Excerpt from We Kiss Them With Rain

After Sipho’s funeral things became progressively worse for Mvelo and her mother Zola. Mvelo was young, but she felt like an old, worn-out shoe of a girl. She was fourteen with the mind of a forty-year-old. She stopped singing. For her mother’s sake she tried very hard to remain optimistic, but hope felt like a slippery fish in her hands.

They had been in this position before, where someone in the pension payout office had decided to discontinue their social grants. One grant was for her being underage, reared by a 31-year-old single mother; the other was for Zola because of her status.

The thought of having no money for food, to live, drove Mvelo mad. “Why are the grants discontinued? My motheris still not well enough to work,” she demanded from the official with the bloodshot eyes, who was popping pills like peanuts into her mouth. Her bad weave and make-up made her look like a man playing dress-up. It was obvious to everyone in the queue that the official was hung-over.

Hhabe, hhayi bo ngane ndini, ask someone who cares. You’ll see what it says here: DISCONTINUED. You will have to go to Pretoria where all your documents are processed. Now shoo.” She waved them away. “It is my lunchtime.” The official’s mind was on a cold beer to deal with her hangover.

Zola stopped her daughter from engaging the woman any further. “It won’t help, Mvelo, let’s go back home. We will make a plan.”

They were a sad sight. Zola was a shadow of her former athletic self. Her tall frame made her look even worse than she was. People in the queue gossiped behind their hands as
usual.

The sight of someone obviously sick seemed to excite them to talk about what was no doubt true for many people waiting there, even if you couldn’t see it.

Mvelo and Zola had borrowed money for taxi fare to come to the pension payout hall. Now they would have to walk, and the Durban heat was suffocating. Hot tears stung Mvelo’s eyes; the lump in her throat burned. She drank water and began to navigate through the crowd towards the road, heading back with her fragile mother. And just then an unlikely angel materialized from the queue in the form of maDlamini.

“Mvelo,” she called out to them. For once Mvelo was happy to answer maDlamini’s call. She nearly fainted from a combination of relief, hunger and heat. “They said our grants have been discontinued, and now we have no money to get home.” Tears of anger and hopelessness about their situation kept coming. Cooing, maDlamini comforted them and offered to give them the taxi fare they needed. Her act of kindness was fueled by the attention she was getting from the onlookers in the queue.

It was that day, when her mother’s disability grant was discontinued, that Mvelo stopped thinking any further than a day ahead. At fourteen, the girl who loved singing and laughing stopped seeing color in the world. It became dull and grey to her. She had to think like an adult to keep her mother alive. She was in a very dark place. One day she woke up and decided that school was not for her. What was the point? Once they discovered that her mother couldn’t pay, they would have to chuck her out anyway.

Zola insisted on them going to church even at her weakest. Physically she was weak, but her will to live had not left her. She was not strictly conventional in the ways of the church, though. She prayed differently from other people. When things got too much she would say: “Well, what can I say, Mother of God. We, the forgotten ones, we scrounge the dumps for morsels to sustain us through the day to silence the grumbles in our stomachs. We are armed with the ARVs to face the unending duel with that tireless, faceless enemy who has left many of us motherless. We, the forgotten ones, know that rubbish day is on Mondays.”

“We come out in our numbers on Monday mornings to scrounge in the black bags that hold a weedy line between life and death for us. We search for scraps to line our intestines, shielding them from the corrosive medicines we have to take, lest we die and leave orphans behind. We dive in with our hands and have no concerns for smells of decay. Maggots explore our warm flesh as we dig into the rubbish to save ourselves, to buy time for our children. We live off the bins of the wealthy. Some of them come to the gate, offering us clean leftovers, while others come out to shoo us away. We are the forgotten ones, shack dwellers at the hem of society, the bane of the suburbs. We move from bin to bin, hopeful for anything to buy us time.”

This was Zola’s talk with Jesus’ Mother at the end of a long hot day, while standing in the middle of the shack that she shared with Mvelo, and washing dishes in a bright blue plastic basin.

“Tomorrow is another day for us,” she would say, switching from Mary to Mvelo.

Sometimes Mvelo craved that her mother would just be normal, and wished that she would say “Dear God” at the beginning and “Amen” at the end like other people do. But Mvelo and her mother were not normal, she had come to that realization soon enough.

Excerpt from Love Interrupted

Take Back the Lobola

I grudgingly drove my mom, a retired teacher, to Marishane for the funeral of her priest’s mother. I resented the fact that every time I visited her I would end up being her unsolicited chauffeur. I had to drive her to funerals, weddings, shops and church, or to visit her bevy of friends.

I cannot deny that at times some of these occasions turned out to be interesting and I ended up enjoying myself. Like last month when I drove her to the wedding of her priest’s daughter Makau, who was marrying a gentleman called Mofeti at the Roland Hotel.

Everything was perfect at that wedding, almost too good to be true. I remember the groom telling everyone that he had saved enough money to bring any musician from anywhere in the world to come and sing for them at the wedding.

“My wife said it had to be Luther Vandross. She wanted no one else but him. I tried several tricks to bring him back from the dead and, fortunately, one of them actually worked and he is here straight from heaven to sing for my beautiful wife,” said the groom.

Then the lighting of the venue went off, leaving only the dim glow of the candles. Suddenly Luther appeared on stage, as tall and handsome as we knew him when he was alive. It was a DVD played through a data projector onto a white cloth that was hung across the stage. It was so real, as if he were indeed there. Tears fell from my eyes when his velvet voice sang “Always and Forever.” It was indeed a fairy-tale wedding. The kind of wedding that made most single people wish they could get married.

Why had I never met a man like Mofeti? Why had I never had a wedding like this? I thought to myself as I took the turn-off to Marishane. Driving into the church parking lot I decided not to take part in the funeral proceedings as I had not known the deceased lady and wasn’t that close to the priest’s family. But mainly because I hated the endless speeches.

Everyone said the same things about the deceased. The situation was even worse if the person who’d died was an elderly person. The event swarmed people who all wanted to give speeches. Individuals representing neighbors, the royal house, grandchildren, in-laws, church members, the burial society and friends would narrate endless, pointless stories about the departed. In some cases, even a representative of the undertaker had to give a speech.

I decided to try to locate an old friend of mine, Ivy, who got married to a local guy some years back and relocated to this village. Marishane was really more like an urban township than a village. It was the only village I knew with tarred roads running through it. Unlike in most rural settlements, there were no shacks or lousy housing structures. Most of the houses were large and modern.

After driving around for a few minutes, a young boy at a four-way stop next to a dusty soccer field directed me to Ivy’s place. I could not believe the house she lived in. It was a mansion with a yard that could have been two hectares wide, surrounded by high white walls. The house was painted lime green. On the one side, next to the pool, there was an entertainment area with a thatched roof and glass walls. Ivy said it was the part of the house that belonged to her husband. He had designed and furnished it himself. Inside there was a bar, lounge, study and bathroom. Animal sculptures and prints dominated the interior.
Ivy was very pleased to see me, even though this was just a brief visit.

“My old friend!” she cried.

At noon, while we were still enjoying our catch-up session, my mother sent me a “Please Call Me” message. I knew this meant that the funeral was over and it was time to collect her.

Order Love Interrupted