was breached. It released this story and other pent-up books from the overflowing well within my soul and I began to write. My incredible wife believes that women will relate to our tale simply because it is a true family story. If she is correct I hope they also identify with its multifaceted heroine, a strong woman who is simultaneously a partner, a best friend, a mother, a lover and our family anchor. Although this adventure will perhaps resonate more with those who experienced the final years of Apartheid in South Africa, it should also be of interest to readers in other countries who would like to learn a little about Africa's amazing people and cultures. Similarly, although it is an adventure story, this tale does not dwell upon aspects of sailing that are meaningless to the average person and especially so to me, who is branded a heretic by many sailors when I tell them; Sailing is the price I reluctantly pay for the time I enjoy safely at anchor in a new port. Although I vowed at the time that I would never own another boat, I currently find myself, together with my now grownup family, building another one. We have yet to set sail, nevertheless our voyage has already begun. Our new adventures and those of the fascinating fellow travellers who share our journey, are recounted a sequel to this book, 2nd Time Lucky. . 2 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 1. Revenge June sixth 2012. How do I begin to explain how and why I have waited impatiently to write the final chapters to this story? While I often fantasised about revenge and what I could or should have done, it is only recently that I realised that I should have forgiven and forgotten and released my pent up hatred a long, long time ago. Nevertheless I have to admit, when I joyfully read the news of his dreadful and humiliating demise recently, I experienced intense pleasure and a sweet release in being able to enjoy with relish, the truth in one of my favourite old saws; Revenge is a dish best eaten cold and there is no sweeter revenge than outliving your enemies! 3 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 2. Jamais vu Jamais vu (from French, meaning "never seen") is a term in psychology which is used to describe any familiar situation which is not recognized by the observer. Often described as the opposite of déjà vu, jamais vu involves a sense of eeriness and the observer's impression of seeing the situation for the first time, despite rationally knowing that he or she has been in the situation before. (Wikipedia) June 7th 1992. When the first rays of sunlight began to peel away the darkness at dawn on June seventh I could see that it was low tide and that the pounding waves were crashing some way off from where I sat huddled with my shivering family. A silver flash of reflected sunlight summoned me to where a shimmering object lay within the expanse of sand exposed by the receding ocean. “Wait here” I ordered as I stood up and stepped sleepily onto the glistening beach, ignoring the protests from the hardy villagers who had shared our all-night vigil. At first I did not notice how my footsteps filled up and sank before vanishing behind me as I single-mindedly drew each foot from the sucking white sand and staggered doggedly forward to stand exhausted above my glinting steel objective. Puzzled and perplexed I scratched my head, wincing absent-mindedly as warm blood oozed afresh from the wound on my aching skull as I struggled to recognise at what I was looking. As I sank up to my hips in the cloying muck, I recognised with dismay, the all too familiar shape sticking out of the quicksand in front of me. 4 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 3. No Time to Change June 6th. 1989. Basil, my business partner, pulled the trigger on the loaded revolver he held pressed hard against my temple and laughed tauntingly as the hammer snapped down harmlessly on an empty chamber with a loud click. He was, like every other Friday afternoon, angry, maudlin; and drunk. “Hey Lanie. You have the luck of the devil. The live round is sitting here in my gun at five to twelve! It would be midnight for you and this bullet would be in your brain right now if I had pulled the trigger just one more time.” Basil staggered a little as he cocked the pistol and carefully extracted the solitary copper tipped bullet and held it up in front of my eyes before pressing it tightly into the palm of my hand. “Here is a small souvenir for you to remember me by.” Basil usually called me Lanie behind my back. When he called me that to my face, he did it as a reminder that despite the fact that we were (albeit illegally) business partners and spent most of our waking hours working together, we would never be friends nor could we associate as equals. This was because I was white and he was coloured. The Apartheid government and its cronies in the church, had jointly decreed that the different colours of our skin meant that we could not publicly socialise nor could we legally own a business together. According to the race classification system implemented by our betters and masters, a coloured person was someone who had a white parent and a black parent and therefore was neither black nor white. This doomed them to an existence in limbo where they were accepted by neither race and were regarded by both as pariahs since they were living proof of the crime of miscegenation that the Nazis and the Jews so abhorred. Lanie was the sardonic name that coloured people used amongst themselves to refer to the ruling class whites during the 5 Don Darkes apartheid era in South Africa. A bastardisation of larney it referred disparagingly to the airs and graces and hypocrisy displayed by the white upper class in a strictly hierarchical society where skin colour determined race and social standing. “I am not a racist,” was Basil’s favourite saying. “I just hate everyone who is not exactly like me.” The reasons for Basil holding his gun to my head that Friday evening were many and complicated. For me it was the final straw in a litany of hurts, betrayals and disappointments that included being defrauded and lied to by my business partners, my employees and most of all by my own half-brother with whom they were in league. I have long since forgiven them all. In fact in many ways, perhaps I owe them a vote of thanks for opening up my eyes so that I could set myself free. As I drove home afterwards, numbly listening to the car radio, Tracey Chapman seemed to be speaking directly to me as she crooned in her sobbing voice: If you knew that you would die today, Saw the face of God and love, Would you change? Would you change? By the time I got home, like every other evening when I eventually returned from work, our four year old son Bill and three year old daughter Morgan were already fast asleep. After dismissing the servants I lingered, still suffering from shock, at the door to the children’s nursery. As I stood there watching them sleep, Basil's bullet clenched tightly in my fist, I understood that my children were complete strangers both to me and to my wife Dianne. We had been too busy chasing money in order to impress others, to have any time to watch them growing up. When Basil pulled the trigger, time for me had moved very slowly, but unlike the promises made by books and in movies, I did not see my life flash before my eyes. Instead I saw only the empty outlines of my children. I could 6 6692 Pisces the Sailfish not see their faces. Instead that space was completely blank. It had taken a single bullet to make me see how worthless and how artificial was the life I had chosen and how I was trapped inside it like a mindless hamster running on a wheel that would always outpace me, no matter how long or how fast I ran. That Friday night, I gave Basil’s bullet to Dianne who said nothing as she carefully stored it away as a reminder of my lucky escape. Then, like every other night when the need for a fix overcame me, I succumbed, switched on the television and flicked impatiently through the channels until I was sufficiently drugged to fall into a fitful sleep. Here I was visited by my favourite recurrent dream where airborne salt spray stung my face as a hissing green wave burst over the deck and washed foaming over my bare feet. Spinning the helm I braced to meet the next wave, feeling the warm sun on my bare shoulders and hearing the rush of the sea surging past the hull and the staccato pinging of halyards slapping against the mast. The following morning I stood under the shower, depressed at the prospect of running yet another treadmill day inside the cage of my self-made prison and so I daydreamed. What if I won the lottery? What would I do with the money? When the answer came I thought to myself, In that case, why do I have to win the lottery to escape? "Hurry up or we'll be late,” cried Dianne. Reluctantly, I turned off the shower and attempted to concentrate on the work day ahead. Dressing quickly, I grabbed my briefcase, furtively slipping the latest Sailing magazine inside while yelling, "Come on, kids, or you'll be late again for nursery school!" While standing under the shower that morning, I resolved to escape the prison of my self-inflicted hamster run and to literally sail away from it all. As we drove to the office, Dianne, my amazing wife, lover, mother of our children and my 7 Don Darkes best friend, first listened to my insane idea and then in her inimitable style, removed her large white rimmed glasses to better flash her sapphire blue eyes at me. They lit up her eversmiling face, as she asked without the slightest hesitation; “So, how long do I have to pack?” Although Dianne is terrified of the ocean, and indifferent to sailing, she loves meeting new people, visiting new places and earning new experiences. Before purchasing the yacht we had discussed at length how we wanted to travel, explore the world and find people and places that stimulated us and even perhaps find somewhere that the treadmill did not operate. We did not consider packaged tours, faceless hotels or sanitised and canned tourist options, since long experience of these proved that we invariably only ended up meeting other wouldbe travellers and not the indigenous people in the countries we were visiting. We chose to seek the path less travelled. We briefly considered backpacking or perhaps cycling but Dianne’s bad knee, shattered in a nursing accident and a young family made this difficult and impractical. Although initially, a caravan proved to be an attractive option, we soon realised that this would limit us to a single continent, limiting our choices should we wish to leave a place we did not like or one that did not like us. Visiting remote places and unusual destinations would also be impossible. The overwhelming attraction of a yacht was that it literally made the world our playground because it enabled us to explore exotic places and when we grew tired or felt uncomfortable then we could almost instantly retreat into familiar surroundings to enjoy home comforts. Another advantage of the yacht was that it enabled us to carry some of our sentimental things with us wherever we went and allowed us to take our life savings without the unwanted interference of the fleas and ticks that seek to regulate our lives and tie us to the grindstone. In balance the risks and terrors of the open ocean were worth the rewards. 8 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 4. Pisces Casts her Spell A boat is a hole in the water in which to pour money. The bleached-blonde yacht broker was spitefully nicknamed Dustbin Kim by the locals, due (perhaps not entirely) to her badly retouched photographs plastered upon waste-bin adverts dotted around Durban’s yacht marina. As she steered us back to the Point Yacht Club jetty the rolling motion of her bouncing rubber duck vied with the bitter taste of my disillusionment and the sour smell of stale curry to make me want to vomit. Where were the dreamboats from the back pages of Sailing Magazine? I asked myself in despair as I stared forlornly at the rows of moored yachts. As if in reply three tarnished brass portholes winked dully at me from the stern of one of them, her twin masts, long bowsprit and voluptuous lines reminded me of a traditional sailing ship from days gone by. "What about the one that looks like a pirate ship?” I shouted above the engine with renewed enthusiasm. "That’s Pisces,” grunted Kim dismissively, as if her reply should be self-evident even to an up-country bumpkin. I sometimes wonder if I would nevertheless have bought Pisces had I known then about her curse. When we climbed up the ladder and stepped on board, Dianne and I exchanged glances as we both felt a link with the vessel stimulating the connection that we have always shared. Although we tried to ask intelligent questions to make the decision to buy the boat appear scientific or at least well thought out, it was clear that it was our first impressions which swayed our decision to purchase the boat later that day. Pisces had classic lines enhanced by brass portholes, varnished teak and her magnificent burgundy coloured sails that graced her two masts and voluptuously shaped hull. She was a Schooner, Forty-five foot long or about three times the length of the Tortoise, our family caravan. Her long bowsprit, 9 Don Darkes like a sailfish’s spear, was enclosed by a stout stainless steel railing and was long enough for all four of us to stand upon. Later, as we experienced the challenges of manoeuvring Pisces in tight spaces we renamed the bowsprit Finger of God because it seemed to have a will of its own and sometimes destroyed whatever it was pointed at. The yacht had a centre cockpit with a wooden ship’s wheel set inside it, like an olden day sailing ship. We adored her teak decks despite the years of bird droppings and the filthy grey grime of neglect that had deterred so many other would-be purchasers. There were two entrances or companionways protected from the elements by sliding teak hatches at either end of the cockpit. The forward hatch led down a polished teak ladder into the chartroom containing a hinged table that folded up to reveal a voluminous freezer beneath. This cabin was arrayed with radios, dials, instruments and rows of toggle switches overlooking a long seat that also served as a sleeping bunk. Moving toward the stern a compact galley held a double sink and a gimballed stainless steel gas stove. There were plenty of cupboards. The largest cabin was in the stern and this had a gigantic double bed surrounded by brass portholes, gleaming teak cupboards and shelves decorated with wooden railings that we later learnt were called fiddles. A generous table surrounded on three sides by fold-up bench seats that could easily seat six completed this, our favourite cabin. A door leading off from the main cabin led to a shower, heads or loo and a wash hand basin complete with a gas geyser. Moving forward from the chartroom was a double cabin with a bunk bed that immediately delighted the children as they set eyes on it. As we lifted Morgan into the top bunk, Kim stepped forward to demonstrate something she called a ‘Leecloth’ This was a blue canvas sheet permanently attached to 10 6692 Pisces the Sailfish the stout teak side rail of the bunk that could be fixed to the cabin roof by a set of hooks. “This is to make sure you don’t fall out of bed when the boat rocks.” She said showing it to Morgan who was so delighted that she refused to leave her snug berth for the remainder of our tour. Later, as we enjoyed a hearty breakfast ashore and we all struggled to recall the name of the ingenious cloth, Morgan decided, according to our family custom of renaming things of which we were fond to rechristen it. “This is my Falling-fing, she lisped. Opposite the children’s cabin was another heads and wash basin. A third double cabin, illuminated by a large hatch and brass portholes occupied the bows or vee-berth of the boat. There was storage aplenty and I could see Dianne mentally redecorating the interior as she planned how she would transform it into our new home. “The donk is in here,” announced Kim, politely hinting that I should take more of an interest in the mechanical parts of the craft. “Huh? I mean excuse me?” I replied completely flabbergasted. “The Donkey, the engine, a hundred horsepower, marinised, Ford diesel,” Kim explained as she opened the trapdoor that led down into the evil smelling bilges that were later to become my domain. By the time we completed the tour Dianne and I had already decided that this was to become our new, albeit mobile, home. 11 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 5. E.T. and Tortoise Our once-comfortable home sadly echoed the hollow space as our furniture and possessions were sold off and taken away by excited bargain hunters one by one. I am still surprised at how difficult it was to part with the first of our hard won belongings and then elated as I discovered that it felt as if a heavy rock was being lifted from my chest each time an item was removed. Only then did I begin to understand that I did not own my goods- they owned me! Nevertheless going cold-turkey was not easy, so, in an effort to escape the reality of transition we huddled together on an island of blankets in an empty bedroom, to be anaesthetised by reality television. Like a drug junkie I still needed my fix of canned reality to continue to be a voyeur of someone else’s life so that I could experience living without risk. Our family loves to rename things and the Tortoise, our caravan and mobile home, was no exception, although the reason for her name is somewhat obvious, not so our beloved all-white, all male, Volkswagen Kombi, with dark charcoal coloured seats and carpets, that we used to tow the Tortoise. He was named E.T. Not after the movie starring a cute extraterrestrial, but rather after Eugène Terre'Blanche, the infamous leader of the Afrikaner Weerstand Beweging (Afrikaner Resistance Movement), a notorious white supremacist group similar to America’s Ku Klux Klan. If anybody asked why we chose to name our kombi after this brigand we would reply, “Because he is white on the outside and black on the inside!” before laughing gleefully at the shocked reaction. 12 6692 Pisces the Sailfish The Tortoise groaned under the weight of the few remaining assets that had escaped our orgy of dematerialisation. The last thing to be disconnected from the mains power and loaded into our trusty caravan was the portable television set. There was little to distinguish this flight down the highway to the coastal city of Durban from any other family holiday, other than this time we were carrying everything we owned and this time we had no home to which we could return. As I faced the enormity of what I had done, fear and doubt overcome me. I needed a fix -and badly! We camped for the night in the mist at a truck stop at the top of Van Reenen’s Pass, at the edge of the escarpment. There we witnessed the live birth of CNN via the television in the Tortoise that flickered live images of the outbreak of the first Gulf War until I was sufficiently anaesthetised to fall sleep. The following t day we continued on our way to Queensborough Caravan Park in Durban, where we had decided to set up a temporary base until we could move aboard our yacht, Pisces. 13 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 6. Theresa’s Justice The Tortoise became home to my wife Dianne and me, together with four-year-old son Bill, our three-year-old daughter Morgan and our friend Theresa, while it stood under the leafy branches of a gnarled mango tree in the caravan park. Raven haired Theresa had volunteered to act as au-pair to the children while Dianne and I spent our days preparing Pisces for the family to move aboard her. The caravan park was too far from the ocean and too unfashionable for up-country holidaymakers so it had become home to a rag-tag community of semi-permanent residents, each with their own tale of escape and new found sanctuary. This was perhaps epitomised by the middle-aged park manager and his wife, who had succeeded in creating a haven for themselves and for their adult son, James, who being ‘slow’ had made them outcasts in fashionable suburbia. Sexy and voluptuous Theresa fascinated dim-witted James who found any pretext to be near her, staring vacantly with his mouth agape as he dumbly followed her every move. Theresa in turn was terrified of him and she soon began to find ways to hide from him to avoid his unwanted attentions. This merely encouraged him to redouble his efforts. One evening Theresa returned from the ladies showers with her long and curly, wet dark hair wrapped in a towel. She was agitated and out of breath as she cursed in her Portuguese-accented, broken English. “I feex him! I feex him good!” She hissed at the curious group that had gathered to investigate the commotion. Theresa flashed her Mediterranean-green eyes at all the males and she wagged her finger cautioning them that they would suffer the same fate if they tried to take liberties with her. “What happened Theresa?” Dianne tried to calm her down. “He climb ladder and he make noise. I hear heem” Theresa spluttered indignantly. “And then?” Prompted Dianne. 14 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “Then I am seeing him fingers inside holding window open” Teresa stamped her foot indignantly. Dianne raised her eyebrows and waited expectantly for her to explain. “Then I am see him eyes looking me” Theresa stuttered. “Who was watching you?” Dianne asked gently. “Thet peeg James! He watch me fru the baffroom window when I am shower naked!” She puffed angrily. “But I feex him good!” Theresa shook her fist and glared at the males in the audience in case they were considering peeping at her in the altogether also. “How did you fix him Theresa?” Dianne asked curiously. “I am breaking window on hees head and fingers” She crowed, triumphantly brandishing her bloodied towel as her trophy while she marched determinedly to the manager’s office followed by her retinue of amused and scandalised onlookers. Theresa confronted the park manager’s wife who was adamant that her retarded son James had been with her, watching television, at the time. Theresa snorted with disgust, packed her belongings and returned to Johannesburg in a huff. I doubt Theresa would have been mollified and stayed to help us had she waited until the next day and seen the manager himself nursing several broken fingers and a bandaged head. It seems that his retarded son James was innocent after all. 15 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 7. Manning Up The time we spent in the caravan park enabled us to bond as a family and especially to get used to doing without servants and the facilities like private toilets that we had taken for granted for so long. The caravan park ablutions in particular helped to wrench us out from our comfort zones and required a massive adjustment to our routine, not to mention our body functions. Dianne and I were used to showering together whenever possible and we enjoyed the privacy of our own bathroom where we could disrobe entirely, completely at ease with each other’s naked bodies. Of course the public facilities meant that this was out of the question. In addition we soon learnt the rhythms of our fellow inmate’s habits so that we could time our visits to the showers or the loos in order to spare ourselves some of the more appalling sights, smells and sounds. An unexpected benefit of the all-male toilets was the opportunity it provided for Bill and me to bond closer together as I conducted his first lessons in how he should handle himself in the world of public testosterone. This began quite innocently as I took my son into the toilets for the first time and watched his reaction while he carefully observed other men using the urinal. It was made entirely of stainless steel, occupied an entire wall and could comfortably accommodate eight or ten men standing side by side. A constant stream of water drizzled down its curved surface and gurgled through the trough into grated drains that lay at either end. Every other day a pile of white chemical deodorisers, resembling mothballs would be placed in the gutter. I could see him mentally digesting every facet of this strange new world and assessing the different stances and attitudes of each of the men while he formulated his own approach to manhood. I was unprepared for the endless questions and did not always have a ready answer, especially when others were listening. “Dad, why do they give us peppermints to pee on?” And “Dad, why are they peeing on that silver wall and not sitting down in the loo like we do?” He would ask me loudly; 16 6692 Pisces the Sailfish unmindful of whomever else might be listening, as he always did whenever anything perplexed him. I watched the backs of a line of otherwise absorbed men stiffening as they suppressed the urge to laugh before I answered him. By the time Bill was ready to attempt the ritual himself he had sized up the situation thoroughly. It is difficult to describe the pride I felt as we stood shoulder to shoulder together facing the everflushing silver wall, sharing an intimate father and son moment as I inducted him into the world of men. My heart contracted with love as he looked up at me with his pale blue eyes showing the gap in his two front teeth as he smiled. It is also difficult to describe my feeling when he was distracted midstream by one of the men at the washbasin behind us. “Hey Dad!” he said simultaneously excited and perplexed, “Why is that man taking out his teeth?” as he turned to point he thoroughly drenched the leg and bare feet of the innocent man standing urinating beside him. The daily appearance of a cheerful, gregarious Jack Russell terrier, that Bill immediately named Loopy, also helped us to adjust. Since pets were not permitted in the caravan park, we assumed that Loopy was someone’s pet from the adjacent suburb that had taken it upon himself to adopt the Park’s orphans as he entered it each day and spent time with each of us according to his own timetable. Bill and Morgan were always delighted to see him, often coaxing him into their beds and hiding him beneath their blankets, enticing him to stay longer until we discovered the hard way why he was also known in the Park as ‘Flea-taxi’. 17 Don Darkes FIGURE 3 THE AUTHOR, MORGAN AND LOOPY THE FLEA TAXI In the park, the close proximity to our neighbours and the lack of high walls and fences meant that we had to quickly shed our carefully fabricated big city persona, especially the ability to pretend that neighbours simply did not exist. Besides, we would have been hard-pressed to ignore anyone within the close confines of the Park that left very little room for privacy (or unselfconscious relief from flatulence). In Johannesburg we would never have condescended to even speak with our closest neighbours and certainly not Sasolburg émigrés, Hennie and Marie who were living their dream of an endless holiday by retiring “to the seaside.” They permanently wore the uniform of their church. Tall, lanky and skinny, Hennie with his broken bifocal glasses held together in the middle by silver duct tape, sported a tartan cloth cap, short-sleeved khaki shirt, matching shorts and knee-high brown socks with well-worn veldskoens. 18 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Rosy-cheeked, ever-smiling, short and plump Marie, always wore an ankle-length bulging pale blue faded Crimpalene dress winched in at the waist by her narrow black belt. Her wispy grey hair was trapped in a hairnet bun topped by a blue faux silk pillbox hat that she habitually held down with her thumb and fingers as if she were forming a question mark with her arm. Inseparable, Hennie and Marie went everywhere hand-inhand and never failed to bring a fond smile to my face as they set off for Bible study each day with a roar! Marie hands on hat, Hennie deadpan behind the wheel of their bizarre choice of vehicle, a spluttering red beach buggy. FIGURE 4 THE BEACH BUGGY WAS AN ALL FIBREGLASS BODY UPON A VW B EETLE CHASSIS . A " HIPPIE " VEHICLE AND NOT USUALLY ASSOCIATED WITH ULTRA-CONSERVATIVE PIOUS CHURCHGOING BRETHREN 19 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 8. Diver down Theresa’s untimely exodus left Dianne and me with a dilemma. We had grown used to having the children looked after during their waking hours by our servants. Now that we had decided to change our lives and do so without hired help we did not know how to entertain our own children or indeed even how to relate to them. Theresa, an ex-nursery school teacher had volunteered to help for a few months, assisting us to adjust without having to go cold-turkey during the key transition period, by acting as a friend come babysitter. But as it turned out, we need not have been concerned. Like Loopy the Flea-taxi, the inhabitants of the caravan park were sensitive to the needs of our tiny community and rallied around to help. Blonde haired, blue eyed, Bill and Morgan easily made new friends and acquaintances whenever holiday makers arrived, invariably bringing with them hordes of their own laughing children who would mingle and play happily, unmindful of the artificial barriers that lay mute between the adults. During the off-season the older park inhabitants especially, would vie to act as foster grandparents in order to spend time with our two children. But then another unlikely babysitter arrived from an improbable source, a young couple who camped beside us when they moved in semi-permanently, as they strove to make a new beginning in the humid coastal city. Although they had no children it was clear that they longed to start a family of their own. Bruce and Christine had left the city of Pretoria, and were working hard to establish their business as scuba diving instructors. They used the park as a temporary headquarters while they travelled to dive sites around the coast servicing the needs of their growing customer base. Before meeting him, I had already decided that I did not like Bruce, when I was forced to listen to his choice of music, the heavy breathing, twisted Latin mass, inappropriate Gregorian chants and arcane words of the rock Group Enigma, who had just released their first Album. (Although I have to 20 6692 Pisces the Sailfish admit it sounds somehow better now.) Bruce would arrive in a cloud of dust with the car radio blaring ‘The Principles of Lust’ and then deftly snap it out of his cassette player in the car and whip it into his caravan stereo with scarcely a skipped beat. “That is evil music!” I hissed to Dianne as it blared out over the placid park grounds and looked across to scandalised Hennie and Marie for support, who both nodded emphatically. When I met Bruce for the first time, we automatically sized each other up, as bulls do, grunting and pawing the ground as we sought to determine who was the dominant beast. “So you are a PADI instructor” I said baiting him. “Do you know the acronym stands for Pay Another Dollar In?” I chortled at my own joke as I pawed my turf. “I can see from your scuba tanks that you certified with NAUI” he replied equally contemptuous. “That stands for Not Another Underwater Idiot!” He teased and snorted as he inflated his chest and stood up to his full height. “My diving school was so tough” I continued circling him, waiting for an opening, “Our motto was No Muff Too Tough, We Dive at Five!” I snorted and pawed the turf between us then moved in for the kill as he hesitated momentarily. “I certified the same year you left primary school sonny” I bragged, establishing my seniority, then zoomed in for the kill with “What does PADI teach you to do when you see a shark?” I jeered and sneered as he timidly formed the divers hand sign for a shark. “Rubbish!” I growled. “When you see a shark stab your buddy!” I mock-knifed him in the chest breaking the tension between us as we both laughed out loud. One humid afternoon as Dianne and I returned a little earlier than usual from the boatyard, Bill was nowhere to be found. Morgan was fast asleep, sucking noisily at her thumb, a legacy of her premature birth, as she lay on a blanket at the feet of Hennie and Marie as they sat hypnotised by a gospel program dripping from their tiny television set. Neither Dianne 21 Don Darkes nor I was particularly concerned as we began a round of his favourite haunts in search of him. We eliminated his usual spots one by one and both became a little worried. “We better split up; we can cover more ground that way. You check out the swings and the jungle gym in the playground and I will go to the tennis courts and the pool.” I shouted over my shoulder as we each went our separate ways. When I arrived at the swimming pool my heart sank. There, shimmering through the ripples in the murky overchlorinated water at the bottom of the deep end, lay the inert body of my son. I took a breath and tensed myself to dive in, then stopped at the last moment as I realised that there was another body, lying six feet below the surface, right next to Bill. I watched amazed as the larger body passed a diver’s mouthpiece to Bill, who calmly put it in his mouth, took a breath and gave it back again with a silver cascade of exhaled air bubbles. It was Bruce and he was sharing a scuba tank that lay between them as he taught Bill the art of buddy-breathing. “What the hell do you think you are doing with my son?” I yelled in temper as they surfaced ten minutes later. “Do you realise that Bill is only four and a half years old?” I was ready to strange the swine for risking my son’s life. “What are you so pissed off about?” Challenged Bruce with a wide grin “If I am supposed to believe what you told me about your dive qualifications, then I figure you must have been about Bill’s age when you passed your exams!” 22 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 9. Heads Up Since we had virtually no experience of sailing, beyond joyrides on the muddy duck ponds of Johannesburg, we decided to store the Tortoise at the caravan park and live, albeit illicitly, aboard Pisces as she lay at anchor in the harbour so that we could gain an understanding of daily living aboard a yacht. During the day we spent our time at classes ashore learning basic seamanship, navigation and radio procedure. Our initiation to living on board began through our noses. Pisces had been lying sealed up and neglected on her moorings for some time. The confined and unventilated space below decks heated by the sun fermented pungent and complex odours. The peeling varnish on the once-bright woodwork of the teak deck-hatch was grey with neglect and resisted being slid back on its brass runners as I struggled to open it. Climbing down the companionway ladder into the gloom of the main cabin, my nose was overwhelmed by a combination of the acrid smell of urine, dried vomit and the chemical tang of silicone glue and stale diesel mixed with the mildewed odour of damp carpets. Since then I have learnt that every yacht has a unique aroma and this stench was soon forgotten in the excitement of exploring our new home, until a new pong alerted me to the children’s fascination with the “heads” where a freshly built steaming brown pyramid bore mute testimony to their combined efforts. Their new playground resembled a stainless-steel aircraft toilet complete with a hinged plastic lid. A silver handle, similar to a car-gear lever, protruded from a rubber boot attached to the hull, flanked on either side by tarnished bronze valves. Reasoning that a few thrusts would activate the flushing mechanism, I stroked the handle vigorously but no influx of water appeared. The foul pile remained where it was deposited. Applying more force succeeded only in tearing the perished rubber boot, releasing a foetid pool of stagnant seawater onto the already 23 Don Darkes sodden foam carpet. I was embarrassed to admit to the family that I had not the slightest idea of how to flush the toilet. Like a youth purchasing condoms, I waited for any witnesses to leave before approaching the least-threatening counter-hand at the yacht chandler that stood across the road from the marina. I was rewarded with a quick lesson and sold the replacement parts for the toilet. A day and a half later a new rubber boot adorned the foot of the pump handle. Buoyed by new confidence and some insights gleaned from an examination of the workings of the pump, I opened one of the valves and operated the pump handle, while explaining to my fascinated family how the bronze sea-cock opened and closed an opening in the hull, allowing sea water to be drawn into the bowl by the pump when the valve was opened. My captive audience clapped appreciatively as green seawater jetted in, toppling their pyramid and filling the bowl to the brim. “Don’t you think you should stop pumping?” said Dianne as a surge from a passing vessel rocked Pisces on her moorings slopping some of its foul contents over the sides of the bowl and onto the carpet below. It seemed that I had only absorbed one part of the lesson. Yet another trip to the chandlers revealed how closing the inlet valve and opening the outlet valve, alternating in turn with pumping the handle should empty the stainless-steel bowl. Unfortunately this did not work either and made the stench below decks almost unbearable as the sun beat down and fermented the added ingredients. I went back to the chandler where the handbooks pinpointed the probable cause. It outlined the steps to be followed should a sea creature residing on the miniature reef that was growing on the neglected hull decide to make their lair inside the seaward opening of the toilet valve and block it. It was clear that there was no alternative other than donning a pair of swim goggles and diving over the side, into the sea, to evict the offending creature with a bent piece of wire. The result was spectacular as the pent up pressure released the foul contents of the toilet 24 6692 Pisces the Sailfish into my face with a whoosh, triggering a feeding frenzy amongst the tiny fish. As I rose to the surface gasping for air little Morgan standing on the deck above me excitedly clapped her hands and cried out. “Yay! Daddy has made friends with all the little fishies!” Once mastered, operating the heads pumps enabled Bill and Morgan to invent a new game. Early one morning as we were standing on our deck introducing ourselves to our port side neighbour, Olaf, a dignified grey haired man of at least seventy, Bill appeared on deck with a mischievous expression on his face. Then he stood to attention, saluted and shouted, “Fire all torpedoes!” Whereupon Morgan, the “gunner” down below, pumped the toilet handle unleashing a foul broadside at Olaf’s yacht lying alongside ours. Dianne cringed with embarrassment and started to apologise. Then to our great amusement, Olaf grinned broadly and with a twinkle in his eye dashed down below into the bowels of his own vessel, -and returned fire! Pisces lay in deep water, together with some of the larger yachts, moored far out in the bay, isolated like an island and virtually inaccessible except by boat. Our new home was private and unreachable to outsiders. We were self-sufficient with gas stove, fridge and freezer and soon adapted to the limits set by our fresh water storage tanks. Limited but renewable electricity was created by an array of giant batteries charged by solar panels and a powerful wind-generator, that buzzed like a swarm of angry bees whenever the wind blew hard enough to drive its whirling propeller. Since I was still unable to give up my addiction entirely, we had intermittent television reception that flickered from the tiny black and white set in the main cabin, allowing me to continue to dilute my reality, on demand. 25 Don Darkes Although we told ourselves we were living like real sailors, the glittering shops and attractions of down-town Durban, all within easy walking distance of the yacht basin, enabled us to enjoy the adventure of rowing ashore in our tiny yacht tender or summoning the ferry like a water taxi. We would dress appropriately for the beach, a visit to the library, a trip to the movies or, laden with bulging sail-bags, the weekly pilgrimage to the Fenton Street Laundry. We loved to transform from stylish citizens into “grotty-yachties” and back again as we thrived aboard our floating home. We discovered a leak in Pisces’ diesel tank, -the hard way as the smell of diesel mingling with our vomit as she pitched and rolled in the swell left me in no doubt that we had a problem. The main batteries had been leaking acid onto the mild-steel roof of the diesel tank, corroding several holes into it. I was determined to repair the container myself although I had never even held a welding mask before. A trip to the Library and a half-hour long chat with the experts at the local Plant Hire shop bolstered my confidence. But a little voice inside me warned that I had, once again, overlooked something obvious, and critical, so I decided to ask for expert advice. I gleaned the name of a local shipwright from the yacht club notice board. Terry, an expatriate Englishman and professional boat builder, lived at Wilsons Boatyard aboard the beached hull of a catamaran he was perpetually building for himself in-between taking on carpentry assignments and evading South African emigration officials seeking to withdraw his resident’s permit. Resembling a young Richard Burton, albeit with the stub of a red carpenters pencil that remained perpetually tucked behind his right ear. 26 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Terry shared the same dry wit and cultured English accent as my favourite actor. I was beginning to learn the boatyard customs so I knocked timidly on the hull of Terry’s catamaran, where he was applying epoxy to a bulkhead. After inviting me aboard he listened intently as I explained my problem and how I intended to repair the damaged tank by welding a new metal panel over the hole. Since he was unable to face me or to pause in his task I could not see the bemused expression on his face as he casually remarked. “In that case I assume that you understand that diesel explodes when heated sufficiently?” Terry paused his painting and turned to look at me with a twinkle in his eye. I gulped as a graphic image of an explosion flashed through my mind. “I shall drain the diesel out first!” I retorted embarrassed. “What about the traces of diesel and any volatile vapour left inside?” he asked quizzically, raising his bushy grey eyebrows before turning back to his work. The interview was ended. I had been dismissed like a schoolboy to go away and think it out again. I was embarrassed, humbled and grateful all at once, as I considered what could have happened had I blindly started welding without obtaining advice or thinking the problem through properly. 27 Don Darkes FIGURE 5 MY MENTOR, TERRY BROWN , APPLYING EPOXY TAR TO A HULL The “brains trust”, holding up the bar in the smoke-filled Point Yacht Club that afternoon, felt that the answer lay in cutting the roof off the diesel tank and replacing it with a fibreglass one. I had little enthusiasm for this plan since cutting the lid from the damaged steel tank would also create heat and sparks which would lead inevitably to disaster. The experts behind the counter at the yacht chandlers suggested a special rubber fuel bag that would fit inside the damaged tank. This was an elegant but prohibitively expensive solution which did not solve the problem of cutting off the damaged lid. Nevertheless, it was clear that there was no 28 6692 Pisces the Sailfish option but to have the yacht lifted out of the water and placed onto dry land, where I could begin not only to solve the problem but also to tackle a number of other pressing repair and maintenance tasks. We compiled a list of chores and tasks that could best be done “on the hard” and were appalled when the list ran into several pages. I discovered that some discoloured and soft spots in the teak deck planking were in fact the first signs of a serious rot problem and realised with dismay that I would have to unscrew hundreds of soft brass screws, one-by-one, in order to replace the rotten sections of teak. When I removed one of the strips by way of an experiment, I discovered that the material underneath the teak was also putrid and would have to be cut out and carefully replaced. Naturally the previous owner of the yacht denied any knowledge of the problem and the yacht surveyor was nowhere to be found. We came to the conclusion that he had performed his examination of the vessel via a pair of binoculars from his favourite haunt, the bar of the famous revolving restaurant that overlooked the yacht marina from its perch on one of the tallest buildings in the area. We promptly renamed the establishment The Revolting Restaurant and pretended to retch every time we mentioned it. 29 Don Darkes Chapter 10. Wednesday Legs “Sign here!” Belched the crane-driver wafting a reek of last night’s cheap wine intermingled with his breakfast of beer and peppermints into my face as his greasy finger stabbed impatiently at the bottom of his dog-eared clipboard. “Foggin pollution,” he grumbled beating at his chest with the inside of his fist like a penitent at Sunday mass. A passing dredger seemed to give a double whoop of triumph as I reluctantly signed away my rights. “Sling her boys!” Cried the crane driver triumphantly, brandishing my legal waiver above his head as he made his way to a long steel ladder and ascended it to the monster crane’s control cabin, suspended several stories high above our heads. He whistled sharply and four burly Zulu workmen appeared from the depths of the boatyard’s gigantic corrugated-iron workshop pushing a huge wire basket on clattering wheels filled with ropes and shackles that they manhandled to the jetty where Pisces was tied up. “Permission to come aboard sir?” Smirked the rigger, wiping his greasy hands on his overalls and flashing a toothless grin as he sniggered at my pristine white-soled deck shoes. I nodded dumbly and opened the catch on the guardrail to admit him. Ignoring the entrance I had made, he swung himself over the railing instead and landed with a crash on the freshly scrubbed teak deck with his greasy hobnail boots. Judging by the start I knew I was going to need all my patience in the next few weeks. Fascinated I watched one of the riggers colleagues pass him one end of a long canvas belt, the width and thickness of my hand, which he pulled beneath the stern of Pisces before attaching both ends to a massive hook that had been lowered from the gigantic crane towering above us. He repeated the exercise in the bows before speaking to the crane driver via his two-way radio to take up the slack. 30 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “Do you want to hang around?” Guffawing at his own weak joke the rigger twirled his right hand in an upward gesture. Enormous electric motors whirred as the colossal crane effortlessly plucked our eighteen-ton yacht dripping from the harbour, like a child’s bathtub toy. Then it turned a hundred and eighty degrees to hold the yacht suspended over a pair of V shaped steel brackets. There a team of hard-hat clad men waited with sledgehammers and wooden chocks to wedge her slime covered hull firmly into place. As we stood holding our hands over our ears, two workmen wrestled a hissing highpressure hose to blast a writhing mass of sea creatures from the homes they had built for themselves on Pisces’ slimy hull. Once the undersides had been scoured clean by the powerful jet of water, a team of men with sharp spades attacked the remaining barnacles, sponges and oysters clinging doggedly to the keel, hacking them free and throwing them onto a squirming pile to be squabbled over by marauding seagulls screaming excitedly over their windfall. Once the hull had been cleaned, the sweating men placed wooden poles between the hull and the concrete apron below and hammered wooden wedges into place to secure them tightly. “Wednesday Legs.” I mumbled absent-mindedly to myself as I looked at the flimsy wooden struts that were all that prevented Pisces’ eighteen ton mass from toppling over and crashing to the cement below. Our boat resembled the bowl of a wine glass balanced precariously upon a few toothpicks. “Yes definitely Wednesday legs!” I repeated to myself. “Isn’t that what you say about fat girls with skinny legs teetering on high heels?” giggled Dianne. “Yes.” “When’s dey gonna break!” we chorused and laughed uproariously at our lame joke. 31 Don Darkes FIGURE 6 THE TWENTY TON BOAT PROPPED UP ON SPINDLY WOODEN SUPPORTS . HERE PISCES WAS BEING PREPARED FOR RE LAUNCH 32 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 11. Puppet on a String The piercing wail of a factory siren signalled the end of the working day. The mechanical din of the shipyard was magically replaced by the shrill cries of excited seagulls swooping and squabbling over the shattered barnacles writhing on the sun baked concrete. As the breeze picked up, the staccato metallic sound of ropes tinkling against hollow masts became more urgent. One of the most challenging and also the most rewarding aspects of travel is being accepted by the cliques, groups or communities that one encounters along the way. Neither Dianne nor I realised how different the yachting community was from any other group that we had encountered until now. We made the mistake of assuming that because we owned a boat they would automatically welcome and accept us as kindred spirits and therefore spontaneously allow us to become part of their unique world. We could never have been more wrong. The denizens of the caravan park, the yachting community at the boat yard and the cruising group who were on the water, each had their own unique etiquette, rites, rituals and unwritten rules. Sometimes we had to face subtle tests before being accepted. Perhaps we should not have been surprised since we took this for granted within the society we had left behind in the big cities of Johannesburg and Pretoria. Dianne told me how she grew up in a working class suburb, populated by teachers and civil servants who knew how to stretch a rand and was not obsessed with keeping up with the Joneses. They looked out for each other, mixed easily with each other and often created their own entertainment. Strong friendships and family bonds kept them together. Newcomers and outsiders were not easily welcomed nor tolerated. This contrasted with the upmarket and materialistic Johannesburg set that judged you by what you purported to own. Neighbours were to be tolerated but kept at a distance and the line between politeness and friendship was seldom 33 Don Darkes ever crossed. The constant competition for more money and more useless possessions was a never ending hamster-wheel that could never be outpaced or bested. As we attuned to life aboard we had to adjust to life without servants and become self-reliant, we also had to learn how to stretch our budget, make do with less and realise how unimportant are the opinions of others. As we encountered each unique community we had first to learn how to find their portals, then pass their tests and endure their rites of passage. Only then could we appreciate how they had each created their unique worldview and lived within their own version of reality and in so doing we not only earned their respect but we were able to relate to them when we were accepted as equals into their intimate circle. Dianne and I were keenly aware that we were seen as outsiders and we knew that we needed to do something in order to be accepted into the tight knit “yachtie” community. This had proved difficult to achieve since our yacht was moored far out in the bay, out of contact with most of the other boats and also due partially to our young children. The fact that we did not frequent the bar where the yachting community socialised and bonded added to our isolation. “Sweetheart, these guys know that I am not a sailor, besides they regard me as a Zululand Queer.” I complained. “How so?” Dianne responded shocked. “They found out that I prefer women to rugby!” I laughed. “Perhaps you need to take a leaf out of a woman’s book and fake it, if you want to make new friends,” she observed shrewdly. Eager to explore our new surroundings Dianne and I decided to break the ice by introducing ourselves to the other yachties in the boat yard. We noticed a number of them drifting back from the hot showers at the “Whites-only” ablution block, their bodies freshly scrubbed at the end of the working day. 34 6692 Pisces the Sailfish They were oblivious to the black labourers forced to share a single cold tap and a slimy green brick of carbolic soap before being obliged to leave the premises. It was clear that the yachties were looking forward to quenching their thirst as they communed around a smoky braaivleis. Also known as a braai, this open flamed charcoal-fuelled barbecue so appropriately named by the Afrikaans-speaking Dutch-Huguenot, Boers or farmers, can literally be translated as “scorched flesh.” As Dianne and I stood dejectedly alone and ignored on the outside of this lively gathering I could not help thinking how this rite was essentially as much part of South Africa as it’s brown veldt and sparkling blue skies. This ritual seemed to parallel the original justification of Apartheid or “apartness” that sanctioned Church and State to force every group to be separated from each other in order, they said, that each community could develop their own unique culture without being influenced by the others. The braai is a traditional South African activity almost exclusively performed by white males who congregate together peering through clouds of greasy smoke as they prod and worry bloody chunks of charred meat, dripping fat into the leaping flames. The women are relegated to preparing salads and side dishes while standing apart in their own groups and holding a completely different conversation from that of the men. Naturally these groups segregated themselves not only into their whites-only male and female bands, but they also polarised themselves into English and Afrikaans speaking groups as well. In contrast to the adults, Bill and Morgan made friends easily. They were able to ignore the artificial boundaries created by sex, skin colour and language as they wandered off to play hide-and-seek with all the other children beneath the suspended keels of the yachts. Dianne and I felt out of place with our soft white hands, neatly pressed clothes and new deck shoes. We contrasted with the ragged shorts, rumpled T shirts and grubby slip slops worn by the sun burnt men and women in this tight knit group who spoke of epoxy and rigging, sacrificial anodes and ballast. 35 Don Darkes As we stood awkwardly watching the various groups, a snatch of raucous husky laughter and banter drifted over from the Afrikaans all-male laager. Unconsciously this was parodying the encircled ox wagons, festooned with acacia thorns, that their ancestors had deployed against the onslaughts of Zulu warriors and British redcoats. Now they stood shoulder to shoulder, clutching beers instead of Mausers and deliberating their religion, (rugby) while they defied their enemies. “Mooi gedoen! n’ boer maak n’ plan!” (Well done! A settler makes a plan –A farmer comes up with a solution.) I chuckled at the inevitable retort from the English square, each bearing gin and tonics as they chorused, “Ja! Vra n’ Engelsman!” (Yes! Ask an Englishman!) and they erupted into a chorus of derisive laughter. “Ja Souties. Moes ons julle Rooinekke al weer leer skiet?” (Yes Salty’s, must we teach you rednecks to shoot properly once again?) Was the angry response from the Afrikaans enclave referring disparagingly to the nickname they used for the hated English with their sunburnt necks, their reputation as a nation of seafarers and the fact that the Boer snipers humiliated the British soldiers with their superior marksmanship. “Hey, can any of you rockspiders tell us the Afrikaans word for genius?” The English responded with the sardonic nickname, sometimes shortened to rocks that referred to the Boer tactic of hiding behind boulders while they sniped at the English soldiers.” “Of course, it’s Genie.” Responded the Boers hesitantly following a whispered discussion amongst themselves. “No, that is an Anglicisation” responded the Redcoats. “There is no single Afrikaans word for one,” replied the Boers falling into the English camps trap. 36 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “That is because the Boers have never needed the word!” Chorused the English triumphantly and broke into disparaging laughter and jeers. “Gaan huis toe Soutpiele!” (Go home salt penises) Was the bitter response from the Boer camp. I smiled enjoying the delicious ability of the Afrikaans language to graphically convey spite and insults. This last one was particularly malicious, almost defying direct translation as it built on the Soutie (Salty) epithet but made it all the more sardonic by taunting British expats as it portrayed them standing with one leg in England and one leg in South Africa with their dicks hanging down in the oceans in-between. “Here comes trouble!” I whispered uneasily to Dianne and prepared to withdraw. “Don’t panic Woodpecker, they always do this” laughed Terry Brown as he appeared by my side holding a green bottle of Amstel beer. “Have you solved your diesel tank problem?” He smirked, knowing full well that I had not. I shook my head. As Dianne and I stood alone, trying to decide how to introduce ourselves the breeze began to freshen, causing Dianne to tug self-consciously at her billowing skirt and increasing the tempo of the slatting halyards that made a rattling sound like a hundred demented drummers. Instinctively the assembled yachties looked up at the sky gauging the speed and direction of the wind before they each slipped away to tighten guy ropes and tap the timber wedges that held their own vessels tightly upright in their cradles. We followed suit nervously walking around Pisces, feeling the power of the wind as the vibration travelled down the masts and into the hull making the whole boat tremble. As I climbed up the scaffolding to stand on the quivering deck suspended more than three metres above the paint-spattered concrete apron below, a slapping sound alerted me to the wind tugging mischievously at the corner of the Genoa. This is a massive triangular sail that ran from the top of the mast to the tip of the bowsprit. An ingenious arrangement controlled by a single rope, which I learned was named a sheet, that allowed this sail to be easily furled and 37 Don Darkes unfurled by simply rolling or unrolling it around an aluminium tube. Without warning, the wind teased the Genoa sheet loose from its fastening and opened the huge burgundy-coloured sail with a loud crack! A knot at the tail end of the sheet snagged in the deck cleat, billowing the gigantic canvas and threatening to pull Pisces off her quivering cradle and smash her onto the unyielding concrete below. With the strength of desperation I managed to yank the knot clear of its fastening, freeing the rope from its anchor point and robbing the sail of its power by allowing the sheet to flap free in the wind. Although the immediate danger was past, the flailing sail continued to pull at the boat as it flicked the knot across the yard like a giant whip, lashing at everything in its path. “If we don’t deal with this sail quickly the wind will pull our boat off its cradle!” Shouted Dianne who had climbed up the scaffolding and was struggling to make herself heard above the roar of the rising wind and the crackling of the flogging sail. I untied the halyard, a special rope used to raise and lower the sail but it did not budge. The rope was jammed in its bracket at the top of the mast. “The halyard is stuck so we have to find another way to drop the sail. It is either that or we shall have to cut the fabric and then tear it down before it pulls the yacht over! To make matters worse, since the bearing at the top of the mast is jammed you won’t be strong enough to winch me up to the top of the mast so that I can to free the sail.” I yelled to Dianne over the shrieking of the wind. “You will be strong enough to winch me up though. There is no time to lose and we don’t know anyone here who will help us,” shouted Dianne, a determined set to her jaw as she struggled, to the great amusement of the all-male crowd gathered on the concrete far below our feet, to control her billowing dress in the gusting wind. She had the men gawping as she flashed her long legs while tucking her skirt into her panties and tying up her long blonde hair before stepping into the bosun’s chair. This is a canvas webbing harness tied onto a 38 6692 Pisces the Sailfish halyard, connected in turn to a winch. As she wrapped her bare legs around the mast she called out gaily, “Beam me up Scotty!” Dianne was flushed with excitement as a cheeky grin lit up her lovely face. The freshening wind seemed to delight in buffeting her head against the aluminium mast with resounding clangs as I ground the winch handle, slowly inching her to the top of the mast. There she released the frozen latch with a few well aimed blows of a hammer, dropping the whipping sail to the deck. Spontaneous applause erupted from the men watching her every move from the ground far below. “The pair of you are either very brave or very stupid!” Shouted Terry Brown who was waiting at the bottom of the scaffolding as we clambered down. “Either way, I want to buy you both a drink.” Turning on his heel he led the way to where the separate groups, assembled around the braai, spontaneously reserved a space for each of us. Dianne had broken the ice and proved that we were one of them. The beer flowed and the braai smoked. It was well after midnight before the impromptu party broke up and we were able to leave our new friends and climb shakily and somewhat inebriated, up the scaffolding to our trembling cabin, perched like a bird’s nest high above the ground. There we lay in each other’s arms comparing notes and reviewing the events of the day. “Do you know the origin of the saying ‘three sheets in the wind’? Dianne asked playfully. “Sure, it means someone is very drunk like we are right now.” I replied drowsily. “That is correct but Terry told me that it originated in the British Navy and it refers to the situation we had today when the wind whipped the sheet away from us and flailed the sail dangerously. So if you have three sheets in the wind you would be completely out of control.” She added triumphantly. “In retrospect I don’t think the risk I made you take today was such a good idea” I commented, still in awe of my 39 Don Darkes wife’s fearlessness. “Do you realise that you were hanging on a thread several stories off the ground on an incredibly unstable structure and that your weight could easily have acted like a powerful lever to bring the whole thing crashing down?” “You may be right, but I don’t think we could have found a better way of making new friends. Besides, I didn’t relish the prospect of having to sew the Genoa together again!” Dianne laughed. “Were you not terribly afraid when I kept you dangling on a string so far above the ground?” I joked, attempting to regain the upper hand. “Not really, I took my glasses off beforehand so I couldn’t see a thing! …Besides, you once frightened me far, far more.” “When was that?” I frowned puzzled in the darkness. “When you arrived twenty minutes late on our wedding day” She spluttered with a giggle and then showed me tenderly once again why I love her so much. 40 6692 Pisces the Sailfish FIGURE 7 A SNAPSHOT TAKEN FROM ATOP THE LOWER MAST SHOWS THE HEIGHT THAT DIANNE CLIMBED . DIANNE IS AT THE STERN AND BILL IS LOOKING UP FROM THE CENTRE HATCH. 41 Don Darkes Early the next morning, while we were below deck planning our day, we heard a knock on the hull. Permission to come aboard?” It was Terry, holding up a bottle of water, squinting up at me highlighted against the sun on the deck above him. “Have you figured it out yet Woodpecker?” he asked, as I looked at him helplessly, knowing that if I said too much he would tantalise me for a day or two longer. He smiled, relenting, as he saw my agonised expression. “Let us go and take another look at your problem,” he said, clambering easily up the scaffolding and down the cockpit ladder into the cabin below. The cabin sole (floor) was cut open, exposing the corroded top of the empty fuel tank. Terry looked at me and said, “Fill it!” shaking the bottle of water that he held it up to my face. He nodded encouragingly as realisation dawned on me. Of course! Fill the diesel tank with water to displace the diesel vapours and make it perfectly safe to weld! Our acceptance into the community had a number of unexpected benefits. Later that week, as I was tapping patiently with a hammer and chisel, carefully cutting away pieces of rotten deck, a monotonous task that had occupied me for almost a fortnight, I heard a familiar voice hailing me from below. “Hey Woodpecker? I have been listening to you pecking at your deck for the last two weeks and I can’t take it anymore. Your incessant and irritating tapping is making so much noise no one can hear themselves think. So I have been asked by the boys to show you how to use this!” He popped his head above the deck, adjusted the pencils behind his ears and then held up a green Bosch cutter with a long saw-tooth blade designed for trimming hedges. He looked at me questioningly for permission and receiving it, to my shocked surprise, laid it on the deck where I had been working, and cut a huge section of the rot clean away in a matter of seconds. 42 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “If you don’t stop fart arsing around and get on with the job you are never going to get out of here!” He was right. By the end of the afternoon I had completed a tedious task that could otherwise have taken months. “Well done!” He applauded as I clambered down the ladder to wash the sawdust from my body. Now I shall have to find a new name for you as I can no longer call you Woodpecker!” I was to have the last laugh. At that moment Bill appeared underneath the boat with Morgan giggling behind him. Dianne and I cringed with embarrassment as we saw what he was up to. “Hey look at me! I’m Terry Brown,” He said as he stuck a pair of red carpenters pencils behind his ears and minced and strutted across the boatyard, pompously mimicking Terry’s bow-legged gait. Since then, our family has fondly named red carpenters pencils “Terry Browns”. “Come on kids; let me make you some real toys.” Terry dropped his stern façade and laughed. They dutifully followed him to his catamaran where I watched him lovingly carve a miniature toy rifle for each of them from a discarded piece of brown teak. Then he fashioned a pair of worn-out sanding belts into hats which he fitted onto each of the children’s heads before setting them to marching up and down between the yachts like soldiers on parade. Terry grew increasingly close to both children to the point that we often had to fetch them from wherever he was sitting reading a story or playing a game with them instead of working at his trade as a shipwright and carpenter. 43 Don Darkes FIGURE 8 THE PIRATES OF ELGIN COMPLETE WITH WOODEN RIFLES AND SANDING BELT HATS 44 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 12. The Tok-tokkie “Wake up sleepy head! The Tok-tokkie is on his way!” Dianne slid the teak deck-hatch back on its brass runners. The early morning sunshine streamed like lasers though the holes in the green canvas awning into the gloomy cabin below. She used the rotund Zulu night watchman as her alarm clock due to his habit of making his rounds punctually at six. She nicknamed the roly-poly figure due for his custom of double-tapping the wooden blocks wedging the yachts tightly into their cradles with his knobkerrie. This was his lovingly carved, stout hardwood staff, with its skull shaped tip. It was his badge of rank and office. He also used to help him carry out his duties by using the sound it made in response to his tapping, to warn him if any wedges had worked loose during the night. He also wielded it effectively as a weapon to dissuade or chastise any strays (of the four or the two-legged kind) that wandered into the boatyard seeking easy pickings. There was no faulting Dianne’s sense of humour in comparing him to the Tok-tokkie or tap-tapper, an African black beetle famed for its habit of scurrying about then suddenly halting at irregular intervals to double-tap the hard earth with its abdomen. This signalled potential mates or rivals before he scurried on his way again. The beetle also lent its name to the popular children’s game of knocking on a door and then running away before the irate inhabitant come to answer it. A suburban variant of this game, involved filling a brown paper bag with fresh dog droppings, placing it in front of the victims door and then setting the bag alight before knocking and then running away to laughingly watch their victims frantically stamp out the blaze and of course get covered in faeces. Nevertheless Dianne was totally unfazed that her Tok-tokkie was a powerful and dignified Zulu man, who would probably take offence at being compared to a lowly black beetle. I was surprised when Tok-tokkie discreetly approached me. It was the first time I had met with him face to face. He 45 Don Darkes wore traditional car-tyre sandals, izimbadada, which he had made himself, from a mini-taxi’s worn out white-wall tyre. The sole was fashioned from the tyre tread and curled slightly upwards in the front. The straps were fashioned from the tyre's white-wall sides lovingly decorated with an intricate saw-tooth pattern. His black head-ring denoting he had earned the right to be married and be respected, encircled his peppercorn hair and was framed by a pair of fist sized, disk shaped, circular shoe polish tins that were wedged inside his pierced and overstretched elongated earlobes. Taking a pinch of snuff from his left ‘ear-tin’ he politely offered me some before sniffing it up from the back of his fist and sneezing violently, setting the empty elongated earlobe hanging limply down his cheek, wriggling like a black earthworm. I still wonder what he kept in the other earlobe container. With the ritual complete he began to address me in the Zulu language. I was forced to interrupt him by holding up my hand while calling out to Terry to join us and act as translator. “These are Nathi ’s parents.” Terry was referring to a young Zulu man whom I had employed to help me with the yacht repairs, who had disappeared, without any explanation, a fortnight previously. “They have come to collect his pay.” Terry explained. “Was this something to do with the curse?” I wondered. Nathi had been adamant when I employed him that he took no notice of such things even though the other men in the boatyard refused point blank to work on Pisces and had warned him to do the same. Tok-tokkie motioned for an elderly couple standing expectantly nearby, to come closer. I was introduced to Nathi ’s father who approached me, his eyes lowered respectfully and with his arms extended with one hand supporting the other reverently offering me something, deferentially, Zulu fashion. It was Nathi’s tattered and blood-stained dompas. (Dumb-pass.) This passport-like document was the hated identity document that every person of colour had to carry, on pain of instant arrest and incarceration if they were caught without it. 46 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “It seems that Nathi will not be coming back.” Terry said and looked meaningfully at me. It took me a few seconds before I realised that he was trying to tell me that Nathi was dead. Surely this is a coincidence. It cannot be the result of the curse. I thought. FIGURE 9 A TOK-TOKKIE BEETLE FIGURE 10 IZIMBADADA TRADITIONAL Z ULU CAR TYRE SANDALS 47 Don Darkes Chapter 13. Revenge of the Sandblaster The giant crane arrived to hoist a sleek racing yacht that had been berthed on our starboard side and return it to the ocean. We relished the extra space next to us until a few days later, when the crane lowered a gigantic canvas bag filled with sharp grey grit onto the concrete apron. We watched as workmen unrolled a thick black rubber hose, snaking it between the suspended yachts to where a huge yellow diesel powered air compressor hissed and bellowed. Later that day the crane delivered the first of many rusty steel beams, swinging them over the forest of masts and landing them deftly in the open space like invading aircraft. Terry arrived and smiled mischievously “You are about to make acquaintance with the sandblaster!” Soon the Sandblaster himself arrived to inspect his new domain. He was a squat and powerfully built Zulu man wearing thick blue denim, overalls. He attached a fitting to the hose, resembling a misshapen paint-ball gun and filled the cylindrical container on its breech with some of the sharp grit. He gave a signal and the compressor bellowed making the fat black hose come alive and writhe across the boatyard like a mamba as it filled with high-pressure air. The atmosphere was filled by a deafening hissing sound and choking red dust as he began to blast the steel beams scouring the rust from the steel structures with deafening blasts and gouts of air. The noise alone made it difficult to think clearly and impossible to speak or to work. There was no question of applying paint or varnish while the hurricane of rust and grit covered everything in seconds. As a result we took to working inside our vessels whenever he appeared. We all detested the noise and dust generated by the sandblaster but we also knew that, according to the rules of the boatyard there was nothing we could do but work around it. That evening, as we stood enjoying a few well 48 6692 Pisces the Sailfish deserved cold beers around the communal braai, Donald, another of the boat owners remarked. “I have a lot of painting and varnishing to do. In-between ducking the weather and that damned sandblaster I am way behind schedule. The weather forecast is favourable for the next few days so I am going to find a way to get my painting done while I can.” “So what are you going to do? Terry asked curiously. “Wait and see” Donald replied mysteriously. Bill and I watched Donald sneak over to the sandblaster’s station early the next morning, remove the hoses metal tip and bury it deep inside the giant bag of grit. Thankfully we were standing on our yacht’s deck as the compressed air supply to the hose was switched on. The black pipe took off like a demonic snake thrashing its headless body around the yard, almost punching a few expensive holes in a sleek racing yacht that lay directly in its path. Donald rubbed his hands with glee and began mixing a fresh batch of expensive epoxy paint as the sandblaster ran to disconnect the air supply before searching frantically for the missing hose fitting. Donald had just completed his epoxy application when the sandblaster started up again. Within seconds all Donald’s hard work was undone as the airborne dust and grit stuck to the wet epoxy glue. Thankfully, Donald was so busy that he did not see Bill take up the game of hide-and-seek to reveal the location of the missing gun to the Sandblaster. “Next time I shall bribe the Sandblaster to work somewhere else until my paint dries,” said Donald as we stood around the braai that evening. Others nodded assent as they each mentioned tasks requiring a respite from the devastating dust and grit. Donald passed an empty bucket around for each of us to contribute some cash to a fund for negotiating a temporary cease-fire with the Sandblaster. “Mission accomplished,” rejoiced Donald ,victoriously returning from his mission. “I think the fifty bucks convinced him to work somewhere else tomorrow and the following day so that we can complete our painting tasks. Funny bloke 49 Don Darkes though? He never said a word. He merely nodded at everything I said, although he grinned from ear to ear when I slipped him the cash.” The following day a deafening roar shocked us as the sandblaster started up in the midst of our various painting operations. “I thought the sandblaster agreed to work elsewhere?” shouted Terry furiously as he tried fruitlessly to cover his work. “He did agree. I have no idea what happened to change his mind. But I am not standing for this. I am going to confront the swine,” shouted Donald competing with the roar and hiss of the sandblaster as he set off determinedly to confront him. We watched him return a short while later muttering under his breath. “I found out why the Sandblaster reneged on our deal!” He spat dejectedly. “Why is that? Asked Terry puzzled. “The bastard is stone deaf!” Groaned Donald, slapping his forehead. 50 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 14. Golden Ivory “Tell me, where can I buy some crack injection epoxy?” I asked Terry as he prepared to fasten a bolt on a winch that he was installing. “Good grief. Have you been talking to Kim Skoenmaker the yacht Broker?” Terry laughed. “Why do you ask?” “When Kim speaks about crack injection epoxy it is Yacht Brokers code for a job which needs to be covered with a coat of paint before being dumped on some upcountry sucker. Don’t tell me….?” He trailed off as he realised why I was looking so upset. “Why do you think you need epoxy anyway?” Embarrassed he tried to change the subject. “I need to glue the plywood decks into place and seal them. Ordinary water based white wood glue certainly won’t be strong or durable enough for the job. I remember Kim saying when she was showing us some boats that we needed to get a couple of buckets of crack injection epoxy for Pisces and so I thought that should be what I should get.” “What you need is some two part epoxy. Let me introduce you to the guys at Ivory. Their factory is located in Jacobs the industrial area near the harbour.” Terry was as good as his word. Later that afternoon I was back on board Pisces ready to lay my first epoxy glue. There were two tins, one resin and another of hardener. The resin tin was white, twice as large as the hardener, which was black. Each tin bore bold lettering that said RATIO 2:1 in large black type below the manufacturer’s name, Ivory, with an image of a trumpeting elephant next to it. “I am holding solid gold in these two tins. At this price they better cure cancer” I grumbled while prising the lid from each tin with a flat-bladed screwdriver before looking down into the contents inside. “Bloody hell! The tins are not even completely full” I complained disgusted. 51 Don Darkes “Remember Terry said you should carefully measure out the components into a plastic mixing bowl and not to make up too much at a time.” Dianne reminded me gently. “”Yes, Yes. I heard him too. But look at the space I need to cover.” Crossly I pointed at the huge expanse of deck that needed to be sealed. “Terry also said I can brush it on just like paint and even use a roller. So I intend to mix the whole five litres right now and get the job done or else I will be here forever -just like him” I snapped irritably. Dianne pursed her lips. She knew better than to gainsay me when I had the bit between my teeth. “Then can I mix it for you? I will start with 100ml as a test and if it goes well I will mix more as you need it.” Dianne was trying her second option at making me see sense which was to offer to help me. This tactic sometimes worked and prevented me from embarrassing myself too often. “Thanks all the same sweetheart. But its already late afternoon and I don’t have time to fart-arse around” I snapped. “Besides Terry told us not to start too late or too early in the day or the epoxy won’t cure if it gets too cold or too damp.” Dianne just nodded, knowing that I would lose my temper if she persevered. “This piddling little dish will be too small” I said. “It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see that is the reason why the tins are not full. They want you to add the small tin to the large tin and voila!” I said triumphantly. Dianne just nodded and said nothing as I poured the hardener into to the contents of the tin of resin and began to stir. 52 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “There look at that. It’s changing colour already. Hmm, it’s even getting warm, just like Terry said it would. This boatbuilding thing is not so difficult. I don’t know why they make such a fuss” I said, stirring the glutinous compound which resembled thick clear varnish. “Sweetheart is it supposed to smoke like that?” asked Dianne anxiously. “Of course, silly, it’s a chemical reaction, although I must confess the smell is making me feel a little odd.” I watched with alarm as my skin instantly developed a rash, resembling measles. “Terry said we should wear a mask and mix it in a wellventilated place” Dianne suggested timidly. “He is just being cautious and besides the wind is pumping outside. It will knock it right out of our hands. No. Working here in the chartroom will be just fine until it’s ready to use.” I cut her off again. As I stirred the compound with a wooden paddle, I become aware that the tin was smoking and becoming very, very hot. At that moment Terry stuck his head in the doorway. “Knock knock. How’s it going?” Then as he took in the situation his eyes grew big and without warning he grabbed the tin of epoxy and threw it over the side to land with a clang on the concrete below. “What did you do that for? You are going to pay for that you ...” But I did not get to finish my sentence as the tin exploded with a wet pop and burst into flame. I gulped as I realised that Terry had probably saved us from serious injury. 53 Don Darkes FIGURE 11 THE AUTHOR, TINS OF IVORY EPOXY ON THE CABIN ROOF TO HIS LEFT 54 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 15. Tortoise meets Sailfish and the Duck. We decided to relocate our caravan to the boatyard, bringing Pisces and Tortoise together for the first time. This would enable us to spend more time completing the repairs since we would not need to commute between the yard and the park every day. I looked forward to resuming sailing instruction once more as the welding, easily completed, buoyed me with optimism when we prepared to re-launch the yacht. We had been dissuaded by the superstitious yachting community to avoid renaming our yacht since it was regarded as extremely unlucky. Instead, we had a sign writer integrate the letters of her name, Pisces, into the body of a sailfish. This was painted on either side of the bows, and in so doing removed the connotation of a horoscope or birth-sign but effectively this renamed her just the same. “I thought you said you were not superstitious?” said Terry. “I am not, I just couldn’t be bothered to do all the paperwork that goes with renaming a boat,” I lied unconvincingly. “Nevertheless, it might not do you any harm to have a Sangoma spread some muthi over the boat. Just to be sure,” Terry suggested, with a strange expression on his face. “Come on Terry, I would have expected you to propose a priest and some holy water perhaps, but a Zulu witchdoctor and magic potions? Surely you can’t be serious?” I said Terry hesitated, almost as if he was trying to tell me something, then turned on his heel and strode away. Dianne and I were sitting inside the Tortoise celebrating with a frosty quart bottle of Lion Ale and admiring our handiwork, overjoyed that Pisces was ready to be launched once more. We had developed a taste for the bitter beer after she had discovered that it helped her to relieve the painful muscle cramps that she experienced as a result of the stifling heat and energy sapping humidity. 55 Don Darkes “I think it replaces the lost salts and nutrients” she said taking a long sip. “That’s a good story and you stick to it” Terry winked at me and raised his glass in salute to Dianne. We were excited because the diesel tanks were repaired and a host of other tasks that had taken more than five months to complete were finally behind us. I had been particularly dreading having to paint the hull below the waterline with the special, poisonous, red-brown, antifoul paint that discourages marine growth from attaching itself to the hull. “He hates painting and somehow he always manages to get more paint on himself and everything else except whatever he is supposed to be painting” Dianne teased. “Here is to you and to Terry.” I toasted. Earlier that day Terry and Dianne conspired to send me on an errand that kept me away from the boatyard for most of the day. By the time I returned Dianne had finished painting the antifoul paint over the entire boat all by herself. “Where did you get the paint?” I asked suspiciously. “Terry had Tok-tokkie go down to the dry dock where they completed anti-fouling a huge commercial vessel. He bought twenty litres of their left over commercial grade antifoul paint from the contractors, for a fraction of the price we would normally have had to pay” Dianne explained. “That’s another one we owe you Terry,” I said gratefully. The crane was booked for the following afternoon to coincide with the high tide and the deep water we needed to accommodate our tall draft. It was calm and windless the following morning when Dianne and I set off to do some last-minute shopping. We planned to varnish the tinned food cans and pack the bulky dry provisions while Pisces was out of the water. This would save us the tedious task of ferrying it, one load at a time to the mooring once she was afloat. Bill and Morgan were content to wait in the boatyard under Terry’s watchful eye playing as usual with their toys on a blanket that we always spread out on the concrete apron in the shade beneath Pisces hull. 56 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “Don’t worry; I shall keep a beady eye on them.” Promised Terry who took every opportunity to spend time with the children who had grown extremely fond of him too. By the time we completed our purchases, the southwesterly wind had picked up, whipping up white horses on the waves crashing outside the breakwater protecting the harbour. The wind was beginning to howl and whistle as it gusted powerfully while we waited for the boatyard gate to be opened to allow us to enter. I was alarmed to see how much our masts were swaying when the powerful gusts shook Pisces on her trestles. “Nooooo!” Dianne screamed as we saw one of the timber supports bracing the hull vibrate and begin to slip. We looked on, powerless as one by one, the others splintered and shattered under the strain. Pisces tottered, faltered, and fell swiftly sideways before inexplicably stopping halfway. The steel rigging wire connecting the tops of the masts caught against the rigging wire of the yacht standing beside her suspending the entire weight of our boat, trembling in mid-air. The cables began to creak and groan as the strain increased inexorably. The other boat began to lean sideways, threatening to set off a domino effect as they knocked each other over in turn, like falling cards. Dianne screamed again as the wire on Pisces masts began to fray and split, parting with a twang and a shock that snapped both Pisces’ masts, releasing her to smash down alone onto the earth below with a sickening thump and a cloud of dust, like a felled tree. Within minutes word spread throughout the close knit community bringing them running from every direction. A number of husky men walked up to me and took my hand wordlessly shaking their heads to hide the tears in their eyes. A number of women, including Dianne were sobbing openly as they hugged and consoled each other. 57 Don Darkes I was numb with shock as I asked myself. If we had not gone shopping would we have been able to prevent the accident? Why did this happen now after she had withstood much more powerful winds during the months that we had worked and slept aboard her? The crane driver’s gap-toothed smile did little to reassure me as I handed him the signed indemnity form and smelt his breakfast liquor on his breath. The crane’s electric motor whined as it took up the slack on the wide webbing straps straining to lift our stricken yacht upright. The rigger spoke urgently into his two-way radio as the wind gusted, pushing hard against Pisces’ hull and swinging her long bowsprit around like a compass needle. Two burly men stationed fore and aft, manhandling long ropes, struggled to hold her steady as she turned relentlessly into the wind and began to oscillate uncontrollably. With a crunching sound, the Finger of God smashed against the side of the parked caravan, ripping a jagged hole through our beloved Tortoise’s side before exploding through her roof with a shower of sparks. Like a wild stallion maddened by reckless destruction she grudgingly allowed the struggling men to regain control. Eventually the crane was able to lift her upright and hold her there while the workers built new timber supports to hold her smashed hull upright once more. Dianne gasped and burst into tears. “Where are the children?” she cried distraught as she pointed to an indentation in the earth where the frenzied vessel had crashed heavily to ground. At that moment Terry walked up, hand in hand with Bill and Morgan. “Thank Heaven you are safe!” Dianne cried as she rushed over, fell to her knees and hugged them both. I looked wordlessly at Terry who met my gaze without blinking. I could 58 6692 Pisces the Sailfish see by his expression and the set of his shoulders that he believed the curse had struck again. He shook his head, turned on his heel and walked away without saying a word. With Pisces safe on her trestles once more, we began assessing the damage. Besides the broken masts, the port side had been smashed like an egg. The experts huddled, declaring that we would be set back at least a year or more. Demoralised, we dragged the crippled Tortoise back to the Caravan Park. With a heavy heart I covered the gaping rents with plastic and duct tape before consigning her to the weekender’s parking. Living on board the crippled Pisces, we worked singlemindedly repairing the damage, determined to prove the experts wrong. Then, just as we thought the worst was behind us, the ships radio crackled into life. “Durban Harbour Radio calling Pisces!” The short-range radio allowed communication between the Port Control and yachts, coordinating harbour traffic and providing a telephone-to-radio relay. The Caravan Park Manager was on the line. Idly I wondered if his fingers had healed by now. “I have some bad news,” he said. “An inflatable ski boat we were moving into storage today broke free from its tow, rolled backwards down the slope and crashed into your caravan. I’m afraid its engines have torn a hole into the back of your caravan and smashed it up pretty badly.” I wondered what my insurers would say when I told them that the front of my caravan had been impaled by a fortyfive foot long, eighteen ton sailing yacht and then attacked by a runaway rubber boat had finished her off by smashing her rear and that both attacks took place on dry land. Dianne had the last word. “I think you should be honest and tell them that our Tortoise was attacked, first by a Sailfish and then finished off by a rubber duck.” 59 Don Darkes Chapter 16. Saggy Party Despite the dire predictions of the boatyard pundits we managed to complete the repairs within four months. Both masts had snapped and had to be repaired. A sleeve was riveted inside and we took the opportunity to remove all the stainless steel fittings, which was a blessing in disguise as we discovered and repaired gaping holes where the dissimilar metals had reacted and corroded. We were particularly elated when the masts lay on their trestles, glistening in a gleaming coat of white paint and I took out the tape to check their measurements for new halyards. “How long is it?” Asked Dianne as I unfurled the long reel of surveyors measuring tape. “Its fifteen and a half metres long.” I replied as I polished the bright stainless steel masthead cap that was riveted onto the very top. “The masts get stepped tomorrow and I don’t think I shall be seeing this shiny chunk of steel again in a hurry. “We must not forget to put a coin under the mast tomorrow -for good luck!” Dianne said, teasing me about yet another sailor’s superstition. The re-launch was cause for a joyous celebration and we decided to have a party to celebrate. Since it was December and the launch date coincided with my birthday, Dianne had also noticed that a disproportionate number of the yachties shared the same birth sign with me so she suggested that we have a theme party. “I promise it will be a Sagittarius party to remember!” She vowed. I was not allowed to take part in the preparations other than to mix a devastating rum punch in a large green plastic bucket that we usually used to rinse our smalls on the deck. I should have known that she was up to something when she spent most of the morning painting a banner that I was not 60 6692 Pisces the Sailfish allowed to see until the guests were about to arrive. The marina ferry had been commandeered for the entire evening and Thabo the driver had been warned that he would be on duty ferrying passengers back and forth from Pisces to the shore until the early hours. “Tell me darling, what is the sailors custom of dressingship?” Dianne asked innocently with a mischievous sparkle in her eyes that should have warned me she was up to something. “I am not sure how the custom originated, but I do know that today, when a celebration is in the air, it is customary to dress ship. This is done by stringing all the signal flags in a colourful display from the bow to the top of the mast and down to the stern.” Dianne slyly changed the subject before I became curious. When the first passengers arrived Dianne unveiled her banner which proclaimed in bold red letters on a white cotton background; Saggy Party. Dianne has never been known for her spelling so I decided to keep silent and not mention that it should have read Sagi Party. Then. as the ferry delivered our guests to the yacht, Dianne, dressed only in a Hawaiian grass skirt with a colourful scarf tied around her best points, stood at the entrance to ensure that no one was allowed on board unless they came appropriately dressed, or rather undressed, she said, in keeping with the theme of the party. The first arrivals were a little confused when she pointed to the sign, told them that it was not a misprint and then informed them that they must enter into the spirit of the evening. The later arrivals got the message more easily as they saw the yachts rigging strung from end to end with a colourful assortment of bras, panties and men’s underwear. Dianne had dressed ship in her own inimitable style and made certain that everyone was indeed, for the rest of the evening, decidedly saggy! 61 Don Darkes Chapter 17. Red Sky in the Morning As we became accustomed to life on board we developed a daily routine that was linked to the rhythm of the harbour and its inhabitants. We would be woken before sunrise each morning when our comfortable double bed was rocked by the wake created by the tug leaving its berth and crossing the bay. Then we would climb up the ladder, slide back the hatch and sit on the deck to watch the sun extinguish the twinkling lights of the city as it coloured the sky. If the sunrise was particularly ruddy we would take delight in confirming its ability to forecast the weather. “Red sky in the morning sailors take warning” Dianne or I would begin. “Red sky at night sailor’s delight!” Bill and Morgan would reply in chorus. “There’s Manuel” Morgan would cry as the Portuguese owner of the café, that stood at the entrance to the marina, arrived to open his shop for business. “Here comes the bread truck and the newspaper truck. But the milk truck is late again today.” Bill had an eye for detail that always amazed me, especially in a four year old boy. We would have breakfast and plan our day as we greeted the other inhabitants when they made their way to shore or returned to their boats. Most evenings we would sit on the deck watching the sunset, enjoying a sun downer, and discussing what we had learnt or achieved that day. Later we would read a story to the delighted children before we tucked them into bed. Invariably Morgan would insist that we fasten her Falling fing before we kissed her goodnight. As we began to learn more about the tiny community, we become part of it too. Day by day, we grew closer to each other and also to our children as they shared our discussions and were included in the decisions we made. Together we 62 6692 Pisces the Sailfish learnt which boats were merely braai-platforms and which were used just for status, weekend getaways and which were used for furtive late afternoon assignations. Other boats stayed closed up for months on end waiting like pensioners in an old age home for their up country visitors to visit and bring them back to life. Saddest of all were the boats we named the ‘widows’ and ‘orphans’. Time and again we would watch, excited, as a boat would arrive on a gigantic truck and trailer accompanied by a happy couple who had invariably spent many years building the yacht in the back yard. The dreamboat would be launched and taken out over the sandbar into the open ocean beyond. The swell off Durban harbour is seldom less than two metres and very soon a very green and disillusioned couple would return to their mooring with their dream in tatters. Within a few days we would watch dismayed as either one or both owners would leave the marina never to return. These were the orphans that would be pounced upon by yacht brokers like squabbling seagulls. The saddest of all were the ‘widow boats’ where we would hear a frightened wife issue an ultimatum. “Choose. It’s either me or this damned boat.” The husbands, whose dream it invariably was, who chose to stay with their cherished dreamboats, often ended up alone on board, unable to go anywhere for lack of crew or anyone with whom to share their dream. 63 Don Darkes Chapter 18. Necklacing at Granny Dawns Granny Dawn lived alone in a run down, four bedroom house overlooking the rolling hills above Durban’s Paradise Valley. She was a friend’s mother and not actually related to any of us. We only called her Granny out of respect for her great age. Granny Dawn loved to tell us endlessly, how in days gone by, when her husband was alive and her sons were young, how the Valley was a favoured picnic spot for Durban families. When they tired of the sunny whites-only beaches infested with up country holiday makers, they would pack a picnic lunch, bundle into their cars and drive down an earth track into the indigenous forest to where the Umbilo River meandered through the trees down to the ocean. Now the valley was home to a new community of less cheerful picnickers who had drifted to the big city of Durban seeking employment and lodgings and finding none, had hidden in the bush around the city. Here they built improvised shelters for themselves and their desperate families out of wood and wire hoops covered in discarded plastic and cardboard. Granny Dawn gave us the use of one of her empty rooms where could temporarily store our belongings which we could not fit neither onto Pisces nor inside the Tortoise at the caravan park. We filled an entire room with suitcases of clothes, boxes of books, family memorabilia and toys that the kids were not yet ready to parted from. We received Granny Dawn’s distressed telephone call relayed via Pisces’ ship radio demanding that we come immediately. It was just after nine am on a Saturday morning when we parked E.T. our VW kombi next to her son Sean’s blood red Ford Cortina XR6 at the top of her steep driveway. His car displayed a bumper sticker flanked by a fish symbol on either side of a legend that read, Die Here is my Herder. It 64 6692 Pisces the Sailfish flummoxed me for a moment until I realised it was written in Afrikaans which translated means The Lord is my Shepherd. It was clear that Sean had been there for some time before us because the six pack that he carried welded permanently to his right hand most weekends was already half gone. I could also see by the look on his face that he was fighting mad. “They took everything!” he shouted as he yanked open the boot of his car. “Just smashed the back door open and threw whatever they could carry over the wall. You took your own sweet time getting here considering most of the stuff they took was yours.” He hawked up a gob of phlegm and spat it down next to my foot as he withdrew a shotgun from the arsenal in his car boot and threw it at me. “Come inside. This is men’s business,” croaked Granny Dawn, standing on the porch in her blue nightgown and fluffy pom-pom slippers. She shooed Dianne and the children inside and slammed the door behind her. “Come. Come. What are you waiting for? Christmas?” Sean brandished a shotgun as he sucked out the last of his beer and threw the empty bottle over the concrete fence into the bush behind him. “Who broke in?” I recoiled in shock as he threw the gun at me and I almost dropped the carelessly flung weapon. “The bloody houtkoppe. (wooden heads) that are squatting there in the bushes you dom doos” (dumb/stupid ‘box’) he spat again and cocked his own shotgun for emphasis after he slammed the car boot closed. “Surely we should report this to the police?” I suggested timidly. “I am the police!” he hissed. “Well a Reservist anyway” he conceded as he corrected himself. He was of course referring to the volunteer civilian force which had earned a bitter reputation for taking the law into their own hands. 65 Don Darkes Before I could protest or gather up my thoughts he ushered me ahead of him onto a well-used winding path that ran alongside his mother’s property into the dense bush behind. I stumbled dazed down the dusty track. The forest closed around us, shutting out the sky above our heads, almost blotting out the early morning light entirely as it transformed the familiar wellmanicured suburban landscape into a gloomy and menacing tropical jungle. As we negotiated a bend in the meandering path we entered into a clearing jam packed with corrugated iron and plastic shacks. Stinking raw sewage oozed and ran everywhere and litter festooned every tree and bush with plastic shopping bags and discarded product wrappers creating a chaotic garden made up of what the press mockingly call Africa’s wild flowers. Once my eyes grew adjusted to the piercing rays of bright sunshine lancing down between the leafy branches of the overhanging trees I could make out the resigned faces of gaunt mothers breastfeeding their filthy, mucus-bubbling children, while they watched us arrive. Nearby, seated on a circle of whitewashed stones was a group of melodiously singing African Zionist Church brethren. The women were dressed in long white robes with blue sashes and headscarves and the men were resplendent in smartly pressed military-like khaki uniforms with peaked officer’s caps. All proudly wore their Silver, Zionist Star badges. Sean pushed me to one side and began to harangue the group in Zulu language. They said nothing as they watched him impassively while he brandished his shotgun threateningly and kicked angrily at discarded tins of coffee creamer and empty Coca-Cola bottles strewn about the place. I felt the hair stand up on the back of my neck when I recognised the sweet aroma of dagga (marijuana). I turned to discover the source of the narcotic fumes and saw with alarm 66 6692 Pisces the Sailfish that a belligerent crowd of surly men had formed behind where Sean stood haranguing at their women. One of the men was rolling a car tyre along the ground and another wielded a clear plastic coke bottle filled with urine coloured liquid that I knew instantly was petrol. I swallowed the lump in my throat with an audible gulp. Oh my God. These bastards are going to necklace us! I realised with alarm. Necklacing is the gruesome term used to describe the bizarre punishment meted out by the mob for rapists and other criminals. Typically the screaming mob would pass summary judgement upon an evildoer before placing a rubber car tyre ‘necklace’ around their victim’s necks. They would fill the tyre with petrol and set it alight. Then, chanting and dancing, the frenzied rabble would crowd around the burning victim, taking turns to gleefully kick and beat the writhing bodies long after their screaming had ceased. Any member of the mob who did not participate or showed insufficient enthusiasm, was liable to suffer necklacing themselves. I cannot remember running back to my familiar world of paved roads and streetlights that waited nearby, but I do recall Sean’s bitter words as he confronted me while I frantically bundled my family into our waiting Kombi. “Ja, run you kaffir-boetie coward. (Nigger-lover/brother) When people like you let them overrun this country they will move into your house and then you will be happy to move into their shacks to be reunited with all your stolen belongings.” 67 Don Darkes Chapter 19. Mouths of Babes There are two bars more devastating to sailors than the sandbar guarding the entrance to the harbour. The first is the type that dispenses alcohol and other is the law that legislates that races should under no circumstances mix socially and particularly not sexually. This was the so-called Race or Colour bar. Transgressors risked criminal proceeding followed by imprisonment. As we got to know our neighbours we sometimes discovered more about their indiscretions than I think they wished to reveal. One of these was Gunter who lived on his half completed boat anchored even farther out on the chain moorings than we were. Every morning we would greet each other as he rowed his dinghy to shore to start his day, building and repairing yacht fridges and freezers. On most evenings we would chorus “Good Night” as he rowed himself back to his lonely floating home. We began to notice that the only time that Gunter’s routine would vary was on alternate Friday evenings when he would row back to his boat later than usual with a dark shape hidden under a blanket behind him. Dianne accidentally discovered that Gunter was sneaking a black lady aboard when a gust of wind lifted a corner of the blanket one evening. Since Gunther risked being incarcerated without trial for a hundred and eighty days under the dreaded Immorality laws and because we knew the children were listening Dianne and I used ambiguous terms to disguise what we were actually gossiping about. This backfired on us one Friday evening as Gunter was stealthily rowing with his criminal cargo to his vessel when four year old Bill innocently stood up and shouted loudly across the open water: 68 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “Hey Uncle Gunter, are you taking that black lady back to your boat so that she can pump your bilges too?” as Dianne and I cringed with embarrassment. We had another favourite yacht that we derisively named the floating Dogbox whenever we gossiped about her. Every few weeks we would become aware that the owner was aboard. He arrived in the early hours, much the worse for wear and would fall down the ladder in his drunken state with a great clatter followed by loud cursing. He would then stay on board indefinitely sometimes for days at a time without leaving his vessel for any reason. Often we would take bets as to how long it would take before his diminutive wife would arrive, disappear below and then the usual rocking motion of the vessel would alter for a while before the loving couple would emerge and walk down the jetty hand in hand. Of course our gossiping was discovered when we attended a family function at one of the yacht clubs where it was customary for everyone to introduce themselves by first names followed by the name of their boat. When our feuding couple arrived and introduced themselves as Charles and Chantal,from the yacht Cataluna, we were unprepared for the ever vigilant Morgan, who burst out indignantly. “Liar! Liar! Your boats name is Dogbox!” she exclaimed indignantly as Dianne and I looked away, embarrassed, and tried not to laugh out loud. 69 Don Darkes Chapter 20. The End of Mankind She stood above me, her long tanned legs held wide apart, with her arms folded beneath her heavy breasts as she watched me manoeuvre between her pristine white hulls. Her crimson tipped toes curled and flexed as the tide rhythmically thrust my vessel in and out of her narrow space. I felt the point of no return approaching when a creaming wave pushed me deep inside her opening sliding my bows along the slippery length of her starboard hull as I entered her confined opening. She gasped, moist lips parted as I looked up into her sea-green eyes and she saw how close I was to losing control. Then the wave receded once more, sucking me gently backward, allowing the awkward moment to pass. Leaning over I deftly plucked her soggy straw hat from the oily swell, stood up in my undulating tender and handed it up to her with a flourish. Languidly she leaned over to accept it, deliberately teasing me with a glimpse of her creamy white breast-flesh as her bikini top gaped briefly before I was reluctantly forced to meet her eyes once more. “Is the skipper around?” I asked nonchalantly, trying to establish why an attractive and desirable female was left alone aboard an ocean-going catamaran with no visible male around to guard his territory. “You are addressing the skipper,” she retorted with a challenge in her voice. “Is there anything else I can assist you with while I am here?” I asked by way of providing her an opportunity to reward me for my efforts. She returned my hungry stare with a knowing look and paused while she looked around the yacht basin, came to a decision and then turned to me with a wicked grin. “Why don’t you come aboard? I have something to show you down below that I think we may both enjoy,” she said 70 6692 Pisces the Sailfish hooding her eyelids and deflecting my leer as she invited me inside with a seductive movement of her head. I made certain to tighten my bum muscles and suck in my stomach as I heard the unmistakable sound of curtains being drawn. She watched me descending her polished teak ladder into her cosy cabin below. When my eyes adjusted to the darkened room I was thrilled to see she had discarded her sarong and was standing clad only in a minute bikini, the backs of her naked thighs pressed against the navigation table as she beckoned to me to come closer. Then, holding my mesmerised eyes with her own, she slowly leaned forward exposing her cleavage and opened her shapely legs while reaching between them with a languid movement of her right hand. Helplessly I dropped my gaze (and my jaw), only to see her slide open a tiny drawer concealed between her knees. It contained two sausage-shaped cylindrical objects lying side by side on a bed of green felt. “These two inventions represent the peak of man’s ingenuity…and his demise,” she mused, picking up the first tube and stroking it with her carmine tipped fingers. “This!” she said, deftly snapping open the breech with practiced skill and slowly inserting a silver concrete nail into its chamber. “This is a Hilti-gun! With this tool in my hand I can place a nail wherever and whenever I wish without having to rely on any man!” Picking up the second cylinder she lovingly caressed its rounded tip with her scarlet tipped fingernails. “Behold! Man’s crowning achievement!” Deftly she twisted its base, whereupon it began to vibrate and its end began to squirm and rotate with a buzzing sound. “I can see in your eyes that you know exactly what this is! So let me ask you this? Why would any woman who can operate these two devices have need of any man?” she asked, contemptuously dismissing me as she snapped the drawer shut with a bang. Shocked and chastened I rowed our tender, flabbergasted at how contemptuously I had been humbled and 71 Don Darkes humiliated. Dianne saw immediately that I was agitated as I returned to our boat with my tail between my legs. “What happened sweetheart? “I had to fish this lady’s hat out of the marina.” I replied bashfully and burst out laughing with embarrassment . “Do you remember the story I often tell about God and Adam?” I teased her. “Which one?” She laughed seductively as she read in my eyes and body language what my words were trying to hide. “Well, God calls Adam and says to him, Adam, I have good news and I have bad news. The good news is that I have given you a brain and I have also given you a prick. The bad news is that I have only given you enough blood to run one of them at a time!” “Oh dear,” Dianne laughed. “What have you gotten yourself into this time? I think you better tell me all about it. You know that I have never been the least bit jealous” she said knowingly as she patted the seat next to her inviting me to sit down. By then I was laughing so hard that I scarcely noticed what her hands were doing until it was too late to reverse the flow of blood. 72 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 21. Pisces Stirs Less amusing was an incident that almost put an end to the entire adventure, perhaps reminding us that the spirit of Pisces was ever vigilant for an opportunity to do us harm. We were moored on chains and anchors side by side with several other yachts. The spaces between the boats would vary with the tides and the direction of the wind. Sometimes the gap was large and we could pass a dingy between the vessels and other times the space was reduced to a point where only the soft inflatable fenders between the hulls prevented them from grinding each other to pieces. One morning as we were assisting our starboard neighbours on the yacht Concorde, by attempting to lever the colliding vessels apart, so that they could climb aboard their boat, Bill lost his balance and fell into the sea and he was trapped in the crushing gap between the hulls. Dianne screamed and with a superhuman effort became a female Hercules as she placed herself between the squeezing vessels and held them apart long enough for me to dive in and retrieve our son before he was crushed. Of course this was a mere coincidence and it would be irrational to attribute this to any supernatural force. After all I am not superstitious. 73 Don Darkes Chapter 22. Up the Creek Although Bill was approaching his fifth birthday he was intelligent far beyond his years. Often he would study a problem, without saying anything, until he was certain of his facts and then he would make a connection that sometimes had even the adults flummoxed. Since our mooring fees included the services of the ferry, we tended to take advantage of it. The ferry was a large open decked motor boat with a sealed off floatation compartment to enable it to float even if it capsized. There was a bench with seating for about ten passengers and a powerful petrol outboard motor to drive it. It was fuelled from a portable red steel tank that was connected to the engine by a black rubber pipe with a pumping bulb midway on its length. Thabo the ferry driver had grown used to our routine and sometimes would even anticipate our comings and goings, especially where the children were concerned. They always made a fuss of him and brought him titbits to eat as they sat in the stern with him as he drove us back and forth. One afternoon as Thabo was taking us back to our vessel, Bill became very agitated. “Red box, red box “he repeated over and over again as he pointed to a spot at the ferry driver’s feet. At first I took no notice as Dianne and I prepared our packages and got ready to disembark. Then I realised that Bill was trying to tell us something as he grew increasingly insistent and began to drum his feet upon the deck in his effort to be understood and taken seriously. “What is it Bill? What’s bothering you?” I asked him as I made my way to the stern where he sat with Morgan. “Where is the red box?” he asked pointing to a spot near Thabo’s feet. I shook my head in bewilderment; not knowing what was worrying him and looked quizzically at Thabo for enlightenment. Suddenly Thabo’s eyes grew large and he cried 74 6692 Pisces the Sailfish out “Haau! Before clapping his hand over his mouth as the starving motor spluttered and died from fuel starvation. Bill had noticed that Thabo had forgotten to bring aboard the fuel tank. We all laughed until the tears ran down our faces as we hung over the sides and used our hands to paddle ourselves back to the jetty while Bill sat Buddha-like, arms akimbo as if to say “ I Told you so!” FIGURE 12 MORGAN, BILL , THE AUTHOR AND E DWARD THE FERRY DRIVER 75 Don Darkes Chapter 23. Bucket Brigade We were sitting on the deck, drinking coffee and listening to the mournful hooting sound of the harbour tugboats contrasting with the cheerful dawn chorus of thousands of garrulous Indian Mynas infesting the trees lining the road that runs past the marina. There we experienced an incident that made a huge impression upon Bill which led to him saving the lives of the entire family as we lay becalmed in the middle of the Mozambique Channel almost a year later. We had noticed unusual activity on the yacht moored astern of us. As we sipped our coffee and watched, Mike, the owner and his Zulu yacht-hand, disappeared below deck carrying a small bucket. They emerged a few moments later each holding their bucket at arm’s length before carefully emptying it over the side. Since there was no splash of the contents being emptied we believed their buckets to be empty. They ignored our pantomimed actions as we rotated our index fingers at our temples indicating our conclusion that they were crazy. Unabashed, the pair continued with their charade, serious as mummers, while we looked on with undisguised amusement. “Hey, guys! Is your bilge pump broken?” I jeered unable to contain my amusement and curiosity any longer. “No!” They chorused, without pausing in their efforts. “Whatever are you doing then?” I laughed curiously. “Watch and learn,” retorted Mike irritably. 76 6692 Pisces the Sailfish He went below returning once more, gingerly holding his bucket in front of him. Then, after first setting his bucket afloat in the channel behind his yacht, he flicked a lit match into it. It exploded with a long blue flame and a loud thump that punched a hole in the bucket’s side sinking it without a trace. “Take note what could happen to your yacht if you aren’t careful how you deal with a gas leak below deck!” he said as our family looked at him our eyes wide with shock. 77 Don Darkes Chapter 24. Chicken Pops “Mom Dad, come quick, Morgan is crying.” Bill had crept into our cabin, concern for his sister written all over his round face as he tugged frantically at our bedclothes. As we reached their bunk bed cabin we could see Morgan lying in her bed, thumb in mouth, her teddy under her armpit and tears streaming down her face. Bill had taken her falling-fing down and as we turned on the light we could see that her face was covered in tiny red spots and wet pustules. Dianne’s nurses training kicked in as she instantly diagnosed the problem. “Good thing we have all the children we want. Our daughter has chicken pox.” She remarked dryly. “What a thing to say. What do you mean by that?” I asked perplexed. “A side effect in mature men can be sterility.” she said in a matter of fact tone as the nurse in her took over. “So what do we do about Morgan?” I asked helplessly wringing my hands. “We need to keep her isolated and warm and well hydrated. Judging by the severity of the rash she may have scars to remember this infection by. We will also have to keep her away from everyone else until we see if we get infected too and this passes.” Unfortunately we were unable to reach our dear friend Jane, who was already en route from Johannesburg, driving down to visit us for the first time. “What do we do about Jane? She is due to arrive here later today.” I remarked. “I would imagine, since she has been a school teacher for so many years that she has been exposed to the virus many times and has built up immunity. Either way we shall keep her on the ferry until we give her the option of coming aboard or not.” Dianne said as she busily examined Morgan’s face and body with concern. 78 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “I am a little worried. Morgan has fine skin and I am anxious that she may get more scars on her face.” Dianne remarked. I could see that she was thinking about Morgan had being born almost fifteen weeks premature and spending almost three months in the incubator. “Look at the scars here on her forehead and here on her upper lip made by them peeling off the adhesive tape they used to hold the pipes they stuck up her nose” she said tearfully, recalling that traumatic time. “Do you remember how she weighed only 720 grams, less than a kilogram pack of butter at birth, and how long she held the record at the Sandton clinic as the smallest baby to survive?” I nodded with a lump in my throat as we both looked down at our distressed daughter. “I bet you remember too how loudly she could yell when they fed her through the pipes running up her nose when she was in the hospital.” Dianne said as we both chuckled as we remembered how the nurses learned to respect her short temper. “Yes, and I remember you telling the paediatrician that he was wrong to say she would not make it, and that anyone with a yell as loud as hers would survive no matter what.” She sniffed tearfully. “Huh! And do you remember the heading on their massive bill when we eventually got to take her home?” I grunted, still angry at the memory. “Yes I do. It read Spontaneous Abortion typed across the top in bold type.” We both laughed out loud to cover up the uncomfortable lump in our throats. 79 Don Darkes Jane arrived later that afternoon and took over without batting an eyelid. At her direction we soon had Morgan paddling happily in an orange plastic basin filled with water and bicarbonate of soda. We sat upon the coach roof as we gently sponged her down. Thanks to Jane’s home remedy, Morgan carried very few scars from that experience and never failed to raise a laugh from Dianne and me whenever she regaled anyone about her illness, perfectly convinced that she had suffered from ‘Chicken pops.’ FIGURE 13 J ANE LOOKING ON WHILE MORGAN THE POPS . 80 IS TREATED FOR 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 25. The Walruses Sing Just because I am paranoid does not mean that there isn’t someone out to get me. “I need your opinion on some woodwork.” Terry certainly had no need of my advice so it was clear he wanted to speak with me alone and certainly out of earshot of both Dianne and the children, so I dutifully followed him toward the opposite end of the yard. “I know of a well-paying job you may be interested in.” Terry knew that we were short of cash, and that I would be willing to do almost anything to bolster our shrinking finances. We had discovered that the yacht that we had bought was not as seaworthy as the surveyors report had indicated. I also had the uneasy feeling there was something else which he was not telling me as I sensed that he wanted to tell me something and then reconsidered. “Before you ask -yes it is legal, -as far as South African law is concerned anyway. Although the Harbour Police may not think so, -they still apply some of the old World War Two regulations.” Terry’s crooked smile did not give me a good feeling. “It’s worth a grand to you, less my finder’s fee -of course!” He gave his crooked smile again. I had been under the water for a few minutes when the throbbing heartbeat of the approaching behemoth numbed me with fear as it filled my head with its overwhelming thrumming sound. The shock wave of its powerful beats vibrated though my body, triggering a wave of queasiness that pressed against the rubber mouthpiece of my scuba gear. Forced to inhale sharply as I panicked, my facemask pinched painfully squashing it against my nose. If I lost control I knew that I would have little alternative but to fin frantically upward to the surface and risk ‘the bends.’ I feared being sucked into the gigantic blades of the approaching ocean liner’s propeller and being shredded into its crimson wake like a frog run over by a lawn mower. 81 Don Darkes “Clank! Clank! Clank! The staccato sound of a prearranged signal made by beating a hammer against a length of steel bar alerted me to the fact that I was approaching the limit of my planned dive. I still had not found the brass propeller dropped by the yacht Pegasus as it motored toward the harbour entrance. Peter its charismatic skipper, had promised me a thousand Rands if I could retrieve it. Despair washed over me as the poor visibility and the cluttered harbour bottom, littered with debris, made my task virtually impossible. The lure of the cash paled as I considered how once again I had acted without thinking it through properly. To make matters worse, I was sure I could see a dark shadow of one of the deadly Zambezi sharks hovering just out of sight waiting for the right moment to come up behind me to sink its ragged teeth into my thigh and shake me like a dog mauling a rabbit. Besides, what I was doing was illegal and if the harbour police caught me it could mean jail. Two clanks reverberated through the water. It was the recall signal summoning me to the surface again. The prospect of defeat gave me new strength. Finning strongly, I covered a lot of ground in an allout effort. A dull glint caught my eye and the propeller seemed to beckon to me from the spot where it had come to rest next to a rusting oil drum. A small grouper mouthed defiance before retreating into its lair. Elated I had difficulty in forcing myself to stop and decompress, hanging suspended a few metres below the surface to purge my blood of its expanding air bubbles, before rising into the sunshine, propeller first, triumphantly mocking king Arthur’s lady of the lake brandishing a sword. “I’ll draw your cash and meet you at the Point Yacht Club bar this afternoon to celebrate” said Peter slapping me on the back with enthusiasm. My heart sank. During our brief residence in Durban, we had learnt some of the quirks of “The last Outpost”, as we were gradually admitted to some of the lower echelons of the yachting community. Unwritten rules determined a pecking order incorporating your financial 82 6692 Pisces the Sailfish status, your job or profession, the yacht you owned, the school you attended and your sporting achievements. These determined your status in the inbred community and by implication to which yacht club you could aspire. Nevertheless, membership of one of the recognised clubs was mandatory if one wished to secure a berth in the crowded yacht basin. So I joined Durban Boat Owners Association on the basis of their more relaxed rules and significantly lower membership fees. Membership of this club, together with the fact that I was a despised Vaalie, a member of the reviled migratory up-country holiday makers, from the gold producing inland cities on the opposite side of the Vaal River, automatically relegated me to the bottom rung of their social ladder. Although the Point Yacht club was not the pinnacle of the yachting community’s elite, it outranked the lowly status of the “Boat Owners Association” and I could not help feeling that I would be recognised as an impostor by its members who would surround me hissing “Unclean, Unclean!” as they made signs to ward off the evil eye. “Don’t be silly. It’s all in your mind. This is a great opportunity to make some new friends,” Dianne kissed me on the forehead as I dressed in a clean white shirt, black slacks and tie before setting off to meet Peter and hopefully to get paid. The level of noise issuing from the crowded bar indicated that I was at least three rounds of drinks in arrears. I entered the smoke filled room where the inhabitants squabbled raucously, exchanging testosterone like jostling walruses and butting each other in the hope of soliciting the favours of a few battle scarred females who lounged in a corner nursing chilled white wine and soda water cocktails. “Hey Brian! I told you I wouldn’t have to pay your thieving rates to get you to make me another propeller, even though it’s your fault it fell off in the first place,” bragged Peter. He brandished the bronze propeller I had lifted from the harbour floor earlier that day. “And this is the guy you have to thank for it” he said, pointing at me with a thumb over his shoulder. Brian glowered at me, marking me indelibly in his mind as the cause of his 83 Don Darkes being cheated out of his rightful due and therefore making me his sworn enemy. “How about a drink for Durban’s answer to Jacques Cousteau?” roared Peter, instantly forgetting me as he assumed his place at the head of the walrus pack, allowing me to merge into the background as the beer and banter flowed. My face reddened as I tuned in to a fragment of gossip on the fringes of the posturing macho walrus herd. “Did you hear that some idiot Vaalie bought Pisces?” Snorted one of the lesser walruses. “Yes, I wonder if he knows that he has bought a Jonah, the most jinxed boat in the Bay?” grunted his companion. “Remember how those four youngsters that built her hull were all killed in a car smash?” belched his buddy. “Yes, I do. What about that croupier from the Transkei casino who bought the hull at the auction and then ran out of money fitting it out? Do you remember how he used to drive the bare hull around the bay like a motor boat because he could not afford the masts and sails?” snorted the first walrus. “Yes!” He snuffled and snorted, slopping his drink as he did so. “Do you remember what he did when we kicked him out of the club?” wheezed his pal. “Do you mean the time he pulled down his shorts and mooned the commodore of the club and the fancy ladies taking the salute at the Yacht Club’s annual Sail-Past ceremony?” Guffawed the first walrus. “No, I’m referring to what happened after he slipped and fell overboard, got crushed against the dock and ended up paralysed in the Addington hospital? Do you remember how Brian, the engine mechanic, pulled a fast-one and had the boat “arrested” so that he could force it to be auctioned, just so that he could get the two grand he was owed?” snuffled the second walrus. “No flies on Brian eh?” Cackled his crony slapping his knee with admiration. 84 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “What about the guy who finally got Pisces finished and took it on its maiden voyage?” Croaked walrus one. “How could I forget? Damn boat nearly killed my buddy Gunter and the owner. They had to get the National Sea Rescue Institute to tow them, barely afloat into Richards Bay. The owner never set foot on a yacht ever again.” His companion shook his head and slobbered with glee. “Never mind that, do you recall how Pisces fell off her cradle in the boatyard and flattened that Zulu?” Frowned walrus one. “Yes, I remember that. Do you remember the witchdoctors charms and bones and the muthi they found hidden inside her hull while they were making repairs?” Wheezed the smaller walrus. “I do, I also remember how they had to import labourers from Johannesburg because the local men refused to work on her after they found the cursed charms.” “Bad news, a jinxed boat. I wonder what kind of fool has ended up with that Jonah now? Snorted walrus one. “That would be me.” I said gritting my teeth as I recovered from the shock. Although it cost me several rounds of drinks to obtain more information from the garrulous walruses, it was worth it to learn more about the scurrilous history of our boat, Pisces. 85 Don Darkes Chapter 26. Teacher Munro’s riddle. Dark bearded Munro was a portly jovial ex-chartered accountant who had jumped off the merry-go-around and rebuilt his life free of his self-imposed boundaries some years before us. “Time and money are two things you should not spend all in one place” was his favourite saying. Down to the round spectacles, black bushy beard and polar neck jersey he was the spitting image of the captain in the Tin-Tin comic book. Munro was able to maintain his boat and live a reasonably comfortable lifestyle by doing exactly what he wanted whenever he wanted to by doing what he enjoyed the most which was sailing or teaching others to sail. Munro was our sailing instructor. He operated his classroom from a garage at the Bluff yacht club which is located where the sewers empty into Durban harbour. His classroom garage was a magnet for scores of renegade hamsters that also fled their wheels and needed to learn to sail. He visibly preened when we addressed him as Teacher Munro and he had a gentle but mischievous sense of humour that I enjoyed. One day as he noted that my temper was becoming frayed by the challenges of navigation and seamanship, he decided to pose me a riddle. “Did you see on the news last night that a multinational group of scientists have discovered the bodies of Adam and Eve?” He asked with a deadpan face. “No I did not see it Munro. Dianne and I are doing our level best to kick the habit of anaesthetising ourselves with television, especially television news.” I replied. “Then you missed a good report. It seems that a multinational group of scientists have made an amazing discovery. They were studying core samples taken from an ancient ice floe when they found a cave filled with primordial ice that has not thawed since it originally froze at the dawn of 86 6692 Pisces the Sailfish time. This ice was so pure and so clear that they could see many feet down through it to where two perfectly preserved naked human bodies lay frozen” he said with a twinkle in his eye. “Then as the scientists looked down at them incredulously, they all agreed unanimously that they had definitely found the bodies of Adam and Eve.” “How did the scientists know just by looking at them that it was Adam and Eve?” I asked. “Well the television camera zoomed in on the scene. When I saw the bodies I had to agree with them that it could only have been Adam and Eve.” Munro replied. “So how did they know?” He challenged. “Were they both wearing fig leaves?” I asked sarcastically. Munro shook his head. “No they were both completely naked.” “Did they have mortuary labels attached to their toes with their names written on them?” I asked as Munro cringed at my stupidity. He shook his head exasperated. “I know. There was a talking snake frozen in the ice with them,” quipped Dianne who had been listening to the discussion. “Not too bad Dianne, and to give you a clue, it’s usually women who get this one long before the men do.” Munro smiled. “Aha! Were this naked couple holding a half-eaten apple” I suggested while Munro shook his head solemnly. “No there was no snake and no apple. Come on you two. Please bear in mind that these are serious scientists and they would not jump to a conclusion based on such frivolous evidence.” Munro taunted us. “They had Adam and Eve tattooed on their chests.” I ventured half-heartedly, while Munro slapped his forehead. “Did the male have a scar on his side where he donated a rib to make Eve?” Ventured Dianne. “Not too shabby. But not quite correct either” Munro said smiling at her. Dianne’s face lit up as the solution came to her. 87 Don Darkes “I know! I know! It’s so obvious!” She exclaimed delightedly. Munro held his finger to his lips. “Shh. Promise me that you won’t tell the caveman?” Dianne nodded while they both laughed at me. By now I was exasperated and perplexed but did not want to give either of them the satisfaction of seeing it. “When is my pilots’ exemption examination going to take place?” I asked Munro by way of changing the subject. “You will be meeting with the port captain next Tuesday and I hope you are more on the ball than you are today.” He teased as he tapped the pack of mariner’s flashcards. That night as we lay in our cabin, Dianne could sense by my irritation that I was baffled by the Adam and Eve story and that I was a little jealous and too proud to admit it. “I love you” She said playfully tickling my chest and stomach with her soft fingers. “Lower, Lower” I replied automatically. She dropped her voice two octaves and said in a very deep voice “I love you” and we both guffawed, sharing an old joke that often led to love play which she knew usually helped to reduce tension between us. I sighed. She moved her hand lower, playfully circling my stomach with her teasing fingers. I ground my teeth being childish and not wanting her to belittle my frustration. “Although I promised Munro that I wouldn’t tell you the answer and I always keep my promises, that does not mean that I can’t give you a clue.” Then she playfully stuck her finger into my belly button and kissed me passionately as I groaned and hit my forehead with the palm of my hand as the solution to the riddle came to me. Of course, Adam and Eve were never born in the usual way. They would not have had a belly button! I had taken and passed my ships radio licence exam and now had to take the Durban Harbour pilots exemption exam. Any ship entering or leaving the harbour has to pay for a pilot to come aboard to guide them in and out of the port. On paper, 88 6692 Pisces the Sailfish an exception is made for local small craft where the skipper has passed the exam and received a Pilots Exemption Certificate. I had been studying for weeks, learning the charts, noting the positions and meaning of the buoys and lights, the restricted areas and the procedures to be followed upon entering and leaving the harbour. One of the sections of the exam involved learning the light arrays displayed by various types of ocean going vessels. This was done using a pack of flash cards similar to those used by young schoolchildren. Bill and Morgan loved this and entered into the spirit of the game so well they knew “the lights” far better than I did. “Too bad I couldn’t take you with me Bill.” I said as I returned disconsolate from the test. “Oh dear! What happened?” Dianne asked concerned as she saw my gloomy expression. “The port captain himself tested me. I thought of you when I used your technique to remember the red and green light and which was left and which was right.” “Do you mean my, There-is-no-red-port-wine-left aide de mémoire?” queried Dianne. I nodded. “Then he tested me with the various picture cards from the flash card deck, Diver-down, Trawler, Dredger, vessel over one hundred metres long and so forth.” Morgan and Bill shouted out aloud, recognising each card shuffling through the pack, searching for the one that had flummoxed me. “I had no problem with any of them. But then the swine showed me one card that had me stumped. And now I can’t find it in this pack either.” I said throwing the deck onto the saloon table in a huff. “What did it look like?” Dianne asked gently. “Well to be honest it looked like a Christmas tree and I said so too. He was not amused. He failed me there and then. But he then he relented and said he would issue my certificate when I could prove to him that I knew what it was.” “I know you don’t want to hear this but I think we should go and see teacher Munro.” Dianne suggested. 89 Don Darkes “So did Captain Cooper show you the Christmas tree?” Munro asked as he winked at Dianne. I smiled in a vain attempt to hide my irritation and my embarrassment. “I can’t find it in the pack.” I replied irritably. “You won’t find it either because it’s not in the standard deck. He had the card made up as a test of logic and deduction skills. Nevertheless it is a vessel that exists. Just hope and pray you never see one.” “So don’t keep me in suspense. What the devil is it?” I was in no mood for one of Munro’s guessing games. “It’s an aircraft carrier you idiot!” He chuckled. Our classroom lessons continued and were augmented by invaluable hands-on sailing practice on board our vessel, Pisces the Sailfish, as we took her over the sand bar guarding the entrance to the harbour and out into the churning washing machine that frothed in the open ocean outside. The large majority of this instruction was provided by an accomplished female sailor, Mimi Glover, our on-board instructor who had in turn, learned her craft at the hands of her estranged husband, a concert pianist who had also been lured by the call of the sea. The first time Mimi accompanied us out to sea was all the more memorable as she promptly rushed to the side of the boat and was spectacularly seasick. “Are you all right?” Bill asked her with concern all over his face. “I am absolutely perfect. This is an important lesson you need to to learn from me!” I looked at her bewildered. “If you feel a bout of seasickness coming on make sure that you are facing downwind!” 90 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 27. Sinking Feeling A powerful westerly wind moaned and whistled through the rigging, clanking the halyards against our hollow masts. Pisces snatched at her anchor chain, rocking and pitching as the swells rolled beneath her. We slid the hatches closed and secured the portholes, sealing out the roar of the stinging salty rain lashing over the heaving deck above our heads. We snuggled below, dry and secure in the gently rocking main cabin, sleepily sipping hot cocoa, staring absent-mindedly at a wavy television picture, crackling and hissing in protest to the onslaught of the storm outside. “Looks like the South African Broadcasting Corporation is foisting another second-rate movie on us. The scriptwriter of this movie should be fired!” I groused. “We’ve been watching helicopters hovering over that stricken cruise liner for ages. He could at least have injected some drama by showing the terrorstricken faces of the passengers or someone drowning if they want me to stick it out to the next advert,” I muttered irritably switching off the offending set before drifting into a dreamless sleep. A bump against our hull woke me up with a start. “Don’t panic. It’s only the ferry delivering our Sunday newspaper,” said Dianne, smiling down at me through the open hatch as she scanned the headlines. “Seems the SABC stole a march on CNN. They syndicated live footage of a passenger liner sinking off the Transkei Wild Coast yesterday,” she added, pointing at the headlines. “What was the name of that scruffy-looking cruise liner listing to starboard so badly as we watched it leaving Durban harbour a couple of days ago?” “Do you mean the cruise liner Oceanos?” I answered with a sinking feeling. 91 Don Darkes Authors note. The passenger liner Oceanos sank on the 4th of August 1991 as the result of incomplete repairs and freak waves that have resulted in the demise of many vessels in this notorious stretch of the Indian Ocean known locally as The Wild Coast. Media reports revelled in the telling story of the less than chivalrous Greek Captain who led the way in abandoning the stricken Oceanos and leaving his terrified passengers to their fate. They also reported how the cruise ship’s band and entertainers played cheerful songs and entertained the hapless passengers, calming them and preventing a panic as they waited to be rescued, in a scene reminiscent of the sinking of the British warship Birkenhead that took place not far from this spot many years before. Fortunately the Oceanos passengers and the performers were all rescued, unlike the brave soldiers on the doomed Birkenhead who died at their posts and who have been credited by many for coining the phrase Women and Children first as they heroically stood to attention on the deck of their sinking ship while the women and children were evacuated in the only lifeboats. Despite many innovative and often fatal attempts over the years, the gold which was being carried aboard Birkenhead has never been recovered. 92 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 28. Bitter Pills It was quite by chance I overheard Steve, an American single-hander as he requested permission to enter port. “Durban Harbour Radio, this is the American yacht Aldebaran requesting permission to enter Durban Harbour.” He pronounced it owl-debb- barron, running the syllables together in a drawl that I have never been able to emulate. I made a mental note to find out what his yacht’s name meant. “Oh it’s a star in the Taurus constellation” Dianne said offhandedly as she intercepted my thoughts and anticipated my needs yet again. She has a fascination with the stars that I have never been able to comprehend. Dianne can look up into the night sky, point out a star and name it and I never tire of seeing their glint reflected in her sapphire blue eyes when she does it. I thought nothing more of Steve until our paths crossed again when I noticed his neat hand written notice pinned up on the yacht club notice board. He was seeking crew to accompany him as he sailed along the coast from Durban toward Cape Town. I could understand his reluctance to attempt this stretch of ocean alone after finding out first hand why so many cruising yachtsmen name this stretch of the Indian Ocean the ‘washing machine’. “This would be a good opportunity for me to gain experience and accumulate sea miles. Let’s take a walk over to the international jetty and check him and his boat out.” I said to Dianne. Aldebaran was a forty foot sloop. She proudly displayed her name and that of her home port, San Francisco, in bold white letters that contrasted with the bright colour of her sleek red hull. She sported several white stripes that ran the length of her hull that worked together with a number of gold stars clustered around her name to echo the stars and stripes that she proudly flew alongside her South African courtesy flag. Although she must have sailed many thousands of miles to 93 Don Darkes cross the Pacific and the southern Indian Ocean she looked as immaculate as if she had never left her home port. “I hope he does not expect me to pay for the privilege.” I said a little intimidated by the pristine yacht. “Welcome aboard. Please call me Steve” he called out to us brightly as he appeared on deck and pointed to where we should board and where we should remove and then leave our shoes. Steve was an American cliché, from his designer-label deck shoes to his bogus hearty over-friendly manner and his perfectly manicured store-bought smile. Both he and his vessel were almost too perfect making it difficult for me to judge where the carefully manufactured façade ended and the genuine person began. Any ocean sailing vessel has a unique and distinctive smell providing clues to its past and to the nature of its owner, crew and passengers. A racing yacht for example, reeks like a locker room with the hormonal tang of male sweat, the acid stench of urine and the sour reek of vomit overlaid with the chemical tang of fibreglass and silicone rubber sealant. A cruising yacht’s pong may contain some or all of those ingredients fermented together with the stink of wet carpet, ripe faeces, oily bilge water, mildewed carpeting and rancid diesel all overlaid by the aroma of last week’s curry and the sulphur stench of stagnant sea water. Smell alone is often enough to identify the “ego-palaces” seldom leaving their walkon moorings to sail offshore. They chose instead to be raucously patronised by their owner’s friends on weekends or visited by furtive couples on weekday afternoons. They invariably reek of charcoaled boerewors sausage, sour beer, stale cigarettes and sweaty afternoon sex. Aldebaran had no such tell-tale odours to give her away. She was as clinically flawless as her owner’s expensive fake smile, right down to the eye-watering automatic air-freshener that expelled regular spurts of phony pine forest to neutral any olfactory clues to her true character. Perhaps that is why I ignored my intuition, 94 6692 Pisces the Sailfish stifling my misgivings as I noted the incomplete crew entries in his ship’s log above the spot where I signed on as crew for this cruise. Besides, I was desperate to log as many offshore and overnight hours at sea as I could before shouldering the responsibility of taking my own family to sea aboard Pisces. After all what was the worst that could happen? We cleared the sand bar outside Durban Harbour, reaching into a dying late-afternoon south-westerly wind that promised a brief calm spell before the north-easterly breeze picked up again to push us onward toward Cape Town. Dismayed to find the heads’ door locked Steven bared his perfect teeth exposing his designer smile as he twanged condescendingly “Chill out, it’s just us guys on board. Take a dump over the stern!” I knew then that there would be no hot meals prepared in that pristine galley, and that the locked heads, like everything else on board, were a carefully maintained façade masking the true nature of its skipper. I began to wonder anew about the crewman who had signed on at Richard Bay, mysteriously “jumping ship” without signing off the ships log when he reached Durban. Alone at the helm as we sailed along the notorious Transkei Wild Coast and over the watery grave of the Oceanos, I guiltily invoked a silent prayer remembering how we had weathered the storm that sank her as we leered at her agony like voyeurs as we sat safely cocooned aboard Pisces while she lay securely moored in Durban Harbour. I recalled how we were entertained by her death throes exhibited on our black and white television set blissfully unaware that we were witnessing a live broadcast of her demise and not just another mediocre made-for-television reality show. As if in retaliation, the north-easterly wind began gusting, driving a confused following sea that crashed and fizzed behind my head as line after line of menacing waves came racing up behind me, twisting our stern to port as each crest broke against our hull, 95 Don Darkes lifting and dropping us again and again as they passed endlessly beneath our keel. I resisted the urge to look over my shoulder at the pursuing waves and stared instead at the amber glow of the compass, making the constant corrections necessary to hold our course in a vain attempt to distract myself and fight down my feeling of blind panic. I thought of Dianne and our two children waiting for me back on board Pisces and I had a vivid flash remembering my mother’s strident voice as we strode angrily from her house. “You are reckless and irresponsible and you are going to drown not only yourself and Dianne but you are going to drown my grandchildren as well.” Although I am not superstitious I could not overcome the urge to pray, over and over. Dear Lord if I am indeed being reckless and irresponsible please do not punish my innocent family. Take me, take my possessions; but please spare them. I was too exhausted to protest when, at the changing of the watch, I went below to find Steve curled up inside my sleeping bag. “No sense in letting a warm bed go to waste” he grinned, challenging me with bared fangs like a Doberman guarding a bone. I climbed into my sleeping bag and tried to sleep but could not overcome the nagging feeling that something was amiss. As I lay there recalling my days in the military trying to reassure myself that I was mistaken by remembering how it was customary for a number of us that were sharing an allnight watch to allow the off duty members to grab some sleep in a “hot-bed”. Surely, I asked myself, this was the same thing? After all wasn’t it ‘just us guys on board’ as Steve had pointed out earlier? Somehow I failed to convince myself and lay awake the entire time so that I was even wearier four hours later when Steve came down the steps to summon me to take over the helm from him. It did not occur to me that Steve had 96 6692 Pisces the Sailfish ,sailed almost halfway across the planet by himself, assisted by electronic systems that invariably did a better job than most humans can deliver or that he certainly did not really need me to help him to steer his yacht. Nor did it occur to me that he most certainly knew that too. Instead I was driven by the need to make sure that I kept my side of the bargain even though I was suffering from lack of sleep. By the time I completed my watch and went below once again to roust Steven from my sleeping bag. I had not slept for more than thirty six hours and was drunk with exhaustion. I had just climbed into the warm bag when the gentle sinking feeling of dropping off to sleep was replaced by horror and revulsion as I felt something wet and slimy. I thrashed frantically to free myself from my disgusting sleeping bag, spasmodically dry-retching as I recognised the acrid smell of fresh semen. “What’s the matter? Feeling seasick?” Steve asked nonchalantly as I rushed to the side to throw up. “You need to be careful not to fall in. I doubt that I could turn this boat around or even find you before the sharks do. It happens all the time you know.” He flashed the Doberman grin at me again and as I looked into his steely eyes I realised with dismay that he was not joking. I woke abruptly, roused by the beat of a whirring propeller and the strident sound of a retreating petrol motor throttled hard. I lay on my face on the cabin floor. My head throbbed and my whole body ached. As I tried to get up I realised that my hands were tied behind my back and that my knees kept slipping in a puddle of something that was both sticky and slippery. I recognised the smell of blood. As I rolled over onto my side and managed to slide myself into a sitting position with my back against the chart table I became aware of a burning sensation in my stomach and anus. With a sick feeling I realised that it was my own blood and exactly what the other substance was. It was daylight and at first could not remember where I was or how I had got there. Then as I sat 97 Don Darkes there and understood where I was I realised that I had no recollection of the last twenty-four hours or how or why I was tied up. Slowly I inched my way backwards up the chart table until I was standing and then painfully shuffled to the galley where I turned around so that I could use my fingers to inch open the drawer, grasp a steak knife and saw through the rope that bound my wrists together. Groggy and disorientated I made my way onto the deck where I realised that I was alone on Aldebaran which was lying at anchor in deep water. The tender was absent from its bracket. That, no doubt, was the source of the engine sound that had woken me from my drugged stupor. Blinking in the bright sunshine I looked around and saw that we were in a bay that was filled with people gambolling in the bright sunshine. As the sensation returned to my aching body and my head began to clear I recognised the unmistakable landmarks of Knysna a small port along the coast en route to Cape Town. Flashes of the lost hours returned to me and as I recognised the reason for the pain in my nether regions I threw up violently with a shout, prompting a knot of children walking on the beach to wave and call out in response to what they must have thought was my friendly greeting. As my head cleared and I began to come to terms with my situation I realised that Steve must have brought the vessel into the lagoon while I was unconscious and had then gone ashore for some reason. I knew that I would have to be prepared for his return. The lock tore a fist-sized piece out of the brightly varnished heads’ door as it splintered beneath my assault. Squatting on the pristine toilet I stared horrified at the rope burns and chafe marks on my wrists. The last thing I remembered was suffering a crippling migraine triggered by fatigue and stress and then gratefully gulping down a pair of bitter tasting pain capsules proffered by a wryly smiling Steve. Then I recalled pain, outrage and horror and screaming soundlessly while he laughed behind me. My mind balked as I experienced flashes of the lost hours and began to remember what he had done to me. Then I staggered 98 6692 Pisces the Sailfish and fell, overcome with a powerful wave of rage that threatened to overwhelm me as I pictured myself squeezing his throat until his eyes bulged out and his blood squirted between my fingers. The pounding headache returned forcing me to try to calm myself. As I sat on the floor holding my throbbing temples between my hands I considered my situation. There was no telling when Steve would return and when he did come back what he was planning to do with me? I remembered his casual comment about me falling overboard and being eaten by sharks and I knew with a sick feeling what he planned to do. He was going to sail out again and throw me overboard somewhere between here and Cape Town. It would be perfect. No witnesses and no messy details either. That still left the nagging question. Why hadn’t he done so already? Was he hoping that I would not remember anything? If that was the case how would he explain the fact that he had left me tied up? The only explanation was that he had not finished with me yet. I shivered with horror. Although the headache was worse than ever, I forced myself to think. What would happen if he came back and found me untied? Steve was a lot larger than I was and he would no doubt be prepared. I went to the galley drawer and took out the biggest knife I could find. This would help to even the odds. Even so, if I attacked him and killed or injured him, even in a fair fight, there would be a lot of questions to answer. A very public court case would follow and then everyone would know what he had done to me. I imagined the newspapers lapping it up and my friends and family pointing at me and sniggering. I dismissed that option out of hand. What about just jumping over the side and swimming to shore and going back to my family and putting it all behind me? That way there would be no consequences and no awkward questions. No one would ever know. 99 Don Darkes But a little voice inside me wanted retribution. Bloody, violent and savagely satisfying payback. But how? Suddenly it came to me. All I had to do was to make a tiny cut in the hose that led from the gas bottle to the stove. That way I could be far away when he came below, made a spark, ignited the gas and boom! A satisfying image of him and his too perfect smile being blown through the air like the proverbial Cheshire cat and splattering into the ocean in thousands of tiny pieces played itself like a movie over and over in my mind. I gloated as I thought how easy and how satisfying it would be. Then I realised with disappointment that I dare not stick around to watch. I had to be far away to establish an alibi when he blew his last load. Thankfully the thought also helped to dissipate my anger somewhat. This was not a movie. There would be questions, an enquiry and even a court case. Besides, I would have to answer to myself afterwards. What would I say to Dianne and the children? Nevertheless I was tempted. I moved toward the stove, knelt down reached behind it and found the hose. It was armoured by a flexible metal sheath and almost impossible to cut. No problem I thought, undo the coupling just sufficiently for the gas to seep out. Better still. Undo the coupling and also shut off the gas at the bottle itself. That way he would be far out at sea when he would find his stove not working, assume the gas was depleted and then either change the gas canister or find it was closed and turn it on again. The gas would seep out and would be waiting implacably for him to go below. He would light the stove and boom! As I knelt on the floor I looked up and saw the gas alarm on the roof. I knew would have to sabotage it or he would hear it shriek when it detected the gas and give my diabolical plan away. I was so engrossed in my plotting that I did not hear Steve return and climb aboard. 100 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “Just what do you think you are doing?” I almost laughed at the absurdity of my situation as I recalled the computer, HAL, in Stanley Kubrick’s movie, 2001 a Space Odyssey, saying exactly that in the same tone of voice as the hero tried to sabotage it. Steve was standing at the top of the stairs that led to the saloon below. When I saw the determined expression on his face and the winch handle he grasped firmly in his right hand I realised with a shock that this was no laughing matter. Raw fear thrust me across the cabin floor where I grabbed his leg and dragged him, head bumping down the stairs until he landed awkwardly on the cabin sole with a crash. Jubilant, I knelt on his chest revelling in the feeling of intense pleasure as I smashed my tightly bunched right fist into his smarmy face, firing it with all my strength and with all my pent up anger and frustration behind it. It felt so good that I did it again and again, alternating right and left fists rejoicing as I watched the blood and spittle fly each time I landed my furious blows on his eyes and cheeks. He made no move to defend himself nor did he make any sound other than to grunt gutturally each time I landed a blow. He merely lay there submissively as I smashed his face to a pulp. But something was wrong. As I landed each blow and his flesh shuddered and split under the impact of my bunched fists, I felt pain. Not mental anguish but real pain. This was sharp and vivid, excruciating pain, that far exceeded the torment created by the anger and humiliation that I was rapidly releasing. I had never hit anyone this hard before but I had seen it done countless times in the movies. There I had always enjoyed it as I swung my fists and threw blows in tandem with the hero as the villain got his just deserts. 101 Don Darkes It was not supposed to be like this! I groaned in agony as I smashed his already swollen eye with my fist again and watched his cheek burst under the impact of my knuckles. But, once again, it was me that felt blinding searing pain. Then I realised what was wrong. I had broken both my hands. I had smashed the bones in my knuckles to the point where they were already beginning to swell. Sweating and drooling with effort and passion I realised that a great deal of the blood and spit was my own. Nevertheless I was still incandescently angry and wanted to hurt and humiliate him far, far more. Then, as I hesitated and felt him stirring beneath me and knew with a sinking feeling that now he would begin to retaliate and that I would be defenceless when he did. I dug my elbow into his eye in desperation. I considered biting him but instead smashed his cheek with my forehead and almost lost consciousness myself with the shock and impact of it. I remembered my father saying as he beat me, “This hurts me more than it hurts you.” But I did not find it in the least helpful now. I saw the winch handle lying at the bottom of the ladder within easy reach and I knew I had to kill him or be killed myself. Leaning sideways I picked it up only to drop it again as my shattered hands and broken fingers failed to retain their grasp. Desperately I stood up to kick him and realised at the last moment that I was barefoot. Instead I drove my heel with all my weight behind it into his crotch. Although he moved his thigh reflexively to absorb most of the impact, I felt the cruel blow strike home and had the satisfaction of feeling his genitals grind and squirm as I crushed them underfoot. I exulted in a feeling of intense satisfaction as I heard him sob out in agony for the first time. 102 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “No more, No more!” He begged as he curled defensively into the foetal position covering his head with his hands. As suddenly as it began, my rage disappeared. Instead I felt shame and disgust. Calmer now, I decided to end things then and there and to take my things and leave. “This ends here and now. If you try and cook up some cock and bull story or try to complain to the authorities I will make sure to find not only the guy who jumped ship in Durban but I shall also seek out the police in every country you have visited to have them ask some very awkward questions about you and the missing crew entries in your log book.” I ground my teeth as I growled at him. The locked main cabin door took the edge off my frustration as I kicked it open and tore at it, ripping it off its hinges. My rucksack lay open, also violated, within his cabin, but nothing appeared to be missing so I picked it up and stepped over his body as I clambered up the stairs into the bright sunlight and sanity that was waiting outside. None of the happy holidaymakers gambolling outside spared me a second glance as I waded ashore in my undershorts holding a dripping black plastic garbage bag containing my rucksack and trudged exhausted into town. 103 Don Darkes Chapter 29. Spicy Runaways The sleepy clerk at the bus station grudgingly informed me that the next bus back to Durban would only be in three days’ time. There was no telling what would happen if I waited until then and I came face to face with Steve again, so I resolved to get as far away as I could, as soon as possible. I considered hitch-hiking through the remote Transkei back to the boat, but considered it far too dangerous. On impulse I decided to abandon another white South African taboo and approach the taxi drivers at the bustling black mini-taxi rank instead. The thought of this land journey in what we whites contemptuously called a kaffir-taxi, paradoxically made me far more apprehensive than sailing any flimsy yacht with a pervert along the shipwreck strewn, treacherous coastline that was aptly named The Wild Coast. Despite my racist and bigoted trepidation, the excited passengers journeying through the Transkei, the Xhosa homeland, to Durban in Zululand, accepted me, a white man or mlungu, without question. They said nothing about my swollen, broken and useless hands as they coaxed me out of my hiding place at the back of the Toyota minibus by including me in their lively chatter even to the extent of translating between Zulu and Xhosa languages as they vied with each other to ply me with titbits from their own humble meals and roaring with delighted laughter at my response to some of their unfamiliar delicacies. “Haau Baba, wait till you taste my spicy runaways” one fat mama chortled as she saw me shuddering at the sight of her disgusting looking dish of yellow chicken’s feet swimming in a rainbow pool of half congealed fat. Luckily I was able to save face when I tucked in with lip-smacking gusto into the marog, (wild spinach) and the samp (corn kernels) and beans, a 104 6692 Pisces the Sailfish delicious and filling staple prepared with lightly spiced onions and herbs. I was delighted when my favourite meal, mielie-pap, was offered. This stiff white porridge, made from ground corn or mielies, water and salt, is the staple food of Southern Africa. Although some regard it as glutinous and tasteless, it is precisely this quality that makes it ideal for saucy accompaniments and culinary creativity that enable every cook and mother to create a cheap, satisfying and delicious signature dish. Dianne detests it, so I take every opportunity to enjoy it whenever she is not around to be offended by my slobbering. I was able to sample four or five variations on the theme before we had travelled the first hundred miles. Although I could not decide which my favourite was, there was a particularly delicious chakalaka sauce made with tomatoes, green peppers, onions and green chillies that I could not resist. For months afterwards my red-stained tee shirt and shorts bore mute testimony to my gluttony despite many subsequent washes. Stomach filled, I was soon soundly asleep with my bulging belly, snugly wedged between a garrulous breastfeeding mother and her sweating plump friend as we sped noisily back to Durban. As I slept in the back of the taxi, still numb with shock I came to terms with the fact that my best course of action lay in encapsulating my pain like an oyster and insulating my shattered spirit over time with layer after careful layer of rockhard shell. I decided not to tell anyone, not even my wife Dianne. I would try to forget all about it. I did not know then that I would have to wait almost twenty years to read Steve’s obituary before I could finally come to terms with the incident and begin to deal with it. The speeding taxi bus approached Umtata and the passengers began to get agitated. After casting a few speculative glances in my direction during a muttered deliberation they came to a decision about me and the women began to ululate thrillingly before bursting into joyous song. The vaguely familiar tune, reminiscent of a hymn, was catchy 105 Don Darkes and soulful and I began to enjoy it until the hair stood up on the back of my neck and gooseflesh dimpled my body as I recognised the melody for what it was, the banned political protest song Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika (Xhosa; "Lord Bless Africa") I knew that it was a criminal offence to sign or write the lyrics to this emotive song. Offenders could be arrested and jailed for 180 days without trial. Hiding in the back of the taxi, memories of my days as a privileged white university student came seeping back like backed up sewage. I remembered how my hormones were in lust for a well-endowed blonde, Luanne, who was in my Psychology class. She enticed me to join a student protest to be held on the steps of the University of the Witwatersrand. In those days the entrance was at. 1 Jan Smuts avenue, the main thoroughfare entering Johannesburg. I could tell by the paired raisins in her blouse that she was excited and my hormones agreed to support her cause, immediately. We were issued with posters and a printed pamphlet before being carefully herded and displayed upon the University’s white granite steps before a jostle of waiting press photographers. A haunting voice took up a hymn like song and the other students joined in at first hesitatingly, then gaining in volume and power as together we read and sang from the printed pamphlet containing the unfamiliar and criminally contraband, African language lyrics of Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika. Reluctantly I tore my eyes from Luanne’s twins to look at the sign which I dumbly held aloft. The sign read. Free Mandela. I was all for it. No one should have to pay for Mandela, whatever it was. Before you jeer, consider that while today that name is a household word, back in ‘74 only a handful of people knew or cared who or what he was. Strict laws were promulgated, enforced by draconian penalties, to indelibly mark and punish anyone who uttered or wrote any evil communist criminal terrorists name, particularly that one. It was a criminal offence to own or publish any of Mandela’s criminal words. By government 106 6692 Pisces the Sailfish decree he became a banned person; literally and legally nonexistent, ostracised and outcast by a police state that dealt harshly with its detractors. At first I did not see the paint-filled balloons come hurtling toward us until they began to burst, splattering our choir with their vitriol and spite. But I did see the hate filled faces of the jeering short haired students from the Right Wing, Rand Afrikaans University, wiping their paint splashed hands triumphantly as they hooted and laughed. They rejoiced when the heavily armed police arrived to surround our faltering choristers. We were rounded up and taken in a cage-like armoured personnel carrier being tested as police riot vehicle, a prototype Casspir, to John Vorster Square. This was the forbidding blue mosaic tile monolith, overlooking the plush offices of the city of gold’s mining magnates. Upon arrival at the forbidding structure, the roaring Casspir drove into the underground garage hidden deep in the bowels of the police fortress. We were herded toward a set of massive steel elevator doors and carefully counted while we waited for the lift to arrive. When it eventually did, the policemen jammed us tightly inside in order to squeeze one of their own men inside, no doubt to guard us. They baulked when they discovered that the overloaded lift refused to move. A hurried consultation resulted in comic farce as they attempted to cram the smallest member of their group into the overcrowded lift, to no avail. They even considered leaving some of us behind until they realised that we could escape. Eventually they decided to wedge all of us subversives into the elevator, before pressing the button marked 9. They hurriedly withdrew to run and climb more than ten flights of stairs on foot. “I heard them say they are taking us up to the tenth floor,” a terrified protester whispered apprehensively, using my voice, as the prison-like elevator groaned and scraped as it grudgingly hoisted us agonisingly upwards. 107 Don Darkes “Why is there is no tenth floor button on the lift controls” I wondered out aloud. “Isn’t that where they have the famous door to the black men’s toilet?” Quipped our resident joker mischievously. “Yes, the one where the toilet door opens into space exposing a ten story drop onto the concrete below.” responded another wag. We tittered nervously, recollecting the quashed court cases against the Gestapo-like police. A rash of gallows humour cartoons were sparked by numerous incidents involving suspected terrorists falling from the tenth floor. “How did the police get there so quickly?” asked the terrified protester. (Of course that was me.) “They knew what we were going to do before we did. They have secret agents and paid informers on campus, infiltrating everywhere to monitor and report everything we say, do, think…” “And smoke!” Quipped our freshly-caught jester. “Secret agents, on the university campus?” I asked incredulously. “Absolutely. They work for a secret government agency, the Bureau Of State Security. Also known as BOSS. The ironic, but no doubt unintended acronym was particularly apt as it was also the accepted term of address. It is more often translated into its Afrikaans language equivalent, Baas, used by the other races to address their white-skinned betters and masters. “Does anyone know how to identify BOSS secret agents?” asked our court jester. “They’re the ones wearing grey, short-pants safari suits, with a comb tucked into their socks” chorused our trapped group, hissing with suppressed laughter. Safari suits had first exploded onto the stagnant South African men’s fashion scene, by providing practical, cool, cotton, open vee-necked, short sleeved, shirt-like jackets. The outfit was designed to be worn with no under-vest or shirt, exposing tufts of manly chest hair to the cooling breeze. It advertised rank and status by the 108 6692 Pisces the Sailfish number of glittering gold neck chains and the number of pens that could be crammed into the breast pocket. The safari suit was completed by matching crisp pleated shorts and knee-high socks. This was initially a practical alternative to the formal business suit and collared shirt and tie that has remained unchanged for almost a century. The practical outfit was well suited to the hot and dry African summers until it was adopted, en masse, by the hated civil service and as school uniforms. Eventually the lift stopped at the ninth floor jolting and shuddering as if the hoist cable had been hit by a truck. The doors creaked and wheezed grudgingly open, slowly revealing a gigantic plain clothes policeman, puffing and sweating profusely as he stared crossly at us, arms folded akimbo upon his massive hairy chest and with a leather holstered pistol upon his hip. He was wearing, (you guessed it) a bilious green polyester safari suit with knee-high beige socks, complete with holstered comb. Our steaming pressure cooker hesitated as we all suppressed the urge to seal our fate by laughing out loud. Time stood still as we stared back incredulously at this apparition while the tension inside our tiny space grew. Someone farted and we exploded out of the lift, laughing hysterically as we erupted from the elevator into the sombre room beyond. A knot of furiously shouting policemen herded us like doomed cattle in an abattoir up a decrepit staircase, lit by a solitary naked flickering bulb, up to the dreaded tenth floor. My interrogation was brief and ruthless. The one-way glass, appearing as a mirror to me, the terrified prisoner, seated upon a hard metal chair behind a splintered wooden table, overlooked the grim procedure. Most of my interview was spent attempting to record my unpronounceable name and being continually interrupted by a policeman bursting in to ask the interrogator to start over and over again as the tape recorder inside the secret room behind the bogus mirror refused to work, no matter how hard or how often he punched and prodded the flat-tab buttons that controlled it. Eventually 109 Don Darkes my tormentor gave up, exhausted and exasperated he threw up his hands in disgust. I took pity on him and offered to assist. He nodded resignedly as I stood up and walked next door, opened the tape holder and carefully extricated the cassette tape to carefully unwind several loops of the brown magnetic tape ribbon that had jammed the mechanism. “May I borrow two of your pens please Arseiffer?”I asked, being recklessly facetious. None of them noticed my taunt as one of them wordlessly selected two ballpoints from the dazzling array, proudly worn like medals, in the top pocket of his safari suit jacket. They watched fascinated as I stuck a pen into each of the geared openings in the cassette and wound the reels in opposite directions to tension the recording tape. I reinserted the cartridge and pressed the record and play buttons simultaneously. I was rewarded with applause as the red recording button lit up. Then I became the vile prisoner again and was frogmarched back to the interrogation room. Most of us spent only that night in jail and were released without charges the next morning following a severe tongue lashing and a stern warning that listed the criminal punishments should we be caught singing or speaking the criminal terrorists name aloud again. Others we never saw again. In my case they made it clear that the police clearly knew what an idiot I was and who the genuine protesters were and thus who the terrorists and criminals were. I shall never forget the smell of urine, fear and terror of that awful place and hope to never to be dimpled or pimpled into visiting it again. Back in the taxi Mama Runaways smelled my fear and slithered over to where I was hiding. “Do you know why we are singing this song now baba?” She asked gently. “No Mama” I replied truthfully. “Because we are celebrating as we pass near the birthplace of Nelson Mandela.” She answered reverently. 110 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “We pray every day for his release.” She said sadly. I hope she did not see me blush. The police roadblock was craftily placed across a narrow section of the national road making it almost impossible to turn around or avoid the checkpoint without rousing suspicion. Mama Runaways turned to look meaningfully at me as the gesticulating policemen cut our taxi from the herd and ordered all the occupants out before searching them thoroughly. “Did you got identification wiff you? The policeman asked in his best English as he took me aside, separating me from the others to rummage search my still-damp rucksack. “No”. I lied, knowing full well that it was only nonEuropeans that were required to carry identification at all times, especially when travelling. “Whachew doing on this kaffir-taxi? He menaced. “Trying to get home to Durban from Knysna. There’s is no Greyhound until Thursday.” I answered truthfully. “Did you got anyfing you want to tell us?” He narrowed his eyes suspiciously. I gulped. “Not unless you are referring to the very spicy runaways and the mielie pap.” I squeaked attempting to lighten the confrontation. “We are watching you kaffir-boetie. If we catch you taking part in an illegal gathering you will be sorree!” He hissed as he gestured for me to return to the taxi where Mama Runaways gave me a sweaty hug. and I had earned the nod of her approval and she raucously rewarded my complicity and silence with a handful after dripping handful of her poultry speciality, as we sped onward to Durban. It was four in the morning, without a breath of wind or the sound of passing traffic to disturb the sleeping hoboes huddled in the doorways on the quayside when I arrived at the marina. Since there was no way to communicate with Dianne sleeping alone on board with the children, she did not know that I had jumped ship at Knysna or that I was on the way 111 Don Darkes home. She did not expect me to return for at least another week. I decided to surprise her. The Ferry driver was not due to come on duty for several hours. Stripping naked, I tied my clothes into the black plastic bag before diving into the oily calm of the bay and began swimming across the dark expanse of water toward the Sailfish. Feeling vulnerable, I tried not to think of the harbour sharks or the blind brown trout, floating in the bay. Aware of how my growing excitement at the thought of my reunion with Dianne was impeding my progress, the lines from Chuck Berry’s classic fifties song popped into my head as I began to stroke (the water) in time to it. Once I was swimming ‘cross Turtle Creek, All them snappers all around my feet. Sure was hard swimming ‘cross that thing, With both hands holding my ding-a-ling-ling! By the time I neared the Sailfish, I was gasping for breath through my laughter as I climbed painfully, using my forearms, chin and prehensile toes to spare my aching hands and drag myself up the anchor chain to slither wetly onto the bowsprit before rolling onto my back to recover. Thankfully a magical force beyond sharp reflexes moved me instinctively to one side just in time, as a razor-sharp kitchen-knife slashed through the air and bit into the wood a hairsbreadth from my naked chest. “Suffer and die, you bastard,” screamed Dianne, mistaking me for an intruder as she panted like a tigress protecting her brood. It was so good to be home again! 112 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 30. Green Mambas Crossing Bill’s fifth birthday was approaching when Dianne and I decided to set off on our first international cruise. Dianne had spent weeks collecting dry food and provisions that would last us at least six months. She carefully marked each tin lid with a black indelible pen before varnishing them. Morgan helped too, scribbling on the tins, in a language only she could understand as she marked the tins while Dianne merely smiled and said nothing to discourage her. The flour and cereals she placed in glass jars or plastic Tupperware containers and put a cotton ball dipped in ether inside each container to kill any weevils. Most of a day was spent carefully covering several dozen eggs with Vaseline before carefully storing them in a special Styrofoam box. We assumed that we would be able to buy fresh meat, fish, milk, cheese and vegetables whenever we made landfall and we had sufficient flour to bake our own bread every day. We carried 700 litres of fresh water in a single tank which we knew would last our family for at least a month as long as we used it sparingly and used seawater to shower before rinsing off with a hand held garden sprayer containing fresh water. Besides this we also carried another 100 litres in four separate jerry cans. The 700 litres of diesel in the steel tank had to be carefully treated against infection by an amazing bacterium that thrived on diesel and caused blocked engine injectors with disastrous results. Dianne had managed to contain a cockroach invasion by using a wonderful chalk sold by the Chinese supermarket. We were ready. We waited, impatiently checking for a weather window as we watched the weather forecasts carefully every day looking for a dying North Easterly breeze to herald the approach of the South Westerly wind which would blow us toward Madagascar. When the customs officials came on board to and stamp our green passports which we fondly called green mambas because very few countries were willing to accept South 113 Don Darkes African tourists without trepidation and treated them as if they were indeed loathsome snakes. I showed the first signs of succumbing to superstition when they asked our destination. “We are sailing towards Tulear, Madagascar.” I replied carefully, making certain that I did not say that we were going to Tulear as I had been repeatedly told by Terry not to announce a firm destination since any sailor knows that a landfall is in the hands of the wind and weather and the gods. Learning that the journey and not the destination is the hallmark of a true Traveller is not a lesson I understood then. Although my initiation into ocean sailing aboard Aldebaran provided valuable insights and underscored the importance of choosing fellow travellers with care I missed the point entirely when I explained, “Announcing your plans is certain to make God laugh” Terry was one of the last to bid us farewell. “Are you aware that you will be leaving port on a Friday?” He asked as he rubbed his chin nervously. “Absolutely, the weather is perfect. Why do you ask?” I replied. “It is extremely bad luck to leave port on a Friday. Oh yes, don’t tell me. I already know. You are not superstitious!” He said as he hung his head resignedly. Within minutes of crossing the sand bar guarding the entrance to Durban harbour and entering the washingmachine, we were all seasick. Bill was throwing up and Morgan fell asleep which was her way of dealing with nausea. That night as I stood alone at the helm, steering a course that would take us across the Agulhas current and hopefully find calmer water, I began to have second thoughts. I looked up at the stars and realised that we were completely at the mercy of the sea. Humbled, I silently repeated my prayer. 114 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Dear Lord if I am indeed being reckless and irresponsible please do not punish my innocent family. Take me, take my possessions, but spare them. By the time the South Westerly wind arrived it was sparkling daylight. The swell had diminished considerably and we were across the current. The maroon sails filled and swelled, and the ropes and the rigging cracked and groaned with the strain as Sailfish heeled over picking up speed and power. The deck began to vibrate and I could feel the energy coursing to our batteries as the wind generator howled and buzzed with the vigour of the wind. A feeling of déjà vu overcame me as I recognised a powerful phrase, like a snatch of a well-loved song. This was not music, but a full bodied sensation with vibrant colours, exciting aromas and powerful sounds fleshing out my favourite dream where I imagined the sun beating down on my naked back. I breathed the pristine salty tang of sparkling froth foaming onto our bowsprit and deck as it splashed up from our plunging bows. I have driven a screaming Porsche at high speed and crouched terrified behind my tandem partner as we swooped our fragile bicycle madly down the winding bends of Long Tom Pass, flying madly at over one hundred kilometres an hour. These did not even come close to the mighty sound and exhilarating thrill of raw speed and thrusting power as the twenty ton Sailfish smashed and flew through the rolling waves at full speed. This was all of six knots, the pace of a brisk walk. As I gripped the deck with my bare feet, revelling alone in the thrilling feeling, I was joined cautiously first by Dianne and then Bill and Morgan both clambering up the ladder excitedly. Then, all alone together, we wordlessly shared a priceless moment that was at the same time brief and infinite as we stared out over the endless horizon toward our future. As the wind increased I knew that I would soon have to consider taking down some sail as the Sailfish heeled over so hard that a clatter of falling crockery in the galley below had Dianne scurrying down the ladder to assess the damage. 115 Don Darkes “No problem,” she shouted cheerily. “The cutlery drawer slid open and dumped our knives and forks onto the floor. Since I am down here who wants a cup of Rooibos tea to celebrate?” We soon began to settle down to the rhythm and motion of the sea and the roar of the wind as our Sailfish bowled along for hour after hour. The miles swam foaming past our keel. Bored, I trimmed and fussed with the sails and discovered that it was not even necessary to hold onto the helm to keep on course. The ‘Finger of God’ seemed to know the way, pointing unerringly towards Madagascar. I set up our deep sea fishing rods from the stern. The line was as thick as weed-trimmer cable and we tied on glistening lures fashioned from the silver foil insides of boxed-wine. “Let’s see if the fish enjoy Château le Boxe!” Dianne quipped and then yelped with shock as the stout poles checked momentarily and then relaxed again as the prowling sea monsters broke the cable-like lines contemptuously. Time and time again I retied them and fitted new silver-foil lures, to no avail, as the cords just snapped again and again until we exhausted our supply of wicked hooks and silver wine bags. “Do you want me to crack a new box of wine?” Dianne asked cheekily. “Not yet. But certainly when we make our first landfall and we have something to celebrate” I shouted above the roar of the wind in the rigging. 116 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 31. 52092 Unexpected Guests Alone at the helm just before dawn on May 20th, Bill’s fifth birthday, I heard them join us for the first time. I was staring up at the stars watching fascinated as an albatross effortlessly soared above us. The backdrop of millions of stars glistened between our swaying masts as we bobbed and weaved over the sea. At first I thought the sound was Dianne or one of the children blowing their noses or sighing in their sleep. Then, as I listened, I heard several more blasts. They surrounded our speeding vessel. A mile long green trail of phosphorescent light marked our path as we dashed though myriad tiny organisms that flashed and glowed in protest at our passing. “What’s happening daddy?” Bill climbed up the ladder sleepily rubbing his eyes. “There are uninvited, but very welcome guests come to wish you Happy Birthday! I replied, my heart full with joy as I put my arm around his shoulders and hugged him as together we listened to the excited squeaks and clicks. A pod of gambolling dolphins blew and splashed alongside the Sailfish. Dianne and Morgan joined us as the sun came up. I had an idea. “Sweetheart, can you keep an eye on the helm while I go below?” Dianne nodded and smiled as I returned with the harnesses that we all agreed to wear (but seldom did) whenever we were on deck and under way. Then I clipped Bill and Morgan onto the safety lines that ran on either side over the length of the boat and guided them as we crept forward over the bobbing deck to the bowsprit. 117 Don Darkes “Smile!” Dianne said and she snapped the picture quickly before carefully sealing the camera into its plastic bag once more. We stood on the Finger of God looking down into the foaming wake below and saw the frolicking dolphins turn on their sides to look curiously back at us. They joyously weaved and bobbed in a swath of bubbles beneath our keel and leapt into the air and somersaulted for joy. FIGURE 14 THE AUTHOR, MORGAN AND BILL IN THE MIDDLE OF THE M OZAMBIQUE CHANNEL 118 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 32. Pisces Warns Later that day the wind died down entirely and we found ourselves becalmed in a glassy azure ocean. “Shall we fire up the Donkey?” Dianne called as the sails flogged listlessly while we bobbed gently in the bright sunshine and wiped the sweat from our faces. “No, I think I will take some time to check everything and catch my breath. If the wind does not pick up by this evening then we will start the engine.” “Great, then I am going to make Bill’s birthday cake,” came the reply from Dianne as she fussed happily in the galley. I dropped the sails, in case the wind decided to change its mind and asked Bill and Morgan to keep a watchful eye as I stripped off and dived into the sea. The water was warm and inviting as I swam around the boat. Secretly I was hoping that the dolphins would return and fulfil a lifelong fantasy to swim with them, but they had disappeared as soon as the Sailfish slowed down and drifted to a standstill. I tried not to think about any of the monsters teeming in the ocean below my body that had snapped our fishing lines so easily. Instead I tread water and admired the brass portholes in the stern. Dianne’s vibrant curtains added a splash of colour and were just one of the touches that she provided that made the boat feel like home. Then as I swam to the bows where the dolphins had cavorted scarcely an hour previously I got a shock. A thick black swath was slashed on either side of the hull below the bowsprit like a grotesque smile. As I touched it I realised that it was sticky, evil smelling oil. During the night we had probably sailed through an oil slick, no doubt slopped from a passing tanker. I held onto the chain that was attached from the bows to the underside of the bowsprit and got a nasty surprise. Instead of being taut and rigid, it sagged beneath my weight. Letting go hurriedly, I back pedalled furiously in order to look up at the bowsprit and rigging to determine the cause. My stomach contracted as I saw the reason for the loose chain immediately. The coupling on the forestay (a thick steel cable 119 Don Darkes that held the Genoa) which connected the bowsprit to the top of the masts, was loose. I watched incredulously and could see it was slowly unscrewing itself under the tension of the rigging connected to the rocking masts. Ignoring the pain from my unhealed smashed hands, I pulled myself back onto the deck and found the coupling was held in place by a single thread. I tightened the bottle screw and secured it in place with a cotter pin and bent the tangs securely around the wire. If the wind had not died when it did, then both masts would have come crashing down. I shivered despite the tropical heat. “What’s the matter darling?” Dianne asked concerned as she saw my shocked expression when I clambered down the companionway ladder to open the engine cover. “I am just cold” I lied as I lowered myself into the bilges. There another shock awaited me. As I stood up inside, I realised that it was full up to my chest with water! Had the water tanks burst again? I asked myself. A taste of the foul brew of engine oil, diesel and anything else that slopped onto the cabin floor above, told me that it was sea water. I panicked and breathed in a mouthful involuntarily and spluttered. “Is everything alright?” Came Dianne’s anxious voice from above. “Fine. Fine,” I lied again. “Are you certain, because I am about to put Bill’s cake into the oven and if you need help with anything it can wait?” She knew I was keeping something from her. My mind raced. Were we sinking? 120 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Then I remembered what one of the walruses had told me. Pisces had been towed into Richard’s Bay, barely afloat once before, the cause had been traced to a roll of very special fabric that prevented seawater flooding into the bilges through the minute gaps between the propeller shaft and the hull. I remembered that running the motor, turning the shaft clockwise, caused any water in the bilges to be driven out through this gland and its fabric packing. If the boat were sailing, the shaft would rotate counter clockwise and water would seep into the bilges if the packing material were faulty to overwhelm the automatic bilge pumps. I dived down and scrabbled in the slimy water around the packing gland. It had come completely undone! I surfaced again with a gasp and this time Dianne saw me as I surfaced, my face covered with oil, diesel and slime. “It’s OK.” I forestalled her question. “The stern gland has come undone and I need to fasten it in place again. It is going to take a while so I need you to keep watch topside for any ships. Send Bill down to pass me tools I may need.” I ordered tersely. She nodded and disappeared. It must have taken about half an hour before I had the gland packing back in place and watched with relief as the bilge pump emptied the water from the bilges. Bill had kept me company during this time, passing me tools and keeping me informed as to what was happening on deck. As I climbed out of the bilges Dianne was climbing down the ladder. 121 Don Darkes “Oh no! The cake has flopped. Who turned the oven off? She complained. “It was me Mummy.” He said plaintively. “What’s the matter with you? Don’t you want a birthday cake?” Dianne asked crossly. “Yes I do. But your klof that you hanged on the oven door handle was burning,” he said as if it was scarcely worth mentioning. (Bill spoke with a slight lisp and mispronounced words like cloth.) Dianne hesitated aghast as she saw her blackened and half burnt dishcloth lying on the galley floor in a puddle of water. “Daddy was busy so I turned the gas off at the tap and threw water on it.” He said as if it was the most natural thing in the world. Dianne hugged him as we both held back a tear of pride and relief. We have never enjoyed a failed birthday cake as much as we did that day. The following day the wind picked up and we continued on our way. The gland packing continued to leak, but not enough to overwhelm the bilge pumps. I tried to jam the rotating shaft with a piece of stout rope, but it snapped the powerful cord like a piece of cotton and continued to whine and whirr in time with the power of the wind and our speed through the water, without further incident. 122 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 33. Landfall “Please double check my calculations. You know my maths have always been suspect. According to my calculations this is where we were six hours ago when we received the last SATNAV fix?” I asked Dianne as I pointed to a spot on the chart. We were using the archaic satellite system because we were unable to afford the prohibitively expensive new Global Positioning System, GPS. Besides there were very few GPS systems available in South Africa due to the impact of international sanctions levied against the apartheid government. The SATNAV system we had on board took six hours to calculate a bearing after obtaining a fix from its American satellites continually circling the planet. “I don’t agree exactly with your position. You have forgotten to allow for leeway or for current. You also haven’t allowed for the fact that America may have reduced the accuracy of their system deliberately, due to the Gulf War. But other than that your guestimate is more or less correct. Do you realise that we are well north of Tulear?” She said after careful calculation. “Yes, but I don’t think we should worry too much about that. Let’s head for this village here.” I said tapping a point on the chart marked as Morombe and pulled out the pilot book to glean whatever information I could about the approaches to it. We could smell the land some time before we could see it. We also noticed a large number of different birds and a change in the colour of the ocean as we approached. I climbed up the mast to see if I could obtain a better view and my heart soared as I saw a smudge on the horizon. “Land ho! Land ho!” I cried with an excitement that I have never been able to describe. Now that I have tasted what the early explorers did once they sighted land after many days at sea, I know my appetite will not easily be satisfied. 123 Don Darkes Chapter 34. Dawn Ritual We anchored in deep water just inside the reef that sheltered the tiny village marked on our chart as Morombe. We had dropped anchor late the previous afternoon and had been loath to go ashore just before sunset and then have to make our way back to our vessel in darkness. Instead we ate a light meal and caught up on some much needed sleep. The next morning we sat on deck in the predawn gloom sipping from enamel mugs of steaming coffee while we waited for the sun to rise. The sky was just beginning to blush with the sun's first rays when we noticed a number of dark figures huddled in a line on the beach. They were hunched over as if in an attitude of prayer. Every few minutes one of them would stiffen then rise and disappear into the bush only to be replaced by another supplicant. As the sun began to rise illuminating the scene more brightly they had all disappeared as mysteriously as they had arrived. Later as we purred toward the beach in our rubber duck, we discussed what we had witnessed. “I think they were praying or meditating.” Dianne said confidently. “You may be right. I seem to remember reading somewhere that Christianity is the dominant religion here although I can’t think of any church that requires their congregation to line up on the beach at dawn to pray.” I commented. “Me neither. Perhaps this is some kind of sun worship.” Dianne suggested as we came closer to the shore. “You are probably correct but I can’t think of any religion that worships the sun.” “Oh look, they seem to have left some kind of offering on the beach” Dianne said. 124 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “Oh yes now I can see it too. It seems to be in line with the low tide mark.” I said squinting to make it out. Dianne and I were both struggling to see clearly since we had taken the precaution of removing our spectacles and storing them safely in a zip-lock bag for the trip to the shore. “Offerings are typical in the Eastern cultures. I wonder what it is?” She said as we both strained our eyes to make out what it was that the congregation had left behind. “Hey dad I hope we are not going to land here,” said Bill with concern in his voice. “Why not son, are you afraid to meet new people?” I asked gently. “No dad, I just don’t want to park our boat in their toilet,” he replied innocently. At first Dianne and I looked at him blankly and then as we got closer to the shore we realised what his younger eyes had seen. We made sure to land upwind and in a clear space before we dragged our tender above the high water mark onto the now deserted beach. Since it was not practical for any one of us to remain behind to guard our dinghy we laid out an assortment of sweets and cheap trinkets on the wooden seat in an attempt to appease any light-fingered passers-by. Morombe consisted of a collection of reed huts on the edge of the beach that were separated from the rest of the village by a dusty track used only by pedestrians and by Zebu carts. As we walked into the settlement we realised that the only vehicles in this remote village were the two wheeled cattle drawn Zebu carts and the potholed dirt track that we were following had clearly been formed purely by the traffic of human and animal feet and had never been used by any mechanical vehicle or device. A solitary rusty hand-operated water pump stood at the centre of an open area awash with mud. There a queue of villagers, carrying an assortment of containers, waited patiently for their turn to draw water. No one batted an eyelid when some of them took the opportunity to strip off and wash themselves at the same time. A number of ramshackle, bamboo and palm open air stalls and makeshift 125 Don Darkes tables, laden with fresh fruit and vegetables stood around the perimeter. Here the majority of the vendors sat amongst their wares under the shade of large hardwood and once-white canvas umbrellas, that sheltered their goods displayed on raffia mats spread out on the bare earth. Amongst the fruits that we could recognise were hands of tiny yellow and black skinned bananas, mounds of oval red and yellow cheeked mangoes, pale orange pineapples and piles of wrinkled purple and green granadillas. There were piles of unwashed red tubers resembling sweet potatoes and mounds of unfamiliar varieties of pumpkins, squashes and calabashes. The rickety tables and stalls that stood around the periphery of this area were bent under the weight of huge canvas bags of unpolished rice. Multi-coloured spices filled the air with their fragrance. “What are those?” asked Bill pointing to a table laden with beige spiny fruit the size and shape of a rugby ball. “I think those are jack-fruit,” I replied uncertainly. “It seems they prefer meat to be sold with the fur still on it,” said Dianne pointing to where a number of joints of meat hung from the rafters that supported a sagging palm thatched roof. We both blanched when the butcher wafted a ragged raffia fan over his wares releasing a cloud of black flies from their roost. Another trader proudly displayed skewers of dried fish that filled the air with their eye-watering stink as he waved them towards us. “Have you noticed how the adults are watching us out of the corner of their eyes and taking a great deal of effort to ignore us?” Dianne asked softly even though it was unlikely that anyone here would understand what we were saying. “Yes I noticed that too. I can’t make up my mind if they are shy or if they are simply being downright rude,” I replied. A group of children being led by a stern woman carrying a package of books under her arm called out "Bonjour Vaza!” Gaily as she herded them in in a line, no doubt to school. “In fairness, judging by the children, I think that the adults are just being polite and reserved” mused Dianne. 126 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 35. Pied Piper The following day as the sun rose and began to heat up the deck we decided to have a swim. Although we were anchored outside the reef, the azure blue water around the boat was crystal clear and so inviting that of course we donned our swimsuits and dived in. The tension of the past few days seemed to wash away as we swam around the boat splashing each other and laughing with the pleasure of it. The water was warm and clean and it was only some time later that we reluctantly climbed up the ladder and sat sunning ourselves on the deck. “Hey Dad some people on the beach are calling us,” Morgan said pointing to where a small crowd gathered on the beach were looking towards us, gesticulating and calling out with excitement as they shouted something that we could not quite make out, over and over again. We decided to take the dinghy ashore to visit the village in order to become acquainted with the villagers. Besides we were desperate to find fresh fruit and vegetables. As we dragged the dinghy up the beach we became aware that the villagers had retreated from the beach and stood instead under the trees some distance away from us. Nevertheless they continued chanting something that sounded like antsansa, over and over again. Since we had no French or Malagasy we had absolutely no idea what they were saying. “I may be wrong but I get the impression that the villagers are shy.” Dianne remarked. “I think they are not used seeing strangers. The adults in particular are pretending to be busy with some important task that keeps them rooted to the spot and they are definitely watching us out of the corner of their eyes.” Despite this it was clear by their furtive manner that they were very much interested in us so we assumed that they were either extremely shy or that it was not socially acceptable for them to look at us or approach us directly. Although the adults remained withdrawn, the children were 127 Don Darkes unable to hold their composure for very long. As we walked along the beach we noticed that the village children were following about twenty meters behind us, skipping and chattering as they did so. Judging by the disapproving stares they received from the adults it was clear that their actions were not meeting with their approval. It did not take long before the bolder children ventured closer and once or twice one of them sneaked up and gently reached out to touch Morgan’s long blonde hair. Since the dusky villagers all had black or sun bleached red brown hair I assumed that they were unaccustomed to seeing the unusual colouring. Morgan in particular was very popular as she did not take offence at their attentions and treated it as if it was all part of some new game. Bill being older was a little more reserved and he skipped away because he has never enjoyed being the focus of attention or being touched by anyone. Although Morgan was only four she knew how to hold her audience spellbound. She wore a pair of pale blue shorts and instead of a T shirt or bikini top she chose to wear a wide blue silk ribbon that she looped around her neck and crossed demurely over her tiny chest before being tied across her back in a huge bow. As we turned and retraced our steps to walk back to our dingy, one of the braver lads approached Morgan holding up a tiny fish as a present which he solemnly presented to her. She accepted it with the dignity of a queen and then ran shrieking excitedly to where Dianne and I were standing and showed it proudly to us. 128 6692 Pisces the Sailfish FIGURE 15 MORGAN HOLDS UP HER TRIBUTE WHILE HER ADMIRERS LOOK ON 129 Don Darkes Chapter 36. Watch Lemur We continued to explore the town and came to a shack which had a long post embedded into the earth inside the tiny yard. A sleepy looking Ring-tailed lemur was attached to this pole by a piece of frayed rope tied to a leather collar it wore around its scrawny neck. FIGURE 16 THE CURIOUS LEMUR A SPLIT SECOND BEFORE HE MADE HIS MOVE At first the wide-eyed animal appeared to take no notice of us until it was suddenly galvanised as it set eyes on Morgan and scurried frantically across the dusty yard towards her. I could see that the creature was also intrigued by her unusual blonde hair and had decided to investigate. Instinctively I stepped between them blocking the determined lemur’s path. Then, frustrated, the frantic beast ran up my leg and sank its teeth into my arm as I tried to restrain it. I was convinced that the maddened fiend would attack Morgan too, so I grabbed it 130 6692 Pisces the Sailfish by its collar and held it at arm’s length while it scratched and squirmed in an effort to get free. Dianne screamed. This brought a man running from a more imposing house that was set back from the road amongst the trees. He called out to us in French and when he met with no response he miraculously switched to English. “Are you OK?” Do you need assistance? I am the village doctor.” “Thank heavens, my husband has been bitten” Dianne replied since I was too shocked to speak. “My name is Étienne. I am here as part of the French Médecins Sans Frontières initiative, Doctors Without Borders” he translated automatically as he introduced himself. “I would recommend that you allow me to vaccinate you against Tetanus” He said as he led the way. “That Lemur is becoming a problem. We are powerless to do anything about it because the villagers believe that the lemur represents a powerful fady. A fady is a taboo or belief. Please understand that this country is known to the Malagasy as Tanindrazana, the land of the razana or ancestors, and that everything they do is measured against their respect for their revered forefathers. They also believe that their razana watch over them constantly and also punish them whenever they are displeased.” As we spoke a youth emerged from the shack and took the struggling lemur from me without uttering a word. Although Etienne was clearly extremely busy, with a long queue of patients waiting good-naturedly as they sat or lay under the trees outside his clinic. They made no objection when he took me straight into his surgery where he cleaned the bite wound and gave me an injection before handing me some tablets and remarking “It appears to me that you have suffered an injury to your hands. Do you want me to examine them?” I nodded. He unwrapped the bandages and grunted. “You may have broken a number of bones in both of your hands. Unfortunately there is little I can to help you other 131 Don Darkes than to provide you with some pain medication. I can see that whoever has bandaged them knows what they are doing since I can offer no advice on how to improve these dressings. “Thank you. I was trained as a nurse.” Dianne said, blushing a little at his compliment. “How much do we owe you?” I asked attempting to change the subject. “Absolutely nothing at all, it has been my pleasure to be of service to you. Please do not let this unfortunate incident sour your experience of Madagascar. Although I am a Frenchman and like you, I am also regarded as a Vaza or white foreigner by the Malagasy people, I have grown to understand them and to respect their way of life and their customs. Above all, understand that to the Malagasy, everyone has their place in their society and it is important to them that everyone knows their place and conducts themselves accordingly. They value family and tribal ties above all else.” As he escorted us to the door Dianne turned to him and asked “Doctor Étienne, what does the word antsansa mean?” He looked at her with concern on his face. “They are also a big problem in this village because ignorant outsiders would say that they are a means of suicide. Besides also being the subject of a powerful fady the villagers believe that the antsansa are also razana and therefore contain the spirits of their ancestors. As such they are to be treated with respect and never harmed or maligned. I have been less successful in treating their bites which are usually fatal. “Why do you ask?” Dianne told him about the incident on the beach and how the villagers had called out antsansa over and over to us as we swam around our anchored yacht and also later when we returned to the beach. 132 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “Étienne laughed bitterly. “In that case I think this lemur has done you a service in bringing you to me.” We looked at him puzzled. “The bay where you are anchored and where you were swimming so innocently is notorious for their attacks and that is why no one swims there.” I looked at him still not understanding. He grimaced and waved his hands about as if he was trying to wipe the incident from the air in front of him. “You see, you were swimming with what you English would call.. man eating sharks!” Dianne paled visibly and I changed the subject hurriedly before she could consider the implications. 133 Don Darkes Chapter 37. No-Name Island. We left Morombe en-route to Morondava and dropped anchor for the night in the lee of a tiny island that bore no name on our chart. This was not unusual since the coast of Madagascar is littered with uninhabited islands, many of which have no name at all. During the early hours of the morning I was agitated and unable to sleep so I decided to swim ashore alone and almost instantly regretted my decision when I was bumped and jostled by a creature so large and so abrasive that I sustained a massive bruise and received a nasty scrape that looked as if it had been scoured by sandpaper that oozed blood and streamed down my leg. It was undoubtedly a curious shark. It was dark as I staggered onto the shore, but the light from a crescent moon hanging above the beach combined with the phosphorescence made by my passage through the water and the glowing green fire that still clung to my naked body was more than sufficient to light my way to a sandy mound that formed the high point of this tiny atoll. As I walked I was puzzled to see a most peculiar pattern that seemed to have been imprinted deliberately upon the sand. It appeared as if a demented olden-day printer had taken his wooden printers block and replaced the letters with a semi-circle of sharp knives, then stamped a pattern onto every visible bit of the island sand that he could find. I sat down on the tussock overhung by a palm tree and looked with fascination at the patterns and wondered who or what could have made them and why. The sea was calm and the Sailfish lay sleeping quietly, rocking gently, tugging softly at her anchor chain as the tide began to slowly ebb and flow. The sun was just below the horizon as I noticed a tiny movement on the sand below where I sat. I watched fascinated as, all at once the entire surface of the island writhed and came alive with movement as thousands of crabs emerged from the sand and began to run around in a kind of bizarre dance. As I stood up to get a better 134 6692 Pisces the Sailfish view they stopped stock still, like children playing blind-mansbuff and then, as if at a signal dug themselves into the sand and miraculously disappeared again. The marks I had noticed earlier were no doubt made by their myriad scurrying legs. As I stood on the tussock the sun came over the horizon and washed the soft moonlight and glowing phosphorescence away. I caught a movement out of the corner of my eye, far out on the ocean. As I placed my fingers into the corners of my eyes in order to better focus and see (I did not have my glasses with me and had long ago given up grappling with my contact lenses) I made out an approaching pirogue. There was not enough time to swim back to the yacht before the other craft arrived, besides which I did not relish encountering the monster shark again. I decided to wait until Dianne awoke and rescued me in the rubber duck. As the vessel approached I could make out its ragged pale brown lateen sail and the high prowed, dug-out log canoe, with an eye painted upon either side of its bows that was lashed to the outrigger which was little more than a nearly straight log. There was a solitary fisherman on board and at first I thought he was as naked as I until he stood up to step ashore not five metres from where I stood. He wore a faded cotton loincloth around his scrawny hips and skeletal legs. He looked straight at me and raised his right hand in greeting as he greeted me softly. “Bonjour Vaza”. I returned his greeting with my eyes greedily riveted upon his skinny forearm where a thick gold bangle encircled his emaciated wrist. He did not approach but merely stood there looking at me, no doubt as surprised to see me as I was to see him. As the light improved and the sun came up, I could see that his golden bracelet was made from a number of folded, old red-gold coins that formed an overlapping circle about his wrist. As we looked at each other I knew that I would do whatever it took to obtain his wristlet and I was shocked at how intensely I felt the burning desire to own it. I pointed to my naked wrist and then to his bracelet and pantomimed him giving it to me. 135 Don Darkes He understood immediately and put both his hands up to his face and made a circle around his eyes with his fingers. I understood immediately what he was telling me. He wanted a pair of goggles, a diver’s facemask in exchange. I cursed myself for not bringing mine with me but did not see the point at the time as it was dark and the decision to swim ashore was made on the spur of the moment. I considered calling Dianne to wake her up and bring a set to me, but hesitated as I considered how unfair would be the exchange. The value of his jewellery, for indeed that is was it was, would buy a thousand dice goggles and I would be as guilty of theft if I succumbed to temptation and swapped it for a single mask; if I had simply beaten him and torn it from his wrist. Somehow he read this in my eyes, shook his head, climbed back into his canoe and sailed away again. As I sat there waiting for Dianne and the children to wake up I argued back and forth with myself. Would I have been guilty of theft if he had been willing to exchange a useless ornament, which he could neither eat nor use for something that would enable him to hunt fish and find food with which to feed his family? To this day I remain undecided as to what I should have done. 136 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 38. The Gold Magnet We left our anchorage at Morombe and No-Name Island to drop anchor at the small town of Morondava a little further north along the coast. The dirt track wound its coils around each shack as it snaked its way through the village. It widened, like a lump in an engorged python’s body as it passed an imposing building. The dry bare earth outside the structure bore a criss-cross patchwork of dusty bare footprints that marked this spot as a focus of village life. The red mud-brick edifice was larger and more permanent than the dry palm-thatched, grass and reed huts inhabited by the residents of the village and it was clearly the main trading store. The building was constructed on two levels, with the owner’s residence occupying the top floor and the shop itself laid out on the ground level. A long veranda supported by rough timber beams ran the length of the building and provided cool shade for the goods that were displayed under its protection. Several Zebu stood patiently in the harsh sun lazily swatting flies with their tails and mechanically chewing as they waited for their masters to reemerge from the cool interior of the building. A haphazard pile of wooden Zebu cart-wheels shod with rusty iron rims leaned against the wall. Nearby a brace of scrawny chickens grumbled and clucked as they scratched and pecked in the red dust for insects and fought noisily with each other whenever they found one. As we approached, a ragged woman hid her child beneath her skirts before greeting us shyly in a sing-song voice, “Bonjour Vaza.” 137 Don Darkes “Hey Morgan we can play hopscotch here!” Bill dragged the tip of his stick through the dust and began to lay out the lines for one of their favourite games. Soon they were so engrossed that they did not notice the fascinated audience which emerged silently from the trees surrounding the dusty clearing. The villagers watched them with rapt attention, as they played in the dust completely oblivious to their onlookers. FIGURE 17 BILL AND MORGAN PLAY HAPPILY IN THE SAND WHILE THE BYSTANDERS WATCH “Leave the talking to me” I said to Dianne as we left the children to their game and cautiously entered the darkened 138 6692 Pisces the Sailfish interior of the shop. As our eyes grew accustomed to the gloom we discerned that we were standing in an empty space bounded on three sides by a counter that ran in front of open shelves packed from floor to ceiling with all manner of goods. Three neatly dressed Malagasy female shop assistants stood behind the counter giggling with shyness as we returned their chorused greeting. There were no other customers so we felt exposed as we curiously surveyed the room and they examined us in turn. A bespectacled middle aged Indian man stood discreetly behind the oldest of the women who occupied the most imposing spot that lay at the centre of the U-shaped counter directly in front of us. He did not look at us directly nor did he greet or acknowledge us in any way while he made a show of being intensely preoccupied with some important and deeply engrossing task. “Must be the owner” I muttered to Dianne. Before I could greet or approach him he disappeared behind a curtain into a darkened room beyond. “Good morning. Can anyone here speak English?” I feigned a smile as I looked at the uncomprehending and expressionless faces of the three ladies that stood behind the counter smiling blankly. “Oh boy, it seems as if we are going to have to play International Charades” I whispered through my frozen smile to Dianne. “May I speak with the owner? I asked. “Please?” I added, smiling vainly as I attempted vainly to soften my clumsy approach. I was met with blank stares. Dianne giggled. “They don’t understand a word. Let me have a go.” She said stepping forward confidently toward the senior assistant and smiling warmly. Dianne has genuine empathy and a love of people that transcends language and she soon managed to have all three ladies twittering around her as they examined fabrics and handmade clothing. I marvelled as they established the feminine rapport that needs no spoken language and which sets women so far apart from lesser creatures, men. Once I realised that the women were no longer taking the slightest notice of me I took the opportunity to walk along the counter 139 Don Darkes and examine the goods crammed onto the shelves behind it. There were stacks of luridly coloured Chinese made enamel pots, pans, plates and dishes, tinned foods and porcelain, fishing hooks and lines and piles of neatly folded fabrics. By the time I had surveyed the store and gained an understanding of what goods were available and by implication which were lacking, the germ of an idea had begun to form in my mind. Here was an ideal opportunity to create trade between our countries. It was clear that French and local products dominated the shelves and that no South African goods were available. This was hardly surprising since there were no diplomatic or informal contacts between our respective countries due to Apartheid. I resolved to meet with the owner to work out mutually beneficial business opportunities. The problem to be overcome was how to get past his ladies, who were clearly there to keep a discreet distance between their master and the customers. As we walked back to the beach where our dingy was tied up I noticed that there were numerous handmade posters offering home video rentals. It struck me as a little bizarre. I had deliberately escaped my humdrum existence in South Africa where I nightly anaesthetised myself with mega doses of canned television drama, only to discover that the inhabitants of this remote village, with only rudimentary running water and intermittent electricity, appeared to be addicted to television just as badly as I. Nevertheless it gave me an idea. I went back on board and carefully sifted through the video cassette tapes that we had brought with us. The following day we made our way back to the store. This time we bypassed the meat stand where the sausages, powered by fly maggots, walked off the counters. The roadside tavern was already serving breakfast to its customers from an assortment of unlabelled bottles that were displayed in its interior. I recognised bottles of rum with vanilla, rum with ginger and rum with coconut milk but some of the bottles and 140 6692 Pisces the Sailfish their contents defied identification. These glass flasks reminded me of the specimen displays in my high school science laboratory where various ghastly creatures and dissected organs floated in translucent liquid. The Zebu cart drivers watching us walk by politely greeted us and indicated that we should not be walking like commoners but (as was befitting our dubious status as Vaza) riding in style in their carts. It was interesting was that they were not soliciting business but were genuinely concerned that we, as white foreigners, should be afoot. I could not help but smile at this glimmer of apartheid, even here in a country that had never known legislated racism. “Should we accept a ride, it could be fun?” Suggested Dianne. Bill and Morgan chorused agreement and pleaded to be allowed to ride. “No. I don’t think it would be wise. It is even slower than walking and they may want to take us to their homes and try to show us hospitality. We would have a difficult time refusing and even more embarrassing time getting away again” I said dismissing the children’s disappointed groan. Eventually we arrived at the trading store where we waited for a number of early morning customers to finish their business before we entered. The three ladies were smiling broadly as they recognised Dianne. This time she did not ask to examine cloth or crockery but merely passed them our carefully wrapped package containing the video cassettes, labelled in our best guidebook French and marked for the attention of the proprietor. Then we quickly retreated into the bright sunshine and the attentions of the curious crowd waiting outside. The following day I returned alone. The trio of ladies were a little shocked to see me without Dianne and were taken aback. They whispered amongst themselves before dispatching the youngest behind the curtain. She returned a few minutes later with the Indian owner. He was dressed in a full length white cotton robe and sported a ragged grey beard that almost reached his chest. We knew that neither of us could speak the others language and would have to use sign language to 141 Don Darkes communicate. We nodded to each other each awkwardly, uncertain if we should shake hands or greet each other in our own language. Instead I placed my bandaged right hand over my heart and introduced myself. I had to repeat my name several times. He did the same and gave his name as Rashied. He signalled for me to follow him and led the way behind the counter and up a wooden staircase to a cool and comfortable living room where a television set took pride of place in front of a lurid orange fabric couch and two chairs. The videos I had left the previous day were lying inside their package on small table. He picked them up and tried to return them to me- which I declined by signalling that they were a gift by pointing to my heart and then to him. He understood immediately, raised his hand above his head without taking his eyes from mine and clicked his fingers. A woman entered the room demurely, her eyes downcast. She made certain not to look at me directly and I made sure to do the same. She was carrying a small wooden tray covered with a hand embroidered cloth. Rashied lifted the cloth to reveal a beautifully made small hand carved wooden box which he offered to me. I placed my hands together in the universal gesture of thanks. The lady withdrew. I felt it would be bad manners to jump to business immediately, although my South African temperament was inclined to do so. This was a different world and I would have to learn its customs. Before we left the yacht Dianne had anticipated that we would have difficulty communicating so she suggested that I take a spring backed pad and a pencil to help us to converse by playing a kind of international Pictionary combined with Charades. I made a childish drawing of our yacht on the pad – pointed to it and then to myself before handing it to Rashied. He looked at the graphic for a few moments, and then, comprehending, gave a loud “Aha,” breaking the silence which up until now had only been broken by the scratching of our pencils. He took the pad and pencil and drew a few wavelets next to the outline of Madagascar adding a question mark next to my yacht drawing. I understood immediately. Taking the pad back from him I 142 6692 Pisces the Sailfish drew an outline of the southern tip of Africa and then circled South Africa. I circled a spot where I wrote the word Durban. I handed it back to him and he nodded. He sketched a stick figure of a man and pointed to me. I nodded understanding. Frowning with concentration, he drew a woman standing next to me and looked at me with a question mark in his raised eyebrows. I pointed to my ring finger and then realised that my wedding band was missing, it had been washed from my finger after I had capsized my canoe in a race some years previously. Somehow I felt as if it was still there and it even still pinched me on some occasions. He frowned, mystified. In a misguided attempt at humour I placed my wrists together as if they were handcuffed. He looked shocked. Then I realised that he had taken me literally. I did not want him to think I was some kind of criminal. Working quickly I drew a stick figure representing myself then I sketched a stick figure representing Dianne standing next to me. I drew them with hands enjoined. He frowned again. I could see by his expression that he had thought that we were merely companions and he disapproved. Then I drew a third figure, a man holding a book, standing in front of us. He scowled and looked at me for confirmation of what he was thinking- then I drew two smaller stick figures with linked hands representing my children, Bill and Morgan. Then I sketched a house and circled the drawing. “Aha” he said again and nodded. I motioned to the depiction of my family, pointed to him and added a question mark. He nodded and pointed to himself and to my sketch indicating that he too had a wife and two children, a boy and a girl. He pointed to my bandaged hands and tilted his head to the side posing an unspoken question. I pointed to the picture of the yacht, drew a hammer and lied. “Boom- boom” I said guiltily and knew that he had sensed that I was hiding something. But he merely nodded again and held up his hand, palm towards me in the universal sign. Stop. He clicked his fingers again. The lady entered the room as before, eyes downcast and stood at his side. He spoke 143 Don Darkes too softly for me to hear. A few minutes later she returned with two glasses on a tray together with a glass jug filled to the brim with a yellowish liquid that appeared to have tadpoles swimming in it. I gulped not knowing what to expect. Without looking at either of us she filled both glasses from the jug and served first me and then her master, being careful not to look at either of us or to address me in any way. I picked up my glass between both hands and lifted it toward my face pretending I was holding it up to toast him as I sniffed its contents attempting to find out what it was. A delicious aroma entered my nose. It was freshly pulped granadilla juice. I nodded my thanks as I took a long refreshing draft and racked my brain as to how to move the ‘conversation’ from small talk to business. I drew the shop with its veranda and balustrades. I sketched him, with a beard, standing outside and pointed to him. Rashied nodded, understanding that I had shown him as the master of the business. Impatiently I pointed to the outline of South Africa. He nodded. I drew a slightly altered diagram of a different shaped building, being careful not to make it any larger than his. Then I drew a pile of boxes standing outside my building with a picture of myself adding a beard and pointing to mine as I did so. He began nodding even before I finished since he clearly understood where the pictogram conversation was leading. I drew an arrow pointing from my ‘establishment’ to his and an arrow pointing from his business back to mine. Carefully I inserted a tiny picture of my yacht between the two arrows and motioned with my pencil backwards and forwards. He nodded and indicated for me to pass him the pad. Painstakingly he drew one of the boxes on the deck of my yacht and smiled. Then he pointed to the box and drew a fax machine. I nodded. Warming to his task, he excitedly sketched a pair of two way radios. I nodded, excited too. Then he held up his finger emphasising the importance of his next point. Carefully he drew a stick figure of a man wearing a peaked cap holding his hand out. Then he crossed the man out. I frowned puzzled for a few seconds and then it dawned on me. The man with peaked cap and his hand out was a customs officer. He 144 6692 Pisces the Sailfish was proposing that we bypass the authorities. I nodded enthusiastically and gave him a thumbs-up, understanding and agreeing at the same time. It was clear that he understood we were discussing trade between ourselves and our respective countries and businesses. I was a little perplexed as to how to discuss the matter of payment. The Malagasy currency was near worthless outside of the country itself. And I certainly did not wish to have to use it to buy local goods that I would have to resell back in South Africa. At the same time I was acutely aware that Madagascar and its people had difficulties obtaining foreign exchange. I did not know how to sketch my dilemma so in desperation I held out my swollen hand and painfully rubbed my thumb and first two fingers together in the universal gesture for money. He was ahead of me. His hand shot up and he snapped his fingers twice impatiently. The lady entered the room more rapidly than before and stood at his side. He muttered something to her in a language that I assume was Malagasy since there were no French words nor any accent that I could pick up. She scurried out of the room as he indicated for me to wait. She returned a few moments later carrying a small wooden box. He opened the hinged lid, looked inside, grunted with satisfaction and then turned the box around so that I could see the contents. It was filled with Malagasy banknotes. I tried to mask my disappointment while I worked out a way to ask if there was any other way we could transact our business. Once again he was way ahead of me. He snapped the box shut and muttered to the lady who returned immediately and scurried out yet again only to return a few moments later with another box. He opened the box, held the lid open, looked inside, then satisfied, he grunted once more and slowly revolved the box toward me. It was filled with well-used bills. I could see immediately that they were mainly French and English and some were very old- possibly even collector’s items. Before I could stop myself I gave an involuntary gasp of surprise. He misinterpreted my actions and snapped his fingers impatiently once again. The woman scurried out and returned once more. 145 Don Darkes Only this time she was staggering with the weight and bulk of a much larger box. She awkwardly put the box down on the floor with a loud thump. It was clearly very old and had that patina that comes from much handling. The box was criss-crossed by three strong metal hoops with a robust lock attached to each one. I was intrigued. What could possibly be inside? I wondered. He motioned for the woman to leave and she withdrew obediently. He placed his hand inside the loose neckline of his long robe and withdrew a cord to which was attached a trio of large brass and well-worn keys. One by one he inserted each of them into the huge padlocks and snapped them open. He opened the lid and gazed inside for a few moments. Then, still keeping the heavy box on the floor between his sandalled feet, he grunted a little with the effort as he slowly turned the box to face me. The rich red glow that radiated from the box blinded me momentarily as I struggled to interpret what I was seeing. The box was filled to the brim with a jumble of gold coins that were French and Portuguese or possibly even Spanish. I could see by their rich red gold colour that they were very old. As I stared down at them I realised that the value of the gold alone was considerable but knew also that these coins were worth even more to collectors. I had struck the mother lode! I felt a pang of guilt remembering the ragged fisherman on No-Name Island and what I had almost done. He could see by my face that I was satisfied and he smiled for the first time. We filled the remaining pages in the wire bound book as we began to sketch and discuss in earnest our new venture. It was many hours before I stood blinking in the bright sunshine once again. I hardly recall walking back to the beach where Dianne and the children were waiting impatiently with the dinghy. As I walked I understood that Rashied, as a trader, was in a unique position to act as a kind of gold magnet for the fishermen. They would stumble across the coins as they hunted the fish that 146 6692 Pisces the Sailfish invariably congregated around the artificial reef created by the ancient shipwrecks. Since the fishermen would have no use for the coins it was logical that they would approach a willing shopkeeper who would exchange them for food or useful items such as fishhooks, line or clothing or things the fishermen and their families needed. By the same token, he had reached a point where he realised that as long as he hoarded the gold it was worthless to him also. He also needed to exchange the gold for something that would be of value to him without alerting the authorities. I waited until we were back on board our vessel before I trusted myself to speak. “So are you going to tell us what happened? Do you realise that you were gone for more than four hours?” Dianne could hardly contain her curiosity. “We are going to become smugglers” I said. Dianne knew me well enough not to press me any further until I was ready to explain. Instead she pointed to the box that Rashied had given me. “What is in that box?” I opened it. Inside, on a bed of clean raffia straw lay a pair of silver bangles. They resembled the bracelet that I had seen on the wrist of the fisherman on No-Name Island. Only his was solid gold and far chunkier than either of these. “I bags this one!” Dianne said as she picked up the smaller of the two and admired it. As she examined it I could see that it was handmade since it was slightly imperfect. I knew that it was also very old because it had that dull sheen made by long contact with bare skin and because it bore marks of wear that old silver gets when it has been worn continuously for a long time. The other bangle was similar only heavier and somehow more masculine. Neither of the bracelets formed a continuous circle. Instead they were twisted into a loop resembling a section that had been cut from a spring. While the body of the bangle was round and smooth the open ends of both bangles were squared off and had been marked with a hand-beaten pattern. It was clear that they were intended for male and female wearers. 147 Don Darkes As Dianne tried hers on for size it was obvious that the wristlet had been opened by bending it in order to remove it from the previous wearer’s wrist, so I had to use some force to bend it back into a symmetrical shape in order to fit it snugly onto her wrist. As I did so I felt a curious warm tingling, almost like electricity. I also felt that the metal would not tolerate being bent and unbent continually in order to remove it. FIGURE 18 THE SILVER VONGU-VONGU FRONT AND BACK. I STILL FEEL THE ELECTRICITY TODAY! “I hope you like it. This bangle is not going to stand being twisted too many more times without snapping like a piece of wire that has been worried back and forth once too often.” Although I do not wear jewellery of any kind I felt strangely compelled to try the masculine one on for size. I can always take it off I told myself. As I shaped the silver around my wrist I felt the electric tingling sensation once again and 148 6692 Pisces the Sailfish had the sense that some residual energy from the previous wearer had been transmitted to me and then I dismissed the notion as being fanciful. “Do you feel that?” Dianne asked. “I can feel a connection to the previous owners. And I can feel that there has been more than one owner too!” I shook my head irritably, dismissing her irrational comment. “Don’t be silly. That is superstitious nonsense.” I replied tersely, but I was perturbed that she had felt it too. I put it down to the fact that we have been together for a long time and know each other so well that sometimes we can almost read each other’s thoughts. “You realise that we cannot take these off ever again without breaking them,” Dianne changed the subject again as I started to remove my bracelet. “Don’t you think that your new partner will take offence if he notices that you are not wearing his gift?” I had to admit that, as usual, she was right, so I decided to keep it on, at least until we had more time to cement our new found business relationship. “Now tell me all about our new smuggling business.” Dianne said as if it was the most ordinary thing in the world. “Well to begin with, we are going to need to go back to Durban where we are going to strip out our cabins to make space for cargo. Then we are going to have to find out everything we can about really old gold coins. Tomorrow I shall be exchanging every cent we can muster for gold coins.” We spent most of that night enthusiastically discussing the events of the day and planning our bright new future. Early the following day, I went alone to the traders shop and was immediately ushered upstairs to Rashied’s home. He smiled broadly when he noticed that I was wearing the silver bracelet that he had given me. After we exchanged pantomimed pleasantries and drank some more of the exquisite fresh granadilla juice, we got down to business. I explained that I wished to purchase some of his gold coins and wished to negotiate the price. Using the spring backed notepad 149 Don Darkes and pictograms and a marathon session of Pictionary-Charades we eventually arrived at what I believed was a fair arrangement to both parties. He would allow me to purchase as many of the gold coins as I could afford for only the price of their weight in gold based on the reigning gold price. Although we had a month old copy of a French newspaper that we used to calculate the various rates of exchange, I had my usual difficulty in calculating the complex arithmetic without the benefit of an electronic calculator and accepted his calculations without question. We agreed that since I would be running the risk of having to negotiate with the authorities, including his own government which might decide to claim ownership or demand a share or a bribe. Any additional value that I could obtain for the coins themselves would therefore accrue to me alone. We also agreed that under no circumstances was I to tell the authorities where the coins had originated. By the time we finished our business it was late afternoon and I had exchanged our life savings for their weight in gold coins which fitted snugly into my canvas knapsack. This was moulded that very evening, into the dark recesses of the bilges under a thick layer of underwater curing epoxy that was indistinguishable from the keel itself. If the customs guys find this they will confiscate it. I thought to myself. We are actually going to become real honest to God smugglers. Strange, I don’t feel a bit like a criminal. 150 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 39. A New Leaf “I wonder what they are selling over there?” Dianne said as she pointed out a more substantial stall set back from the others where a large crowd was waiting patiently. As we watched an open drawn by a pair of long horned Zebu, rumbled into the clearing. It was laden with a huge pile of freshly cut green leafy branches. The throng stirred and began uncharacteristically for these usually reserved and wellmannered people to jostle each other for more favourable positions in the queue and even attempted to mob the cart. A pair of stern looking men armed with stout wooden staves took up their positions atop the wagon and whacked anyone that dared to approach too close while the cart was manhandled into position behind the stall. As we watched curiously, the crowd parted as a man armed with a sharp machete appeared behind the table and wrote a number with a flourish on a flat jagged piece of dark slate with a chalky piece of seashell. As he held it up the mob grumbled a little and then surged forward each holding a fistful of money, whereupon the guards lightly tapped the worst offenders on the crown of their heads with their staves until they subsided a little. We watched fascinated as the man with the machete grasped a twig bearing a few shiny leaves and severed it from one of the larger branches with a deft flick of his knife. He quickly exchanged it for one of the many bundles of cash being waved toward him by frantic members of the unruly horde. Each time he did this the crowd stirred and heaved as if they feared that the supply of precious leaves would run out before they had a chance to obtain any for themselves. “The foliage looks like curry leaves or perhaps even tea leaves.” Dianne said quietly out of the corner of her mouth while we sidled up towards the cart and approached as close as we dared to the excited throng. 151 Don Darkes “Look! They are eating them” she said. We noticed that the successful bidders had begun to drift away and were frantically stuffing a few of the shiny leaves into their mouths and masticating contentedly upon them like cows. “It must be coca leaves.” I said observing the dazed look that began to appear upon the faces of those who were chewing. “You mean like those that cocaine is made from?” Dianne queried. “I think so. After all, we know that, here in Madagascar, they grow vanilla and cocoa beans, which both originated in South America, so why not coca plants too?” “No! You are mistaken. This is not coca.” We looked up surprised as a thickset European man spoke and appeared next to us like a genie out of a bottle. “Please excuse me for eavesdropping but since you are the only other white people in this village I knew I should came over and introduce myself and so I myself could not help overhearing your conversation. My name is Pierre.” He said extending his hand towards me. “Don.” I said grasping his hand and wincing at his firm handshake. “This is my wife Dianne, my son Bill and my daughter Morgan.” I watched fascinated as he solemnly shook hands with each of them in turn. “We have just arrived ….” I began. “Yes I watched your yacht, the Sailfish Pisces, when you arrived last night and dropped anchor in the bay.” Pierre interjected. “I myself am a visitor of sorts. I am here to study these fascinating people.” He smoothed his bushy grey moustache with his forefinger. “You see I am an Ethnologist, from Paris. “ He explained by way of response to my raised eyebrows. As we spoke I noticed that the leafy contents of the Zebu cart had disappeared entirely and the once excited customers were now slowly drifting away, munching serenely as they did so. 152 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “In that case are you able to tell us something about the leaves that they are chewing?” Dianne asked as she kept a watchful eye on the children who had wandered over to where a weather-beaten turkey was gobbling as it strutted purposefully behind a reed barricade. “Indeed I can, since their use of the plant forms part of my research. They are Khat also known as Qat leaves. They are not related to coca although they are also a mild stimulant. The Malagasy use the leaf to improve their concentration and sometimes to reduce fatigue. Some of the tribes chew the leaves to induce a kind of religious or spiritual trance when they invoke their razana –their ancestors. I myself am having some difficulty in studying it too closely though because it is a lucrative business, because it is in short supply, because it is in constant demand and because the source where it is grown and harvested is kept a closely guarded secret.” He waved his hands around for emphasis and I wondered idly if he would be able to speak at all if his hands were tied together. “Although the Malagasy are not generally a violent people, I myself have had my life threatened whenever I myself asked too many questions.” He looked around furtively. “May I invite you to somewhere less public for light refreshment as I myself fear we are attracting too much attention?” As I followed the line of his gaze I noticed the Zebu cart guards were looking in our direction and clearly discussing us. Dianne and I exchanged a glance instantly communicating and silently agreed to accept his invitation. “That would be most welcome” I said as we followed him as he led the way through the trees towards a cane-fenced enclosure. A palm thatched rattan and bamboo hut, larger than some others, stood unobtrusively in the cool shade. “Welcome to the Les Bougainville’s Restaurant” he announced. It is the best place in Morondava to meet, should you wish to remain discreet. I myself take all my meals here.” The establishment was deserted save for our small party. We followed him to a cosy and neatly swept, bare earth veranda, shaded by a cane and bamboo pergola. This was supported by the wizened trunks of a number of well-placed trees towering 153 Don Darkes high above our heads through the roof of the unconventional structure. He waved his hand and waited patiently pair of obsequious young women hastily placed two tables together and quickly spread a faded but clean cotton cloth over them before placing five cane and rattan chairs around them. “May I recommend the refreshments?” He bowed his head elegantly as Dianne and I nodded enthusiastically while we seated ourselves. A diminutive Malagasy woman appeared from behind a raffia curtain and stood quietly at his side. It was clear that there was no menu and that he was a regular customer since he ordered in fluent Malagasy sprinkled with the occasional French word. She listened intently before scurrying away. “We have so many questions.” Dianne began, “But we don’t know where to start.” He nodded. “That is understandable since Madagascar has chosen to remain cut off from the outside world and I fear that my countrymen have striven to keep it that way. “We could not help but notice that the local people appear to be aloof or distant toward us. Have we done something to offend them?” observed Dianne. Pierre raised his eyebrows. “You have touched the heart of the Malagasy mind-set.” he said smiling at Dianne with new respect. “Have you heard them greet or refer to all of you as Vaza?” He smiled as we nodded. “It means stranger, foreigner or more specifically white or rather European stranger.” It is both a term of respect and the opposite because it is a warning to others that we are foreigners, that do not know how to behave and therefore will never be accepted here. The Malagasy have a strict code of conduct, unique customs and a tribal hierarchy which I believe, in its own way, far transcends what your countrymen call apartheid.” He smiled and waved away our objections as we started to stutter and apologise for our country’s embarrassing cultural and political philosophy. “Please, do not take offence. As a young student studying in Germany after the war, I myself was unable to find a single 154 6692 Pisces the Sailfish German that supported the Nazis.” He held up his hand dismissively as I opened my mouth to protest again. “The fact is that the Malagasy have an unwritten but nevertheless clear code of conduct and a corresponding social order that requires that everyone know their place in it and that they act and speak accordingly. The Vaza are, in theory at least, at the top of the social order and as such cannot be approached directly or on equal terms. I myself do not wish to bore you at this time, especially as I can see that I have lost some of my audience.” Morgan had fallen asleep with her thumb in her mouth and her head upon the table while Bill was trying to tempt a mangy, three legged, rat-faced brown dog, to come closer so that he could pet it. The waitress returned with two mini bottles of CocaCola which she placed in front of the children. “Ugh! It’s warm! Complained Bill disappointed as he frowned at the waitress. “Please do not complain as I myself am afraid you are lucky to have it at all because it’s an expensive luxury especially imported, exclusively for me, from France” chided Pierre. As he spoke the waitress placed a dripping wet light brown quart bottle of beer on the table and laid out three different, gaudily patterned plastic tumblers in front of the host before withdrawing. “There is no refrigeration in this village, so the beer has been cooled especially for us in the spring that bubbles behind this building.” I rotated the bottle and looked at the label that bore a picture of the disembodied heads of three white Lipizzaner horses looking toward me, beneath the legend that read Three Horses Beer. Pilsner. “It’s surprisingly good so I myself don’t know why some of my countrymen call it Three Zebu Beer.” Pierre chuckled as he poured a glassful into each of the tumblers and passed two of them to Dianne and me. “So their ‘apartheid’ is based on tribal and ethnic rules and not merely skin colour” I asked. 155 Don Darkes “Not exactly, but far more precise, especially when compared to your system, which I understand is more concerned with one being able to present the outward appearance of being white skinned more than anything else. The Malagasy have any number of subtle ways of distinguishing one tribe from another and making outcasts of those who marry or have children across the tribal boundaries. This automatically ranks them at the bottom of the social ladder along with the Negroid races that came across from Africa and culminate at the top end of the ladder with the Merina tribe who dominate the Highlands around the capital, Antananarivo. “Is there a religious aspect to their social stratification?” I asked. “Surprising as it may seem, the population is predominantly Christian, divided up between the Catholics and a number of the Protestant churches more or less equitably. However, Madagascar has one of the largest Lutheran congregations outside of Europe. Despite the proximity to Zanzibar and North Africa there are surprisingly few Muslims.” Pierre took a long sip of his beer and smacked his lips with satisfaction. “Considering the fact that they look down on the African races, where do the Malagasy come from? Are they, like the Australian Aboriginals or the African San people, a unique race?” I asked. “This is in fact also the subject of my studies. Although the current thinking is that the Malagasy arrived here relatively recently from Malaysia or even from the Pacific islands and South America, I am researching the persistent oral tradition that speaks of the Vasimba or the little people, who like the Roc, the fabled giant bird of legend, became extinct. Despite the overwhelming number of Christians, the Malagasy simultaneously follow a number of unique customs, language roots and culture that forced even the usually intractable Catholic Church to bend its rules and soften its dogma to incorporate some of their ancient practices and beliefs into 156 6692 Pisces the Sailfish everyday Catholic practise rather than risk losing their converts altogether. “But enough of this dry talk. Our food is getting cold.” Pierre said as he gestured impatiently for the waitress to approach with our lunch. FIGURE 19 A M ALAGASY T SHIRT - PARODYING THE 3 HORSES BEER . I HAVE BEEN THERE AND GOT THE T SHIRT . 157 Don Darkes We tucked into our meal that consisted of tough but tasty Zebu steak and strange tasting potato fries that we later learned were a type of taro root. Pierre leaned over to me and asked. “Please forgive my impertinence but I noticed you have damaged your hands. What happened?” “It was my own fault. I made an error of judgement” I replied unable to meet his questioning gaze. He nodded and raised his eyebrows when he sensed that I was not prepared to discuss it further. Instead he lifted his glass and said by way of a toast. “May I take this opportunity to welcome you to the Island of Saint Lawrence” “Why do you say that?” I asked laughing. “Are you pulling my leg, this is Madagascar?” “Not at all. The Portuguese explorer Diogo Diaz named the island St. Lawrence when he was blown off course and landed here on his way to India.” “Oh I love that!” I replied filing the curious fact away in one of the many little mental drawers where I store useless information. When we finished our meal Pierre seemed to think for a moment, reconsidered and then spoke. “I myself would like it very much if you would visit me in Paradise.” “Absolutely. We would enjoy being able to do that” answered Dianne excitedly. “Where exactly is Paradise and how do we get there without dying first?” She smiled, her blue eyes wide with innocence and mirth. “Bon! Pierre lapsed into French for the first time. “I shall send two pirogues to fetch you tomorrow morning two hours after sunrise.” 158 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 40. Garden of Paradise The next morning we waited anxiously for the pirogues to arrive and take us to what we assumed must be Pierre’s home. Since he had elected to send ocean-going canoes for us we assumed that it could not be reached by road. Besides the opportunity to travel in a Malagasy outrigger canoe was too good to turn down. When the weather-beaten craft arrived we were at first a little concerned at their appearance. “Should we just take our dingy?” I said to Dianne and then changed to Afrikaans in case the paddlers could understand us if we spoke English. “Hierdie dinge lyk as of hulle vrot is.” (These things look as if they are rotten.) “Don’t be silly” she replied. “They look fine. Besides don’t you think Pierre would be offended if we snub his kind offer?” I knew she was right. “You are right. Well I think then we should all at least wear life jackets.” Dianne laughed. “Well I think that may be a good idea for the children but for my own part I think it would be a bit like bathing with socks on.” It did not take long for us to climb shakily into the highprowed dugout canoes, that each had a puddle of stagnant water sloshing around in their bottoms. My break into Afrikaans proved to be unnecessary. It soon became clear that the paddlers had no English. They sat impassively in the stern of their canoes, each armed with a single, hand carved, tear shaped paddle, as serenely as a pair of Sphinxes. Morgan sat between my legs, inside the first canoe and Bill insisted on looking after his mother in the second one. At first we were somewhat alarmed at how little freeboard there was between the level of the water and the sides of the boat. We soon relaxed and enjoyed the ride immensely. We sped across the mirror calm ocean, marvelling spellbound as the bejewelled multi-coloured fish frolicked in the coral gardens below and the crystal white beach, fringed by variegated tropical forest, unrolled like silk ribbons along the coast. 159 Don Darkes “Look there is Pierre!” Bill’s eagle eyes picked out our host standing alone on a long strip of shimmering white sand that was laid out like a carpet in front of an exquisite palm thatched bungalow that seemed to blend with the jungle behind it. “Welcome to Paradise!” Pierre said as he opened his arms to hug Dianne and to plant a smacking kiss on each of her cheeks, much to my surprise. He led the way into the cool shade of his veranda where two clear glass bowls filled with fresh fruit juice, fortified by chunks of pineapple, mango, cinnamon and vanilla pods languished under a white net, upon a rattan table. “Salut” he cried after pouring two glasses of plain fruit juice for the children from one bowl and generous glasses for us three adults from the other and handing them to each of us in turn. As we took a sip we realised that the adult glasses contained a healthy dose of aromatic rum that made our eyes water at first. Then as the intoxicating beverage raced through our veins, and our glasses were continually topped up, we soon found ourselves relaxing and laughing as Pierre told us about his life in Paradise. “When I first came here there was absolutely nothing, just bare jungle.” He said. “I was taken to the tribal chief and asked him if I could purchase this property. He had no idea what I was talking about because the Malagasy do not believe that foreigners, or indeed anyone, can actually own land. Nevertheless they are tied to the land where their parents and grandparents are buried because, like the sons of Abraham, they believe that the place where their ancestors are buried is almost sacred and that to abandon their razana’s graves is to invite disaster. They are obliged to settle there and venerate their ancestors. In return, their razana will look after them in their daily lives. On some parts of the island the Malagasy practice a rite known as Famadihana where they will gather the family together to exhume the bones of their razana, rewrap them in expensive silk wrappings and sacrifice many 160 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Zebu in a celebration that may last several days. Considering how the Malagasy relate to the land it is not difficult to see why they have great difficulty understanding the Western concept of land ownership. Nevertheless the chief allowed me to use this land for as long as I wished as long as I made sure to respect the fady and traditions associated with it. He stood up and beckoned us to follow him, which we did rather unsteadily due to the rum, as he led us on a tour of his domain. “On Saturday evenings I start up the generator and use the electricity it provides to show the forest people a movie.” He waved expansively at the dense forest behind him. “Afterwards we discuss the movie and have a critical discussion.” Pierre proudly led us past his vegetable garden to where an imposing gnarled and ancient looking tree stood behind a cane and raffia fence. A number of ribbons and pieces of brightly coloured cloth tied to its branches and trunk were rippling in the gentle breeze. “This is a Kili, a Tamarind tree. It is the most sacred spot in the area and every year the tribal elders oversee a special ceremony under its branches. Under no circumstances am I allowed to touch or approach this tree beyond the fence which you can see surrounding it.” We moved under the shade of some trees in front of his bungalow before he spoke again. “I want for nothing here. Every day the villagers bring me Zebu milk and sometimes eggs or fruits that I do not already grow myself. The fishermen bring me all manner of fish and food from the sea. I have my books, and new movies and new books arrive once a month from Paris.” He pronounced it Paree and I smiled as I wondered what he would think if he heard me mispronounce that famous name the way we English speakers do. “I myself have my studies and a touch of culture from the civilised world in France.” He grimaced and made as if to spit as he said the word civilised. We gazed at the crystal blue sea that lapped gently onto his beach framed by a brace of whispering palm trees. I had to agree. This was Paradise. 161 Don Darkes “But now I have to leave my Garden of Eden and return to Hades.” He said suddenly, with glistening tears in his eyes. Shocked, Dianne and I looked to him for an explanation. “I have to go back to France.” I looked quizzically at him, puzzled. “I have been diagnosed with cancer.” “Are you going to France for treatment?” I ventured. “No. I have to go home to die.” He said simply, as if it was the most trivial thing in the world. We stood there for a long moment, complete strangers linked together momentarily by pain and anguish. Bill broke the silence when he looked at me and asked Dianne plaintively, “Mummy, is something wrong? Daddy is crying.” It was only some time later that I realised that my son had never seen his father shed a tear before today. 162 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 41. 6692. Pisces Day June 6th. 1992. “Red sky in the morning” I began. “Sailors take warning.” Responded Dianne automatically. “It’s June sixth. The anniversary of the D day landings today.” I mused as we lounged on our deck sipping coffee and watching the sun colour the sky red as it rose out of the sea.” I have always had a fascination for history and find the lives of the people and the events that shaped their lives infinitely more interesting and sometimes even more bizarre than any fictional characters or events that populate so much of our entertainment today. I wondered if the people on this island had any inkling at the time what was happening at the other side of the world on this day when the ‘civilised’ countries slaughtered each other on a beach not unlike this one. During the night the motion of the sea had altered from a slow languid rolling motion to a short sharp chopping movement that was most uncomfortable and made sleeping almost impossible. “This is odd. It’s almost as if there is a cyclone approaching. Since June is not the season for them I must be mistaken. In any case I think it is time to get back to Durban and start our new venture, but before we leave I would like to buy some of those gigantic coconuts that we saw in the market. Perhaps we can do that before we meet Pierre for a farewell lunch.” I said. 163 Don Darkes “That’s a great idea. Do you think we can get some of those pretty cotton lambas for me to wear and some to take back as presents?” Dianne said, excited as she jumped up and began to pack a basket for the trip. The outboard burbled as we motored back to the beach and we took special care to pull our dingy far up onto the sand because the usually calm bay had developed a mild surge and wavelets were breaking on the usually placid shore. We were comfortable and felt almost at home as we walked through the now familiar village and confidently returned the cheerful greetings of the locals. “Bonjour Vaza!” they cried. “Salut” came our chorused reply. Pierre had explained to us some basic words and some of the more subtle conventions that allowed us to feel more at ease and also helped break down the reserve of the locals that we had thought until now were arrogant and aloof. Since we were returning to South Africa we did the tourist thing, searching like gannets for proof of our exploits in the form of souvenirs, trinkets and trophies with which we could impress our friends and relations back home. 164 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 42. Bowled Over June 6th. 1992. During the preceding few days, as we walked to Rashied’s store we passed and ignored the same young girl, eyes downcast, her legs crossed beneath her. She sat, like an outcast, completely separate from all the other vendors on the bare earth behind a tiny raffia mat upon which she displayed a solitary article. But today was different as we stopped and gazed with acquisitive tourist’s eyes at her humble offering. She did not look up nor did she react to our presence in any way, but she continued to stare down before her with unfocused eyes like a monk meditating on a sacred object. A solitary rust-brown, open mouthed pot stood leaning slightly askew on the mat in front of her. The metallic bowl resembled a small round melon with its bottom cut off to provide a flat base upon which the slightly squashed ball shape could stand. A hole cut into the top was fitted with a fluted opening similar to that found on a vase. It was clear that the dish had been made by hand as the edges of the lip were rough and irregular. As we leaned forward to examine her offering we could also see that it had been hand-beaten from tarnished brass or fashioned from a crude alloy of copper coloured metals. There were solder marks where the lip had been brazed onto the slightly oval base and I could see the impact marks made by its being beaten into shape. “Oh dear. How sad. She has sat here all week hawking the self-same vase.” Dianne whispered, with the sympathy evident in her voice. The girl sighed soulfully, but did not look at us and continued staring at the bowl as if she was willing it to sell itself to us. “Sweetheart, perhaps she is selling nuts, or fruit of some kind and she is merely depressed because she is out of stock.” I said, attempting to pull away as my attention was caught by some brightly coloured cotton lambas fluttering from a pole a little further down the road. 165 Don Darkes “I don’t agree! That dish has stood there, empty, just as it is now, for the whole week, and no one has bought it or anything else from her. All she has to sell is this one little jug. I bet she has her family waiting at home yearning for her to sell it so that they can buy something to eat tonight.” I could see that Dianne obviously felt sorry for the young girl and was going to buy the ugly metal vase no matter what I said. As I looked down at the young girl, who could not have been more than eight or nine years old and I saw how carefully she had plaited her long black hair and how threadbare was her dress, my heart went out to her. I imagined her family waiting anxiously every day for her to return home bearing good news, only to be disappointed as they saw her crestfallen face. No doubt her father had crafted this dear little urn with his bare hands and was waiting anxiously for her to sell it and bring in some money with which to feed his starving family. Then, as she looked up for the first time and I gazed into her limpid dark brown eyes, which would have Disney scouts scrambling to sign her for a Bambi sequel, I relented and forced back the lump in my throat. “How do we ask her now much she wants?” I said gruffly, fearing that the frog in my throat would betray my distress. “Leave that to me.” Dianne knelt down holding a sheaf of paper Malagasy money. Catching the girl’s eye she started to peel notes from it. Every so often she stopped and held the growing sheaf of notes out toward the girl who nodded assent each time she did so. Then Dianne would shake her head, reconsider, add some more cash and do it all again! Eventually I could take it no more. I have never been good at arithmetic but as I looked at the growing mound of money I thought that we had become crass tourists and had crossed the boundary from generosity into foolishness. “Geez! We want to buy just this one dish not the whole frigging factory.” I said through my clenched teeth. “Hush, this is two hundred thousand Ariary, slightly more in the new currency, Franc Malagache or FMG. I know it 166 6692 Pisces the Sailfish is confusing but it’s only about twenty South African Rands.” Dianne said tactfully referring to my well established incompetence to calculate things mathematical, arithmetical or financial. “There! Three hundred thousand Ariary or slightly more in FMG, still only about Thirty Rands.” She contradicted herself as she came to a decision and held out the wad of money to the still nodding girl. She accepted the cash without any smile or sign of thanks or any visible emotion. “Oh dear, do you think it’s not enough?” Dianne asked concerned as she started to fish out some more creased and greasy Ariary and FMG notes. “It’s quite sufficient.” I said crossly. “Now take the damn pisspot and let’s go! There. Look at her, you can you see I am right. She is so happy with the money that she’s burst into tears!!” I remarked exasperated and led my family crossly away. 167 Don Darkes Chapter 43. Plat du Jour 6th. June 1992. Our favourite table at Les Bougainville’s restaurant had been reserved by Pierre for our farewell lunch. He was late arriving and we proudly placed our hard won prize in the centre of the table. “Pardon moi” said Pierre momentarily surprised and lapsing into French as he arrived a little late. “May I ask why there is a begging bowl sitting upon our lunch table?” He remarked quite innocently. He appeared not to notice as Dianne and I flushed with embarrassment as we understood our blunder. “Please forgive me if I am being forward but may I ask you a question?” Startled, I looked at Pierre, expecting him to ask again why both my hands were crushed and why I had fresh stitches on my forearm. “I see you are both wearing Vongu-vongu” he said pointing at our silver bracelets. “May I ask how you acquired them?” ”Yes, you may ask. They were given to us by a local man.” I replied, mentally filing away their names like a magpie. “Did he tell you that these are very old indeed and have probably been handed down from wearer to wearer over several generations? Did he explain that you should never take them off until you decide, in turn, to pass them on to your loved ones and because they create an unbreakable link between you and Madagascar and the previous wearers?” I frowned and shook my head. Superstitious nonsense, I thought. “No, he did not tell us these things.” I replied surprised. “Hmm, I see you are a sceptic” he said nodding sagely. “Please consider that I am a man of science and was once a devout Catholic, but in this, I myself, am no longer a sceptic.” 168 6692 Pisces the Sailfish He lifted his right arm and pulled his sleeve back to reveal his own Vongu-vongu. “May I myself recommend the prawns?” Pierre took over once again as our gracious host. “Although it pains me to admit that this is the cheapest meal in this establishment.” “Why is that? Back home they would be one of the most expensive items on the menu” asked Dianne surprised. “Morondava is home to a Malagasy prawn fishing fleet left behind after the Russians built a packing plant here in the seventies. The Malagasy were trying to get out of the pockets of my countrymen and instead they ended up in the pockets of the Ruskies.” He rubbed his index finger with his thumb and spluttered as he made a squeezing noise with his pursed lips volubly demonstrating France’s financial hold on Madagascar. Dianne supressed the urge to laugh and tried to catch my eye as she tried to set me off too. She knew I was thinking about how we gossiped about his habit of speaking with elaborate gestures and punctuating his speech with zany sound effects. The food arrived and was spread out extravagantly upon the table. There were oval plates piled high with juicy butterflied prawns, skewered on bamboo and grilled over an open charcoal fire. Bowls of fat, thumb sized, prawn tails swimming in an exquisite sauce of green peppercorns in rich yellow cream, vied for space with bowls of shelled prawns, fragrant with curry. A gigantic platter of steaming, saffron coloured rice completed the meal. “This rice is grown here in Madagascar, in the paddies located on the highlands around Antananarivo,” Pierre explained, delighting in the spread he had arranged. “How about a photograph so we can remember this moment?” I suggested and then stood up and snapped a picture of the bounty of the sea upon our table, surrounded by our smiling faces. I walked around the table taking more pictures in an attempt to capture the moment. As I looked through the viewfinder from my vantage point standing behind the feast, I could see the restless ocean framed between two wooden poles supporting the trellised palm frond roof above our heads. 169 Don Darkes When I focused on the happy group, I saw foaming white caps glinting on the ocean beyond. The wind must be picking up and the sea is responding to it, I thought noting the position of the rocking Sailfish. She was anchored far out beyond the pounding reef as she waited patiently to take us back to South Africa. “The sea is looking more unsettled than this morning and I can see white horses on the waves for the first time since we arrived in these waters,” I commented. “Aha! Here is the Three Zebu’s Beer’” announced Pierre extravagantly, as he poured a tall glasses of the foaming beverage for the three adults. He motioned for the timidly hovering waitress to fill glasses of fresh fruit juice for Bill and Morgan. “This is terrific Pierre. Merci and baie dankie!” I toasted Pierre and winked fondly at Dianne before we set upon the prawn feast like a flock of greedy seagulls. 170 6692 Pisces the Sailfish FIGURE 20 I AM NOT A BIG DRINKER BUT THIS IS INCREDIBLE BEER PIC TAKEN IN 2006 WHEN I WENT THERE TO FULFIL A LIFELONG DREAM (ANOTHER STORY . TOLD IN THE SEQUEL TO THIS BOOK , 2 ND. TIME LUCKY ) 171 Don Darkes Chapter 44. A Stitch in Time June 6th. 1992. “I myself see you have purchased some lambas.” Pierre tactfully avoided mentioning our tarnished metal beggars bowl sitting proudly in pride of place upon the table. “May I see them please? “Certainly” glowed Dianne as she proudly took the traditional oblong cloth from her open woven basket which stood alongside her chair. She stood up and opened them, one by one, trapping one end beneath her chin and allowing the other to hang down to her sandaled feet. “Ah that is a genuine one, a Lambahoany,” remarked Pierre. “Can you see the ohabolana, the Malagasy proverb, written around the edges? It is particularly appropriate to us today because it says ‘Ny voky tsy mahaleo ny tsaroana’ which means ‘A good belly-full doesn't equal a kind remembrance.’ “Does that imply that some lambas are fakes?” Dianne interrupted. “Indeed, in the sense that genuine lambas are hand woven here in Madagascar and the imitations are mass produced, printed on cotton sheets in China and India. There they know nothing of the subtleties or meaning of the ancient craft.” “In that case why are there Baobab trees in this picture? I thought they were indigenous to the continent of Africa.” Queried Dianne pointing to the illustration on the lamba she was holding. 172 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Pierre slapped his forehead. “Merde!” Pardon. I do apologise. But I myself cannot believe that you have spent all this time in Morondava and you have not visited our world famous tourist attraction, the Avenue of the Baobabs. I myself will see to it that this sad state of affairs does not persist.” “Thank you Pierre, but since we are leaving today we shall have to do it next time.” I interjected and instantly regretted it as Dianne shot me a glance reminding me that Pierre would literally no longer be here. “And what is that?” Pierre continued smoothly, ignoring the awkward moment as he pointed to some carefully folded heavy white cotton fabrics. “Oh, these are just some childishly embroidered tablecloths.” responded Dianne sheepishly. “I adore embroidery and just could not resist them.” “Au contraire” corrected Pierre. “These are fine examples of Malagasy needlework. A woman may spend years completing a single item as she sews each one for recreation after completing her many daily chores. In fact this piece you have selected is the subject of another of my pet projects. May I bore you with its history?” “Please do!” begged Dianne her eyes shining. I groaned inwardly and tried not to sigh too obviously. “But tell me Dianne, why did you choose this particular piece above all the others? Asked Pierre curiously. “To be honest it reminded me of some antique needlework I saw in a museum in Madeira.” She answered slowly. “The use of threads and these techniques are so very different from modern embroidery stitches and I just fell in love with it.” 173 Don Darkes “This is incredible!” Pierre looked at Dianne with new respect. “You have made a connection that has taken me years of study to make.” “How is that? What connection are you referring to?” Dianne’s interest was piqued and even I sat up and took notice although I could not help feeling somewhat left out. “How briefly to explain?” Pierre took a deep breath, made a sucking noise with his teeth as he gathered his thoughts before continuing. “The Malagasy have chosen to remain isolated on their island and in so doing managed to preserve much of their culture, free of contamination by outsiders. This is similar in many ways to the Japanese people. However, when they did come into contact with visitors from the outside world and adopted new things from them, these borrowed influences tended to be preserved intact and unchanging over time. Of course, for the visitors, their original input evolved and adapted to the ever changing world and their own evolving culture. The Malagasy kept the original memory intact over time after the strangers disappeared. Similar perhaps to the Victorian costumes worn by the Herero’s of Namibia or the bowler hats of the Indians of Peru.” I was struggling to see how this had anything to do with embroidery and becoming bored, gazed idly out to sea where the Sailfish awaited our return as Pierre droned on. “When some six hundred Portuguese sailors were shipwrecked nearby in the 1500’s the survivors built a fort in order to survive while their fate remained unknown in Portugal. Almost one hundred years later when this fort was rediscovered by their countrymen, the survivors had died out and legends of a white skinned people who had been taken into slavery or killed were recounted by the local tribes.” 174 6692 Pisces the Sailfish I was growing restless as I noticed a dark line on the horizon. Was it a squall? I asked myself. Since I was not wearing my glasses, I was uncertain and did not want to interrupt Pierre even though I feared that he would bore us to death before he got to the point. I stifled a yawn. Dianne remained enthralled. “Pierre, this is interesting but how is this relevant to my embroidery?” Asked Dianne, ignoring my restlessness. Pierre took a long sip of his Three Horses Beer before continuing. I tried unsuccessfully to stifle my yawn as he continued. “The Portuguese sailors discovered to their amazement that the local women were carrying out a style of embroidery that had disappeared in Portugal almost a century before! What you found today is an almost exact replica of Portuguese needlecraft, dating back to the 1500’s, that has remained unchanged in the hands of industrious Malagasy women until today; almost 500 years later!” Dianne was overjoyed to hear this and began to question Pierre more closely. I was more interested in the approaching storm on the horizon and tuned them out. Besides, I did not want to alarm Dianne unnecessarily. 175 Don Darkes Chapter 45. Pisces Returns “Excuse me for a moment Pierre, but please continue. This is so interesting” I lied. “Bill, would you mind standing up next to that pole so I that can take a picture?” I asked my son to pose for me, masking my true purpose. I looked through the viewfinder, extended the zoom and focused onto the skyline beyond Bill to where the Sailfish was supposed to be. I grew cold despite the tropical heat. The Sailfish had moved from her position! As I looked up once again I could see her Genoa billowing in front of her. Pisces had returned and she was sailing away without us! 176 6692 Pisces the Sailfish FIGURE 21 THE CIRCLE MARKS PISCES HELL -BENT ON DESTRUCTION . THIS WAS ANOTHER CRITICAL MOMENT SEEN THROUGH THE EYE OF THE CAMERA. 177 Don Darkes By the time we raced to the beach and untied the dingy, there were waves breaking on the fore shore. That morning there had been ripples and gentle ripples. Now crashing breakers smashed and foamed as they broke onto the sand. Fishermen scurried to drag their bucking pirogues across the beach and into the shelter of the trees that lined the shore. The gale tore coconuts from the bowing palm trees and flung them to earth like cannonballs. The tide was nearing its high point and washing right up the beach so we did not have to drag the dingy far. Launching it was difficult because the waves threatened to capsize the craft or fling it back onto the land. The tiny petrol engine could not make headway against the surge of the water and the relentless power of the wind. In desperation I jumped out and waded with the heaving inflatable craft through the surf to where the water was deep enough for its flailing propeller to bite without hitting bottom as the waves passed beneath. The howling wind blew onto the land, creating a sailor’s nightmare; a lee shore. Here the wind ruthlessly heaves any foreign object floating in the ocean onto the sand like a dog vomiting up pieces of a dead lizard. Although the wind was blasting water over our bows, drenching us completely, the sun was still shining as warm and as bright as any other day. Only the colour of its light had altered as if we were looking at the sky through a sheet of tinted glass, like the eyepiece of a welder’s helmet. As our path converged with the wildly plunging Sailfish we knew then that she had become Pisces once again and that Pisces was hell bent on destroying herself once and for all. Pisces had a two meter draft, which meant that she needed deep water at least the height of a tall man standing beneath her waterline in order to remain afloat and upright. As we approached we could see that there was too little water to support her wildly rearing hull or to float erect. As we watched dismayed a wave would roll up behind her, lifting her up momentarily to a point where she would right herself and then buck and rear like a wild stallion trying to break free. Then the 178 6692 Pisces the Sailfish wave would roll away dashing Pisces down onto her keel before knocking her onto her side with a shock that checked her headlong flight momentarily as she wallowed and fought to get up again. Again and again we watched the crash of the impact and shockwave ripple through her heaving hull and shudder through her heaving masts. Over and over we saw the rolling surge lift her up, knock her to the floor, then wait for her to gather up her battered dignity and stagger upright, before bashing her down again. So hell bent was Pisces on escape and certain suicide that we struggled to intercept her headlong flight. Once as she thrashed in the grip of the storm, we were almost crushed by her furious Finger of God as she waved it up and down, in her desperation to destroy herself. Somehow Dianne helmed our tiny boat alongside and held it there while I thrashed and scrabbled to get astride the bucking Pisces. Then as I gained a foothold my other leg lost its grip and my scrabbling foot kicked Bill’s head, knocking him unconscious. Once I clambered onto the deck to ride astride Pisces bucking form I could see the driving Genoa billowing in the wind as it drove her inexorably forward. It had somehow unfurled itself and then mysteriously, instead of whipping the sheet uselessly free in the wind as she had done once before in the boatyard, the vital rope had inexplicably tied itself around a cleat. This enabled it to power Pisces towards her death. It was almost as if someone had tied this rope deliberately. I tried to shout to Dianne to take herself and the children back to the beach to wait for me there. The roar of the wind and the crash of the waves and rushing water whipped the words from my lips. Somehow, she understood and turned her heaving craft away and was blown back onto the foaming shore. Taking stock I stumbled forward and cut the Genoa sheet with the emergency knife that I snatched from its pouch in the cockpit. This allowed the rope to fly free and make the sail flap impotently in the gale. Seeking to find out why Pisces had somehow broken free of her anchor in deep water outside the reef, I followed a trail of links leading from the locker onto the deck. Then I traced the chain as it ran over the steel trough 179 Don Darkes along the deck toward the bows where it terminated suddenly in a single half link. The thick anchor chain was new and looked as if it had been deliberately cut, allowing Pisces to ride free with the wind under the force of the powerful sail. Even though the speed of her flight had been diminished by robbing the Genoa of her prey, the waves were nevertheless driving Pisces onward. In fact, the waves were starting to force her long bowsprit around, turning her parallel to the shore and side on to the waves as each successive jolt drove Pisces inexorably into ever shallower water and threatened to tumble her sideways onto the beach. Nevertheless I was relieved to see that there were no rocks and curiously, although the water was shallow, there were no coral outcrops either. There was little time to lose. I had to halt her flight quickly. The stern anchor lay in her place and I cut the lashings free with a single lucky stroke. There was no chain attached to this anchor, so I dashed forward and dragged some chain from the bow locker then attached the free end to the anchor before throwing it overboard with a shout. Once sufficient chain rattled out I snubbed it securely around the stout wooden post set into the aft deck and waited. I staggered as the fluted anchor bit, dragged, dug into the mud and held, bringing Pisces’ headlong flight to an abrupt halt. She reared like a thwarted mustang, jumping and thrashing as she tried to fling me from her back. I stumbled forward to the cockpit while she struggled to break free. Although the cockpit was hip deep in sloshing seawater I was able to hang onto the helm and brace my shoulder against the mast to steady myself. Then I grabbed the handset from the radio bracket, pressed transmit and called into it. “Mayday, Mayday, Mayday! This is the Yacht Pisces located two miles north of Morondava. We require immediate assistance.” A hiss of static was my only reply. I tried again, knowing full well that there was no one nearby to hear it. Even if there was someone, they would be powerless to assist, because the water was too shallow below our keels to enable any vessel to approach or to pass a tow line. 180 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Somehow I needed to claw Pisces off the lee shore and reach the safety of the open sea. To do that I knew I needed to start the engine and power her back into deep water. With a sinking I heart I realised that Pisces’ keys were in Dianne’s basket, now safely ashore. I staggered in the cockpit, disappointed and felt a fist like blow in my right thigh when a monster wave bucked the vessel and she shuddered under the impact. On reflex I touched the knot in my throbbing leg muscle and a wave of pleasure washed over me as I realised the cause of the pain. The cork float ball, attached to the boat keys was in my pocket! I do not remember fishing it out and somehow inserting the ignition key into its slot. If only my luck would continue to hold. I turned the key. The mighty diesel coughed once, missed a beat and roared powerfully into life. Our luck was turning. The Sailfish was fighting back. I put the motor into reverse and gunned the throttle. We began to claw our way back toward the open sea. There was neither space nor depth to turn so I had to continue in reverse, flinging the wheel back and forth as I struggled to keep the stern facing toward the rolling breakers. I shouted with joy and relief as we began to make headway when a tearing sound followed by a powerful shock stopped us short in our tracks with a jarring crash. The engine stalled. We had reversed over the stern anchor which I had just set and the taut chain had scraped beneath the hull until the anchor bit and brought us up short. The jolt knocked me off balance and I fell sideways knocking my head on the starboard winch as I plunged into the bathtub sized trough of water sloshing in the cockpit around my feet. Pisces had returned with a vengeance and now she had regained the upper hand! 181 Don Darkes Chapter 46. The Book of Gnomes June 6th. 1992. Suddenly all was quiet. Gone was the roar of the wind and the rushing of the sea. Gone too was the strident beat of the engine. It was quiet and warm and cosy and I was happy. I was sitting on the top bunk in the children’s cabin, safely aboard Sailfish, reading to them from their Book of Gnomes that lay open upon my thighs. I looked up from reading and saw the wide blue eyes of Bill and the gap-toothed, smiling face of Morgan waiting expectantly for me to read the last line. A line they already knew so well. I exhaled in a cloud of bubbles then stopped. I dared not take the next deep breath I needed to deliver the last line. Somehow I knew that I was under water. My chest began to burn as I hesitated. The children looked expectantly at me, a question in their eyes as they waited to recite the final words along with me when I read them aloud. I held back. I dared not take the vital breath I needed to be able to read the last line. An upwelling of joy swelled within me. I knew that if I breathed now there would be no more agony, only this moment, crystallising my bliss forever as my children chuckled before kissing me goodnight. I wanted it to last for eternity. All I had to do was breathe once. Just one final deep breath and this perfect moment would be mine forever. I opened my mouth to inhale and stopped as I was assaulted by excruciating pain! This eye watering torment burned as if my head was on fire and my hair was being torn out by its roots. I was ripped, dripping and spluttering, upward and out of the water. I opened my eyes and saw Steve’s hated face shimmering before my eyes as he yanked me triumphantly aloft. He dangled me there using double fistfuls of my hair to hold me upright. I could see his fleshy lips moving as he spoke, but could not hear his words above the roaring in my ears as incandescent rage burned out everything but my hatred for 182 6692 Pisces the Sailfish him. Alternating with both fists, I swung at Steve but he gracefully danced my blows aside, pirouetting like a matador. I tried to bite his wrist, snapping like a rabid dog to force him to let me go but he easily jerked my head back using my hair as a leash. He opened his maw to laugh, exposing jagged, nicotine stained teeth. I recalled Steve’s flawless designer smile and in that moment came to my senses. With those imperfect teeth I knew at once that this could not possibly be Steve and I came to my senses. FIGURE 22 BILL AND MORGAN LISTEN WHILE I READ FROM THE BIG BOOK OF GNOMES . BILL ( CURRENTLY 26) COLLECTS GNOMES 183 Don Darkes Chapter 47. The Frogman Arrives June 6th. 1992. “You look as if you need some help!” A tall swarthy man held me painfully upright by my hair and shouted with a strong French accent, above the roar of the waves. “I am Jean-Luc. I was photographing frogs in the forest when I saw your bateaux floundering in the surf and decided to swim out to see if I could be of assistance. Please accept my apology for pulling you out of the water by your hair but I suspected that you might be drowning and could not get a grip on you any other way.” He sheepishly released his grip on my mane and gently helped me to stand unsteadily upright. I was too stunned to speak. Reluctantly I returned to earth once more. Together we cut free the stern anchor and started to make headway again as I gunned the engine. Blood was streaming down my face from a jagged cut in my scalp at the back of my head. I did not care. I was determined to make sure that Pisces did not return today. Progress was slow as JeanLuc, standing spread legged at the bucking stern, guided us through the coral heads, shouting “Wave!” ahead of each upwelling surge. This prompted me to gun the howling engine and brace ourselves before we lifted up, plunged down, thumped bottom, rolled right and shook like a wet dog. Then we prepared to do it again and again as each rushing swell arrived and rolled foaming under us. Inch by inch we gained sea room each time I revved the engine between each swell, snaking the boat a little as we clawed our way backwards. I could see Dianne and the kids on shore, anxiously watching our battle. A ragged knot of fishermen stood behind them, agitated but helpless to assist. They could see that our frantically rearing steed was bucking uncontrollably and that she would thrash about and crush 184 6692 Pisces the Sailfish their flimsy wooden boats like straws. The engine howled, the sea roared and the wind screamed defiantly as inexorably we began to gain ground. Without warning, the brave donkey gasped and died. This time had not stalled. It simply stopped dead. I turned the key. Nothing, not even the click and whine of the starter motor. My heart sank. I did not want to admit to myself what could be wrong. Jean-Luc turned questioningly to me as I wrenched Pisces’ key from the ignition and unlocked the sliding hatch into the cabin below. Climbing backwards down the ladder I stepped down into chest high water. Once my eyes grew accustomed to the gloom, I could see spice bottles and cushions, hatch covers and wooden boxes all floating in the oily water. Morgan’s teddy drifted by and I knew then that the donkey had drowned, bravely fighting to the last breath until the rising water cut off her vital air supply and she choked. Half swimming, half wading, I made my way aft to a gaping hole where our bed had once been. The rudder, hitting against the sea bottom, had smashed a jagged semi-circular crater, the size of truck tyre, in the stern. The frothing sea water came gushing in as the rolling waves lifted and dropped Pisces. The sliding hatch in this cabin was locked from outside, so I knew I had to either exit through the breach in the hull and risk not being able to get on board again or else I could swim back underwater, to the open forward hatch, dodging floating debris as I did so. Somehow I clawed my way to the open hatch and dragged myself onto the heaving deck. At first I was at a loss as to what to do. I remembered the repair we had made after Pisces had crashed to earth in the boatyard and knew I could heal this wound too. To do that, I needed to deliberately beach her, so that when the tide went out, I could plug the hole, seal it off and repair the damage. I shouted above the roar of wind and sea to Jean-Luc. “She is holed and full of water. We must turn around before we sink in deep water. I have to go back and drag the boat onto the beach.” He nodded, immediately, understanding. 185 Don Darkes “The wind and waves will help us this time. They will drive us toward the land where your wife and children are waiting,” Jean-Luc shouted as he came forward. “Give me a long rope and I will swim ashore with it. Once I am there, I shall ask the villagers on the beach to help me pull her in,” he yelled above the shrieking storm. I nodded agreement. “We also need to take a rope from the top of the mast to help us pull the boat down onto her side so that we can reduce her draft and get her even closer to the beach,” I yelled. Together we dragged all the lines we could find out of the aft locker and tied them to the top of the masts. We secured a heavy mooring hawser firmly to the stout anchor bollard and threw it off the bowsprit, after first fastening a coil of lighter line to its tail end which we looped over Jean-Luc’s shoulder. “See you on the beach!” He shouted cheerily as he dived onto the maelstrom, trailing ropes in his wake and swam powerfully ashore. As I stood watching him, a furious bellow issued from the forest. I watched in amazement as a monstrous snorting tractor, belching smoke and diesel fumes, arrived on the scene. Jean-Luc lost no time in attaching his thick hawser to its gigantic tow hook. He instructed the driver to pull, towards the beach, in time with the ebb and flow of the surging sea. Meanwhile, I shouted to a line of excited villagers in the water, to pull on the masthead line. Like a tug-of-war, they toppled the struggling Pisces onto her port side. Then they tied her down, like Lilliputians subduing Gulliver. At first Pisces struggled to get up. Eventually she weakened and like a beached sailfish, gave up fighting and lay still. 186 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 48. Childs Play June 6th. 1992. In the excitement none of the adults saw the life raft break free from its mountings and inflate with a hiss of gas as it hit the water. We did not notice it float away and gaily pop up its orange canopy, like a cheerful circus tent. It blew and bobbed ashore to where Bill and Morgan were standing. The children cheered when it eventually arrived. They dragged it up above the high water mark and lost no time in unzipping its entrance and climbing happily inside to play at being shipwrecked. “What happened? Why are you are bleeding?” Dianne dashed up to greet me as I waded ashore. “I bashed my head on the winch when I fell. Just as well Jean-Luc was there to save my bacon.” I answered her as she hugged me gratefully and then turned to smile in thanks and in greeting at the gangly Jean-Luc who was standing back a little bashfully. “It was nothing. I am here in Morondava to study the rare frogs in this estuary for a book I am researching. I am a naturalist you see. When I saw that your husband might use a little bit of help, I decided to meet him.” Jean-Luc shyly flashed his gap-toothed smile again as he pointed to the forest and the mouth of the river entering the sea. He wiped his round spectacles on the hem of his shirt before replacing them on the bridge of his nose like a schoolmaster. A ‘frog’ studying frogs? I stifled the urge to laugh. Dianne shot me a warning glance as she picked up my irreverent thought. “Where are the kids?” I asked, looking around concerned. “They are over there, playing in the life raft, happy as clams.” Dianne pointed to where it stood at the edge of the forest in the shelter of an overhanging Tamarind tree. “Come to think of it, there should be a first aid kit inside. Come with me,” 187 Don Darkes she commanded in her nurse’s no-nonsense tone as she dragged me towards it. “Good heavens. Bill is bleeding too!” She exclaimed as she entered the tent and saw the dried blood on our son’s head where I had accidentally kicked him when I scrambled aboard the runaway Pisces. “Come inside, out of the wind. I need to clean both your wounds!” She ordered and used the special safety knife attached to its side to cut open the pouch containing the life raft survival kit. “Hey Dad, look! There’s chocolate in here.” Morgan wheedled, picking up the pack and licking her lips theatrically. She fluttered her eyelashes and smiled irresistibly at me as she always did when she wanted something. “Go ahead, let’s all have some, and be sure to offer some to Jean-Luc who is waiting outside to meet you both,” I relented as idly looked through the contents of the kit, which had remained sealed inside the life raft until that day. “Hmm, look what else they have included along with seasick pills, glucose tablets, a puncture repair kit and water.” “What is it?” Asked Dianne curiously as she attended to the cut on my head. “It’s a Saint Christopher medal,” I answered with a wry smile and held it up for her to see. “Do you think the manufacturers of this life raft are trying to tell us something?” 188 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 49. Vigil Announcing your plans is certain to make God laugh. June 6th. 1992. Jean-Luc mysteriously disappeared without a word, before we could thank him. Some of the villagers had drifted off to their homes as we sat together on the beach watching the sun sink into the ocean without a ripple. The sturdy group that remained wrapped themselves up in their lambas and curled up to share the all-night vigil with us. Bill and Morgan insisted that we all sleep inside the life raft but Dianne and I felt claustrophobic inside its damp and flimsy walls. We sneaked outside as soon as their soft snores and steady breathing told us they had fallen asleep. It was new moon and funereally dark despite the fact that the sparkling heavens were filled with iridescent stars. The restless ocean flashed and glowed with green phosphorescent fire. The howling wind dropped as quickly as it had arrived and the high tide crept in to lick at Pisces gently, comforting her where she lay quietly, tethered to the earth. “So where to now?” Asked Dianne quietly as we watched the heavens whirl above our heads. “If you mean what I intend to do with the Sailfish. That’s easy. When the tide goes out I shall climb aboard and patch the hole with plywood, screws and underwater curing epoxy. Then I shall pump her out so that she can float. I shall find somewhere to careen her on her side or perhaps lean her up against a jetty or wharf and repair her there. 189 Don Darkes It’s pretty much the same process as we have already done at the boatyard in Durban. It’s a minor irritation but not a catastrophe,” I answered with an offhand confidence I did not feel. “And then?” She whispered. “Sweetheart, then we will sail back and forth trading gold for gadgets and make a fortune. Since I am not superstitious I did not hear God laughing as we dozed off into an exhausted sleep, unmindful of the biting sand fleas. 190 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 50. Déjà vu Déjà vu, literally "already seen") is the impression that one has already witnessed or experienced a current situation, even though the exact circumstances of the prior encounter are unclear and were perhaps imagined. The term was coined by a French psychic researcher, Émile Boirac (1851–1917) in his book L'Avenir des sciences psychiques ("The Future of Psychic Sciences"), which expanded upon an essay he wrote while an undergraduate. The experience of déjà vu is usually accompanied by a compelling sense of familiarity, and also a sense of "eeriness", "strangeness", "weirdness", or what Sigmund Freud calls "the uncanny". The "previous" experience is most frequently attributed to a dream, although in some cases there is a firm sense that the experience has genuinely happened in the past. June 7th 1992. When the first rays of sunlight began to peel away the darkness at dawn on June seventh, I could see that it was low tide by how far the pounding waves had receded. Now they were crashing some way off from where I sat huddled with my shivering family. A flash of reflected sunlight beckoned from the expanse of sand exposed by the receding ocean. “Wait here,” I said standing up blearily. I wiped the sleep from my eyes and stepped onto the glistening beach, ignoring the protests from the robust villagers who had shared our allnight vigil. At first I did not notice how my footsteps filled up, sank and then vanished behind me, as I single-mindedly drew each foot from the sucking white sand. Instead I staggered doggedly forward to stand exhausted above my glinting steel objective. Mystified I scratched my head, wincing absentmindedly as warm blood oozed afresh from the wound on my aching skull. I struggled to recognise at what I was looking. As I sank up to my hips in the cloying muck, I recognised with dismay, the familiar shape sticking out of the quicksand. Momentarily I was transported back to Durban and the boatyard, shortly after Pisces had fallen off her cradle, 191 Don Darkes shattered her side and snapped both her masts. I remembered repairing them both and how excited I was on the day Dianne helped me to measure the tallest one as it lay, freshly repainted, on its trestles. I stared in horror at the gleaming metal in the quicksand and recognised it for what it was. At that moment I knew that Pisces had finally beaten me. Since I was looking at the tip of her tallest mast, this was Pisces’ mast cap. The weight of her ballast had no doubt caused her hull to right itself. This explained why the tallest mast stood upright. That meant she must have sunk more than the height of a six story building and lay buried far below my feet As if in confirmation, a gigantic air bubble belched up through the watery sand and burst obscenely at the surface with a wet plop. I gazed in morbid fascination as more debris floated to the surface. I recognised shattered bits of polished teak, two canisters of exposed film and Morgan’s favourite teddy bobbing in the water. With a sick feeling I knew that Pisces’ hull had exploded under the terrible pressure at that depth; releasing anything that would float to the surface. Her shattered body lay in her grave forever, together with whatever curse she carried. 192 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 51. Bread sans Fish We were not alone as we trudged sadly away from that remote beach in Madagascar. The whispering villagers tramped respectfully behind us, like mourners in a funeral procession. “What do we do now?” Asked Dianne crestfallen as we led the way. “All I know for certain is that we are going to have to pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off and move on.” Do you think all of this happened because of the Curse? Dianne’s lovely face was pale and exhausted. “You know I am not superstitious. I prayed several times during the last few weeks and my prayer has been answered.” She turned to look at me with a strange expression. Dianne knew that I was not superstitious and she was in no mood to banter. “This is no time to be flippant.” She said tossing her long blond mane like a mare flicking an irritating insect, her expression uncharacteristically showing her anger. “Do you remember when my mother said that I was reckless and irresponsible; that I was going to drown not only myself and you but that I was going to drown her grandchildren as well?” “I certainly do. You did not speak to her for more than six months afterwards and sometimes you took your frustration out on us.” “I know. I am truly sorry. I was wrong, and she was right. Now I understand that although she was furious, she was also concerned and meant well. She got me thinking. I could not bear the thought of hurting or losing you or our children. So, superstitious or not, I prayed. My prayer was a plea. If I was guilty of a doing a reckless and irresponsible thing ,that only I should be punished and that no harm should come to my family. That’s why I’m grateful to have been granted more than what I prayed for.” 193 Don Darkes Dianne nodded and said nothing. We both knew that the loss of everything we owned was punishment for her too. I am grateful.” I said gently and stopped to face her towards me so that I could look into her steely blue eyes. “Grateful! Grateful for what?” She spluttered, bewildered and angry. “I am grateful for the wakeup call I received today. I have learned that the only thing that is important is that we are always together as a family. You must never allow me to lose sight of that.” She nodded and attempted to smile. “What are we going to do right now?” Her voice trembled as she held back a tear. “We shall have to alert the harbour authorities. They will know how to reach our government and arrange to repatriate us.” I changed the subject and sighed. “I anticipate political problems between the respective South African and Malagasy regimes. They refuse to speak directly to each other ever since the Apartheid government refused to allow the Malagasy President to disembark when he arrived, by ship, at Cape Town recently.” As we made our way into town, intending to ask Pierre for his assistance and approached a humble shack that stood on the outskirts of the village. When we drew alongside it, Dianne became aware of a petite woman carrying a young child upon her hip. She had left the gaggle of villagers following behind us. She tugged wordlessly at Dianne’s sleeve and pointed toward the humble palm thatched, bamboo walled dwelling. Dianne understood. “Your house?” Dianne asked although we all knew the woman would not understand English. The Malagasy woman nodded and pointed backwards to her own heart. “Helene,” she said, by way of introduction, opened the ramshackle door and invited us inside. Her modest shack consisted of a single room, with a neatly swept bare earth floor. Four makeshift grass beds lay on the dry ground in a corner where pair of young girls sat cross legged upon them and 194 6692 Pisces the Sailfish smiled shyly at us. An upturned wooden crate took pride of place as a table inside the hovel. The ‘table’ was unadorned, save for a fresh banana leaf placed upon it, acting as an improvised ‘plate’ that bore four, dry bread rolls, resembling miniature French loaves. Helene lifted the boy child from her hip and handed him wordlessly to the elder of his two wideeyed siblings who wiped his running nose and comforted him. Their mother stood at her simple table where she silently broke each of the four tiny loaves in two and timidly offered a piece to each of us, four total strangers. She then handed a portion to each of own children. Embarrassed and overcome by her generosity I started to decline. Luckily Dianne caught my eye and made me to remain silent by sheer force of will. Helene softly gave thanks and then gestured for us to begin eating. Dianne looked at me with tears in her eyes as we silently chewed. We swallowed our breakfast with great difficulty because our throats that were taut with emotion. When the meal was over, Dianne thanked Helene by clasping her hands together as if in prayer and bowed forward slightly from the hip. The two women smiled at each other as we departed, instantly forging the powerful bond that mothers everywhere share. We stepped into the bright sunshine and the group waiting outside murmured as another tiny Malagasy woman shyly approached Dianne to offer her a lamba. Dianne stooped to accept it and to allow the woman to wrap the homespun cloth around her shoulders and hips. With a start I realised that Dianne was, to their eyes, almost naked since she was wearing only a thin blue cotton tee shirt, red cotton shorts, slip slop sandals and no brassiere. 195 Don Darkes The woman handed Dianne another, larger lamba, gazed directly into her eyes and then flicked her eyes briefly toward me before firmly returning her face back to Dianne. It was clear that she intended the lamba for me but that it would be improper to approach me or give it to me directly. As I became aware of my own appearance I realised that my green tee shirt was filthy, torn and blood-stained and my once-black shorts were hard and crusted white with dried salt, grease and dried blood. My body and clothing stank of diesel, bilge water and the sweat of fear. Dianne helped me to wrap the traditional garment around my body. We tried to thank our benefactor but she was clearly embarrassed and disappeared silently into the anonymity of the crowd. Never before or since, have I experienced such selfless generosity made all the more poignant since it was given by those who had very little themselves. It touched me in a way that brings gooseflesh to my body even thinking about it today. 196 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 52. Avenue of Baobabs Pierre was incredible. Although he was clearly under pressure to wind up his affairs before leaving Madagascar and returning to France, he guided us through a laborious process traipsing from one government department to another, filling in forms and answering questions. The harbour master in particular was brisk, efficient and impersonal, as if he routinely processed shipwrecked families. We reciprocated, unemotionally completing myriad unintelligible French documents with Pierre assisting as translator. As he read one document to me I realised with a shock that we had consigned ownership of the wreckage of our doomed yacht to the Madagascar government, as is customary following a shipwreck. Machine-gun thuds emitted by an array of rubber stamps signalled the end of our business. Aside from the begging bowl which we own and treasure to this day, we were now officially destitute! Our stay at Les Bougainville’s had its bright side too. We depended on the good services of the neutral Swiss and Dutch diplomats to act as go-betweens to negotiate our passage back to South Africa. During this time, we were accommodated at Pierre’s generous expense in a small structure behind the Les Bougainville’s restaurant. A sparse but clean and comfortable room was placed at our disposal for a few weeks, while the officials shuffled paper and practised protocols. We were destitute and depended on the charity of others and had to ration our donated funds carefully. We found the cheapest meal was prawns and rice and we ate it for breakfast lunch and supper. The mayor of the town, Rolando Kolo, ensured that we were feted as minor celebrities. A charity drive was held to garner donations of money and clothing because every cent we owned and all our possessions were on our sunken yacht. Dianne snapped a photograph of us with the Mayor and his family. This illustrates the odd assortment of donated clothing that we wore. 197 Don Darkes FIGURE 23 THE AUTHOR, ROLANDO, HIS WIFE, CHILDREN, MORGAN AND BILL The highlight of our stay came when we were taken, in Rolando’s dilapidated Renault 4, to the unique, spectacular and unforgettable Baobab forest located just outside the town of Morondava. This unforgettable spot has subsequently been named as a world Heritage Site, but certainly not as a result of our visit! The shock and enormity of our loss was beginning to sink in and we were having trouble keeping our spirits up. The simple pleasure of visiting this truly unique spot cheered us and the sight of these incredible ‘God’s upside-down’ trees shall remain with us forever. It is difficult to comprehend the majestic size of these gigantic trees which had only survived predation by charcoal and firewood scavengers, due to the belief by the Malagasy that the Baobab trees are sacred, taboo or Fady and therefore protected by their ancestors. 198 6692 Pisces the Sailfish FIGURE 24 THE WORLD HERITAGE SITE; AVENUE OF THE BAOBABS. HERE MORGAN, BILL AND THE AUTHOR ATTEMPT TO ENCIRCLE THE GIGANTIC TRUNK OF ONE OF THE SMALLER TREES . 199 Don Darkes Chapter 53. The Prophesy Thanks to the intervention of the Swiss and Dutch governments, they linked my pariah country, South Africa, with Madagascar. Rolando insisted on giving me a gift just before we were repatriated as shipwrecked sailors. He solemnly handed me a box, roughly the size of a large shoebox. It was crafted from finely woven raffia matting, sewn into a rectangular shape and beautifully hand dyed before being painstakingly embroidered. He coughed before nervously reading from a prepared note; “This is to remind you of the Malagasy proverb.” he coughed again and wiped a tear from his cheek. “All you have lost by water or by fire in Madagascar you shall have again.” Back home in South Africa, when we opened Rolando’s gift, we were overjoyed to find that it was filled with all manner of Malagasy hand crafts, souvenirs and an enigmatic painting. This artwork, depicting a ring tailed lemur, rendered on hand-made paper, was later to become our logo and the symbol of the fulfilment of the Prophesy. There were also a number of slabs of organic chocolate made from locally cultivated and fermented cacao. This box contained the vital keys to enable the Malagasy prophesy to come to pass. But that is a happy and fulfilling story which I shall enjoy sharing in the sequel to this adventure, in my next book, 2nd Time Lucky. 200 6692 Pisces the Sailfish FIGURE 25 THIS ENIGMATIC LEMUR BECAME THE SYMBOL OF OUR RECOVERING ALL THAT WE HAD LOST IN M ADAGASCAR - AND MORE! 201 Don Darkes Chapter 54. The Obituary. Until recently I have been unable to tell anyone the entire story of what happened on that first Pisces day. Instead I had to wait for someone that I have hated bitterly for twenty years, someone that I tried to murder, to die. I read Steve's obituary, on the June 6th. 2012. I would love to tell you that it was the day that he died, but it was not. That was the day I chose to check up on him, via the Internet, as I did every Pisces day. This time I discovered that he contracted a humiliating and debilitating disease and committed suicide a few months previously by taking an overdose. I am not ashamed to say that I was overjoyed at the news. This was sweet revenge indeed. 202 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Chapter 55. Postscript. Killer Prawns. Pisces Day, June 6th. 2010. Every June 6th., we remember Pisces Day, often commemorated as D-Day elsewhere. We also celebrate our family’s survival on that day. I also remember it as the day I died and was coaxed back to life again by a French Frog Scientist. We call it Pisces Day because that was the name of our doomed yacht We have celebrated every Pisces day by reuniting our family around a meal of prawns and rice. Why prawns and rice? To remind us how we had to eat that for weeks on end, because prawns and rice were cheap and plentiful and because we were destitute. On the eighteenth anniversary of Pisces Day, June 6th. 2010, my family was put on trial again. My wife Dianne and I and our daughters Luna and Morgan lived atop Fields Hill just outside the coastal city of Durban, South Africa. Our son Bill worked in Pietermaritzburg about 100km inland. He left work early in order to attend our annual celebration. Dianne chose the restaurant carefully and booked a table, near a window that overlooked the old railway station. The name of this prawn restaurant was Jimmy's Killer Prawns. We thought nothing of it at the time. (It has subsequently gone out of business and disappeared.) “Ugh! There is something slippery under the table” exclaimed Bill as he lost his footing and fell heavily against the red vinyl seat that protested with a sibilant hiss of escaping air as he tried to shift his huge frame into the cubicle. “Judging by the smell of rancid butter and garlic it must be the prawn sauce” laughed blonde and vivacious Luna, his younger sister, as we slithered our bottoms along the maroon 203 Don Darkes bench seats. Dianne’s blue eyes sparkled with pleasure at having the family together again. She sat at the base of the U, flanked by both our daughters with Bill and me facing each other. “Although it’s just past six-thirty the place is already busy” remarked Dianne surveying the half-full restaurant. “What shall we order?” Quipped Morgan covering her ears and cringing. “Prawns and rice!” We chorused over and over, laughing unashamedly at the surprised faces of the other patrons. “I'm dying of thirst. I hope the waiter comes to take our drinks order soon,” groaned Bill grasping his throat theatrically and gagging to the amusement of his adoring sisters. “Remember, only granadilla juice” I ordered mock sternly, ignoring the disappointed groans of my family. “Come on Dad, can't we break tradition just this once? I hate tadpole juice,” complained Morgan recalling the freshly pulped granadilla juice swimming with frog-spawn-like seeds which was the cheapest drink we could afford in 1992. I shook my head and my family groaned in unison, as they did every year. “I wonder why there are no waiters around?” puzzled Dianne quietly. “Wait a minute. Speak of the devil!” Luna pointed to a thickset man approaching our table. “It's not that cold tonight. I'm surprised management lets them wear their hats on duty.” I noted as our waiter approached. “Do you have granadilla juice...?” I stopped mid-sentence as the muzzle of a large pistol was placed squarely on the tip of my nose. “Cell phones and money,” interrupted the man gruffly. “I don't have any money with me. I pay by credit card and I am not carrying my cell phone” I stuttered, numb with shock. 204 6692 Pisces the Sailfish “And you?” The robber swung around and placed the barrel of his gun on Bill’s forehead. “I have a phone.” Bill said reaching into his shirt pocket with trembling fingers and dropped it to the floor. Unthinking he ducked below the table to retrieve it and scrabbled around on the greasy floor while it evaded him like a slippery fish. The gunman's pin-prick irises flashed and I imagined the roar of his gun and the impact of the bullet mushrooming my son’s head redly onto the walls and floor. “Wait. Don't shoot! My son is trying to pick up his phone.” The gunman hesitated and Bill emerged again unaware of how close he had come to extinction. “What about you?” the gunman waved his pistol at the girls where they sat ashen faced and rooted to the bench. Luna spoke first. “My Daddy won't buy me one.” She lied with an innocent expression on her face that convinced even me. The gunman shot me a disgusted glance and so neither of us noticed Luna surreptitiously secreting her precious phone and purse between the seat cushions behind her. “And what about you?” The robber hissed at Morgan who had emulated her younger sister’s example. Both girls stared down the killer’s harsh gaze. I caught their eyes with my own and gestured to them not to maintain eye contact with him. They obeyed demurely. My heart thrashed within my chest from an overload of pride, terror and anger. “Stand Up!” He commanded and we all complied, albeit bent double, like aged grannies, within the narrow space between the table and the bench. The crook moved forward, wedging his gun beneath his chin, while he frisked Bill and me patting our bodies and even feeling our groin region as he did so and found nothing that interested him. He looked towards my wife and daughters. I baulked at the prospect of him running his hands over their innocent young bodies and began to boil and rage inside. Bill caught my eye and shook his head imperceptibly, warning me with his eyes. 205 Don Darkes “The girls don't carry money. Our father is too stingy.” Bill blurted, lying convincingly. The thug glanced disdainfully at me once more, snorted derisively and turned his drug dulled eyes toward his other prey sitting at the tables behind him. He swaggered to a table occupied by a solitary man who was so busily engaged in devouring his meal and at the same time speaking on his mobile phone, that he had not noticed the commotion. The gunman stuck the barrel of his pistol on the distracted man's nose. “Cell phone and money,” he demanded. The diner frowned uncomprehendingly at what he also thought was the waiter. “Huh” “Cell phone and money!” The robber hit the table with his fist upsetting the glass of red wine over the seated patron’s lap. “Uh...I have to go now. I think I'm being held up at gunpoint and robbed,” the diner said to his phone, rung off and handed it to the gunman. “Money” demanded the robber. “I don't have any. I pay by credit card,” said the diner flicking it onto the table. “May I continue eating? This is my first meal of the day and I am starving,” he said dismissively and returned to his meal without waiting for a reply. The crook grunted and moved to the next table which was occupied by an elegantly dressed Indian couple sharing a candlelit dinner. “Money and cell phones,” he demanded crossly. “I also pay by card,” said the Indian man “But here is my phone. It's insured so thank you! I shall get a brand new one,” he said with a huge disarming smile and handed it over. His speechless wife showed her empty hands and shook her head vehemently. The gunman dropped the phone into a filthy black cloth bag suspended by a leather cord from his neck and turned to his next victim. “Oh, just a minute,” the Indian man tugged at the robbers sleeve. “Would you mind terribly sir? All my contacts and my entire business are on my phone.” He left the words 206 6692 Pisces the Sailfish dangling. The thug nodded understanding, pocketed his pistol and upturned his decrepit swag bag upon an empty table. “Find it” he hissed menacingly. “Take your phone chip out.” The Indian diner complied and helped the robber sweep the phones and money back into the bag. “Thank You.” He said gratefully. The thief nodded and was disappointed when he turned to service his next victim only to discover that his comrades had completed the work behind him. The situation became even more bizarre when a group of would be diners arrived to take up their dinner booking and were brusquely shooed away by a gun toting crook. So far we had only sampled the hors d'œuvres. The gang were furious at their slim pickings. Clearly they did not fear the intervention of the police since they were in no hurry to depart and it was close to midnight before they finished with us and swaggered out into the night. When the police eventually did arrive, none of them were in uniform. Instead they wore shabby street clothes that were filthy and dishevelled. The first thing they did was to demand a round of free drinks from the owner. They lounged around the bar laughing and talking amongst themselves as if they were gangsters hanging out at a sleazy shibeen. (illicit bar.) Their demeanour and appearance made us believe we were being robbed by a second band of criminals. The leader of the group strutted up to our table and stood with his legs apart and his arms folded upon his chest while he leered at us. His filthy white tee shirt bore the misshapen skull logo of The Enforcer. “We are here to protect and to serve. Tell us what happened here.” His gap toothed attempt to smile reassuringly was more menacing than the grinning skull emblazoned on his sweat stained shirt. By the time the police had finished with us, we were more terrified of the gang of police than we were of the original criminals. 207 Don Darkes The terror did not end there. In the weeks and months that followed we saw the gangsters on numerous occasions at the shopping malls. They would leer at us and taunt the girls by pointing to their stingy father and laughing uproariously at their shared joke. When we visited the police to complain and to ask about the progress of the investigation we were told they had no record of any such incident; despite the fact that it had been in a local newspaper. Other victims we contacted fearfully told us to let sleeping dogs lie. There would be no investigation they said. Eventually the family became so traumatised they refused to leave the house for fear of meeting our tormentors. Incensed and determined to obtain justice I complained at a higher level; without response. Eventually I asked a good friend, a well-connected man and a long standing member of Interpol, to make discreet enquiries. His special ringtone, Don’t worry, be Happy, told me it was he, when my mobile phone rang late one evening. “We need to meet; sooner rather than later,” he said without preamble. “Sure. Why don’t you come for dinner this Friday evening?” “Yes, yes,” he said tensely. “Until then I need you to remain silent. Stop harassing the cops and try not to go out. If you need supplies, shop out of town.” “Why? Is something wrong?” I asked, knowing full well that there must be. “I can’t discuss this over the phone. See you Friday.” He hung up, uncharacteristically for him, without another word. What he told us, like Basil's gun to my head twenty years before, for me the last straw in a series of disquieting events. Only this time I called a family meeting and we voted unanimously to take action. We did not know at the time that our family decision would result in all five of us living together, high up in the branches of a Casuarina tree rooted in Zululand, for one year, one month and one day. *************** This story continues in the sequel, 2nd. Time Lucky. 208 6692 Pisces the Sailfish Author Biography I have been chaotically married for over three decades to my amazing wife Anne who bore me three miracle children. After repudiating my psychology degree in the mid-seventies I served my mandatory National Military Service in a top-secret and clandestine Electronic Warfare unit stationed in Rhodesia, for which I received a military medal. During the eighties, at the height of Apartheid, together with (then illegal) “black” partners I built a successful manufacturing company which I later sold to buy the yacht upon which I was shipwrecked together with my family. After returning destitute to South Africa, I rode a ripple in the dot.com wave and later cashed in my Internet start-up in order to distribute rare organic Madagascar chocolate. Currently, our family resides high off the ground amongst the branches of a Casuarina tree while we work together to build another yacht. I am also writing several books that have as a common denominator, my love of history and my belief that fact is stranger and far more interesting than fiction. Other Books by Don Darkes 2nd Time Lucky. On Pisces day, June 6th. 2010, my family suffered a traumatic event, triggering a unanimous family vote to opt-out again. This story records our journey from another gun-athead incident after we voted unanimously to live high up in the branches of a Casuarina Tree in Zululand. Then it follows our journey onward, as we encounter amazing people, animals and events and rejoice in bizarre experiences while we build our family ark. Fly on the Wall. This is the biography of an amazing man, a round-theworld-sailor, a War Veteran, and a member of three generations of Hollywood Movie Soundmen. He has over 100 209 Don Darkes Hollywood Movies to his credit and has been nominated for an Oscar 5 times. Currently he is an Academy Awards Judge. He has sailed with Disney and lived on Marlon Brando’s Island. His soundman father, on his deathbed, advised him to turn his back on fame and fortune and to go sailing. That is exactly what he did, but that is only a fraction of his fascinating story. Darkest Africa. My Life of Crime. This is the biography of my friend and mentor. Born in Great Britain in the thirties, his fascinating and eventful tale reveals how he was concealed under an assumed name in order to hide his true identity. At the end of World War Two, he went to Rhodesia. There he spent many years as a mounted policeman patrolling African bush country, teeming with wild animals and primitive tribesmen. His experiences as a Policeman, Judge, Member of Interpol, International Security Consultant and Entrepreneur culminated with him having to flee for his life with a target on his back and a price on his head. Bread from Air. This novel, has been on my mind for more than two decades. This is a direct result of our being shipwrecked in Madagascar. I have studied more than 400 history books and visited numerous historical sites to gather information and do background research. Bread from Air explores the fascinating links between the Jewish Holocaust and Madagascar and reveals the hidden lives of some of the incredible women who helped to shape the course of world events and yet somehow disappeared through the cracks in history’s floor. *** I would be gratified to receive feedback, comments or questions from my readers. I may even give them a voucher for one of my other books. I can be contacted via my website at www.dondarkes.com. 210