First Draft
Alexandria,
1798
It is summer in Alexandria and
I am a girl of fifteen. The French have invaded our city and the world lauds a
military officer I have not heard of until his troops stormed into Egypt and
murdered my family. They say his name is Napoleon.
We are of the Mamluk, who had saved
themselves from their fate through mutinous advancement. It is a proud and
vengeful heritage. My father, the soldier and slave Murad once said a man never
stops being contained. He never wins his dignity back no matter what he
achieves, no matter how many wars he wins, he will always have to prove himself
again. He distrusted the Europeans too much because of his fears about his own
fatalism. He should have been more concerned about the people he ruled. They
did not love him enough. If they did they would not listen to the whispers. They
would not be so easily swayed. We have high ranking officials dressed in the
Western manner. When the French invaded they did not care about this.
From the shore we could see
them as they swarmed, 400 flying ships from the basest quarters of Hades,
30 000 men to a city of 7000. There was no garrison strong enough to
defend us. We have been left to protect ourselves. Our men are running and I am
scared but will do what I must. I, with only the yelek I was wearing and my
melaya luf to carry provisions for food and warmth, my face concealed in the
style of the bur’a like a woman from the city of Cairo. My face hidden for the crimson
blush that now cannot be wiped away.
They have set up a government and
we cannot stay here under their authority, it is impossible. Peace is
impossible. They take what they want, what is majesty they decimate. When you
kill someone, you do not have to shed their blood by your own hands. There are
sinister ways to murder. They have found how to be sinister.
_________________________
They chased us across the
desert then followed our camp along the West bank of the Nile. The scouts saw
them and warned us, but too late. At nightfall they attacked while we slept. We
had been safer in the dunes of sand and scorpion stings where many of them died
of dehydration as they do not know the terrain as we do. But this luck did not
last long nor did it stop them.
It was dark and the night was
still at first. Throughout the century I recall the stillness the most. We lay
in the tent unable to dream contented dreams. I heard my mother’s voice as she
spoke to me in my childhood, “A Muslim is never ungrateful,” she smiled,
“everything that happens is the will of God, and we accept this.”
She sat now weaving my hair, my
head falling between her arms listlessly resting against her bosom. War exhausts
you but only in the moments when there is quiet. When you’re running you barely
realise that you are there and that your limbs might weary and feel tired.
You’re just running and you keep moving until the danger subsides and then there’s
the stillness and you stop and you want to rest but you are too scared to
breathe.
I put my hand to my stomach.
My mother could not see, but I knew.
I knew.
On the other side of the camp
my father slept with the menfolk around the fire. “He doesn’t get scared,” I
said.
My mother smiled and caressed
my temple. “Your father is a courageous man,” she said, “but do not be fooled
by pride that conceals true feelings. A wise man is often scared. Fear is where
wisdom begins.”
There were voices outside.
Women, talking, and the voices grew more urgent and greater in congregation.
Panic set in, signalling that danger might be near and my mother and I sprang
to our feet to check outside the tent. In the darkness an abhorrent unified
scream rang out across the sky equal in malignance to a shrill eagle hovering
above its prey, and from across the other side of the water a single flame came
towards us and behind it the scream of invisible men rushing on behind it
towards us.
As the flame grew closer, I
saw it. The face of my father in the hands of a man, a man in a muddied French
uniform carrying it as if it was no more than sinew and skin. I could not bare
to witness it. My father: when I was a girlchild he taught me how to hold his sword
although it was almost a size equal to my height. In the wooded area near our
house he showed me how to wield it, how to defend my territory so that no one
could attack me. How to pluck a chicken so I would have food to eat. How to
spear a fish. Even though I was not my brother he wanted me to be strong. And
yet when I bruised my leg he wrapped it in leaves so it would heal and I would
not be frightened and cry. My father who on the days I was born picked a
wildflower for my hair. My father, who cautioned Abdul that if he wanted to
have me as a wife he would have to prove himself a man worthy. That I was not
to be had by an infidel. As I said this my heart shook and I clenched my palm
over my belly.
The French solider rushed
among the crowd waving his spoils triumphantly and my body seared with pain but
my legs did not feel feint, yet grew stronger and a stamina overtook me like a
madwoman, a strength I did not know I had, and I ran towards them as they came
forth setting tents alight.
I grabbed the sword and ran
into the crowd, pushing my mother back but she would not have this. Alongside
me she ran, screaming, fighting. In the men’s camp nothing was left. Not my
father. Not my brother. He had been seven.
After we fell they ransacked
the bodies and stole from the dead. Took whatever valuables they could find
sewn into our clothes. They took my ring. The one Abdul had given to me when we
fled, promising marriage when the war was over.
He grabbed my hair, pulled it
in the place my mother had made the weave, dragged me through the mud, pierced
my stomach with his knife and then I fell. I fell a second time submerged in
the waters of the Nile, water pluming red, holding my belly. I let out a wail
more frightful then than the eagle I had seen flying overhead before. It perched on my arm, observing, pecked at my
womb. And when it rose to fly away it carried me and I saw it all from the sky.
I wanted to hug them, those who had fallen, but they were out of reach.
Paris,
1830
He lives in a chateaux outside
Paris and is rarely alone, yet often feels that he is. He is merely a drunken
descendent who occupies a vestige of his family’s history, enraptured in
nightly jaunts with his array of women. The demi-monde cannot harm a spiritless
ghoul. And so he thinks he is safe. From them perhaps he is.
He plunders into the kitchen
in the dark of night stumbling against the body of a woman who holds him up so
he does not fall down. His eyes diluted and weak from his search for escape. She
steadies him on the kitchen chair and pulls off his boots.
“There, there,” she says in
French. And when she says it he falls sideways and mutters drunkenly that he
does not want her to leave him alone.
“I must go,” she says, “Pierre
is waiting.”
He slaps her but so slovenly
that she does not defend herself and steadies him again, upright in the chair.
“My father, remember, he is
waiting,” she says.
She is overcome with
sentimentality and holds his face in her hands, kisses him on his cheek softly and
says, “you will be fine. After all, you do not need someone like me. You have
all the others,” and her face dulls and she looks at him sadly, although she
knows he is too drunk to feel what she is trying to tell him. “Besides, it is
not safe on the streets. The workers are protesting. They want blood.”
“What others,” he says, not
too drunk yet to amuse himself with her emotions. “Go,” he mutters with disillusion,
“go to your father and be safe. You cannot be docile and trust men who are
starving.”
“Will you be alright?”
“I will be as I should. I have
a bottle of spirits and my absinthe for courage.”
“You speak as a man with not the whole world
to fight for.”
“Fight? For what?”
“And what of your uncle, a man
of social prestige. He wields some influence. They will be after people like
him.”
“And his brother, my father, a
soldier. And for what? He fought bravely in Alexandria. I cannot lick his
bootstraps. I was a child then and I don’t forgive him. His brother does not
forgive him. My mother does not forgive him. Their causes like camphine and
water. He conquered but the people bear no gratitude.”
“You are in danger.”
“I am no aristocrat.”
“France loves revolution.”
A vague childhood memory
filters through his mind’s eye as he drifts into his drunken slumber, he
recalls his father’s letters. How jubilantly he wrote to his mother about the
victory that belonged to them, then the despondency in the months that
followed, the homesickness, the lost cause when the English followed them into
Cairo and took it all. When he returned home he was a broken man, brought with
him a young girl to work for the family, wretchedly disfigured, whom despite having
a tongue never uttered a single word. Not even when she died. It was not long
after that when his father was found hanged in his sleeping chambers,
succumbing to the despair that had followed him since the days of the war in
Egypt. A soldier did not speak piteously of his anguish, if he understood the
source of what ailed him.
Between recollection and
regret his head dropped to his chest and arms and legs grew listless, and he
fell asleep. She went to his sleeping quarters and found a blanket in a closet
by the door, brought it to the kitchen, not being strong enough to carry the
weight of his body over her shoulders. She unbuttoned his coat and threw it
over the chair, arranged the blanket over him where he rested in the chair and
brushed a stray strand of his brown curly hair from his forehead, leaving the
touch of her mouth in its place. Then she opened the kitchen door and the
moonlight shone through, alighting him as if on a stage. She turned back to
glance, sighed softly, and that was how she left him.
___________________________
A tap drips slowly. Outside
the night is dark and still. The droplet falls into a bathtub making a tiny
whirlpool and a noise so loud it whips the air. A woman’s feet are visible in
the water of the bath and a soft groan of pain is diluted by the steady fall of
droplets. A plume of red is injected into the whirlpool and the woman’s scream
becomes so loud the bathroom window cracks.
In the tree outside the window
an owl’s eyes glow like bright lanterns amid the blackened sky. From inside the
bathroom the woman’s scream drapes through the night, tapering off into the
distance. No one hears her.
The woman lies submerged
beneath the bathtub of water, it is now dripping over the edge of the bath and
makes a pool across the floor. She is draped in a brown dress that stops above
her ankles and clings to her body from the damp. Her face is moistened wet, her
head turned sideways, her eyes closed, she is quiet now. In her neck there is
small scar in the shape of a half moon. In her arms, there is a newborn baby. A
shrill scream rings out from the child’s mouth, the scream of meeting the world
and finding it for the first time as it is.
The world fades into black.
The woman is now standing in
the kitchen bent over a metal pot on the stove. She is boiling an egg. Inside
the pot air bubbles around the shell cloistered in fat pockets and bristle to
the top lightly. Her dress is still wet and it drips from her hem onto the
kitchen tiles. Her stare vacant as she watches the egg boil, the wind outside
in the night blows sharp as it calls to her, behind her is a man in a chair,
his coat strewn over the armrests, resting like a baby tucked into a blanket. The
woman hums a lullaby.
Rockabye baby
On the tree top
When the wind blows
The cradle will rock
When the bough bends
The cradle will fall
And down will come baby
Cradle and all.
She
strolls slowly past the chair, circling around the man, her nails growing as
she passes him, long as a pitchfork. Her shadow is visible against the wall, an
ominous spectre, three times the size of her actual form.
From
somewhere a radio starts to play. It begins with static, then the sound of an
announcer commentating a football game from the future, then the wavelength
switches to the lullaby she was humming earlier. The radio plays the singing of
her voice to the soft murmur of children laughing in the background.
Rockabye baby, rockabye baby,
Children’s
laughter rings out. He is one of the children, the man in the chair, but he is
seven years old.
The
baby is another room, swinging from side to side in a crib, there is a flower
placed behind her ear. On the table beside the crib there is a photo of a man
and a woman smiling bright, he dressed in a soldier’s uniform. On the wall
there is a clock but the two hands of time are gone. The watch bears only
numbers as it ticks loud. The woman enters the room and stops in the doorway as
the door creaks open. Her hair is long and black and straight, parted in the
middle, her face is pale, wan, her lips crimson. In her hand she is carrying
the egg and a spoon. Her nails are brown, her fingers slim. Sternly she looks
out towards the baby and steps towards her. The baby does not cry anymore.
The baby makes a gurgling
noise and laughs. She picks the baby up and sits down on the floor in the
middle of the room which is mostly vacant, she feeds the baby the runny egg.
The baby begins to cry so tormentingly it wakes the man, and he stirs in his
chair, calling out:
“Qui est la; Who is there?”
Dubiously he gets up and
stares out towards the sound of the crying and the humming. From the kitchen he
picks up his father’s old sword, slung behind the back of the door, a valued
keepsake now his defence and he slowly opens the door to the next room as it
creaks on its hinges and the wooden floorboards echo. It is so dark he cannot
see and he turns back to get the lamp on the kitchen table.
As he turns a sound like a
screaming banshee penetrates the void of the room and pierces his ears as sharp
as a knife. In pain he folds over and holds his ears dropping the sword to the
floor. When he tries to pick it up a pale stringy hand with long brown nails
sharpened into points touches him and a chill of freezing cold blisters through
him like he is in an ice bath. His lungs close and he cannot breathe. As he
gasps his eyes become accustomed to the dark and right in front of his face is
a woman, half beautiful, half disfigured with a sunken eye. He screams and
falls back, crawling on his hands in reverse.
The woman weeps and shows him
the baby, and starts to hum the lullabye, “Rockabye baby on the treetop,” she
sings repeatedly, and in tears. “When the wind blows the cradle will rock.”
“Please leave me,” the man
weeps. You come back so often, please leave me.”
The woman rises up into the
air, her dripping wet feet floating above him, she turns around her back to him
and her voice becomes as sweet as honeysuckle as she sings the lullabye then
her voice degenerates into a coarse harsh demonic bass. Then her face turns to
him vividly and fast and her hair grows from her head like tree branches that
entrap him so that he cannot move.
Outside there is a noise, a
mob on the street, a crowd is making its way past the chateaux and they seek
justice, alighted in their suffering. As they walk they chant, “Freedom,” and
raise their flames to the sky vengefully. He turns his head to the window, to
the growing noise outside and the woman stops humming and the baby stops crying
and they both disappear.
______________________
The crowd does not desist nor
vanish with the mother and child, their cries can be heard through the night,
their torches bright as stars. Through the window he hears a crash, rushes to find
the streets ravaged with looters knocking down doors, breaking windows, and
pillaging houses. Any moment they could rush into his house. He shudders and
bolts the front and back doors, retreats to his bedroom and draws the curtains.
There is nothing left to do but hide. He crosses the room and opens the drawer
in his bedside table, fumbles through it. Inside there is a bible which he pulls
out and holds to his chest uttering a prayer. An explosion, and a rock falls
through his window, leaving splintered glass across the floor. He bends to pick
it up and the words “Freedom” are scrawled across. The crowd outside chants
madly.
He wipes his brow from sweat.
“They are possessed,” he says to himself fearfully and holds the candle to the
dark room so he can find what he is looking for.
Fifteen minutes later he is in
the bathroom, sitting on the floor behind a locked door. He closes his eyes and
he hears his name being called so very sweetly. “Philippe, Philippe,” a voice calls
to him, “oh my dearest Philippe, you are mine, don’t you know that? You can
never run away.”
The most beautiful light comes
towards him and when he reaches out to touch it, it kisses him on the mouth and
when he opens his eyes his mouth it is filled with worms oozing out of from his
throat, and it starts to nibble at his flesh, crawls all over his face and into
his hair, into his nostrils, nibbles on his eyes. He starts to scream
hysterically and gets up trying to beat it off with the bible but it turns to
ash and burns his skin, then falls to the floor in a pile of dust.
Through the mirror the woman
and her baby appear and he steps back in fear as she moves towards him, half of
her face covered with crawling worms.
“What are you,” he mutters.
“Philippe, Philippe, you talk
to me as if we are strangers, don’t you recognise me,” she says softly and
reaches her hands with its black nails out to touch his face, where there are
still maggots, just like hers.
“Look,” she says, “we are the
same now.” She touches the worms affectionately as he writhes in anguish. “Do
you not love us,” she cradles the baby to and fro in her other arm, and as she
does so her fingernails sprout into treetrunks that ensnare him so that he
cannot move.
A blinding light shines into
the bathroom and Philippe is a young boy of seven. He is playing outside in the
meadow, running with friends and then he calls out to them, “Goodbye,” and goes
home, entering the chateaux.
He walks in slowly and cannot
find his mother or the helper his father brought from Alexandria, they are
missing, he walks upstairs slowly and enters the father’s bedroom, there is nothing
there. Opens the door to the bathroom, turns the handle slowly, and finds it,
his father hanging from the chandelier above the bath, water dripping from his
feet. He looks down to his feet and there is the bible on the floor, in a pile
of ash. On the floor crawling away, a forlorn and lost maggot.
“It must have crawled in from
outside,” he thinks as the doctor signs the death certificate and pulls his
uncle aside to talk about the necessary arrangements.
_______________________________
It was a night of fire and
revolt. Workers had been thrown onto the streets, unemployed by merciless men
of business who closed their factories, refused to lend money, newspapers had
ceased publication in compliance with new legislation, police raiding the press
were met with angry mobs, and the country was alive with defiance. Looters
rampaged the streets and street lamps in Paris were torn down.
Houses burned and the flames
could be seen throughout the city.
At the chateaux more stones
were flung through windows. Glass splintered and the front door was torched,
breaking the lock and the wooden barrier behind it. At the back door someone
hacked the wood with an axe and a hand slipped over from outside and unlocked
it from within. Footsteps sounded through the kitchen as the lounge burned.
More people entered the house and began to pillage, salvaging what they could
and running to the streets with any valuables they could find, leaving nothing,
not even kitchen silver.
The house burned, while upstairs a man rummaged through the bedroom. Picked up the stone that lay
on the floor and rummaged through the half open bedside drawer. It was dark and he could not see very
well. A door creaked and the sound of a crying baby rang out from within. The man followed the sound
into the bathroom and turned the doorknob cautiously. The door moved slowly open, stumbling over a
pile of ash on the floor. He pushed past it so the door could open, and there he saw, hanging from the
chandelier of the roof, Philippe, with his feet dripping wet and a few stray maggots crawling on his
clothes, and in the mirror behind the looter, the reflection of the woman with half of her face beautiful,
swaying from side to side, holding a crying baby, humming.