This Was the Old Chief's Country

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This Was the Old Chief's Country Page 13

by Doris Lessing


  Tembi departed on this occasion with lingering steps, and some time later Jane, glancing from the window, saw him standing at the edge of the bush gazing towards the house. She despatched the houseboy to send him away, saying that she would not have him loitering round the house doing nothing.

  Jane, too, was now feeling that she had ‘spoiled’ Tembi, that he had ‘got above himself’.

  And now nothing happened for quite a long time.

  Then Jane missed her diamond engagement ring. She used often to take it off when doing household things; so that she was not at first concerned. After several days she searched thoroughly for it, but it could not be found. A little later a pearl brooch was missing. And there were several small losses, a spoon used for the baby’s feeding, a pair of scissors, a silver christening mug. Jane said crossly to Willie that there must be a poltergeist. ‘I had the thing in my hand and when I turned round it was gone. It’s just silly. Things don’t vanish like that.’ ‘A black poltergeist, perhaps,’ said Willie. ‘How about the cook?’ ‘Don’t be ridiculous,’ said Jane, a little too quickly. ‘Both the houseboys have been with us since we came to the farm.’ But suspicion flared in her, nevertheless. It was a well-worn maxim that no native, no matter how friendly, could be trusted; scratch any one of them, and you found a thief. Then she looked at Willie, understood that he was feeling the same, and was as ashamed of his feelings as she was. The houseboys were almost personal friends. ‘Nonsense,’ said Jane firmly. ‘I don’t believe a word of it.’ But no solution offered itself, and things continued to vanish.

  One day Tembi’s father asked to speak to the boss. He untied a piece of cloth, laid it on the ground – and there were all the missing articles. ‘But not Tembi, surely,’ protested Jane. Tembi’s father, awkward in his embarrassment, explained that he had happened to be passing the cattle kraals, and had happened to notice the little boy sitting on his antheap, in the shade, playing with his treasures. ‘Of course he had no idea of their value,’ appealed Jane. ‘It was just because they were so shiny and glittering.’ And indeed, as they stood there, looking down at the lamplight glinting on the silver and the diamonds, it was easy to see how a child could be fascinated. ‘Well, and what are we going to do?’ asked Willie practically. Jane did not reply directly to the question; she exclaimed helplessly: ‘Do you realize that the little imp must have been watching me doing things round the house for weeks, nipping in when my back was turned for a moment – he must be quick as a snake.’ ‘Yes, but what are we going to do?’ ‘Just give him a good talking-to,’ said Jane, who did not know why she felt so dismayed and lost. She was angry; but far more distressed – there was something ugly and persistent in this planned, deliberate thieving, that she could not bear to associate with little Tembi, whom she had saved from death.

  ‘A talking-to won’t do any good,’ said Willie. Tembi was whipped again; this time properly, with no nonsense about making the switch whistle for effect. He was made to expose his bare bottom across his father’s knees, and when he got up, Willie said with satisfaction: ‘He’s not going to be comfortable sitting down for a week.’ ‘But, Willie, there’s blood,’ said Jane. For as Tembi walked off stiffly, his legs straddled apart from the pain, his fists thrust into his streaming eyes, reddish patches appeared on the stuff of his trousers. Willie said angrily: ‘Well, what do you expect me to do – make him a present of it and say: How clever of you?’

  ‘But blood, Willie!’

  ‘I didn’t know I was hitting so hard,’ admitted Willie. He examined the long flexible twig in his hands, before throwing it away, as if surprised at its effectiveness. ‘That must have hurt,’ he said doubtfully. ‘Still, he deserved it. Now stop crying, Jane. He won’t do that again.’

  But Jane did not stop crying. She could not bear to think of the beating; and Willie, no matter what he said, was uncomfortable when he remembered it. They would have been pleased to let Tembi slip from their minds for a while, and have him reappear later, when there had been time for kindness to grow in them again.

  But it was not a week before he demanded to be made nurse to the children: he was now big enough, he said; and Jane had promised. Jane was so astonished she could not speak to him. She went indoors, shutting the door on him; and when she knew he was still lingering there for speech with her, sent out the houseboy to say she was not having a thief as nurse for her children.

  A few weeks later he asked again; and again she refused.

  Then he took to waylaying her every day, sometimes several times a day: ‘Missus, my missus, let me work near you, let me work near you.’ Always she refused, and always she grew more angry.

  At last, the sheer persistence of the thing defeated her. She said: ‘I won’t have you as a nurse, but you can help me with the vegetable garden.’ Tembi was sullen, but he presented himself at the garden next day, which was not the one near the house, but the fenced patch near the compound, for the use of the natives. Jane employed a garden boy to run it, telling him when was the time to plant, explaining about compost and the proper treatment of soil. Tembi was to help him.

  She did not often go to the garden; it ran of itself. Sometimes, passing, she saw the beds full of vegetables were running to waste; this meant that a new batch of Africans were in the compound, natives who had to be educated afresh to eat what was good for them. But now she had had her last baby, and employed two nannies in the nurseries, she felt free to spend more time at the clinic and at the garden. Here she made a point of being friendly to Tembi. She was not a person to bear grudges, though a feeling that he was not to be trusted barred him as a nurse. She would talk to him about her own children, and how they were growing, and would soon be going to school in the city. She would talk to him about keeping himself clean, and eating the right things; how he must earn good money so that he could buy shoes to keep his feet from the germ-laden dust; how he must be honest, always tell the truth and be obedient to the white people. While she was in the garden he would follow her around, his hoe trailing forgotten in his hand, his eyes fixed on her. ‘Yes, missus; yes, my missus,’ he repeated continually. And when she left, he would implore: ‘When are you coming again? Come again soon, my missus.’ She took to bringing him her own children’s books, when they were too worn for use in the nursery. ‘You must learn to read, Tembi,’ she would say. ‘Then, when you want to get a job, you will earn more wages if you can say: “Yes, missus, I can read and write.” You can take messages on the telephone then, and write down orders so that you don’t forget them.’ ‘Yes, missus,’ Tembi would say, reverently taking the books from her. When she left the garden, she would glance back, always a little uncomfortably, because of Tembi’s intense devotion, and see him kneeling on the rich red soil, framed by the bright green of the vegetables, knitting his brows over the strange coloured pictures and the unfamiliar print.

  This went on for about two years. She said to Willie: ‘Tembi seems to have got over that funny business of his. He’s really useful in that garden. I don’t have to tell him when to plant things. He knows as well as I do. And he goes round the huts in the compound with the vegetables, persuading the natives to eat them.’ ‘I bet he makes a bit on the side,’ said Willie, chuckling. ‘Oh no, Willie, I’m sure he wouldn’t do that.’

  And, in fact, he didn’t. Tembi regarded himself as an apostle of the white man’s way of life. He would say earnestly, displaying the baskets of carefully arranged vegetables to the native women: ‘The Goodhearted One says it is right we should eat these things. She says eating them will save us from sickness.’ Tembi achieved more than Jane had done in years of propaganda.

  He was nearly eleven when he began giving trouble again. Jane sent her two elder children to boarding-school, dismissed her nannies, and decided to engage a piccanin to help with the children’s washing. She did not think of Tembi; but she engaged Tembi’s younger brother.

  Tembi presented himself at the back door, as of old, his eyes flashing, his body held fine and taut, t
o protest. ‘Missus, missus, you promised I should work for you.’ ‘But Tembi, you are working for me, with the vegetables.’ ‘Missus, my missus, you said when you took a piccanin for the house, that piccanin would be me.’ But Jane did not give way. She still felt as if Tembi were on probation. And the demanding, insistent, impatient thing in Tembi did not seem to her a good quality to be near her children. Besides, she liked Tembi’s little brother, who was a softer, smiling, chubby Tembi, playing good-naturedly with the children in the garden when he had finished the washing and ironing. She saw no reason to change, and said so.

  Tembi sulked. He no longer took baskets of green stuff from door to door in the compound. And he did as little work as he need without actually neglecting it. The spirit had gone out of him.

  ‘You know,’ said Jane half indignantly, half amused, to Willie: ‘Tembi behaves as if he had some sort of claim on us.’

  Quite soon, Tembi came to Willie and asked to be allowed to buy a bicycle. He was then earning ten shillings a month, and the rule was that no native earning less than fifteen shillings could buy a bicycle. A fifteen-shilling native would keep five shillings of his wages, give ten to Willie, and undertake to remain on the farm till the debt was paid. That might take two years, or even longer. ‘No,’ said Willie. ‘And what does a piccanin like you want with a bicycle? A bicycle is for big men.’

  Next day, their eldest child’s bicycle vanished from the house, and was found in the compound leaning against Tembi’s hut. Tembi had not even troubled to conceal the theft; and when he was called for an interview kept silent. At last he said: ‘I don’t know why I stole it. I don’t know.’ And he ran off, crying, into the trees.

  ‘He must go,’ said Willie finally, baffled and angry.

  ‘But his father and mother and the family live in our compound,’ protested Jane.

  ‘I’m not having a thief on the farm,’ said Willie. But getting rid of Tembi was more than dismissing a thief: it was pushing aside a problem that the McClusters were not equipped to handle. Suddenly Jane knew that when she no longer saw Tembi’s burning, pleading eyes, it would be a relief; though she said guiltily: ‘Well, I suppose he can find work on one of the farms nearby.’

  Tembi did not allow himself to be sacked so easily. When Willie told him he burst into passionate tears, like a very small child. Then he ran round the house and banged his fists on the kitchen door till Jane came out. ‘Missus, my missus, don’t let the baas send me away.’ ‘But Tembi, you must go, if the boss says so.’ ‘I work for you, missus, I’m your boy, let me stay. I’ll work for you in the garden and I won’t ask for any more money.’ ‘I’m sorry, Tembi,’ said Jane. Tembi gazed at her while his face hollowed into incredulous misery: he had not believed she would not take his part. At this moment his little brother came round the corner of the house carrying Jane’s youngest child, and Tembi flew across and flung himself on them, so that the little black child staggered back, clutching the white infant to himself with difficulty. Jane flew to rescue her baby, and then pulled Tembi off his brother, who was bitten and scratched all over his face and arms.

  ‘That finishes it,’ she said coldly. ‘You will be off this farm in an hour, or the police will chase you off.’

  They asked Tembi’s father, later, if the lad had found work; the reply was that he was garden boy on a neighbouring farm. When the McClusters saw these neighbours they asked after Tembi, but the reply was vague: on this new farm Tembi was just another labourer without a history.

  Later still, Tembi’s father said there had been ‘trouble’, and that Tembi had moved to another farm, many miles away. Then, no one seemed to know where he was; it was said he had joined a gang of boys moving south to Johannesburg for work in the gold mines.

  The McClusters forgot Tembi. They were pleased to be able to forget him. They thought of themselves as good masters; they had a good name with their labourers for kindness and fair dealing; while the affair of Tembi left something hard and unassimilable in them, like a grain of sand in a mouthful of food. The name ‘Tembi’ brought uncomfortable emotions with it; and there was no reason why it should, according to their ideas of right and wrong. So at last they did not even remember to ask Tembi’s father what had become of him: he had become another of those natives who vanish from one’s life after seeming to be such an intimate part of it.

  It was about four years later that the robberies began again. The McClusters’ house was the first to be rifled. Someone climbed in one night and took the following articles: Willie’s big winter coat, his stick, two old dresses belonging to Jane, a quantity of children’s clothing and an old and battered child’s tricycle. Money left lying in a drawer was untouched. ‘What extraordinary things to take,’ marvelled the McClusters. For except for Willie’s coat, there was nothing of value. The theft was reported to the police, and a routine visit was made to the compound. It was established that the thief must be someone who knew the house, for the dogs had not barked at him; and that it was not an experienced thief, who would certainly have taken money and jewellery.

  Because of this, the first theft was not connected with the second, which took place at a neighbouring farmhouse. There, money and watches and a gun were stolen. And there were more thefts in the district of the same kind. The police decided it must be a gang of thieves, not the ordinary pilferer, for the robberies were so clever and it seemed as if several people had planned them. Watchdogs were poisoned; times were chosen when servants were out of the house; and on two occasions someone had entered through bars so closely set together that no one but a child could have forced his way through.

  The district gossiped about the robberies; and because of them, the anger lying dormant between white and black, always ready to flare up, deepened in an ugly way. There was hatred in the white people’s voices when they addressed their servants, that futile anger, for even if their personal servants were giving information to the thieves, what could be done about it? The most trusted servant could turn out to be a thief. During these months when the unknown gang terrorized the district, unpleasant things happened; people were fined more often for beating their natives; a greater number of labourers than usual ran away over the border to Portuguese territory; the dangerous, simmering anger was like heat growing in the air. Even Jane found herself saying one day: ‘Why do we do it? Look how I spend my time nursing and helping these natives! What thanks do I get? They aren’t grateful for anything we do for them.’ This question of gratitude was in every white person’s mind during that time.

  As the thefts continued, Willie put bars in all the windows of the house, and bought two large fierce dogs. This annoyed Jane, for it made her feel confined and a prisoner in her own home.

  To look at a beautiful view of mountains and shaded green bush through bars, robs the sight of joy; and to be greeted on her way from house to storerooms by the growling of hostile dogs who treated everyone, black and white, as an enemy, became daily more exasperating. They bit everyone who came near the house, and Jane was afraid for her children. However, it was not more than three weeks after they were bought that they were found lying stretched in the sun, quite dead, foam at their mouths and their eyes glazing. They had been poisoned. ‘It looks as if we can expect another visit,’ said Willie crossly; for he was by now impatient of the whole business. ‘However,’ he said impatiently, ‘if one chooses to live in a damned country like this, one has to take the consequences.’ It was an exclamation that meant nothing, that could not be taken seriously by anyone. During that time, however, a lot of settled and contented people were talking with prickly anger about ‘the damned country’. In short, their nerves were on edge.

  Not long after the dogs were poisoned, it became necessary for Willie to make the trip into town, thirty miles off. Jane did not want to go; she disliked the long, hot, scurrying day in the streets. So Willie went by himself.

  In the morning, Jane went to the vegetable garden with her younger children. They played around the water-butt,
by themselves, while she staked out a new row of beds; her mind was lazily empty, her hands working quickly with twine and wooden pegs. Suddenly, however, an extraordinary need took her to turn around sharply, and she heard herself say: ‘Tembi!’ She looked wildly about her; afterwards it seemed to her she had heard him speak her name. It seemed to her that she would see a spindly earnest-faced black child kneeling behind her between the vegetable beds, poring over a tattered picture book. Time slipped and swam together; she felt confused; and it was only by looking determinedly at her two children that she regained a knowledge of how long it had been since Tembi followed her around the garden.

  When she got back to the house, she sewed on the veranda. Leaving her chair for a moment to fetch a glass of water, she found her sewing basket had gone. At first she could not believe it. Distrusting her own senses, she searched the place for her basket, which she knew very well had been on the veranda not a few moments before. It meant that a native was lingering in the bush, perhaps a couple of hundred yards away, watching her movements. It wasn’t a pleasant thought. An old uneasiness filled her; and again the name ‘Tembi’ rose into her mind. She took herself into the kitchen and said to the cookboy: ‘Have you heard anything of Tembi recently?’ But there had been no news, it seemed. He was ‘at the gold mines’. His parents had not heard from him for years.

  ‘But why a sewing basket?’ muttered Jane to herself, incredulously. ‘Why take such a risk for so little? It’s insane.’

  That afternoon, when the children were playing in the garden and Jane was asleep on her bed, someone walked quietly into the bedroom and took her big garden hat, her apron, and the dress she had been wearing that morning. When Jane woke and discovered this, she began to tremble, half with anger, half with fear. She was alone in the house, and she had the prickling feeling of being watched. As she moved from room to room, she kept glancing over her shoulder behind the angles of wardrobe and cupboard, and fancied that Tembi’s great imploring eyes would appear there, as unappeasable as a dead person’s eyes, following her.

 

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