When did it become a crime to be afraid, I wonder..?
All I know is that since I can remember it has never been an
option. It simply did not happen in our family. On the Afrikaans side, my
father’s side, I have a Great Uncle who ran off to join the fighting against
the British when his family was taken to the infamous camps – three of his
siblings never made it out of them. He found his father’s Kommando and ran
alongside his father’s horse, hanging onto the mane until a horse became
available. He was twelve. My great-grandmother had a different sort of courage –
the sort that can endure watching three children die of sickness and starvation
and still never lose faith in God or in mankind.
My father went to war as a pilot aged seventeen.
On my mother’s side they appear to have been equally
fearless, dying in The Great War and in the Zulu Wars, and surviving the “White
Man’s Grave” that is Africa , according to
Kipling..
So while my family has been known to tolerate many small
foibles and indiscretions (particularly on my mother’s side), cowardice was
never one of them.
And yet I’m sitting here, heart pounding every time the
birds start up, or I hear one of the big palm fronds falling over the pond.
It had to happen eventually. Our small part of the valley is
experiencing a crime wave and every house around me has been hit. It was only a
question of time…
I woke up all bright-eyed and bushy-tailed yesterday at
seven thirty, which is very early for me. The shadowplay of light in the lounge
is irresistible between eight and ten, and I hate to miss it. The branches of
the big trees over the verandah are all dancing in the August wind, scattering
the sunlight into little twinkly bits. It makes my day to see it. It is still
too cold to sit outside then, but I love the view from the sofa, snuggled up
with my dogs and sipping cocoa and doing my daily morning journal.
I had just got up and was preparing for the daily Odyssey up
to the Water-tower to turn the water on (it all runs out during the night),
when the dogs all rushed out of the French Doors in my bedroom, barking madly.
I peered out and saw a man up in the rose garden near the Tower.
It didn’t worry me particularly – I thought it was my
neighbour’s worker. He had promised to come down with his man and have a look
at my leaks. I figured he’d come early to look at them before I filled the
tank. So I called the dogs in before they scared the poor fellow to death and
phoned him.
“Selwyn, is that you crashing around in my undergrowth?”
“No. It isn’t.”
“It isn’t..??”
“Hang on – I’ll be right down”
And he was. By then I was up there looking for tracks. I’m
blind as a bat without my lenses – too bad an astigmatism for glasses – so I
told myself it might have been a cow, and was looking for hoof-tracks (my
neighbour-to-the-west’s cows are always jumping over the electric fence). There
weren’t any.
My neighbour fought in the Rhodesian Bush Wars and is a
tracker of note. He found the tracks. There had been three of them. He showed
me where the first two had come in – where they’d stood and observed the house.
A lovely view of my open bedroom door…
He found the path the third one had taken – the one I’d
seen. And where the three of them had come together. The dogs had also picked
up the scent. I got onto the radio.
“Papa Delta, Papa Delta, come in for Charlie Foxtrot”
“Go ahead Charlie Foxtrot. I receive you”
“Three intruders, nice fresh tracks. Only 15 minutes ago. I
saw one. I think it’s a good case for the Sniffer Dog and the Tracker”
“I’ll organise it, Charlie Foxtrot”
“I’m warning you, I’m still in my pajamas”
“Are those sexy pajamas, Charlie Foxtrot?”
“Most definitely not, Papa Delta”
And he did. It took a while though, to organise.
“They’re taking a long time” said Selwyn.
“They’re much quicker at night. Remember, they’re all at
work now, so they have farther to come”
Selwyn went home, he had things to do.
I went and washed my face and made coffee in case anyone
wanted any, and put on some clothes. My bright pink furry dressing gown made
far too good a target. It took a while for the tracker to come.
Papa Delta arrived.
“So would you have been quicker if I’d said the pajamas were
sexy?” I enquired.
He laughed.
Wagner arrived with his beautiful Alsation, Jaffa . Introductions all round. The tracker
was a fresh-faced young man with eyes shining with a rare pureness of spirit. I
liked him and his dog instantly.
I went up to show them where the tracks were, but found that
I wasn’t that clear on it (I’d kept back so as not to mess the scene up) and
had to run back to the house to phone the long-suffering Selwyn, who arrived
two minutes later.
It was fascinating to watch. Selwyn pointed out where they’d
come in, reading signs that were plain to the other two men but invisible to
me. As soon as Jaffa
picked up the scent, she sat down. Then the hunt was on! It was uncanny how
accurate Selwyn had been. The track led through the field, past the rose
garden, behind the cottage, across another field through blackjacks and
shoulder-high grass, to the fence. Wagner pointed out the loose strand, not
apparent to the eye. He waggled it, to show us how loose it was compared to the
others.
“This is not their first visit”, he said. “They’ve been
through here before”
We left the track, went out through the gate, and as soon as
Jaffa found the
scent again on the other side of the fence, she sat down. And so we went on,
Papa Delta pointing out shoeprints that he recognised from a cable-theft at his
house. Safety boots and takkies.
“They’re armed, these guys”, he said.
Selwyn compared his
foot with the print. It was massive. So, a big guy…
I’m astonished that I kept up. I was the eldest of our
little group by ten years..
Eventually, we called a halt. It was plain where the tracks
were headed.. Past the local Shebeen to a new squatter camp housing mainly
Zimbabweans. I remembered that I’d left the gate open and my radio and phone
and mobile on the verandah, and all the dogs locked inside (for Jaffa )
We retraced our steps. No need to photograph the prints –
Papa Delta already had them on record. Pointless calling the police. Nothing
had been taken. What could they do, anyway..?
“Not much they can do until these guys do something to you”
said Wagner. “But they’ll be back”.
“Probably tonight, or tomorrow. Better be on the lookout for
the next few days”
“Ja, they case the joint during the day then come back later
when it’s dark”
"Would any of you like some coffee?” I asked. No-one did.
Every one of them had a job to get back to.
It was after they’d all gone that it hit me. I had been
very, very lucky.I always have been. My Irish Granny called it the luck of the devil. My Afrikaans Ouma called it the hand of God.
A few minutes later, and I’d have run right into them at the
pump house…Unarmed and in my pajamas. I don’t even take my radio or phone with
me – after all, it is just a stroll in the garden..! The dogs are almost always with me on the way there. But not always when I return an hour later to switch it off..
And very lucky that my door is always open. Who knows how
close to the house they might have got? It could have gotten ugly. Someone was
bound to get hurt..
And so here I sit, waiting, the television off, no music. It is midnight now. Will it be tonight..?