Unmaking Grace

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Unmaking Grace Page 19

by Barbara Boswell


  Grace thought about canceling the second visit, but now, more than ever, she needed the little girl. Her bruises were more or less healed, but she kept her sunglasses on as David dropped Sindi off. He stared at her, bemused by the sunglasses, and lingered at the door, as if waiting for an invitation to enter. Grace felt ashamed by her face, the flat, her life. She took Sindi and masked her embarrassment with rudeness, asking David to leave.

  It was just as well. Johnny returned a few minutes later, and Grace was not yet ready for the two of them to encounter each other in her living room. She was surprised at Johnny’s appearance, as he knew Sindi was coming—she’d expected that he’d stay away. They were still not speaking to each other. Each staked out a different corner of the cramped living room, Grace with Sindi, and stayed there. When it was time for David to pick Sindi up, Grace took the child down to the street so as to avoid the two men seeing each other.

  There was another appointment, made weeks ago, that she could not get out of. She called the number she’d used before but could not get through. With just two days until they were due to meet, she had no way of reaching him to cancel. Of course she could just not go. She didn’t owe him anything, not a damn thing! But even as these thoughts swirled around her mind, she knew that she’d be there, at the agreed upon place, at the appointed time. Was it curiosity? A need for reckoning? She didn’t know, but even as she fought against wanting to see him, her compulsion to see him was stronger than any revulsion she felt. Some unknown force was propelling her toward the ordained time and place. Grace knew that she was destined to see him one more time—Patrick de Leeuw.

  Chapter 21

  Rows of identical houses whizzed past them as they drove through the township. The car was a warm cocoon insulating them from the dogs and running children, a bubble protecting Grace from the stares of strangers. Johnny and Grace had driven all the way in silence, cutting across the Cape Flats on the N2 highway. Her mood, already somber, dipped some more as they left the pleasantness of the suburbs close to the city. At first the drive seemed interminable, and then, once they arrived at the area bordering the airport, it was over too quickly. For the first time since that day, the day everything changed, Grace was back in the neighborhood where she’d spent her childhood living in that yellow house on Saturn Street.

  “Why did you let him in?” she could still hear the voice, clear as a bell. The ringing had never stopped.

  Here she was, several lifetimes later, winding down roads that were much narrower than she remembered: convoluted, labyrinthine. They felt claustrophobic. Nausea pushed up inside her as they slithered this way and that, circling narrow bends. Everything she remembered had faded. Paint peeled off walls, gutters sighed under the weight of years, fences had sagged and rusted. There was the shop Grace had once walked to every day for bread and milk and, when there was money, a small chocolate bar. It was still the same, just grimier. There was the shebeen Patrick had patronized. Here was the rent office, where the Casspirs had congregated in that terrible month leading up to her mother’s death. What would have happened had Mary lived? Would she still be here, proud Mary, with her nose higher than everyone else’s? How would she have carried herself against the indignity of the fading walls, the plastic bags flowering everywhere like sores?

  And what about Johnny? Would he have been her only love? She would not have had Sindi. But she didn’t have Sindi now anyway, and she would not have known the pain of being denied her own flesh and blood. So many what ifs.

  Memories flowed thick, like blood from freshly punctured flesh. That night when he came to the window, he’d wanted to see her. He had scared Grace witless, but she understood now the desire to see one’s child, and how it could make you crazy. Had she not almost smashed a window of her own when David turned her out, and kicked and hammered at the front door with her fists?

  The car slowed, and they came to a halt next to a curb. They had arrived at Patrick’s place.

  “You feeling okay?” Johnny asked.

  She nodded. They were barely speaking, but he’d felt it important enough to bring her here to see Patrick. It would bring a sense of closure, might heal the thing that now lay between them too, he’d said.

  Closure? Grace wanted to spit a mean laugh at that word. What the hell did Johnny know about anything? Maybe this meeting would make him feel better about himself, make him feel like the hero in orchestrating a reunion between estranged father and daughter. Maybe he needed to think of himself in those terms, as savior to both Patrick and Grace, since he was turning out to be one hell of a disappointment as a mere man.

  “Wait here. Don’t get out of the car,” grunted Johnny.

  He left, stepped through the gate of a forlorn greenhouse that had long ago given up the battle of trying to look presentable. An overgrown garden loomed up front, threatening to spill through the mesh fence out onto the pavement; the gate almost fell off its hinges as Johnny passed through. Johnny walked up the path but didn’t stop at the front door. Instead, he turned right and went around the house, out of sight. So Patrick was a backyard dweller. What had Grace expected? A mansion? He was never going to come out of prison and own a proper house. A knot tightened in her stomach. In a few moments she’d be coming face to face with her father, the man who had murdered her mother.

  There were still a few seconds of grace in which to duck out of the car and run to the nearest taxi rank. Yet her blood had turned to lead: she couldn’t move; couldn’t even summon the energy to roll down the car window. She focused on the gate. It would take maybe two screws to reattach the loose hinge and make it stand upright again, but with the decrepitude of this place, what difference would a functioning gate make? Where would one start anyway, on this house, so badly in need of repair?

  Grace heard two soft voices and saw two figures come around the house. Johnny reappeared first on the narrow path, walking back to the gate, with a smaller figure following him. He walked slowly, pausing several times to turn back as if to check on a distracted child. While Johnny’s confident steps fell on the path, the other man made a shuffling sound as he walked, as if he was dragging something behind him. Then they were out the gate, and Johnny stepped aside. There, right in front of Grace, stood her father.

  Mouth dry, heart pounding, she took in the remnants of the monster who had terrorized her and her mother for so many years. He was withered, emaciated; thinner even than the kids running around on the pavement. He leaned on a walking stick, clutched with a gnarled hand. Johnny opened the passenger side of the door and gestured for Grace to get out. She moved slowly, as if weighted down by an invisible hand, until she was standing face to face with him, this man. Another shockwave passed through her body as she realized that she was taller than him. He craned his neck to look up at her, and there were those eyes, liquid-brown, moist and pleading. Pathetic. Look at you, Grace thought. How pathetic you’ve become. And how pathetic that this, this shadow of a man was the one who lived so vividly in her imagination, inspiring so much dread. To her mind he’d been a giant, a larger-than-life boogeyman who had taken away the one she loved most, and had robbed her of a childhood. Her whole life, he’d had this incredible power over her. He was the one she feared coming to get her; he was the shadow that haunted her nightmares. And he was this? Hardly human. The man who had beaten her mother was now a pathetic shell, wearing the haunted look of an abandoned child. She could push him to the ground with one hand. She could crush his windpipe under her thumbs without breaking a sweat. This was the monster she’d spent her life running from? This pathetic thing?

  “Grace.” His voice was soft and raspy, struggling to make itself heard. “Grace, my Gracie. Is it really you?” Tears pooled in his eyes.

  Oh God, not this. Not a tearful sobbing mess in the middle of the street.

  He shuffled closer, eyes moist. The navy blue shirt he wore was new—she could tell by the stiff collar that chafed against his neck. It gave him the odd look of a tortoise that might retract his
head into the shell of the shirt which hung limply around him. He was missing the entire row of his top teeth. Silver strands of saliva hung like moist cobwebs from baby pink gums, glistening as his slack mouth broke into a smile.

  “Thank you for coming. Thank you. Thank you.”

  He bowed his head with each thank you, solidifying his gratitude. Grace allowed him to clasp her folded hands into his as his cane dropped to the ground.

  “It is really you, Grace. Look at you, so beautiful.”

  Finally, the approval she had craved all her young life from him, coming now, decades too late.

  “Thank you for coming. I’ve waited so long for this day.”

  Grace nodded, but didn’t trust her voice to welcome this new father, the frail, infinitely human man, into her life.

  “How are you, Grace?”

  She nodded again.

  “Please take off your glasses. I want to see you.”

  Grace pulled away and back into herself. Patrick stopped, waited. He had said something wrong. Johnny bent down to retrieve the cane and put it back into his hand.

  “Thank you for coming.” Patrick returned to his gratitude mantra, as if he did not know what else to say.

  Johnny intervened. “Is there a place where you can sit down, be alone, Uncle Patrick?”

  “Yes, we must talk alone,” the older man replied. “But it’s not good inside, not in there. Too much comings and goings. Too many ears and eyes.”

  “Let’s go for a drive somewhere then,” Johnny decided. Yes, he was in full savior mode.

  Father and daughter nodded and climbed into the car. Grace, in the passenger seat, couldn’t think of a single thing to say. Uncle Patrick. She hadn’t missed the affectionate form of address. Her father and Johnny were close, closer than she had known. Perhaps this was what made Johnny think he could hit her. If this was his role model….

  “Where do we want to go today?”

  The false cheer in his voice sickened Grace. What was she doing here, with these two? She felt like smacking Johnny for encouraging this, for acting as if the occasion was a happy reunion. She reached into her bag for her trusty friends, and soon a soothing numbness washed over her and cigarette smoke filled the car’s cramped interior.

  “Can you spare me one, please?” Patrick piped up from the back seat.

  “You have cancer and you want a cigarette?”

  Grace regretted the words as soon as they’d left her mouth. There she was, cutting to the quick, making his devastating predicament clear. She had planned to wait for him to bring up the topic of cancer, and here she was, not even five minutes in, blundering around his grave. God, this was a terrible idea.

  “It’s okay,” he responded cheerfully. “What’s it gonna do to me? Kill me?” He chuckled, seeming pleased at his wisecrack.

  Grace passed him a cigarette without turning round, and the smoke soon loosened his tongue.

  “Johnny, there’s one place I’d die to go, if you’d excuse the pun.” Another chuckle. “Swartklip Beach. Do you remember it, Grace? We used to go there sometimes, you and me and your mummy. Do you remember?” His voice had turned high pitched and whiny with excitement, like a child clamoring for parental affirmation.

  Anger closed Grace’s throat. How dare he? How dare he speak her existence with his toothless beak. To bring up fond memories like this, like it had all been a lovely, gossamer dream, those years. How easily he spoke of her, without a trace of guilt. How unhampered the memories of her rolled off his tongue.

  “Yes, I remember,” Grace replied.

  She turned her face away from him, but she was there again, thirteen years old, back on a day where the three of them had visited that beach. A year before it happened. Patrick and Mary had broken up for the hundredth time, or so it seemed to Grace, for real this time, but were trying to be friendly as a separated couple, for the sake of the child, you know. Of course Patrick’s motive had been to woo Mary back. They had arrived at the beach, one, Grace remembered, Mary hadn’t liked at all, but Patrick loved. The wind whipped sand into their faces, while clusters of small, jagged rocks, leaning into the sea at a sharp angle, assaulted the soles of their feet.

  There was hardly any beach; getting into the water required pitter-pattering across the sharp, cutting rock edges. The waves beat against the rocks, stirring up dirty brown foam that flew up at them. Little droplets of spray clung to the air, lingering there and diffusing light. They were only going for a walk, a talk, like today, but Patrick, ever the water baby, could never resist the sight of the ocean and had to dip in for a swim. He stripped down to a pair of shorts, made his way through the jagged rocks, and like an arrow leaving its bow, plunged into the churning ocean. Mary and Grace sat on the beach watching his strong back recede toward the horizon, secure in the knowledge of his superior strength. His muscled back rose and fell, rose and fell into a steady beat, slicing the waves.

  A few weeks before that visit to the beach, Grace had watched her father don a plain white robe and walk onto the large stage of an evangelical church—one of those tented ones that sprang up overnight. As the crowd cheered, she’d watched him step into a deep bath, followed by a robed preacher. The preacher embraced him and held him like a father holds a newborn, in a most tender embrace. Then he submerged Patrick’s head under the water, holding him there for a few nerve-racking seconds.

  “I baptize you in the name of the Father, the Son, and Holy Spirit,” the pastor declared.

  Patrick submitted. It was the first time Grace had seen him submit to any earthly force. Then he broke the water’s surface and raised his fist in a gesture of victory. Tears of joy streamed down his face, mixed with the water of the baptismal font. He was saved—saved! He believed it; Grace believed it. He would never drink again, squander his money, mistreat them. Grace was ecstatic—happy for the new future the three of them would have together. Her father was now a man reborn, a man who would face the world sober, who would love her. They’d do father and daughter things like go for walks, sit on the beach. So far it had been good. Life had been good with this newly born man, this kinder version of his old self. Grace watched him cut through the water and smiled a smile that spread all the way inside of her, touching her heart in a way that she had not let it be touched by her father before. Mary had seen this Damascus moment too many times before to harbor anything but slight hope.

  On that day, years ago, Grace had watched Patrick swim far out past the breakers and dirty foam, to the quiet calm of the open ocean. Once there, he stopped and turned to face them. Once again, a triumphal fist shot up through the water, puncturing the air with hope, waving at them, reassuring Mary and Grace that everything was okay. In that beautiful moment, the perfect conflation of all of their happiness, Grace caught herself wishing for a huge wave to engulf her father and drag him under. The thought had shamed her. She’d tried to wipe it from her mind, but it lingered. How beautiful and strange and tragic would her father’s death be, right there in that moment of supreme strength and mastery. He would die young, at his physical peak. He would have been saved, in a state of grace, right with God. He would have died a kind, loving man who had taken his family to the beach one sunny afternoon, not the cruel raging monster they had known too intimately. Mary and Grace would have had the memory of him having been saved, baptized, sins repented for, and being new and happy in the world. His death, so soon after his baptism, would have provided the perfect arc to a brief, tumultuous life, finally at peace before its untimely end.

  But Patrick had lived on, at the expense of Mary. He’d lived on to kill her. And here he was, asking with innocent wonder, “Do you remember that beach, Grace? Hey, Grace? The one we used to go to?”

  She had loved him then, and now this memory of love flooded back. How tenuous and unpredictable is memory, a traitor sidling up to you, surprising you with thoughts of love for a man you have told yourself you hate. What did she feel for him now? As the outskirts of the town blurred and melted into san
d dunes outside the car window, Grace scanned her heart. There was nothing. She felt nothing for her father: not hate, not disdain, not contempt. Even fear had left at the sight of him. All that remained was a cavernous nothing, an emptiness sitting in the middle of her chest where a heart should have been.

  They arrived at the deserted beach parking lot. Grace got out while Johnny helped Patrick from the back seat, then walked over to her and whispered something about giving them some time alone. He climbed back into the car as Grace and Patrick made their way down a footworn path from the parking lot. Before them the beach stretched like a supple spine, curving in front of them, drenched with light. The sea was calm. Waves rolled in, spending themselves in foamy spray on the shore. Grace drank in the heavy, salty air and relaxed. She sank her bare feet into the comforting wet sand. Patrick hobbled along next to her, quiet, deep in thought. They reached a rock and sat down. Grace held her box of cigarettes out to Patrick, and they both lit up. She took a good look at him, for the first time, without flinching. A serene smile played on his face as he sampled the air.

  “I love this place. It’s a shame I haven’t been able to come for years.”

  Grace smiled. Something about the sea air had calmed her. “You remember it, don’t you? How I used to chase you around? I would let you get just far enough away to think you were going to escape, then I’d catch you and plop your little feet in the water, again and again, and you’d laugh. Laugh and scream. My little Grace. Tell me you remember?”

 

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