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Story postcard – on the road (4)

“Ever been to London?”

Rudd shakes his head.

“Well … plenty of Zimbabweans in London. Sophisticated. Entrepreneurs, doctors, nurses. Some in my choir. I like them. Partly why I came. Curious I suppose. I know it’s got problems, but I never expected it to feel like this. Sort of sad.”

Rudd’s fingers begin to drum on the wheel. He chews his lip, and forces himself not to point out the stuff he’s heard about London – the rain, the knife attacks, the crowded trains. Out of the corner of his eye he watches Simi. Goddess Simi. Suddenly he can’t imagine her liking the lodge at all.

She’s still talking, more to herself than to him. He doesn’t mind. Better than silence. He rubs a hand around the back of his neck to wipe away the sweat.

“Is there going to be anything fun at your lodge?”

“Fun?” He looks across at her.

“Yes. Didn’t realise it was so far from anywhere.”

We’ve got a bar. Swimming-pool. Tennis court. Golf. Walks … that kind of thing?

“I suppose so,” said Simi, her voice dropping. “Don’t know why I thought it would be a good idea. Detox. Healthy living. Feels like I’ve made a massive mistake.”

Body language Rudd. Be confident. Convince her. He clears his throat.

“No. Not a mistake. We’ve got stuff happening. We’ve got a wedding this weekend.”

“A wedding?”

“Yes. Big wedding. Local wedding. They won’t mind you joining in. Nobody does here. You’re the only non-wedding guest staying anyway.”

“I’m the only non-wedding guest?”

“Ja. This weekend you are. Most people come in families and we couldn’t fit any of them. Had room for you though.”

 “Okaaay.” Simi stretches out the word. “A wedding? Never been to one in Africa. Could be interesting. As long as there’s not so much of the nothing-really-works problem, the pothole-problem.”

“Well,” says Rudd, “it’ll be different. Look … over there.”

Simi eyes follow Rudd’s finger to the horizon.

 “There. Those rocks, up there on the left. Those are kopjes.

Simi studies the lumbering parade of rock.

“They look brilliant in this light,” says Rudd. “We’ve had a lot of rain.”

“And there’s more coming.”

 “Maybe. Won’t spoil anything.”

“Oh no? Our pilot said something about a cyclone?”

“Cyclone? This weekend?”

“That’s what he said.”

“Must have meant Mozambique. We don’t get cyclones here.”

“No?”

“No,” says Rudd meeting her eyes. “Hardly ever. Not here.”

Copyright Georgie Knaggs & The Phraser 2023

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Story postcard – on the road (3)

For a while, they drive on in silence. It’s almost ten o’clock, and the pale blue day is getting hotter.

Rudd lifts his damp back a little further from the seat. He fiddles with the air conditioning, but knows he won’t get much out of it. No replacements around, and the lodge doesn’t have the money anyway.

He gives up, and tries to think of something to say. It’s important. He knows that, remembers it from his training.

“Communicate.” “Body language.” “Be accessible.” “Professional.” “Friendly.” “You want them to like you.”

Great.

After a few more awkward miles he tries a little conversation.

We’ll be heading through the kopjes soon.

“The what?” Simi turns towards him.

“Kopjes. K-o-p-j-e. Afrikaans word I think. They’re big rocks. Balancing. You’ll see them. They’re beautiful. Msasas all around them.”

“Msasas?”

Simi raises her hands to adjust the broad yellow band that holds her hair back, fountain style. Her eyes never leave Rudd.

 “Ja. Msasas are trees. They change colour. September, October, and they’ll be all oranges and reds.

But not now?

No.

Her hands drop back to her lap. She twists a ring on her finger.

Getting warm,” she says. “No air con?

No. Doesn’t seem to be working.

Nor my window, thinks Rudd, but he doesn’t tell her that.

Simi presses the button on her door, opening the window slightly.

You know,” she says, as a slither of wind cools the cab, “this place is nothing like I expected. Don’t know what I expected, but the airport was so quiet. It felt tired. Not much 2019 about it. And those petrol queues? What’s going on there?

 “Petrol shortage. It comes and goes. Things are different here.

Thanks. I can see that.” She pauses. “Sorry. I’m a little tired. It’s just that so far nothing feels like the other bits of Africa I’ve seen. There’s no buzz.

Rudd, braves a glance. She’s staring ahead. Eyes lost. He looks back at the road, relieved that at least her tone sounds softer.

I suppose I did ask for somewhere different, but I didn’t want somewhere completely comatosed.” She looks at him. “Is it always like that?”

The airport?

Yes.

Like what?

Half dead?

 Rudd avoids her eyes. He feels irritated suddenly. It’s his airport. Same as always. At least the main luggage belt worked this time. And the lights were on. Not good enough for her? Then she’d better take her fancy earrings somewhere else.

He shrugs.

“Really? That’s it?”

He looks at her.

It works for us.

Copyright Georgie Knaggs & The Phraser 2023

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Story postcard – on the road (2)

“Uh-huh?”


The truck jolts.

“Sorry.”

“Are all the roads around here like this?”

“Getting that way.”


More potholes flare in front of them, like a rash. Rudd misses most, but not all. Simi, both hands on the dashboard now, turns towards him.

“How old are you?” she asks.

“22.”


“22!”

 “Ja,” he says, eyes trying to hold on to the distance.

“And you’re the manager? You know I’m almost twice your age.”

Rudd says nothing. He feels her eyes search across him, and knows there’s a gap he should fill with words but he doesn’t know what to say. His neck is hot red still, and now his back is sweating, sticking to the seat.

“I surprised you, didn’t I?”

“Well …”

“You didn’t expect me to be black, did you?”

Rudd’s stomach curls. She’s right, so right, and he has no idea what he’s supposed to say. He begins to shake his head, and then stops. Simi Bishop. How was he supposed to know?

“Never had any black guests?”

“Ja. Of course, hey. Just not from London. Never entered my head.”

He sits straighter, trying to keep his eyes on the road, his mind playing back over his rush to airport, and his hopes of collecting some glossy young Londoner. All he’d been told about was the last minute booking.

The road is better now. Simi releases her brace position, smooths down her kaftan and places her hands in her lap.

“And? Is it a problem?”

“No. Not at all. Nothing like that. Just didn’t have time to get …. Anyway data costs too much here to check stuff you don’t need to, and the lodge WiFi is useless. Plus the wedding… Just knew you needed collecting, and that …”

Rudd’s voice drifts away into the tall grass on either side of the road. He wants to vanish with it. To hide. Questions kick inside his head. What did he do to deserve the Queen of Sheba? How did she pick his lodge for her big adventure?  What did the agent say? Wants somewhere different. Off the normal circuit. Where no-one goes. Brilliant.

Rudd sighs.

Simi turns her back to him and stares out the window.

Copyright Georgie Knaggs & The Phraser 2023