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Story postcard – the search (1)

Rudd climbs on to the chair to get a better view. He swings his torch beam around the room, searching for Jacobus and Hansie, and finds them just off to his left.

“Jacobus, I’m going to take some staff to look for Fred and Bernard. Can you hold the fort here? Keep your guests inside if possible?”

“Sure.” Jacobus nods, his face broad and calm.

“Can’t we help search?” Hansie asks.

“Maybe later. We’ll do a first sweep. Not sure how bad it’s going to be out there. Hopefully the generator will come on soon.”

Rudd moves his torch beam on, glancing it across Simi and Marybelle, whose backs are towards him, their attention returned to the storm. Then he circles the light round to the kitchen where he picks out Tonderai and Innocence shining wet in their waterproofs. He raises an arm in greeting.

“How’s the generator?” he shouts.

They shake their heads. “Too much water. Flooded.”

No. Man! Just what we need.

“Any sign of Fred or Bernard?”

“No.”

“Okay. We need to search the rooms. They may be there. Please come.”

He jumps down from the chair into the swirl of voices, and starts to make his way to the doors, with Tonderai and Innocence behind him, and the wind slapping at their legs. They are at the far end of the room when Jen blocks their path. Her hair is tangled, and her face made ghostly by the torchlight reflecting off the white of her dress.

“What can I do?” she asks, anxiously.

“Please, just keep everyone here. We’ll be as quick as we can.”

“What about the lights?” Katania demands.

“Not working,” replies Tonderai. “Too much rain.”

“At least we’re used to the dark,” someone calls.

“Eggsactly … Harare every night.”  

Rudd tries again to press on, but now a hand on his shoulder holds him back. He swings around.

 “Tim!”

“Do you want me to come?”

“Ah, no. Didn’t see you just now. Probably not. Better if you’re here with this lot. If we need you we’ll come and get you.”

“Okay. Hope you find them.”

Broken glass crunches under Rudd’s veldskoens as he opens the doors, and steps out through their damaged frames into the gale, his torch fluttering feebly. Tonderai and Innocence join him, closing the doors as far as they can behind them. They switch off their torches, and with the rain sweeping over them in blinding gusts, manoeuvre through the chairs and tables to the edge of the verandah. There are no stars, and there is no light, just the dull gleam off the metal walkway poles, stabbing roofless, up into the night. The three splash down on to the drowned terrace. Ahead is the squash court, and beside them the trees, mad in black.

Rudd crooks an arm across his forehead, longing for the raincoat, hat and boots he left in the back of the truck. Tonderai and Innocence, are in front of him now, clambering through the branches of the tree that has fallen across the steps down to the bedrooms. Rudd catches up, and they jump down to the lower walkway. Here the wind is less, but the roof is not so high, and the rain is deafening.

Copyright Georgie Knaggs & The Phraser 2023

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Story postcard – champions in the storm (3)

Simi feels a new fear numb through her.

“Not seen.”

“They were at the meal.”

“Next to us, when we got up to leave the tables.”

“If they’re together, Fred and Bernard will be fine,” someone shouts.

Simi is not so certain. She remembers Sal helping her uncle to his feet. He had not been steady.

“We need to find them.”

 “Don’t worry, we will,” Rudd shouts.

“Hope they’ll be okay Simi,” says Marybelle, her hand on Simi’s arm. “They’re old soldiers so they should be fine.”

Simi pats the hand, but is not convinced. She turns back towards the doors, as keen as the others to catch a glimpse of the pair out in the storm. Bodies squeeze to either side, forcing her and Marybelle close to the tug and rattle of the glass as the wind tumbles through the tables outside. Suddenly, Simi sees a table fling towards them. It spins round, and then its corner smashes into the glass just beside her. As it does somebody screams and slams into her from behind. Simi falls, and tries to push herself up with her hands, but a sharp stab in one lifts the other straight up to Marybelle, who catches it and pulls her to her feet, dragging her towards the middle of the room.

As they squash back through the guests the gong rings out over the chaos, and Rudd yells out, urging all to come away from the glass. He shouts that they must stay inside, but not everyone agrees.

“We need to search man.”

“Let’s get out there.”

“We’ll go.”

Rudd pleads again. “This is not your average storm. This is a cyclone.”

“What?”

“A cyclone?”

“You’re kidding.”

“Who says?”

 “Nobody warned us …”

Rudd shouts more loudly. “This is the cyclone that’s just hit Beira. They said it might get here. May get worse.”

“How come we never heard anything?”

“Agh man, it’s just another storm.”

“No way. Beira’s drowned.”

“You never said.”

“Well …wasn’t much info out there …” Rudd shouts. “Should be over by morning.”

“By morning!” Groans fill the room.

“Meanwhile, we’ll get a search party together to look for Fred and Bernard,” Rudd yells.

There is another splintering crack, and more wind sweeps through at knee height. Rudd is still saying something, but Simi can barely hear him.

“… old bit of the lodge the safest … watch out … glass … working on the generator …”

A frantic banging twists in from outside, cutting Rudd short.

“It’s the walkway roof!”

“The lower end is lifting …”

Simi and Marybelle turn around, Simi stretching up to see over peoples’ heads. She just catches sight of a section of roof flapping wildly in the flickering light of the storm. Beside it another sheet lifts, and starts to peel back, then both rip free, and tear away into the night.

“Like washing from a line. Gone,” someone shouts.

Again bodies tiptoe, but there is not the rush forwards. All are wary of the glass. Simi’s nerves are scraped raw.

“Eish …”

“No …”

“We’ve got to find them!”

Copyright Georgie Knaggs & The Phraser 2023

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Story postcard – champions in the storm (2)

Simi, her own fears almost forgotten, moves closer to the doors, and peers through their glass. At first she sees no sign of the young man, then suddenly she spots him, bent low into the wind. Curtains of rain sweep around him, hiding him and then exposing him, as he makes his way through the tables to the crate of champagne. By the time he reaches it, he is so low to the ground Simi thinks he must be on his knees.

“He’s got it,” someone shouts.

“Any bets he won’t make it back?” jokes another.

“He better!” shouts Katania, and the room bellies with laughter, until a sudden cry cuts through the noise.

“No way! Look at that.”

Simi cups her hands against the glass, and sees the roof over the walkway begin to lift. She watches it strain at its edges, and then, with a muffled, clattering wrench, one side peels back, twists free and cartwheels out into the darkness towards the pool.

“What’s happened?” voices call.

“The roof over the stairs … far side of the verandah … it’s come off.”

“Where is it?”

“Can’t see.”

“And the champagne?”

Simi refocuses. She tries to find the young man but when the lightning comes again all she sees is the crate, closer now, but without its escort.

“Can you see him?” Simi asks, eyes straining into the dark.

“Yes,” says Marybelle. “He’s just there. Something knocked him over, but he’s up again.”

“I see him,” someone shouts. “He’s on his hands and knees.”

“Agh, we’d better get out there and help him.”

Then Simi spots him. He is trying to stand, but the wind forces him back down, toppling the table beside him and blocking her view. New shoulders squeeze in beside her.

“Where is he? I can’t see him?”

“He’s just behind that table there. Not far … by the crate,” says Marybelle, stepping away from the doors as they slide wide then closed again.

“Who’s gone out now?” a voice at the back calls.

“No clue.”

Simi sees two more bodies double into the storm. Staccatoed by flashes of lightning, they reach the upturned table, and pull it to one side. Then, crouched together around the crate, the three push, bobsleigh, through the deluge. As they get close to the doors, hands reach forward and pull them open and the three stagger in, their shouts spinning into the room.

“Yassus man …”

“That’s wild out there!”

The doors thump closed, and the champagne is lifted high and carried forwards, torchlight bobbing to either side.

“Good job,” shouts Katania, over the cheers and whistles.

Simi turns back to the glass, unable to resist the force of the chaos outside. In the flat bursts of light she watches as the tables, dishevelled in their white cloths, jumble and jam on the verandah like logs across a spillway.

She is immersed in their jigsaw when she hears Rudd shout over the crowd.

 “Listen up please. Has anyone seen Uncle Fred and Bernard?”

Copyright Georgie Knaggs & The Phraser 2023