Breakfast
After John Steinbeck
Ferial Mohamed
It is the innocence of that time that stays with me. Why
else hold onto a simple memory and draw it out, even long after it should be
diluted. It is the feeling I recall, a feeling, not every detail so much, but
how the sky opened that morning, the vibrations invisible in the crisped air,
the way the waking rays flecked against my naked arms, blushed my cheeks a brownish-red,
left me breathless.
Dawn had already showed itself and the morning was cool but
bright. Delectable it was, in all the ways that morning and beauty purely is,
enlivened by the promise of possibility which lays before it. A familiarity
within a newness. The orange swarm which earlier drenched the horizontal
plateau of Table Mountain had disappeared, smoking like the pipe of Van Hunks
on the day he challenged the Devil and beat him. The Devil being naturally of
course a sore loser. But this was not important on this day. Winning and
losing. This morning when he strolled casually into our camp, his jeans
scraping the edge of his boots, his chequered shirt, sleeveless, hanging loose.
We were not accustomed to strangers and when I saw him I hardly thought that he
might stay.
It was the summer month of December and we were renting a
place near the sea, my father having brought us there from Pretoria for our end
of year holiday. We were lodged in a rondawel, a little round hut with a thatched
roof, geckos and the occasional scorpion falling from the wood, the hut divided
semi-comfortably into three sleeping compartments and a small kitchenette where
we kept some milk, and bread, and oil, a few groceries, and a pot that we could
cook in. We bathed that summer in the communal shower and had to use the outhouse
just a few metres from where we slept. The same shower the visitors from the
caravan park used. I kept my flip-flops on when I washed and had by now grown
accustomed to the cold water, but it was so hot in the night and my skin so
sticky, it almost didn’t matter.
The days we spent at the beach, the nights we made a fire
outside to braai and sat around the concrete table with its concrete benches
playing klawerjas and five cards, drinking coffee from a metal flask and eating
koesisters by the pool near the café, the only café within walking distance for
many kilometres.
I was barely a young woman then, still a girl really, as I
stood in the doorway of our hut in the morning mist, with my little brother squarely
on my hip, while my mother fried fish fingers and eggs and chilli sausages in
the kitchen right behind me. I could smell the toast and the butter dripping
off it from the smoke emanating around us, when he made his way up the walkway
towards me.
____________
It was at the same moment that my father and twin brother came
across the grassy patch that separated our lodging from the low white dunes
that led to the beach on the opposite side. They were each wearing Wellington
boots up to their knees, carrying a fishing rod and my father had a blue
plastic bucket with freshly caught harders and crabs in it, having been out all
night in a tent on the beach, rising early before the tide changed to get a
good catch from the shore. Their faces
were unshaven, stubbly, their hair dishevelled. In the distance I could hear
the wash of the sea they had now left behind as it intertwined with the coastline,
and overhead gulls circled the crag where people had tossed leftover bits of
fish and chips.
Around us neighbours, holidaymakers, were starting to wake
up, the rustle of morning noise, children had started running about, and the
day was beginning.
My father and brother came nearer. The stranger on the
opposite side meeting their stride.
I hoistened my little brother higher on my hip as he half-lept
from my arms and reached for our father to scoop him up, his eyes swollen from slumber
and his voice unsoftened by distance to sleep.
Shameeg, my twin, intercepted our little brother’s reaching
arms and took him from me. He and I had been born three minutes apart, but I afforded
him none of the authority of an older sibling, a point of endless demand from
him. Putting the plastic bucket down, he ruffled our little brother’s hair as
the boy fidgeted with the line of the fishing rod and tried to peek at the dead
fish, having been promised that he would get a sea monster if he was good.
“You lost son?” my father said to the stranger, his eyes meeting
his at the entrance to our rondawel.
My father nodded his head towards the young man, possibly
only a little older than Shameeg and I.
“Not lost Uncle, we just need some help back at our tent,”
he said pointing backwards. “Our car won’t start, and we were hoping to go into
town this morning.”
“Did you catch
anything?” my mother called out from behind us, the sizzle of butter and eggs still
fragranting the air.
My father looked toward the stranger and offered a pat against
his shoulder. “Come in and have breakfast, then we can sort you out. Where’s
your tent,” he asked as he put his fishing gear against the rondawel wall and
led the way in to greet my mother, pinching her gently on the sides of her
waist, then handing her the pail with the morning’s catch.
___________________________
It did not take long to gut the fish and fry them in the pan
with butter and lemons until the skin turned crisp and brown. We arranged our holiday
(plastic) plates and mugs on the concrete table outside the rondawel, placing
it gingerly on paper serviettes which I recall had balloons printed on them,
and the words HAPPY BIRTHDAY emblazoned in the corners, the ones we had packed
in from home, remnants of an old birthday party, and then we sat down on the
concrete bench which ran in a circle around the table, the pan sizzling in the
centre with fresh rolls wrapped in wax paper.
“Where you from?” my father asked as we ate.
“From upcountry.”
“Yous gonna stay ong? We still here another week.”
“2 more days,” he said, and as he spoke I looked up and his gaze
was fixed on me. A sliver of a current frazzled me, like I had placed my wet
hands on an electric switch, and I started, and had to look down fast, so that I
did not feel too embarrassed and more importantly, before my father or brother
could notice.
My little brother, with his compass for exacerbating the
awkward, grabbed at a piece of bread from the table and flung it.
“Look at this child hey, feed the baboons, hey, where’s your
manners?” my hit him on his hands too softly, and still he wailed.
“But you never know,” the young man said, “we might still decide
to stay on a bit longer,” and the way I recall it, I almost think he smiled at
me when he said it.
“Not a bad idea,” my brother said, “the fish are biting.”
“The locals here are sweeping up full nets.” my father said,
“the ocean providing us with full bellies. Rizq,” and he lifted his eyes to the
sky, where clouds hovered now in a slim, misty film.
“Eat, eat,” my mother said, “it’s a sin to leave leftovers.”
After we had our fill we cleared the table and the young man
turned to thank my mother, I scurried into the kitchenette, busying myself with
plates. I hovered there, over the sink, wiping my hands incessantly on my
dress, checking the window to see if he was still there, listening to hear him
say goodbye, but after a few moments he appeared in the tiny doorway, his mouth
drawn into an awkward half-smile. I returned a mediocre grimace, and my father appeared
unexpectedly behind him, “Orright, we can go now, I’m ready,” my father said, and
he and my twin brother shuffled him out as he looked back towards me, away to
his own camp, to where he had come from.
It was only later when I sat alone on the beach, reading
Wuthering Heights, studying the quiet sea, that a warm feeling came over me as I
recalled his arrival, his voice, his words, his gaze, his nervous smile, and I queried
how perhaps, when Shameeg and my father came back from fishing, I could ask without
betraying myself, about his whereabouts, and if they knew if he was coming back.
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