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The Strange Folk – Nana Afadua Ofori-Atta

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AI art created with MidJourney

Kwesida

It is Sunday and Sundays are for the past.

Not for any recollection of things gone by but for the remembrance of how my hometown was founded, of the priests who led my ancestors from the interior and the creatures who lurk in the depths of the ocean my hometown is coiled next to.

Sundays are for the retelling of the bond between Mother Ocean and the town. Sundays are for reinforcing lies.

Ebo is talking about Afia’s Island again; he is warning my brother off it. My uncle is the only one in town who talks about the floating isle this way. Everyone else speaks about Mother Ocean’s servants who walk the island with reverence—we call them the Strange Folk—and the treasure they guard.

“Turbulent waters which can crush any ship,” Ebo says in a low voice. He makes a gushing sound and my brother lets out a laugh. “It is the last line of defence. You will stay away, right?” My brother nods vigorously. Fiifi looks like a bobblehead going back and forth like that.

“Last line of defence against what exactly?” I ask, knowing full well Ebo won’t answer. I have asked this question before.

“The other side,” Fiifi says. “All the people who die at sea end up there.”

Ebo raises an eyebrow. “No, where did you hear that?”

When my brother points out it was our father who told him, Ebo lets out a chuckle. “For a fisherman, it’s outstanding how little your father knows of the sea.”

Disappointed that Ebo doesn’t agree with his answer, Fiifi brings up his shell collection. He tends to do that when he is not sure how to react in a given situation. It’s a security blanket which has taken up an entire wall in his bedroom.

“It’s the Strange Folk.” I blurt. My uncle’s lips flatten into a thin line.

“No, it’s not them either.”

“How do you know that?” I am tired of  his stories, his lies. There is no ocean spirit and Afia’s Island doesn’t really move around the coast; it’s an optical illusion. All I want to know is why the island disturbs Ebo so much. I am tired of being bullshitted. “No one has ever seen one of them,” I say to him and think: but people say they take the shapes of animals; mostly turtles—it’s why their nests are not disturbed.

Ebo grimaces. Suddenly, he looks almost sixty even though he is forty and his brown skin is shrunken as though he had been wading in water too long.

“The things on that island and the Strange Folk are two different entities. The things on that island have twisted themselves into something unnatural, abominations. They only serve themselves.” There is a hard edge to my uncle’s voice.

“Monsters?” Fiifi asks, his voice trembling.

“They can’t get to you,” Ebo says as he puts an arm around my brother. “Not on my watch.”

I suck my teeth in irritation, lift myself out of the sofa and head outside. I can hear the ocean but it’s too dark to see where the island is. Could there really be monsters wandering its forests? I hate that Ebo is able to do this; that he can pique my interest in his stories despite my best efforts to leave them in my childhood.

#

Benada

It is Tuesday and Tuesdays are for Mother Ocean.

No swimming, no fishing; most people avoid the beach on this day, I am not one of those people. Fiifi is next to me on the hot sand, trying to dig a hole with his feet. We’ve been told to go home several times even though technically we aren’t breaking the taboo.

Tuesdays instil so much fear in my hometown, it’s quite disturbing at times. My university too, stands in a coastal town but it doesn’t come to a standstill because it’s the third day of the week. Tuesdays are for upholding the status quo of my hometown.

The sun sits high in the sky, the fluffiest clouds I’ve ever seen, floating around it. The water is a dark blue, glittering as the waves wash the shore.  I watch the things around me, the things allowed on the beach because it’s Mother Ocean’s feast day. The fishermen sing while they mend their nets; it’s their way of honouring her.  I spot my father and Ebo amongst them.

My eyes follow Afia’s Island, it looks closer to the coast than it was on Dwowda. I wonder what the monsters are like. Ebo says they have body parts in the wrong place, mouths in armpits, eyeballs for mouths.

“Are you thinking of going to find the treasure?” My brother asks. I turn to look down at him. “If I had the treasure guess what I would do.”

“Buy lots of toffees?”

He flashes me a toothy grin and I chuckle. Eight year olds are so easy to please.

“Can  I tell you a secret?” His voice is barely a whisper as he fidgets with the hem of his tee-shirt, curling his toes further into the sand.

“You can tell me anything.”

“They want to throw Uncle Ebo out. I heard them talking about it, Mama says he is cursed.”

I sigh. Not this shit again. What happened is almost a decade old. It wasn’t Ebo’s fault people followed his foolish precedent in breaking the taboo. It is not his fault for some reason Mother Ocean did not claim him. They have to stop blaming him for the things that don’t go right in our family.

“Uncle is not cursed.”

“But Mama said—”

“It will be fine. He won’t go anywhere, too stubborn for that.”

Seemingly satisfied our uncle won’t be evicted Fiifi demands to know what I will do with the treasure. I want to think I will do practical things with sacks of gold: buy treasure bills, get stocks, invest in startups; anything to bring me more money.

“Get a ship,” I extend my arms forward as though they are on the wheel of a ship and put on my best imitation of a pirate. “Pillage the nearby islands for more gold,” I lower my head towards my brother’s ears. “And meet some ladies.”

That makes him laugh.

“We can sail the world, go to all the places in my encyclopaedia. We will be the Pirate Brothers, think of all the adventures we could have,” Fiifi says as he jumps to his feet, swishes an arm in front of himself as if he is in a sword fight then brings his face level with mine. “Then you don’t have to go back to uni.”

“Sure it will be.”

“You don’t think so?”

“I do, but I have to go back to school. I will always come back to spend time with you. We will be the Pirate Brothers when I am here.”

My brother looks at me as if he is pondering whether to accept my response or throw a tantrum. “Alright then, when you are here we can go swimming and eat so many toffees our teeth fall out.”

“Would any self-respecting pirate have teeth?” Fiifi shakes his head, laughing and I let out a chuckle.

We decide to build a sandcastle before the tide comes in; since we can’t get water from the ocean, we buy a bag of sachet water from one of the few open kiosks, so many sachets are sacrificed in the name of a moat and two towers. The castle even has a gate made of pieces of a twig. It’s a shame it will be gone in a few hours. We take a picture of us next to it.

“Look,” my brother exclaims, pointing to something near the shore. A conch, a big white one, half buried in the sand. “I don’t have anything like it. It will probably take up half a shelf. I am going to get it.”

“You will do no such thing.” My voice is harsher than I intend. “It will be here tomorrow with some luck.”

“But what if it’s not here?”

“Better luck next time?” I reply with a shrug.

“The water is not even touching. I won’t be breaking the rule.” Fiifi whines.

“Yes it is. Let’s head home.”

Fiifi ignores me. He sprints towards the conch. A chill descends upon me. My chest hurts. I am not going to have a brother soon. I scream for him to turn back as I chase him down. Fiifi picks up the conch, turns it over in his hands and lets out a laugh of delight. I stare in horror. Fiifi is ankle deep in the water.

His peals of laughter slowly morph into cries for help as the calm waters suddenly turn violent, crashing against the shore and spitting wood on the beach. I watch as the waves engulf my brother’s body. Thunder booms in the skies and lightning strikes beach sand into sculptures. The fishermen’s songs of reverence are barely audible. My mouth is full of bile and the rain is coming down in torrents.

My brother belongs to the ocean now.

I stare at the conch lying in the sand. The fisherfolk are scurrying towards safety from the tumbling trees. My uncle and father are trying to drag me along with them. The conch is mocking me. A better brother would have tried to save Fiifi but that’s not me. I am only a coward.

“Kwame,” Ebo grabs me by the shoulders. “What are you doing here?”

“Fiifi…Fiifi…”

“Don’t tell me he is in the… oh gods!” Ebo’s eyes narrow into a pained stare. Come on, you have to get to safety. Fiifi will be fine. I promise.”

My father is screaming at me for not taking better care of my brother. Does he think I don’t know this? Fiifi is dead and it’s all my fault. I was the one who brought him to the beach. Something breaks inside me; my brother might be dead but the ocean cannot have his body. I will not allow it. Fiifi deserves a proper burial and a tombstone I can visit; a place I can tell him of our many adventures as the Pirate Brothers. I break free of my uncle’s hold and dive into the raging ocean.

It’s not as dark under the sea as it is above. It looks like it is illuminated by hundreds of lightbulbs. It takes a while before I catch a glimpse of Fiifi. His eyes are shut, limbs akimbo and surrounded by turtles.

Turtles? The Strange Folk?

I swim closer, trying not to bump into any of the turtles. Gathering my brother into my arms I make my way towards the surface. I am running out of air faster than expected.

There is a hissing sound. Out of the seabed tentacles rush at me, jabbing and prodding till they pry Fiifi out of my hands. Another tentacle wraps itself around my neck and holds on tight. It is sticky and slimy, and I am one coil away from being strangled. It grows quiet for a moment, even the schools of fish darting about seem to still, then the seabed opens its eyes.

Sixteen. It has sixteen red eyes and they are all focused on me. Its voice is reminiscent of an orchestra. It is speaking Fante.

“He belongs to me,” the seabed says. “So do you, but for now you may go.”

That means what exactly?

The tentacle around my neck loosens its grip and I swim towards my brother. Another tentacle stops me. My air is almost depleted. I can barely keep my eyes open . My throat feels swollen and my chest is caving in on itself.

Something is swimming towards me. Something mostly human. There are flippers where feet should be and fins along its arms. I know I am seeing things because of the lack of air. The thing is glowing neon yellow. My mind is slipping. I couldn’t save my brother. We are both going to die in the clutches of Mother Ocean.

Why does the creature have my uncle’s face?

#

People in town claim before you die there are two options available: end up as an ancestor or return to your family home to negotiate with your ancestors for a longer life. This is not what happens to me. I see Mother Ocean’s eyes. I see masses of flesh with teeth and hair growing out of them. Masses of flesh with too many limbs, all in the wrong place, crawling across the beach sand, ensnaring sailors with sultry voices. I see Afia’s Island for what it truly is.

When I open my eyes, I am in more pain than I remember ever being in. My father is looking down at me, a sneer mars his face. I try to talk, but my throat hurts. Next to me is Fiifi; looking at him is hard, his skin is discoloured, his lips cracked. He looks vacant.

I did it? I did it.

“Is he… is he okay?” This time I manage to get my words out.

“No. He is barely alive, but he will be gone soon enough,” my father says.

“Ignore him,” Ebo says, shooting a glare in my father’s direction. His clothes are drenched, but there is a joking tone to his voice as though two people didn’t almost just die. “That was a brave thing you did. Always knew the taboo was rubbish.”

“Rubbish?” my father barks. “Things are ordered in a certain way for a reason. He brought back a curse.”

“Oh, shut up! One would think you would be happy your children aren’t dead.”

“It would be better if they died. The only reason he thought this was sensible was because of you. I should never have let you stay with us. Useless man.”

“Blame me if that will help you cope better, but useless? You would be at the bottom of the ocean if it wasn’t for me,” I have never seen my uncle fight back. He always brushes his brother’s insults aside with a joke or a smile. It’s unsettling. “Or did you forget who I broke the taboo for?”

My father’s lips flatten into a thin line. “That was a long time ago.” I look between them. Ebo is cracking his knuckles. How have I never heard this part of the story before?

The ocean is calm again and it’s silent between us. I think we all believe Fiifi is dead. It’s probably why they didn’t bother to take him to a hospital. I want to believe my brother will wake up. Miracles like that always happen in Ebo’s stories.

And Fiifi does wake up. But when he does, I don’t think it’s a miracle, I think I am hallucinating. His eyes are open but they are looking at nothing in particular. His eyes are glassy. My brother looks incredibly frail.

“Please don’t ever leave me. I am not ready to be an only child again.”

#

Memenda

It is Saturday, and Saturdays are for the wind.

The nets of all the fishermen in my hometown have come up empty since Tuesday. They blame my father and have punched holes in his canoe. My uncle isn’t allowed in our house anymore.

And on Fida, the baby turtles began their journey towards the ocean. On that Friday, Fiifi threw out his shell collection.

Saturdays are for the unknown. If you want to talk to god speak to the wind and they will speak back. Saturdays are for dealing with the supernatural.

I am on the beach, knees tucked under my chin. I’ve always liked the ocean but now there is something constantly beckoning me towards the water. Sometimes, I hear Mother Ocean when I am in the shower, I stand with eyes closed and let the water run down my body till someone—usually my mother—bangs on the bathroom door to tell me to stop wasting water. Mother Ocean keeps pestering me to visit. Other times, I hear snarls and low growls. I know they are from Afia’s Island.

The baby turtles are still making their journey. I want to join them and never leave the ocean, but for now, it’s enough for the seawater to wash my feet.

Ebo is the only one who doesn’t question me coming out here. He tends to come along with me. I think about telling Ebo about the noises I keep hearing, but I am not sure whether or not he is the creature I saw. I look at him, laying with his head on the sand, sunglasses over his eyes. He hasn’t uttered a word in two hours.

“What happened when you broke the taboo?” I ask.

He sits up. “What did she show you?”

It is unnerving hearing all those disembodied voices and screeches, but it is comforting in an odd way to know the experience is not unique to me.

“Masses of flesh,” I reply. “Some of them look like regular people but I can tell there is something off about them. And now I keep hearing all these voices around town.”

Ebo’s lips flatten into a thin line. “You will learn to ignore the voices. I didn’t see bodies. Just blood, the town drenched in blood.”

 “So, what I saw is what exists on Afia’s Island?”

“Yes, though next time your vision of the island won’t be in your head, you will be standing on it.”

 I drop my head into my hands. “Why?”

“I swear you never listen when I speak,” Ebo says. “The island keeps floating towards the coast for a reason. Mother Ocean can barely hold it back at this point. She’s a lot weaker than she was in the past.”

I look out to the ocean and realize Afia’s Island is closer than it has been my entire life, soon enough there won’t be a need for a canoe to get to it.

“You didn’t answer my question.”

“I am getting to it,” Ebo replies. “Sometimes, when people break the taboo Mother Ocean creates bonds between those people like she has with the town. The people who belong to her are meant to help keep Afia’s Island at bay.”

“It’s an island,” My frustration leaks into my voice. “How is anything we do going to affect it?”

“Well, it involves a bit of lunar magic and sailing out to the island to slaughter a few monsters.”

“This has to be one of your tales.”

“It’s not a lie just because it’s a story.”

A lump forms in my throat. “I didn’t ask to be a part of it. Who cares what the island does?”

My uncle pushes his sunglasses to the top of his head. “The story of how we came from the interior that gets told around town is not complete. There was a civil war not long after, some of the elders wanted to turn Mother Ocean into a weapon and they went to great lengths to attain it,”

 My toes curl in the sand.

 “Blood magic has terrible consequences and you saw what became of them,” Ebo says, his voice flat. “They were thrown on the island which used to be so far out you couldn’t see it from the shore. Afia’s Island is a corruption of the island’s original name, you know? The town used to call it Efiase. Do you know what that means?”

My eyes widen. All his warnings keep making more and more sense.

“Prison,” The word tastes bitter on my tongue. “So, the thing down there with the tentacles? That is Mother Ocean?”

Ebo nods.

“She looks like the monsters you’ve been describing.”

“The ocean spirit didn’t always look like that. Whatever blood magic was used misshaped her too.”

 “And the things on the island are the Strange Folk?”

Ebo lets out a laugh before rising then dives into the ocean. It takes a moment before his head shoots above the waves. “Come on in,”

“No,”

“The worst thing that could possibly happen has already occurred.”

A part of me knows nothing terrible will happen. Ebo won’t let it happen but I am wary of touching the seabed. It seems disrespectful. I find the creature from Tuesday swimming around when I dive beneath the waves. I didn’t hallucinate it. It does have Ebo’s face.

“Uncle?” I ask, before clamping a hand over my mouth. That’s when I realise I can breathe properly.

I look down at my body. It looks like Ebo’s except my fins and scales are a gleaming orange. What am I? Panicking, I swim towards the surface and hurl myself onto the hot sand.

“No, no,” I scream. I pull my legs into my chest, so glad to see them return. “What did you do to me? Why is this happening to me?”

“Calm down, you were going to find out eventually. Your brother will take this better than you are taking it, and he is a child.”

Those words only serve to escalate my fear. “Fiifi is like this? What even is this?”

“We are the Strange Folk.”

Nana Afadua Ofori-Atta is a Ghanaian writer and poet from Takoradi and an avid tennis fan. Her writing has appeared in Lolwe, Fantasy Magazine, Crow & Cross Keys, AFREADA, the Lumiere Review and elsewhere. She can be found on twitter @afaduawrites

Other Planes – Ebere Obua

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Other planes art
Art by Sunny Efemena

You’ve been here before; this house with the black gate that has gold details and sharp spikes shooting up at the top. This house with the pink bougainvillaeas that have taken over the brick fence, so much that the cement barely peaks through. You know that the owners of the house have a pretty, white dog with a purple collar. You remember how amused you were that night when the tiny thing barked at you until a greying man clinging to a black robe came to shout at it.

“What are you barking at?!” the man had yelled before he switched on a torch and searched the premises. He couldn’t see anyone, so he hissed and picked up the dog, chastising it on his way to the door.

You are still looking at the gate when it opens, and the dog and the man emerge from behind it.

#

You never realized how rare it was to have dreams as vivid and controlled as yours until you saw a man on TikTok joke about the randomness of his. Curious, you began to ask your classmates what their dreams were like. It was an odd question, but the answers were amusing: being naked in school; kissing a crush; a lot of falling, too.

You learned about lucid dreaming during your computer time one Saturday night. So lost in articles about this seemingly special ability, you didn’t notice the minute hand slipping past your bedtime until your father’s hand struck your cheek so hard, causing a ringing in your ears that kept you up all night.

It is that sensation that you’re thinking about now, barely ten minutes left till your bedtime, as you read about what your internet search has taken you to: astral projection.

“Is this what you’re using your computer time to do!?” you hear, before your father’s hand collides with your face.

“This is the type of thing that killed your mother! These occultist acts! You want to join her abi?”

You want to ask him what he means, but between the stinging sensation on your cheeks, and the intensity of his voice as he continues to narrate the dangers of astral travel, you decide that it’s not the best time.

#

You can finally project again tonight because it is Friday and your father is at an all-night prayer meeting for the deacons. Aunty Lolade, his sister and your guardian for the night is a kinder version of him, so she lets you have two hours of computer time instead of one and laughs at your father’s instruction to make sure you’re not “roaming the spirit realm” in your sleep.

“How am I supposed to do that one abeg?” She says to you later, an amused smile on her face. “Will I come to your room and be shouting, ‘I hope your spirit is at home o!’?”

You remember the joke before you fall asleep and laugh.

“No, it is not,” you think to yourself.

 When you finally fall asleep, you pull yourself out of your lucid dream, and into the astral plane, you are astonished by the weirdness of it; how the ground beneath you looks like shimmery water; how you sink into it to appear at a new location every time; how strange the beings are here, with faces and bodies that your human mind cannot comprehend. There are tails and horns and fish fins and fur and multiple hands and multiple eyes—all of varying colours. You are astonished.

 What is even stranger, however, is that you can understand these beings: you do not know the language they speak and cannot compare it to anything you’ve ever heard on earth. But when you speak to them, and they respond, you know exactly what they’re saying.

 You’re not going to be projecting into the physical realm anytime soon.

#

You meet your mother on your fourth trip. Your internet searches have already taught you that there are other beings in the astral realm. You know to avoid the entities that radiate negative energy. You know the ones that are approachable for help. You know that some of the humans here are not “awake” enough to be conscious of their presence here, so you no longer feel like they’re simply being arrogant when they ignore you. Honestly, you don’t care for the beings anyway. You’re simply here for the experience; to explore the cities that your human mind cannot fathom; to experience the fluidity of time and space, moving you from one destination to another in seconds. You’re here to escape your reality. Yet, here is your three years’ late mother; a woman who had taken her life with her own hands, leaving you in those of a man you both despised. A woman who you found red-eyed that early Sunday morning—when your father asked you to see why she was not yet ready for church—dangling from a rope tied to a hook in the ceiling, with her tongue protruding from her mouth, where saliva was starting to foam. When her paling body suddenly started to jerk, hope overwhelmed you with its promises, but reality wasn’t kind enough to allow you time to bring your mother down. Her body stopped.

It’s the jerking you remember when you see her; how it played in your mind; hour after hour; day after day; month after month; till gradually, it sank into the deepest, darkest parts of your brain, merely resurfacing to torment you at your lowest times. Next, you remembered the hollowness; the cruelty of it, how it banished you to extended periods of sleep to forget its presence, only to crawl back into you when you woke up and remembered your loss and began to cry until sleep found you again. You thought your father felt hollow too. He started drinking—something you never expected your overly righteous old man to indulge in — and muttered regularly about how your mother’s “demonic affiliations” were to blame. You found the accusation of invisible demons odd. Her only demonic affiliation was him.

#

The second time you meet your mother’s ghost it is almost magical. You find that you’re drawn to it—her. It’s as if you’re called by her. And it is a call you can’t resist; you don’t want to resist. She hugs you. You hug her as tightly as you can and wish you could cry; many emotions are swirling through you at this very moment.

“I’ve missed you so much my love,” she starts, but you can only nod a response.

You have so much to tell her about: the milestones she’s missed; the low moments when she wasn’t present to comfort you; the abuse that she wasn’t around to shield you from. But you do not talk about any of these things.

“Why did you do this to yourself?” you ask instead, and then start to question the appropriateness of the question as soon as it leaves your mouth.

She looks away from you first, and her body slides forward so that she’s holding her face in her palms.

“I didn’t want to burden you and your father,” she says after a dramatic sigh.

“Burden?” you ask, incredulous. “You were not a burden. If anything, the only burden in our family is still alive and well!”

“The doctor told me I had cancer,” she replies, and your eyes widen, but she doesn’t give you the chance to talk. “Pancreatic cancer. Late-stage. The longer we talked about my treatment, the more I realised that the financial burden of helping me get better would only put a strain on our family. God, the tests alone put a strain on me.”

“Why didn’t you tell anyone, mummy?” you question her, looking straight into her eyes. Many thoughts are dancing in your brain about the revelation, but this is the most important one. “Aunty Lolade, grandma, grandpa, your siblings, even daddy, they would have pulled funds together. They would have found a way.”

“And for what? Ask google about the life expectancy for late-stage cancer. Imagine asking my family to spend all that money, knowing full well that I wouldn’t be able to survive for more than a year? I had to consider these things.”

“But you couldn’t consider the effect that seeing you dangling from the ceiling would leave,” you mutter.

Suddenly, you are hit by a bit of realisation—maybe your mother was not aware of the gravity of her actions when she carried them out.

“I didn’t think it through,” she starts to explain, but you don’t want to hear it.

“You didn’t think about what seeing you in that state would do to us? You didn’t think about what daddy would become after seeing you go like that?”

“I know your father. And I know that if there’s one thing he despises in life, it’s having a financial load thrown at him out of nowhere. He would do the right thing and contribute to my treatment, but he’d despise me for it till I died, the whole time, complaining to anyone who’d listen, that it was my ‘demonic affiliations’ that made me so ill”. After which his anger would be the fact that he spent all that money, only for me to die in the end.”

“Despite everything you’ve said, I still can’t find the reason that you did it,” you tell her, but she continues like nobody said anything.

“It is exactly what happened after his mother died. You might not have been there to experience it, but I was.”

“So, leaving me with him was the only option?!” You ask. You don’t realise how angry her response makes you until you hear yourself.

“You left me with him!” You continue. “Did you consider what would happen to me?! Did you think about how much I’d miss you?! Did you—”

“It was rash, I can’t lie,” she interrupts you. “But I need you to know that it wasn’t my intention to leave you behind. I wasn’t thinking clearly, and I only did what I thought was best for you. I just didn’t have the resources or support to do it the right way and I’m sorry my love. I really am.”

Her voice breaks, and you feel bad for taking the conversation this way. But you have every right to be upset, you think. You’re stuck between missing your mother and detesting the fact she took herself from you.

“How did you learn this?” she asks, changing the topic. “Did you come here to see me? I can’t imagine your father would have allowed you to learn about astral travel.”

“He didn’t,” you say, and you laugh a little to yourself.

You tell her about how he caught you searching up projection on the internet and the hyper-vigilance of your sleep that followed. You tell her about how you started, about the dog that could see you even though his owner could not.

“I always knew I passed something down to you. Makes up for how much you resemble your father instead of me,” she says, laughing softly. You join in. You’ve missed laughing with your mother.

“He thinks it’s all evil,” you say.

“Oh. There’s definitely evil here. The funny part is, I already knew this before I came. But being here for so long—as the soul of a person that took their own life, it truly throws the evil at your face.”

“Is it different?” You ask. “For the people that didn’t commit suicide?”

“They go to heaven. Straight. Or hell,” she says, stretching a hand up then down for emphasis. “The rest of us? The universe doesn’t even give us the chance.”

She talks about the memories that followed her death; how she saw the other souls shoot up like fireworks, while she sank deeper, and deeper into the other planes. She talks about the weariness that hit her when she arrived, as if the place had wrapped her up in a cloak of unquenchable fatigue.

“I would give anything to have a body again. This place changes you. I’m not the mother you lost, my love. I am a destroyed version of her.”

“You’re not destroyed to me,” you try to comfort her, and place an arm around her waist. She only sighs.

“Sometimes,” she starts, “when it gets too lonely or I’ve had to fight off yet another lower vibrational being, I wish I had let your father do the work for me.”

#

“You need to stop coming here so often,” your mother solemnly advises you.

You don’t know how many visits you’ve made here since you first met her because you’ve stopped counting. You’ve figured out how to jump back into your body as soon as your father touches it, so it looks like you are merely asleep; another act your mother warned you about.

Art by Sunny Efemena

Her warnings have become as frequent as your travels. She even escorts you back to your body—just in case you meet a dark entity in your room. You can’t decide whether you enjoy the overbearing behaviour, out of nostalgia for what motherly love feels like, or you dislike it.

“You need to understand that it’s not good for your physical body to be left empty so often,” she continues. “And coming here too much will negatively affect your brain. Your reality is not here. It is on the physical plane. Constant visits will disrupt your perception—”

“Daddy is in the room,” you interrupt her.

“Let’s go,” she tells you, holding you tightly.

Within milliseconds, your body is in front of you. Your father is tapping you to wake up, but that is not what holds your attention.

There are three shadows in the room: dark entities with red eyes, a muscular human build, heads like birds and tails like lions. They turn to you and your mother as soon as you arrive. Your father cannot see them.

“Go to your body,” your mother starts to mumble to you. “I’ll try and keep them from it.”

You nod and proceed to the corner of the room as calmly as you can. In the centre of your room, your bed is already surrounded by figures, so it’s too early to approach it. You have no idea what they’re capable of. They look at you as you walk away from your mother. Red eyes glow ferociously as they follow your every move. You realise that you’re not shaking because you’re not in your body. The human body would quake at the sight of these entities. It would sweat, cry, and probably pee itself. It would run away too. You think about these things and you are wistful. A longing for the body that you’ve been leaving every night sets in. You crave the reality you’ve been running away from; a reality where you’d never have to face such beings. You are terrified.

Your father is oblivious to the scene unfolding in his presence. Frustrated with trying to wake you up, he leaves your body and returns to his room, promising to “deal with you” when he gets back.

Your mother runs to the bed, effectively distracting the beings, and you take the chance to enter your body. Your plan fails. A shadowy hand slaps you to the wall like you are nothing but an annoying insect. You collide with your pink, cloud-patterned wallpaper before your astral form touches the ground. It cannot feel pain. What it feels instead, is an overwhelming weakness. You are almost paralysed. It is up to your mother to save you now.

You can hear her fighting the beasts. You hear her voice: high pitched and fragile, against the deep, mumbled grunts of the beasts, and you worry that her weakened form is not strong enough to fight them all off. A feeling of defeat starts to set in. It is further intensified by the absolute silence that engulfs the room, and the sharp, tugging sensation that climbs your astral form. Your body has been occupied.

You’ve read about beings like this. How they roam the earth, looking to occupy the bodies of the ones who have travelled to the astral realm. You have never read about how these bodies are recovered.

You want to mourn your loss. You want to scream. To wail and roll on the floor. But you cannot move. Instead, your mother’s advice rings in your mind, calling you a fool in the way that only a mother’s “I told you so” can. Now, you will be able to live with her for eternity. To see your mother again. This is what you wanted, isn’t it?

“Mummy,” you struggle to word out.

You have no idea where she is, but you can only hope that the last of her strength has not been knocked out of her.

At the sound of your voice, the beasts march to the corner of the room where your astral form lies, one after the other, until all three of them are looking down at you.

“Three. Three?” you wonder to yourself.

They proceed to pick you up.

“Wait,” you hear your voice.

Your body glides towards you. There is something familiar about the rhythm of the footsteps that you hear, but you don’t want to accept the realisation that is sneaking up on you.

“My darling,” it starts.

“I can’t believe you did this!” you try to yell, but it comes out like a loud whisper. “Why did you do this?!”

“I told you. I am not the mother you lost.”

Ebere Obua is a medical student with way too many side interests. Her work has been published in Olongo Africa, Preachy, The Roadrunner Review and Sylvia Magazine

Favorite Shoes – Gerald Dean Rice

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AI art created with MidJourney

Kifa sat on the stairs in her black dress, staring at her dead husband’s shoes. Pastor Waters was conversing with Vdekja and Tod, the small gathering of friends eating the food Heriotza had brought. The reverend had led a great service, but appeared uncomfortable still wearing her garments, tugging at the sleeves alternately and smiling beatifically as Kifa’s brother droned on.

“The way I see, Life and Death are two sides of the same coin or maybe the reverse of each other,” Tod said. “Life is always laborin’ away, deliverin’ new life like some sorta short order cook and all Death wants to do is blend all that life up and drink it down as easy and as quick as it can. No appreciation for how beautiful a life is, or how complex.” Tod paused long enough to take a sip from his plastic cup. “Life is always givething this wonderful spread, y’see—” He popped a meatball in his mouth. “Death is always takething away.” He munched away as he rolled the toothpick between his thumb and index. “From the moment after birth, Death is always sippin’ away what Life just got through pouring in.”

“But what is that supposed to even mean?” Vdekja said, cartoonishly shrugging his shoulders. “Death is something we all know. What does this mean?”

“I don’t know.” Tod shrugged. “Maybe Mort was even tastier than most of us. Maybe his straw went a little closer to the bottom. Don’t look at me. I’m not an expert.”

Tod always had a way of stinging with his words. He was Kifa’s younger brother, so Vdekja and Pastor Waters were inclined to give him leeway, but she saw her friend’s shift of discomfort and the faltering of the reverend’s smile.

It was another of those temporary inconveniences that would soon be forgotten, the only remnant the lingering discomfort of every person within earshot.

Pastor Waters’ sermon had been passionate, personal, polite. She had captured as much of the essence of her husband as Kifa could have expected. The reverend’s silence now, in respect of Kifa’s brother’s gaffe, was for her. He should have developed a condiment to go along with the foot he was always sticking in his mouth. His blunders were as common as shoes on feet.

Speaking of shoes…

Kifa sat upright, her eyes again returning to what she’d failed to actually see since they’d returned from the cemetery. She hadn’t seen the shoes for several months now.

They were right there, on the bottom rack like they’d always been whenever they hadn’t been on her husband’s feet. He’d been sick so long…he’d been in bed so long before finally surrendering.

“Are you okay, my dear?” Heriotza asked, suddenly next to her. “It’s a ridiculous question and I’m sorry, but I saw your face just now.”

“No. I’m sorry. I just—” Kifa sighed, pointing with her eyes to the pair of shoes on the rack. “Those are Mort’s shoes.” The other woman turned and looked. “His favorite shoes. Whenever he left the house, those are the ones he wore. No matter the occasion. Birthdays, graduations, funerals—except for his own, anyway.”

She bit her lip as if she could chew up her next words rather than say them. “I hate those shoes.” Kifa laughed and Heriotza joined in. “You know what the worst thing is?”

Her friend grabbed her hand, apparently sensing the next sentence or so was difficult to say.

“I don’t feel bad. I mean, I do. I love him and I miss him. But I don’t feel bad he’s finally gone.”

“My sweet. He was suffering. You’re only relieved it’s over.” She folded both hands over Kifa’s and gave her a gentle squeeze.

Tears had begun streaming down her face. “I feel bad because I don’t feel bad. Does that make some kind of sense?”

“My Kifa—you are a good woman. A loving woman. Mort was a good man. He knows your heart and he knows it was broken well before he passed. The pieces don’t have to fit together like they used to for you to let it heal.”

Heriotza was a good friend, but Kifa wasn’t looking for advice. Kifa realised she needed to feel what she felt on her own. She felt vulnerable and alone and needed to cut herself on those broken pieces.

The sickness that had grown inside him had bided its time over nine months. It had begged her to look and dared her to look away. Had it been sudden, there would have been a break in her grief and a definite point from which she would have been able to heal. Instead, the plasticity of her misery had laid across her soul like a band-aid; each memory of Mort, either in sickness or in health like a barb as she peeled that bandage away.

“Hey, sis, you alright?” Tod came over with a fistful of tissues. He was good for what he was good for, and she took a few with gratitude to dab her eyes.

“I’m good. I just saw…I just saw something that reminded me of Mort.” She blew her nose, then folded her arms, a chill slipping through her. “I think I need to lay down.”

“Almont and I will clean up and I will send him home,” Heriotza said. “I saw a bottle of Prosecco in the fridge. You and I will have a girl’s night.”

Kifa didn’t think she was up to having a guest but didn’t have the strength to withstand the disappointment in her best friend’s eyes. Her brother kissed her cheek and hugged her before she headed upstairs.

Kifa turned back, dashing down the stairs and scooping up her husband’s favorite shoes and hugging them to her chest.

“You all have a good night,” she said. “And thank you for coming.”

Their bedroom was to the left at the top of the stairs. Kifa crossed the threshold and laid in her black dress across the bed she’d shared with Mort for many years, shoes still in the crook of her arm.

They had never had children—her biggest regret was that there wasn’t a part of him still left in the world. She was an unwilling stone rooted in the wake of his loss. And despite Heriotza being here for her at every turn, she was alone.

Mort should have been buried with these shoes.

Kifa didn’t know how she’d missed them so long. Maybe she’d become immune to their presence like signs on oft-traveled roads. Their invisibility had probably been a kind of balm. The shoes of the man who literally walked everywhere in them and then suddenly couldn’t even walk from his own bed to the bathroom.

Seeing them a moment ago had been like a scoring across her heart worse than the last few days of her husband’s life.

She spread herself across their bed, covering as much of his territory as she could, reaffirming her claim against what had taken Mort away from her.

She cried into his shoes until she fell asleep.

Kifa became aware of coming awake. The heavy curtains had been drawn, but it felt like there should be daylight out still, despite the dark of the room.

“Hello?” she said, the quaver in her voice the only indicator she was afraid. “Is anyone still here?” Kifa had no reason to be afraid, but there was something that flagged her sense of danger. Heriotza should have been here unless she’d changed her mind and left. Before she’d come up, Kifa had wanted nothing more than to be alone, now she hoped her best friend hadn’t left.

She slid off the bed and reached for the bedroom door.

SKRRP-

Something was in the house. That wasn’t a sound like any person she’d ever had in her home, and it sounded more…organic and less like the shift of an unbalanced washing machine or the metallic clanging of a starting furnace. Floorboards creaked and popped downstairs as something moved freely about.

She wrapped her hand around the knob and turned it as slowly as she could. The whispered whine as the metal innards slid across, around, or between each other—Kifa had no idea how such a thing worked—echoed up her bones from her hand to her mouth and she clenched her teeth to stifle the miniscule scream that would declare that she was here.

Rationality monologued that whomever she heard downstairs could only be Heriotza. Kifa mouthed the words to reassure herself as she drew the door inward and peeked into the pronounced dark of the hallway.

SKRRP-

Kifa jerked her head back, a gasp of air crawling into her mouth. The first sound had been somewhere downstairs. Maybe in the kitchen, maybe in the dining room, or maybe by the front entrance. But the second one was definitely closer, accompanied by the squeaky rhythm of feet ascending the stairs.

She needed to call the police. Her cell phone wasn’t on the end table where she left it every night. In her distress before coming upstairs, she’d probably left it in the living room. They hadn’t had a landline in almost a decade, leaving her the only option to hide.

Kifa only had the two cliched spaces to hide. Under the bed had several shoe boxes and pulling them out would only underline exactly where she was. The closet door was slightly open and it was big. Maybe she might be overlooked.

She pushed her way inside, the door creaking slightly as she crossed the threshold.

-SKRRP-

It was outside of her bedroom, scraping away at the rock of her sense of security. Kifa found a spot near the back of the walk-in and sat, huddling her legs up to her and drawing her arms around her knees. Then she realized she was still holding Mort’s shoes. She wanted to hold onto them, like an anchor rooting her to a notion of calm. But she put them down on the floor so she could have both hands free to pull her dress down over her bare feet. Maybe if she were mistaken for a pile of clothes she could be missed.

The extended gait of feet dragging across the floor was just inside the bedroom. They went around the bed and paused—perhaps it was looking under the bed. She briefly wondered why she thought of whatever was in her bedroom as an it and not a person. Maybe because it was an undefined thing, that she hadn’t seen a face to make it a whole person.

Kifa squeezed her hand around her mouth, ready to crush any errant sound she might make against her will.

skrrp-

It was by the closet. Hinges that had never wanted for oil groaned and she wasn’t entirely certain she hadn’t groaned with them. She could make out gradations of black and saw the motion of indistinct shapes, despite the lack of discernible light. As it came closer, Kifa willed herself to be a part of the wall, for her flesh to be the cotton-polyester blend of her dress and her breathing to be the trickle of air coming through the vent high up on the wall.

Two feet padded to a stop directly in front of her. She could barely make them out. It hadn’t turned the light on, moving like it knew her home as well as she did. Clothes above her rustled and she realized with the crackling of naked bones, it was bending over, its head parting hung shirts and pants.

Kifa was emotionally and physically unarmed, seeing the long, thin bones of index and middle fingers, split like an upside-down peace sign. But they weren’t reaching for her, instead hooking the tongues of Mort’s shoes. This visitor had been in her home before, although the last time was for her husband’s unconditional surrender.

As Mort’s shoes were lifted out of sight, dragging feet moved away. Something trailed behind it and Kifa thought she could have reached out and touched the hem of its garment, but she was still too afraid to move. It retreated quickly, the previously pregnant air contracting into a less humid, breathable thinness. A long moment passed before Kifa crawled on her hands and knees, padding back into her bedroom.

They had never met officially and she hoped not to appear on its ledger for a long time. Kifa felt a wash of unexpected relief as her husband’s courier took him his shoes.

But when her hand grazed the lid of a shoe box on the carpeted floor, she paused. Kifa felt around until she found the box that had been beneath the bed before. Then she reached inside the box.

Her favorite stilettos that had been in here were gone.

A woman has just returned from her husband’s funeral, and leaves her friends and family in the living room to go get a nap in her bedroom. Then she awakens in the dark and hears a noise, she jumps into the closet…
Gerald Dean Rice has several short stories and a few books under his belt, including Absolute Garbage, Total Nonsense, and Utter Ridiculousness. He has a BA in English from Oakland University and lives in Metro Detroit.

Omenana Issue 24: Special South African Focused Edition

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Omenana issue 24 cover

Editorial

Ladies and gentlemen, welcome! We are always so happy to receive new visitors. I think it goes without saying that this particular province of the South African imagination does not receive a lot of visitors, or at least not as many as we’d like, so thank you for coming. Before we begin our trip into this beautiful, complicated and riveting space, I have a few announcements.

The first: we will not be addressing what defines South African speculative fiction or covering all the districts of this space. Even as a local tour guide, I am yet to experience all the older districts of this province. In fact, I haven’t even been to some of the newer, fancier, ever-evolving ones. I understand that you may be disappointed… It is a very popular question, but I think it is best if you immerse yourselves in the space, engage with it and enjoy it before asking a million questions about what makes it… it. The spirit of a place is impossible to capture upon first arrival. One does not instantly become an expert on Japanese literature after spending a few days in the Murakami district.

*waits for laughter*

I invite you instead to remove from your mind, the more popular provinces of the South African imagination. Please resist the urge to don anthropological specs when interacting with the space. It is the very nature of speculative fiction provinces to make you feel like an outsider even as we bring you in.

*waits for groans and complaining*.

The second announcement is a weird one but stay with me: There are no streets named after Nelson Mandela in this province. Why, you may ask? Because we are so much more than one icon and leader. More than one aspect of our history. More than the few news headlines you’ve seen scrolling past the bottom of the screen on your 24-hour news station. Here we have cats that drive taxis, digital representations of our ancestors, headless horses that stalk young people at night and tales that will delight and horrify. Why add replicas of the Realist Province when you can enjoy something completely different? So… no Nelson Mandela here.

*winks*

You will see influences of other provinces in some of the architecture. This is, after all, a growing province that is part of the national imagination and not a separate country. Okay… What have I forgotten? Oh, right! The language thing. As with all other provinces of the South African imagination, there are eleven official languages and even more dialects. That is reflected in the stories even though we will only be visiting English language works today. The birds here sing in their own special words, listen and enjoy. Tales end with a special goodbye (take your cue from the storytellers). Bodies of water whisper to those who feel unheard, and the future comes to visit – speaking a language of its own. There will be no italics. No footnotes. Just words. Some of this may be disorienting at first but that will pass and give way to euphoria and warmth – if you let it.

Today we will be visiting 5 original stories, 2 reprint stories, and 2 essays. You will encounter a bit of everything, from science fiction work by established names like Lauren Beukes to horror, fantast and even experimental work by newer, talented authors like Rešoketšwe Manenzhe, as well as some fascinating discussions between other locals of the district about its history and architecture, and a lot more in between. Keep your eyes open.

I see some of you are growing restless so I will stop right here. Excuse me, over there in the back! Please put on your seatbelt. And watch out for both past and future debris – the timelines here are so intertwined that things move quickly between before and after. Once again, welcome! Let’s begin our trip.

Mohale Mashigo

Omenana issue 24 cover

Essays

1: A History of The Science Fiction & Fantasy South Africa (SFFSA) Club – Gail Jamieson

2: Men, Women & Other Beings From the South: An Overview of South African Science Fiction & Fantasy – Deirdre C. Byrne and Gerhard Hope

Stories

3: Amadi on the Concrete – Jarred. J. Thompson

4: Into the Hyacinth – Mandisi Nkomo

5: Naruoma, the Cow Detective of the Millennium – Rešoketšwe Manenzhe

6: What Pushes Against This Moment – VH Ncube

7: The White Necked Ravens of Camissa – Nick Wood

8: TAAL – Abigail Godsell

9: Slipping – Lauren Beukes

Omenana Speculative Fiction Magazine is published quarterly by Seven Hills Media. All rights reserved. For feedback or information, please email sevenhills.media@yahoo.com

TAAL – ABIGAIL GODSELL

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Illustration for TAAL, Omenana speculative fiction magazine

“Dear South African Public” The words skittered across the huge screen, chasing each other in a stream of pixels. The next line jumped and flickered, almost unreadable. The government blimps needed servicing.

“Please do not alarm yourselves”

Below, the populace- decidedly un-alarmed- continued their homeward migration out of the city proper, trading the grimy skyscrapers and leafless Northern suburbs for the quiet civilization of the South.

Surresh breathed smoke rings out of the window of the jeep, watching them.

In a few hours the city centre would be dead, save for the prostitutes and the night-watchmen and the occasional adventurous Taxi-Lord.

He wiped his brow and stretched out a long fingered hand to snap on the aircon. It was scorching today. Far too hot for this time of year. Almost four in the afternoon, middle of July and he was still sweating. The 2050’s would be remembered as a hot decade.

Suddenly he was bathed in shadow as a Propaganda blimp passed overhead. Surresh glanced up briefly.

On the screen was a greyscale photograph – archive footage- familiar to anyone who spent much time in Central Joburg these days. Below the poster “To Hell with Afrikaans” resting on a pair of school shoes, ran the usual red text: “Understanding that, in your country,”

The image changed now to something else subtly reminiscent of the past.

“you have a hatred of violence”

The toes of a police boot and the shadow of a gun faded in. The text crawled on:

“and heavy handed policing,”

Surresh snorted, sending the smoke in crazy spirals. It was almost too ironic. He wondered how this ‘Government’ could hope to understand anything at all.

The blimp and its flashing screen passed and sunlight returned. Baking sunlight. Surresh groaned and turned the aircon up.

The retreating airship now flashed the message: “But please do remember that THINGS HAVE CHANGED. ‘Well, at least they’d got one thing right. Since they’d pushed the Americans into nuclear war, showered Europe with fallout in a bigger fuckup then Chernobyl and chosen South Africa as a home away from home things had changed. Now that the Chinese ‘Government’ had arrived and taken over, everything was different.

Then he looked out at the abandoned high-rises across the way, and down at his watch. He ground the remains of his cigarette between his teeth in annoyance. The girl was late again. He hated pick up duty.

The glass shattered, catching the sunset in a spectacular show of light. Callie flung up an arm to protect her eyes, stumbling for a moment. Then the soldier was through the window and she was running.

The soldier hit the ground heavily, landing on his knees, allowing his armour to absorb the impact. After a moment he rose, glass falling from him like rain. He paused; banging his mask a couple of times until the filter stopped rasping and then, with deliberate slowness continued the hunt.

Behind an abandoned bath tub, fallen on its side, Callie crouched. There was blood in her mouth and her ankle throbbed. She cursed her luck.

Towering over the pitted floor, her pursuer began scanning the room, skirting its perimeter, Glass crunched under each heavy stride. Callie willed her spent muscles quiet; she couldn’t afford to shake now. The footfalls of the searching soldier echoed harshly from the concrete walls, closing in.

She froze, holding her breath and listening.

He stepped nearer, so close that she could hear the hum from his kit. Steady.

Her fingers brushed the signal pack at her hip. The twin buttons were cool and smooth under her fingers. Waiting.

The soldier tramped closer, his gaze intent on the tub in front of him. For the first time in the mission, Callie hesitated. This timing had to be perfect.

Another piece of glass snapped under his boot.

Closing her eyes and risking one tiny breath, she hit the first button.

The soldier deliberated. He’d definitely heard something up ahead, like a small gasp, but the sudden beeping from the doorway demanded his attention too. He was just turning to investigate the door when the final warning sounded. Callie braced her body and slammed down on the second button detonating the contact bomb she’d stuck to the doorway when she ran in.

Suddenly it was like there were two suns blazing at the soldier, one sinking beyond the barred windows and the other exploding into being in front of him. The first seconds of flame seemed to consume everything. The shockwave shattered the door and ripped chunks from the ceiling. Shards of rubble rained down on Callie, cracking the tub with savage force. For a time there was just sound and blackness. Then just blackness.

After a while she let the tension flow from her muscles. Slowly she pulled herself from the remains of the bath tub, bleeding from a dozen places but somehow, improbably, alive.

Gingerly she found her feet, deciding that today’s strategy had definitely worked better on paper.

She shook the dust from her ears and listened. The room was still. She smiled bleakly, lucky this time.

It wasn’t enough though, not in the long run. The rebellion wouldn’t survive on poor strategies and luck. She’d have to crap out her Tactics department when she got back to base. Sighing suddenly she rubbed her aching shoulders. Her Tactics department was two people and a dartboard. The two best monopoly players in the team, and a dartboard for when they got stuck for ideas. This country hadn’t been ready for a war. Not even close. Callie shrugged, and headed back to the centre of the room to strip the body.

The bloody helmet slid off easily, letting the softly deepening sunset wash gold the remains of Asian features. He was so still and so mangled that it was only when Callie bent close, checking his breast pockets for ammo, that she realised that the soldier was alive.

Beneath the heavy uniform she felt his chest shudder, rising and falling spasmodically. Startled she jerked away, looking for the first time at his face. His one eye was a mess, blood and tissue tumbling from a lid sunken in its socket. The other was a deep brown.

It blinked at her. Thin lips began to move slowly in soundless speech. Callie stood, transfixed by something in his tired gaze. The sudden horror of the thing she had done swelled within her. Her eyes prickled involuntarily. She shook her head, dropping his gaze and answering her shame with anger. It wasn’t like he was an innocent. You lost that when you signed up for the Government army. The Chinese Government Army. Since South Africa signed that damn treaty, the Chinese was the only government that mattered here anymore. They didn’t let you hold onto anything. Especially not innocence.

She could almost understand it, the treaty and everything. They’d all been so scared when war broke out. Oil war between America and China, two of the world’s leaders shooting each other to shit over the last dregs of fuel. They’d been scared badly in the beginning and worse when with the first nuclear strike. The President had been scared enough to sign away his power for the promise of security.

Now the only people not scared were the rebels and the Army. The soldier coughed, racking and wet. She balled up her fists. She hadn’t invited the fucking Chinese.

There was more blood on his face now, leaking from between his gently moving lips. No tears for invaders. No shame in defence. The blood was thick and dark. No one was forced to join. There were always choices, some were just harder. There were always choices, no matter how young you were. He coughed up again. Something inside his body must be very, very broken.

Her stomach churned and she quelled it with rage. Narrowing her eyes she glared down at him and spat, in the banned language, the forbidden, rebel tongue of the struggle “Moenie met my praat nie, jou fokken jakkals.”1

His good eye swivelled back to her. He rasped a hollow breath and, “Ek praat nie met u.”2    

Callie stopped, stunned.

The brown eye turned away as he continued to whisper. On his lips the blood began to dry, splitting into sharp black flakes. Gradually, his words slowed. She could hear how his lungs bubbled now. After a while he stopped speaking entirely.

Numbly she sank to her knees, staring at the body. It was a long time before she could move again.

Eventually the last of the sun slipped out of the little room, sinking below the empty Parktown High-rises and leaving the smog cloud glowing.

The chip-reader’s screen winked once, bright as a fallen star, as Callie slid the soldier’s Identity implant in. He’d earned a name now. And maybe more than that. She thought for a while and got out her paint.

She’d nearly finished her spray can when her ‘corn buzzed. Slipping it into her ear and slapping on the throat patch she winced at Surresh’s hysterical yelling.

“Callie! Where the hell are you?! You’re 45 overdue!”

“I’m coming Surresh. Just finishing up the usual.”

“Are you alive?”

She almost managed a smile. “No shit.”

In the jeep outside, Surresh exhaled. She was fine. He could hear from her voice that she was rattled, but you could survive being rattled. He put his hand on his own pounding heart, and lit another smoke.

She slipped into the car minutes later, badly roughed up. Calmly he checked her over for major damage.

“I’m all right Surresh” she muttered, her eyes telling another story.

Understanding, he pulled off – first thing you learned on pick up duty was when not to ask.

Callie watched the city through the window, lifeless and shut up for the night (night that should have been buzzing with Jozi vibe). But she didn’t want to think about how things used to be. It brought up other memories.

In the distance she could see a propaganda blimp, running news footage of the March. People died in the street, gunned down by soldiers every time they ran this video. It was part of the Government’s desensitisation plan: hit us with those images enough so we get used to them, until they’re not real. Until we don’t care.

All of a sudden Callie missed her dad.

It had been simple after the March, the lines drawn clean and absolute. Us and Them, Justice and Tyranny.

Now she was wary of capital letters. If the Government was recruiting South Africans… Tricking us, into fighting our own…

She shook her head. There’d been no betrayal in the soldier’s brown gaze, no surprise. Just sadness. She sighed. How did she justify that? She’d been shocked when she’d realised she was fighting a South African„ He’d known from the start. She didn’t believe that anyone could be forced to join the army. He’d joined.

Maybe he’d just picked the wrong side. Maybe she couldn’t make it that simple anymore.

He didn’t look like he even realised he’d chosen badly, but Callie was bad at reading Chinese faces. She wondered if she could use that excuse here, with him.

What does a South African face look like anyway?

Maybe she’d lost his expression in the blood and missing eye. “Stupid fucking blimp,” She muttered to herself. Surresh looked up but she shook her head at him, pointing at the blimp.

“Yes, that one’s the worst. ‘We can build a stronger loving nation’  Makes me sick, that line.”

She looked at him curiously.

“You don’t ‘build’ a nation. You grow it, with and backward steps and compromises and small acts of grace.”

Callie thought a bit. Small acts of grace.

She wished it could have been better, but she’d never spoken Afrikaans before the revolution.

When the government cleanup crew finally arrived at the Parktown High-rise, they sighed and shrugged. It was a standard scene: light damage, walls covered in the usual terrorist propaganda, (Nkosi Sikele and such). It was only one worker who found the other message, sprayed small and neat beside the body.

“Mag die Here jou seen, en nog baie jare spaar, Kuan Lee Gouws.”

May God bless you and spare you many more years, Kuan Lee Gouws.”

Taal first appeared in PROBE, the magazine of SFFSA (South African Science Fiction and Fantasy club) after winning first place in the Nova contest, 2011.

Abi Godsell has been writing sci-fi, horror and urban magic short stories since 2006. Her novel, Idea War, is set in a dystopian future Johannesburg. She is awed and inspired by words and world building, moonlights in city planning and sustainable design and believes that our spark of hope might be burning low, with the world the way it is right now, but it hasn’t quite gone out yet.

A History of The Science Fiction & Fantasy South Africa (SFFSA) Club – Gail Jamieson

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TABLE MOUNTAIN

Way back in 1969 Tex and Rita Cooper sent a letter (snail mail) to “The Sunday Times”, asking the newspaper to print it in the letters column.  They had been in contact with the N3F, the National Fan Fiction Federation in America, and they were in search of fellow South Africans who were keen to share their love of Science Fiction.

On the 29th of June 1969 nine hardy souls made the trek to the Pretoria home of Tex and Rita and the South African Science Fiction club was born. Its name was later changed to Science Fiction South Africa. The committee started out by producing a monthly newsletter, which included meeting minutes, book reviews, stories, news of other SF clubs and various other items of SF interest.

After a year or so it was decided to create a Club Zine and members voted on a name which came from such as Beep, Xenon, Stargaze, War of the Words, Nucleus, and Utopia to name a few. PROBE was chosen and the June/July of 1970 newsletter, which was Volume 1 number 8, was printed on a Roneo machine and sent out to members. By March 1974 Probe had been become issue 25 and it has more or less been published 4 times a year for a while and now,  and as of March 2022, issue 191,  a fully electronic as well as a hard copy, has just gone to the printer.

The club decided, as one of its aims, to promote the writing of Science Fiction by South African authors, and to start up a short story competition. I can’t find out the exact date that this first occurred but by May 1978 in issue 36, stories from the competition were being printed in PROBE.

And as PROBE progressed, the stories from the competition, which at some point became the “Nova”, began to be the backbone of each issue. Over each year the winning stories from the previous year were published as well as some that took the fancy of the Editor.

The Nova has always been pre-judged anonymously by at least four or five members of the club. The top ten stories then went to a final judge who would rank them. We’ve had a very respectable selection of final judges, including Dave Freer, Lauren Beukes, Jennie Ridyard, Deirdre Byrne, Arthur Goldstuck, Gerald Gaylard, James Sey, David Levey, Digby Ricci, and Allyson Kreuiter; and in the very early days, noted South African astronomer Professor Arthur Bleksley. All are noted academics and many are professors of English departments in many of our noted Universities. There are even a number of internationally published authors among them.

I first came into contact with the club in 1973 when I saw an advert for the short story competition in the newspaper. I’d just completed my Matric and already an avid SF reader. So I entered a story. I was delighted to get into the top 20 stories and joined the club. In 1979 I took on the editorship of PROBE for the first time and was bitten by the editing bug.

Among our club members we have been delighted to have had Claude Nunes who was the first published South African author. He even had a couple of Ace doubles printed. Also the now well published Dave Freer and Yvonne Walus, who has changed to crime writing. A regular contributor to Nova and PROBE was the late Liz Simmonds, who I consider one of the most talented South African authors I have come across. One of the fillers that are found in PROBE are the 99-word “Wormholes” that were written at our annual MiniCons and many of them were co-authored by Liz. We miss her.

Up until 1994 we had published “The Best of South African Science Fiction”, volumes 1, 2 and 3. Then there was a long hiatus but as the club, now Science Fiction and Fantasy South Africa approached its 50th anniversary, long time member Gary Kuyper suggested that we do a Best of 50 Years of the Nova Competition.

I’d been threatening, for some time to look at doing a Volume 4 once I finally retired and it seemed to be a good idea to add it to the list of things I would need to keep me busy once I was no longer working.

The SFFSA committee deliberated and agreed that it would be a very good idea. It is currently approaching a point where it will be ready to be published.

Besides PROBE, the club has a long established tradition of meeting on the 3rd Saturday of each month. We have had many really entertaining speakers on topics ranging from “Hard” science topics  such as nanotechnology, space travel and chemistry  to archaeology, flying cars, Spacex, Afrofuturism, Tuberculosis  vs. Man,  Game of Thrones, renewable energy, black holes, What makes an alien, alien and also some  literary discourses as a few examples.  We’ve been to the Planetarium, the Radio Astronomy site at Pelindaba, the crater sites at Parys as well as at Tswaing. We’ve even hosted authors Terry Pratchett and Raymond E. Feist.  We’ve had many socials and lots of Quizzes. We’ve been a small core of members who have become good friends of each other and of science fiction over many years. 

With the advent of Covid-19 we were forced to stop meeting in person but within a short time had converted our monthly meetings to the Zoom forum. We found that we were able to find speakers from beyond our borders and indeed as we have members in a number of other countries they were able to join us as well.

Going forward it looks as if our monthly meetings will be a combination of live and Zoom meetings, depending on who we find is willing to talk to us.

And I should mention that a small number of us have been lucky enough to attend a few of the Science Fiction WorldCons in places such as Glasgow, Baltimore, Chicago, Philadelphia, Toronto, London and even Yokohama. It is the most amazing sensation to be in a group of up to 5000 fans when we generally number our member meetings in the 20’s. To walk along passages and be passed by people like Harry Harrison and Robert Silverberg, Lois McMaster Bujold as well as George R. R. Martin, whose books we had been reading since childhood is mind blowing. To sit down and drink coffee with people like James White or Gene Wolfe and discover they are people just like us is a humbling experience.  To listen to a debate amongst Terry Pratchett, Anne McCaffery and Terry Brooks was enthralling.  To hear David Brin address the opening of the Nippon 2007 WorldCon in Japanese was astonishing. I doubt that there is any other genre of fiction on earth which brings together authors and readers than Science Fiction and Fantasy with such gatherings.

One issue that has often concerned the club over the years has been the lack of representation of people of the other colours of our “rainbow” nation. We’ve had a couple of Black, Coloured and Indian members but few who have seemed to stay long term.  We’ve always been a speculative fiction club and that has been the main reason for joining up. Thinking back over the years, perhaps the best I can do is to quote one of our long time members Ahmed Wadee. He stood up at the 50th SFFSA Anniversary dinner that we held to celebrate and said,” I first came to a meeting, with some trepidation, in 1978, and was the only dark face there. I was welcomed as a Science Fiction fan and have been an active member ever since. The club has only ever been interested in my interest in SF and never in whom I was or where I came from. “

I have seen a change in the authorship of stories over the years and we’ve received review books from a number of black authors. And Nick Wood has given us an overview of all the speculative fiction that is being written on the African continent. One of our biggest concerns is not only not gaining members of other colours but of not gaining young members of any colour. There are so many seemingly exciting options out on the Internet and we’re finding it difficult to attract members, which is one of the reasons that we are glad to be part of this collaboration. We’re hoping that more people will be interested in helping to balance the make-up of the club to enable it become more like the society in which it exists.

Long live Speculative Fiction in Africa.

Gail Jamieson

Editor PROBE

SFFSA

Gail Jamieson is a retired Medical Applications Specialist and lifelong science fiction fan. More recently a fantasy fan as well. And a very occasional writer of SF&F. She’s been a member of SFFSA since 1973 and an on-and-off editor of the club magazine, PROBE, for the past 40-odd years. She loves the idea of the “what if?” in fiction and she is never without something to read. Earthbound, she is married to Ian, who she met through the club and has 2 adult children and 1 grandson, all of whom enjoy SF&F as well.

Slipping – Lauren Beukes

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Illustration for TAAL, Omenana speculative fiction magazine
AI art created with MidJourney

1. High Life

The heat presses against the cab, trying to find a way in past the sealed windows and the rattling air-conditioning. Narrow apartment blocks swoop past on either side of the dual carriageway, occasionally broken up by a warehouse megastore. It could be Cape Town, Pearl thinks. It could be anywhere.

Twenty-three hours travel so far. She had never been on a plane before.

“So what’s the best thing about Karachi?” Tomislav, her promoter, asks the cab driver, trying to break the oppressive silence—the three of them dazed by the journey, the girl, the promoter and the surgeon, who has not looked up from his phone since they got in the car because he is trying to set up a meeting.

The driver thinks about it, tugging at the little hairs of his mustache. “One thing is that this is a really good road. Sharah e Faisal. There’s hardly ever a traffic jam and if it rains, the road never drowns.”

“Excellent.” Tomislav leans back, defeated. He gives Pearl an encouraging smile, but she is not encouraged. She has watched the World Cup and the Olympics on TV; she knows how it is supposed to be. She stares out the window, refusing to blink in case the tears come.

The road narrows into the city and the traffic thickens, hooting trucks and rickshaws covered in reflecting stickers like disco balls, twinkling in the sun. They pass through the old city, with its grand crumbling buildings from long ago, and into the warren of Saddar’s slums with concrete lean-tos muscling in on each other. Kachi abadi, the driver tells them, and Pearl sounds it out under her breath. At least the shacks are not tin, and that’s one difference.

Tomislav points out the loops of graffiti in another alphabet and taps her plastic knee. “Gang signs. Just like the Cape Flats.” “Oh they’re gangsters all right,” the driver says. “Same people run the country.”

“You have gangsters in your government?” Pearl is shocked.

The cab driver clucks and meets her eyes in the rear-view mirror. “You one of the racers?”

“What clued you in?” Dr. Arturo says, without looking up. It’s the first thing he’s said all day. His thumbs, blunt instruments, tap over the screen of his phone. Pearl rubs her legs self-consciously, where the tendons are visible under the joint of her knee, running into the neurocircuitry. It’s a showcase, Dr. Arturo told her when she asked him why it couldn’t look like skin. Some days she thinks it’s beautiful. But mostly, she hates seeing the inside-out of herself.

“Why do you think you’re in Pakistan?” the driver laughs.

“You think anyone else would let this happen in their country?” He rubs his thumb and fingers together and flings them to the wind.

2. Packed with Goodness

Pre-race. A huge +Games banner hangs above the entrance of the Karachi Parsi Institute, or KPI. It’s an old colonial building that has been extended to accommodate them, the track built over the old cricket ground and into the slums. The original school has been turned into the athletes’ village, classrooms converted to individual medical cells to cater to their unique needs. Pearl’s, for example, has hermetic bio-units and sterile surfaces. The window has been fused shut to prevent polluted air leaking in.

In the room next door, they installed extra generators for Charlotte Grange after she plugged in her exo-suit and tripped the power for the whole building. Pearl can hear her grunting through the walls. She doesn’t know what Siska Rachman has. Do the technically braindead still need to eat?

She sits on the end of her bed, paging through the official program while Tomislav paces the room, hunched over his phone, his hand resting on his nose. “Ajda! Come on!” he says, in that Slavic way that makes the first part of the sentence top- heavy. Like Tomislav himself, still carrying his weightlifter bulk all squeezed up into his chest and neck. He doesn’t compete anymore, but the steroids keep him in shape. The neon lights and the white sheen off the walls make his eyes look bluer, his skin paler. “Peach” she was taught in school, as if “peach” and “brown” were magically less divisive than “black” and “white”, and words could fix everything. But Tomislav’s skin is not the warm orange of a summer fruit, it’s like the milky tea she drinks at home.

Tomislav has thick black hair up his arms. She asked him about it when they first met at the Beloved One’s house on the hill. Fourteen, too young and too angry to mind her elders, even though her mother gasped at her rudeness and smacked her head.

Tomislav had laughed. Testosterone, kitten. He tapped the slight fuzz above her top lip. You’ve got it too, that’s what makes you so strong.

He’s since made her laser all her unsightly hair. Sport is all about image. Even this one.

He sees her looking at him and speaks louder. “You want to get a meeting, Arturo, we gotta have something to show.” He jabs at the phone dramatically to end the call. “That guy! What does he think I’m doing all day? You all right, kitten?” He takes her by the shoulders, gives them a little rub. “You feeling good?”

“Fine.” More than fine, with the voices of the crowd a low vibration through the concrete, and the starting line tugging at her insides, just through that door, across the quad, down the ramp. She has seen people climbing up onto the roofs around the track with blankets.

“That’s my girl.” He snatches the program out of her hands. “Why are you even looking at this? You know every move these girls have.”

He means Siska Rachman. That’s all anyone wants to talk about, the journos, the corporates. Pearl is sick of it, the interviews for channels she’s never heard of. No one told her how much of this would be talking about racing.

“Ready when you are,” Dr. Arturo says into her head, speaking through the audio implant in her cochlear. Back online as if he’s never been gone, checking the diagnostics. “Watch your adrenaline, Pearl. You need to be calm for the install.” He used to narrate the chemical processes, the shifting balances of hormones, the nano-enhancing oxygen uptake, the shift of robotic joints, the dopamine blast, but it felt too much like being in school; words being crammed into her head and all worthless anyway. You don’t have to name something to understand it. She knows how it feels when she hits her stride and the world opens up beneath her feet.

“He’s ready,” she repeats to Tomislav. “All right, let’s get this show pumping.”

Pearl obediently hitches up her singlet with the Russian energy drink logo—one of Tomislav’s sponsors, although that’s only spare change. She has met the men who have paid for her to be here, in the glass house on the hill, wearing gaudy golf shirts and shoes and shiny watches. She never saw them swing a club, and she doesn’t know their names, but they all wanted to shake her hand and take a photograph with her.

She feels along the rigid seam that runs in a J-hook down the side of her stomach, parallel with her hysterectomy scar, and tears open the velcroskin.

“Let me,” Tomislav says, kneeling between her legs. She holds her flesh open while he reaches one hand up inside her abdomen. It doesn’t hurt, not anymore. The velcro releases a local anesthetic when it opens, but she can feel an uncomfortable tugging inside, like cramps.

Tomislav twists off the valves on either side, unplugs her stomach and eases it out of her. He sets it in a sterile biobox and connects it to a blood flow. By the time he turns back, she is already spooling up the accordion twist of artificial intestine, like a magician pulling ribbons from his palm. It smells of lab- mod bacteria, with the faintest whiff of feces. She hands it to Tomislav and he wrinkles his nose.

“Just goes to show,” he says, folding up the crinkled plastic tubing and packing it away. “You can take the meat out of the human, but they’re still full of shit!”

Pearl smiles dutifully, even though he has been making the same joke for the last three weeks—ever since they installed the new system.

“Nearly there.” He holds up the hotbed factory and she nods and looks away because it makes her queasy to watch. It’s a sleek bioplug, slim as a Communion wafer and packed with goodness, Dr. Arturo says, like fortified breakfast cereal. Hormones and nanotech instead of vitamins and iron.

Tomislav pushes his hand inside her again, feeling blindly for the connector node in what’s left of her real intestinal tract, an inch and a half of the body’s most absorbent tissue for better chemical uptake.

“Whoops! Got your kidney! Joking. It’s in.” “Good to go,” Dr. Arturo confirms.

“Then let’s go,” Pearl says, standing up on her blades.

3. Forces Greater Than You

You would have to be some kind of idiot. She told her mother it was a bet among the kids, but it wasn’t. It was her, only her, trying to race the train.

The train won.

4. Why You Have Me

The insect drone flits in front of Pearl’s face, the lens zooming in on her lips to catch the words she’s murmuring and transmit them onscreen. “Ndincede nkosi undiphe amandla.”

She bends down to grab the curved tips of her legs, to stretch, yes, but also to hide her mouth. It’s supposed to be private, she thinks. But that’s an idea that belonged to another girl: the girl before Tomislav’s deals and Dr. Arturo’s voice in her head running through diagnostics, before the Beloved One, before the train, before all this.

“It’s because you’re so taciturn, kitten,” Tomislav tries to comfort her. “You give people crumbs and they’re hungry for more. If you just talked more.” He is fidgeting with his tie while Brian Corwood, the presenter, moves down the starter’s carpet with his microphone, talking to Oluchi Eze, who is showing off her tail for the cameras.

Pearl doesn’t know how to talk more. She’s run out of words, and the ones Dr. Arturo wants her to say make her feel like she’s chewing raw potatoes. She has to sound out the syllables. She swipes her tongue over her teeth to get rid of the feeling that someone has rigged a circuit behind her incisors. It’s the new drugs in the hotbed, Tomislav says. She has to get used to it, like the drones, which dart up to her unexpectedly. They’re freakish—cameras hardwired into locusts, with enough brain stem left to respond to commands. Insects are cheap energy.

Somewhere in a control room, Dr. Arturo notes her twitching back from the drones and speaks soothing words in her head. “What do you think, Pearl? More sophisticated than some athletes we know.” She glances over at Charlotte

Grange, who is also waiting to be interviewed. The big blond girl quakes and jitters, clenching her jaw, her exo-suit groaning in anticipation. The neural dampeners barely hold her back.

The crowd roars their impatience, tens of thousands of people behind a curve of reinforced safety glass in the stands high above the action. The rooftops are also packed and there are children swarming on the scaffolding of an old building overlooking the track.

The people in suits, the ones Dr. Arturo and Tomislav want to meet, watch from air-conditioned hotel rooms five kilometers away. Medical and pharmaceutical companies looking for new innovations in a place where anything goes: drugs, prosthetics, robotics, nano. That’s what people come for. They tune in by the millions on the proprietary channel. The drama. Like watching Formula 1 for the car crashes.

“All these people, kitten,” Tomislav says, “they don’t care if you win. They’re just waiting for you to explode. But you know why you’re here.”

“To run.”

“That’s my girl.”

“Slow breaths,” Dr. Arturo warns. “You’re overstimulated.”

The insect drone responds to some invisible hand in a control room and swirls around her, getting every angle. Brian Corwood makes his way over to her, microphone extended like a handshake and winged cameras buzzing behind his shoulder. She holds herself very straight. She knows her mama and the Beloved One are watching back home. She wants to do Gugulethu proud.

“Ndincede nkosi.” She mouths the words and sees them come up on the big screens in closed captions below her face. They’ll be working to translate them already. Not hard to figure out that she’s speaking Xhosa.

“Pearl Nit-seeko,” the presenter says. “Cape Town’s miracle girl. Crippled when she was fourteen years old and here she is, two years later, at the +Games. Dream come true!”

Pearl has told the story so many times that she can’t remember which parts are made-up or glossed over. She told a journalist once that she saw her father killed on TV during the illegal mine strikes in Polokwane and how she covered her ears so she didn’t have to hear the popcorn pa-pa-pa-pa-pa of the gunshots as people fell in the dust. But now she has to stick to it. Tragedy makes for a better story than the reality of a useless middle-aged drunk who left her mother to live with a shebeen owner’s daughter in Nyanga so that he didn’t have to pay off the bar tab. When Pearl first started getting famous, her father made a stink in the local gossip rags until Tomislav paid him to go away. You can buy your own truth.

“Can you tell us about your tech, Pearl?” Brian Corwood says, as if this is a show about movie stars and glittery dresses.

She responds on autopilot. The removable organs, the bath of nano in her blood that improves oxygen uptake. Neural connectivity that blows open the receptors to the hormones and drugs dispatched by the hotbed factory. Tomislav has coached her in the newsworthy technical specs, the details that make investors’ ears prick up.

“I can’t show you,” she apologizes, coyly raising her shirt to let the cameras zoom in on the seam of scar tissue. “It’s not a sterile environment.”

“So it’s hollow in there?” Corwood pretends to knock on her stomach.

“Reinforced surgical-quality graphene mesh.” She lightly drums her fingers over her skin, as often rehearsed. It looks spontaneous and shows off her six-pack.

She hears Dr. Arturo’s voice in her head. “Put the shirt down now,” he instructs. She covers herself up. The star doesn’t want to let the viewers see too much. Like with sex. Or so she’s been told. She will never have children.

“Is that your secret weapon?” Corwood says, teasing, because no one ever reveals the exact specs, not until they have a buyer.

“No,” she says. “But I do have one.”

“What is it, then?” Corwood says, gamely.

“God,” she says and stares defiantly at the insect cameras zooming in for a close-up.

5. Things You Can’t Hide

Her stumps are wrapped in fresh bandages, but the wounds still smell, like something caught in the drain. Her mother wants to douse the bandages in perfume.

“I don’t want to! Leave me alone!” Pearl swats the teardrop bottle from her mother’s hands and it clatters onto the floor. Her mother tries to grab her. The girl falls off the bed with a shriek. She crawls away on her elbows, sobbing. Her Uncle Tshepelo hauls her up by her armpits, like she is a sack of sorghum flour, and sets her down at the kitchen table.

“Enough, Pearl,” he says, her handsome youngest uncle. When she was a little girl, she told her mother she was going to marry him.

“I hate you,” she screams and tries to kick at him with her stumps, but he ducks away and goes over to the kettle while her mother stands in the doorway, face in hands.

Pearl has not been back to school since it happened. She turns to face the wall when her friends come to visit, refusing to talk with them. During the day, she watches soap operas and infomercials and lies in her mother’s bed and stares at the sky and listens to the noise of the day: the cycles of traffic and school kids and dogs barking and the call to prayer vibrating through the mosque’s decrepit speakers and the tra[c again and men drunk and ßghting at the shebeen. Maybe one of them is her father. He has not been to see her since the accident.

Tshepelo makes sweet milky tea for her and her mother, and sits and talks: nonsense, really, about his day in the factory, cooking up batches of patés which he says is like fancy flavored butter for rich people, and how she should see the stupid blue plastic cap he has to wear to cover his hair in case of contamination. He talks and talks until she calms down.

Finally she agrees to go to church—a special service in Khayelitsha Site B. She puts on her woolen dress, grey as the Cape Town winter sky, and green stockings, which dangle horribly at the joint where her legs should be.

Me rain polka-dots her clothes and soaks into her mother’s hat, making it flop as she quicksteps after Tshepelo, who carries Pearl in his arms like an injured dog. She hates the way people avert their eyes.

The church is no more than a tent in a parking lot, although the people sing like they are in a fancy cathedral in England, like on TV. Pearl sits stiffly at the end of the pew between her uncle and her mother, glaring at the little kids who dart around to stare. “Vaya,” she hisses at them. “What are you looking at? Go.”

Halfway through the service, two of the ministers bring out the brand-new wheelchair like it is a prize on a game show, adorned with a big purple ribbon. Mey carry it down the stairs on their shoulders and set it down in front of her. She looks down and mumbles something. Nkosi.

Mey tuck their ßngers into her armpits, these strangers’ hands on her, and lift her into the chair. Me moment they set her down, she feels trapped. She moans and shakes her head.

“She’s so grateful,” her mother says and presses her down with one hand on her shoulder. Hallelujah, everyone says. Hallelujah. Me choir breaks into song and Pearl wishes that God had let her die.

6. Heat

Pearl’s brain is micro-seconds behind her body. The bang of the starting gun registers as a sound after she is already running.

She is aware of the other runners as warm, straining shapes in the periphery. Tomislav has made her study the way they run. Charlotte Grange, grunting and loping, using the exo- suit arms to dig into the ground, like an ape; Anna Murad with her robotics wet-wired into her nerves; Oluchi Eze with her sculpted tail and delicate bones, like a dinosaur bird. And in lane five, furthest away from her, Siska Rachman, her face perfectly calm and empty, her eyes locked on the finish line, two kilometers away. A dead girl remote-controlled by a quadriplegic in a hospital bed. That is the problem with the famous Siska Rachman. She wins a lot, but there is network lag-time.

You have to inhabit your body. You need to be in it. Not only because the rules say so, because otherwise you can’t feel it. The strike of your foot against the ground, the rush of air on your skin, the sweat running down your sides. No amount of biofeedback will make the difference.

“Pace yourself,” Dr. Arturo says in her head. “I’ll give you a glucose boost when you hit eight hundred meters.”

Pearl tunes in to the rhythmic huff of her breath, and stretches her legs longer with each stride, aware of everything: the texture of the track, the expanse of the sky, the smell of sweat and dust and oil. It blooms in her chest—a fierce warmth, a golden glow, and she feels the rush of His love and she knows that God is with her.

She crosses third, neck-and-neck with Siska Rachman and milliseconds behind Charlotte Grange, who throws herself across the finish line with a wet ripping sound. The exo-suit goes down in a tumble of girl and metal, forcing Rachman to sidestep.

“A brute,” Dr. Arturo whispers in her ear. “Not like you, Pearl.”

7. Beloved

The car comes to fetch them, Pearl and her mother and her uncle. A shiny black BMW with hubcaps that turn the light into spears. People came out of their houses to see.

She is wearing her black dress, but it’s scorching out, and the sweat runs down the back of her neck and makes her collar itch.

“Don’t scratch,” her mother said, holding her hands.

The car cuts between the tin shacks and the government housing and all the staring eyes, nosing out onto the highway, into the winelands, past the university and the rich people’s cookie-cutter townhouses, past the golf course where little carts dart between the sprinklers, and the hills with vineyards and flags to draw the tourists, and down a side road and through a big black gate which swings open onto a driveway lined with spiky cycads.

They climb out, stunned by the heat and other things besides— the size of the house, the wood and glass floating on top of the hill. Her uncle fights to open the wheelchair Khayelitsha Site B bought her, until the driver comes round and says, “Let me help you with that, sir.” He shoves down hard on the seat and it clicks into place. He escorts them into a cool entrance hall with wooden floors and metal sculptures of cheetahs guarding the staircase. A woman dressed in a red and white dress with a wrap around her head smiles and ushers them into the lounge where three men are waiting: a grandfather with two white men flanking him like the stone cats by the staircase. One skinny, one hairy.

“The Beloved One,” her mother says, averting her eyes. Her uncle bows his head and raises his hands in deference.

Their fear makes Pearl angry.

The grandfather waves at them to come, come. The trousers of his dark-blue suit have pleats folded as sharp as paper, and his shoes are black like coal.

“So this is Pearl Nitseko,” the Beloved One says, testing the weight of her name. “I’ve heard about you.”

The stringy white man stares at her. The lawyer, she will find out later, who makes her and her mother sign papers and more papers and papers. The one with heavy shoulders fidgets with his cuffs, pulling them down over his hairy wrists, but he is watching her most intently of all.

“What?” she demands. “What have you heard?” Her mother gasps and smacks her head.

The Beloved One smiles. “That you have fire in you.”

8. Fearful Tautologies

Tomislav hustles Pearl past the religious protesters outside the stadium. Faiths and sects have united in moral outrage, chanting, “Un-natural! Un-godly! Un-holy!” They chant the words in English rather than Urdu for the benefit of the drones. “Come on!” Tomislav shoulders past, steering her towards a shuttle car that will take them to dinner. “Don’t these cranks have bigger things to worry about? Their thug government? Their starving children?” Pearl leaps into the shuttle and he launches himself in after her. “Extremism I can handle.” He slams the door. “But tautology? That’s unforgivable.” Pearl zips up her tracksuit.

The crowd surges towards the shuttle, bashing its windows with the flats of their hands. “Monster!” a woman shouts in English. “God hates you.”

“What’s tautology?”

“Unnecessary repetition.”

“Isn’t that what fear always is?”

“I forget that you’re fast and clever. Yeah. Screw them,” Tomislav says. The shuttle starts rolling and he claps his hands.

“You did good out there.”

“Did you get a meeting?”

“We got a meeting, kitten. I know you think your big competition is Siska, but it’s Charlotte. She just keeps going and going.”

“She hurt herself.”

“Ripped a tendon, the news says, but she’s still going to race tomorrow.”

Dr. Arturo, always listening, chimes in. “They have back-up meat in the lab, they can grow a tendon. But it’s not a good long-term strategy. This is a war, not a battle.”

“I thought we weren’t allowed to fight,” Pearl says.

“You talking to the doc? Tell him to save his chatter for the investors.”

“Tomislav says—” she starts.

“I heard him,” Dr. Arturo says.

Pearl looks back at the protestors. One of the handwritten banners stays with her. “I am fearfully and wonderfully made,” it reads.

9. She Is Risen

Pearl watches the buses arrive from her bed upstairs in the headquarters of the Church of the Beloved Pentecostal. A guest room adapted for the purposes, with a nurse sitting outside and machines that hiss and bleep. The drugs make her woozy. She has impressions, but not memories. The whoop of the ambulance siren and the feeling of being important. Visitors. Men in golf shorts and an army man with fat cheeks. Gold watches and uniform stars, to match the gold star on the tower she can see from her window and the fat tapered columns like bullets at the entrance.

“Are you ready?” Dr. Arturo says. He has come from Venezuela especially for her. He has gentle hands and kind eyes, she thinks, even though he is the one who cut everything out of her. Excess baggage, he says. It hurts where it was taken out, her female organs and her stomach and her guts.

He tells her they have been looking for someone like her for a long time, he and Tomislav. They had given up on finding her. And now! Now look where they are. She is very lucky. She knows this because everyone keeps telling her.

Dr. Arturo takes her to the elevator where Tomislav is waiting.

The surgeon is very modest. He doesn’t like to be seen on camera. “Don’t worry, I’ ll be with you,” he says and taps her face near her ear.

“It’s all about you, kitten,” Tomislav says, wheeling her out into a huge echoing hallway under a painted sky with angels and the Beloved One, in floating purple robes, smiling down on the people flowing through the doors, the women dressed in red and white and the men in blue blazers and white shirts. This time, she doesn’t mind them looking at her.

They make way for the wheelchair, through the double doors, past the ushers, into a huge room with a ceiling crinkled and glossy as a sea shell and silver balconies and red carpets. She feels like a film star, the red blanket over her knees her party dress.

From somewhere deep in the church, women raise their voices in ululation and all the hair on Pearl’s body pricks up as if she is a cat. Tomislav turns the wheelchair around and parks it beside a huge gold throne with carved leaves and flowers and a halo of spikes. He pats her shoulder and leaves her there, facing the crowd, thousands of them in the auditorium, all staring at her. “Smile, Pearl,” Dr. Arturo says, his voice soft inside her head, and she tries, she really does.

A group of women walk out onto the stage, swaying with wooden bowls on their hips, their hands dipping into the bowls like swans pecking, throwing rose petals before them. Me crowd picks up the ululating, and it reverberates through the church. Halalala.

The Beloved One steps onto the stage, and Pearl has to cover her ears at the noise that greets him. Women are weeping in the aisles. Men too, crying in happiness to see him.

The Beloved One holds out his hands to still them. “Quiet, please, brothers and sisters of the Pentecostal,” he says. “Peace be with you.”

“And also with you,” the crowd roars back. He places his hands on the back of the wheelchair.

“Today, we come together to witness a miracle. My daughter, will you stand up and walk?”

And Pearl does.

10. Call to Prayer

The restaurant is fancy, a buffet of Pakistani food, korma and tikka and kabobs and silver trays of sticky sweet pastries. The athletes have to pose for photographs and do more interviews with Bryan Corwood and others. The journalist with purple streaks in her hair and a metal ring in her lip asks her, “Aren’t you afraid you’re gonna die out there?” before Tomislav intervenes.

“Come on! What kind of question is that?” he says.

But the athletes can’t really eat, and there is a bus that takes them home early so they’ll be fresh the next day, while the promoters peel away, one by one, in fancy black cars that take them away to other parts of the city, looking tense. “Don’t you worry, kitten.” Tomislav smiles, all teeth, and pats her hand.

Back in her room, Pearl finds a prayer mat that might be aligned toward Mecca. She phones down to reception to ask. She prostrates herself on the square of carpet, east, west, to see if it is any different, if her God will be annoyed.

She goes online to check the news and the betting pools. Her odds have improved. There is a lot of speculation about Grange’s injury, and whether Rachman will be disqualified. There are photographs of Oluchi Eze posing naked for a men’s magazine, her tail wrapped over her parts.

Pearl clicks away and watches herself in the replay, her strikes, her posture, the joy in her face. She expects Dr. Arturo to comment, but the cochlear implant only hisses with faint static.

“Mama? Did you see the race?” The video connection to Gugulethu stalls and jitters. Her mother has the camera on the phone pointed too high so she can only see her eyes and the top of her head.

“They screened it at the community center,” her mother says. “Everyone was very excited.”

“You should have heard them shouting for you, Pearl,” her uncle says, leaning over her mother’s shoulder, tugging the camera down so they are in the frame.

Her mother frowns. “I don’t know if you should wear that top, it’s not really your color.”

“It’s my sponsor, Mama.”

“We’re praying for you to do well. Everyone is praying for you.”

11. Desert

She has a dream that she and Tomislav and Jesus are standing on the balcony of the main building of the Karachi Parsi Institute looking over the slums. The fine golden sand rises up like water between the concrete shacks, pouring in the windows, swallowing up the roofs, driven by the wind.

“Did you notice that there is only one set of footsteps, Pearl?” Jesus asks. The sand rises, swallowing the houses, rushing to fill the gaps, nature taking over. “Do you know why that is?”

“Is it because you took her fucking legs, Lord?” Tomislav says.

Pearl can’t see any footsteps in the desert. The sand shifts too fast.

12. Rare Flowers

Wide awake. Half-past midnight. She lies in bed and stares at the ceiling. Dr. Arturo was supposed to boost her dopamine and melatonin, but he’s busy. The meeting went well, then. The message from Tomislav on her phone confirms it. Good news!!!! Tell you in the morning. Sleep tight kitten, you need it.

She turns the thought around in her head and tries to figure out how she feels. Happy. This will mean that she can buy her mother a house and pay for her cousins to go to private school and set up the Pearl Nitseko Sports Academy for Girls in Gugulethu. She won’t ever have to race again. Unless she wants to.

The idea of the money sits on her chest.

She swings her stumps over the side of the bed and straps on her blades. She needs to go out, get some air.

She clips down the corridors of the old building. There is a party on the cricketing field outside, with beer tents and the buzz of people who do not have to run tomorrow. She veers away, back towards the worn-out colonial building of the KPI, hoping to get onto the race track. Run it out.

The track is fenced off and locked, but the security guard is dazed by his phone, caught up in another world of sliding colorful blocks. She clings to the shadows of the archway, moving past him and deeper into the building, following wherever the doors lead her.

She comes out into a hall around a pit of sunken tiles. An old swimming pool. Siska Rachman is sitting on the edge, waving her feet in the ghost of water, her hair a dark nest around a perfectly blank face. Pearl lowers herself down beside her. She can’t resist. She flicks Rachman’s forehead. “Heita. Anyone in there?”

The face blinks and suddenly the eyes are alive and furious.

She catches Pearl’s wrist. “Of course, I am,” she snaps.

“Sorry, I didn’t think—”

Siska has already lost interest. She drops her grip and brushes her hair away from her face. “So, you can’t sleep either? Wonder why.”

“Too nervous,” Pearl says. She tries for teasing, like Tomislav would. “I have tough competition.”

“Maybe not,” Siska scowls. “They’re going to fucking disqualify me.”

Pearl nods. She doesn’t want to apologize again. She feels shy around Siska, the older girl with her bushy eyebrows and sharp nose. The six years between them feels like an un-crossable gap. “Do they think Charlotte is present?” Siska bursts out. “Charlotte is a big dumb animal. How is she more human than me?”

“You’re two people,” Pearl tries to explain.

Before. You were half a person before. Does that count against you?”

“No.”

“Do you know what this used to be?” Siska pats the blue tiles.

“A swimming pool?”

“They couldn’t maintain the upkeep. These things are expensive to run.” Siska glances at Pearl. In the light through the glass atrium, every lash stands out in stark relief against the gleam of her eyes. “They drained all the water out, but there was this kid who was . . . damaged, in the brain, and the only thing he could do was grow orchids. So that’s what he did. He turned it into a garden and sold them out of here for years, until he got old. Now it’s gone.”

“How do you know this?”

“The guard told me. We smoked cigarettes together. He wanted me to give him a blowjob.”

“Oh.” Pearl recoils.

“Hey, are you wearing lenses?”

She knows what she means. The broadcast contacts. “No. I wouldn’t.”

“They’re going to use you and use you up, Pearl Nit-seeko. Then you’ll be begging to give some lard-ass guard a blowjob, just for spare change.”

“It’s Ni-tse-koh.”

“Doesn’t matter. You say tomato, I say ni-tse-koh.” But Siska gets it right this time. “You think it’s all about you. Your second chance and all you got to do is run your heart out. But it’s a talent show, and they don’t care about the running. You got a deal yet?”

“My promoter and my doctor had a meeting.” “That’s something. They say who?”

“I’m not sure.” “Pharmaceutical or medical?”

“They haven’t told me yet.”

“Or military. Military’s good. I hear the British are out this year. That’s what you want. I mean, who knows what they’re going to do with it, but what do you care, little guinea pig, long as you get your payout.”

“Are you drunk?”

My body is drunk. I’m just mean. What do you care? I’m out, sister. And you’re in, with a chance. Wouldn’t that be something if you won? Little girl from Africa.”

“It’s not a country.”

“Boo-hoo, sorry for you.”

“God brought me here.”

“Oh, that guy? He’s nothing but trouble. And He doesn’t exist.”

“You shouldn’t say that.” “

How do you know?”

“I can feel Him.”

“Can you still feel your legs?”

“Sometimes,” Pearl admits.

Siska leans forward and kisses her. “Did you feel anything?” “No,” she says, wiping her mouth. But that’s not true. She felt her breath, burning with alcohol, and the softness of her lips and her flicking tongue, surprisingly warm for a dead girl.

“Yeah,” Siska breathes out. “Me neither. You got a cigarette?”

13. Empty Spaces

Lane five is empty and the stadium is buzzing with the news.

“Didn’t think they’d actually ban her,” Tomislav says. She can tell he’s hungover. He stinks of sweat and alcohol and there’s a crease in his forehead just above his nose that he keeps rubbing at. “Do you want to hear about the meeting? It was big. Bigger than we’d hoped for. If this comes off, Kitten . . .”

“I want to concentrate on the race.” She is close to tears, but she doesn’t know why.

“Okay. You should try to win. Really.”

The gun goes off. They tear down the track. Every step feels harder today. She didn’t get enough sleep.

She sees it happen out of the corner of her eye. Oluchi’s tail swipes Charlotte, maybe on purpose.

“Shit,” Grange says and stumbles in her exo-suit. Everything comes crashing down on Pearl, hot metal and skin, a tangle of limbs and fire in her side.

“Get up,” Dr. Arturo yells into her head. She’s never heard him upset before.

“Ow,” she manages. Next to her, Charlotte is climbing to her feet, a loose flap of muscle hanging from her leg where they tried to attach it this morning. The big girl touches it and hisses in pain, but her eyes are already focused on the finish line, on Oluchi skipping ahead, her tail swinging, Anna Murad straining behind her.

“Get up,” Dr. Arturo says. “You have to get up. I’m activating adrenaline. Pain blockers.”

Pearl sits up. It’s hard to breathe. Her singlet is wet. A grey nub of bone pokes out through the skin under her breast. Charlotte is limping away in her exo-suit, her leg dragging, gears whining.

“This is what they want to see,” Dr. Arturo urges. “You need to prove to them that it’s not hydraulics carrying you through.”

“It’s not,” she gasps. The sound is wet. Breathing through a snorkel in the bath when there is water trapped in the u-bend. The drones buzz around her. She can see her face big on the screen. Her mama is watching at home, the whole congregation.

“Then prove it. What are you here for?”

She starts walking, then jogging, clutching the bit of rib to stop the jolting. Every step rips through her. And Pearl can feel things slipping inside. Her structural integrity has been compromised, she thinks. The abdominal mesh has ripped and where her stomach used to be is a black hole that is tugging everything down. Her heart is slipping.

Ndincede nkosi, she thinks. Please, Jesus, help me.

Ndincede nkosi undiphe amandla. Please, God, give me strength.

Yiba nam kolu gqatso. Be with me in this race.

She can feel it. The golden glow that starts in her chest, or, if she is truthful with herself, lower down. In the pit of her stomach.

She sucks in her abdominals and presses her hand to her sternum to stop her heart from sliding down into her guts— where her guts used to be, where the hotbed factory sits.

God is with me, she thinks. What matters is you feel it.

Pearl Nitseko runs.

Slipping first appeared in Twelve Tomorrows, (The MIT Technology Review SF Annual anthology by edited by Bruce Serling), 2014.

Lauren Beukes is the award-winning and internationally best-selling South African author of The Shining Girls, Zoo City and Afterland, among other works. Her novels have been published in 24 countries and are being adapted for film and TV. She’s also a comics writer, screenwriter, journalist and documentary maker. Her new novel Bridge will be published in August 2023.

Men, Women & Other Beings From the South: An Overview of South African Science Fiction & Fantasy – Deirdre C. Byrne and Gerhard Hope

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Most people know South Africa as a country where gold is found and where apartheid existed. Some people know that South Africa had a political and spiritual renaissance in 1994 when democracy dawned and the idea of a rainbow nation spread like wildfire. But what many do not know is that South Africa has a flourishing and distinctive literary history of producing science fiction and fantasy. In this essay, we will explore the contours and main figures of this history, in the hope of bringing the rich diversity of its offerings to a wider African audience.

            First, we need to be clear about what we mean when we write about “science fiction and fantasy”. We see them as two separate genres, separated by a common language, as Bertrand Russell said of England and America. While both speak the language of non-realism, reacting strongly against the strictures of social verisimilitude, they speak it in different accents. Science fiction, as Darko Suvin famously said in Metamorphoses of Science Fiction (1979: 4), is based on a cognitive difference from the world around us. Suvin called this difference the novum, from the Latin word for “new”, and argued that science fiction introduces a rationally possible new element into the world that we know in order to create its locus. Fantasy, on the other hand, relies on non-rational, or irrational, differences from our consensus reality. The existence of magic, wizards, dragons and talking trees, for example, is not explained: it simply is, and is taken for granted in fantasy texts despite its impossibility. The two terms are often conflated into “speculative fiction”, which is any literary text that speculates about a world that might be different from our own. However, since we are writing here to an audience of aficionados, we will stick to the original terms and keep the generic boundaries intact. It is worth noting, though, that many authors represent differences from the “real” world without employing the terms “science fiction” or “fantasy”. Two famous cases in point are Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and Marge Piercy’s Woman on the Edge of Time, which are set in dystopian futures (Woman on the Edge of Time is set in an alternative utopian/dystopian world). Despite this being a well-known and widely-used strategy for science fiction authors, both Atwood and Piercy insisted on having their books marketed as “mainstream” fiction, both claiming that to assign them to a “genre” would limit their appeal for readers. Finally, many mainstream authors use “magical realism” in their writing to import a novum into the social realist world, but then incorporate it as though it were there all along. For example, Amos Tutuola’s The Palm-Wine Drinkard (1952) and My Life in the Bush of Ghosts (1954) both draw heavily on the supernatural, as the protagonists journey into realms where the dead are still very much alive. These features belong squarely to science fiction and fantasy, but as the publishers and authors of these texts do not choose to label the books as science fiction or fantasy, they are not sold, or read, as such.

An equally important term in discussions of (South) African SFF is Afrofuturism, a term that prominent Nigerian author, Nnedi Okorafor, takes huge exception to, tweeting on 16 December 2020 that “I DO NOT WRITE AFROFUTURISM. I WRITE AFRICANFUTURISM”’ Hope Wabuke explains that the former term was coined in the 1993 essay “Black to the Future: Interviews with Samuel Delany, Greg Tate, and Tricia Rose” by Mark Dery. A white US critic, Dery defined “Afrofuturism” as “African-American signification that appropriates images of technology and a prosthetically enhanced future” (Wabuke 2020: n.p.).

  SF has a long tradition of arguing for, and against, its own terms and labels, and coming up with new terms and labels for the next generation of writers to argue about. Masande Ntshanga, the author of Triangulum, has a very interesting take on the debate. In an interview with Heady Mix in May 2022, “Why Afrofuturism needs more nuance”, he explains:

… a lot of what Afrofuturism draws on aesthetically, or at least how it seems to the layman or outsiders, is a recreation of the intricacies of pre-colonial culture and pre-colonial traditions and re-imagining them … . And the problem there, I guess, is that a lot of people feel like Africa hasn’t had its moment yet in order to present its own culture and its own systems. It hasn’t been given that opportunity; since colonialism and subsequent conquests, the narrative has always been determined for the continent. So, some people are sceptical of Afrofuturism because they feel like it’s a replacement of something that already exists and it’s coming from the outside and basically contributing to more erosion. (Heady Mix 2022)

South African author, Mohale Mashigo, also engages robustly with “Afrofuturism” in the Foreword to her collection of short stories, Intruders (2018). She writes:

Afrofuturism is not for Africans living in Africa.

Afrofuturism is an escape for those who find themselves in the minority and divorced or violently removed from their African roots, so they imagine a ‘black future’ where they aren’t a minority and are able to marry their culture with technology.

            It would be disingenuous of me to take Afrofuturism wholesale and pretend that it is ‘my size’. (2018: x-xiv)

Afrofuturism, then, is not a comfortable subgenre for black authors from Africa. As the continent begins to decolonize its culture, African writers need create their own stories, not modelled on conditions in the African diaspora, but on life in Africa. 

            But we are getting sidetracked. The roots of South African science fiction and fantasy lie, properly speaking, in its myths. This is, of course, not limited to South Africa. But the myths that surround the country’s colonization and founding are deep and rich, providing veins of material for the authors of science fiction and fantasy. The myth of Adamastor tells of a Titan who coveted a nymph, and as punishment was made into a mighty mountain and placed at the southernmost tip of Africa. Adamastor is irascible and curmudgeonly and vows to place obstacles in the path of any ship that attempts to sail around his point or come safely to land. The myth has given rise to a number of fantastic texts, most prominently The Lusiads by Luiz Vaz de Camoes, the Portuguese poet who invented Adamastor and added him to the family of Titans who were already entrenched in Greek myth. Adamastor is the prototype for South African writing about an inhospitable natural world, where human beings are something of a blight. This idea was taken up by multi-genre author Peter Wilhelm in his 1994 novel The Mask of Freedom, where HIV/AIDS, population growth and crime have turned the country into a place of unfreedom. Wilhelm’s book for children, Summer’s End (1984), imagines a country in the grip of the Third Ice Age, turning parts of it into a frozen wasteland and forcing the characters to conduct their quest across sheets of ice. Wilhelm, who passed away in 2021 aged 78, was the first South African author to adopt science fiction as a serious literary pursuit. He was widely celebrated and won numerous awards for his writing.

            Despite Wilhelm, science fiction and fantasy had a halting start in South Africa and have only come into their own in the post-apartheid period since 1994. Science Fiction South Africa (SFSA) is the country’s science fiction club, which was founded in 1969 so that like-minded geeks and readers could get together and talk about the things they enjoyed. In 2009 the club officially changed its name to “Science Fiction and Fantasy South Africa” (SFFSA) and met monthly for nearly 50 years before the COVID-19 pandemic struck in 2020 and forced meetings to come to a complete halt. It has since resumed its monthly meeting schedule. SFFSA publishes a fanzine called Probe, which, at the time of writing, had issued nearly 200 issues and publishes approximately 10 short stories a year written by (mostly) South African authors. Stories are selected by entering the club’s annual short story competition, known as the Nova Competition, and the top 10-ranking stories are published in the zine. They cover numerous South African themes, including race, language, South African politics, and the country’s lifestyle. These are more frequent in the science fiction stories than in those that use fantasy, which tend to rely on the stock motifs of dragons, castles, knights, magical skills, and so on. Over Probe’s more than 50 years of publishing, it has featured stories by several modestly well-known authors, including Gerhard Hope and Yvonne Eve Walus. Some of them are republished in this issue of Omenana.

            The club has had several stalwart supporters over the years, including Arthur Goldstuck (currently CEO of World Wide Worx, a tech company), who has written four books of South African urban legends. The series was inaugurated in the 1990s, just prior to the country’s transition to democracy, at a time when the population was sorely in need of entertainment. The first two are The Rabbit in the Thorn Tree (1990), a title that alludes to the logo of one of the country’s most powerful banks, First National Bank. Showing the silhouette of a thorn tree against a turquoise background, the logo is supposed to have incorporated all kinds of shapes, including a rabbit. The Rabbit in the Thorn Tree was not science fiction, but showcased Goldstuck’s taste for non-realist modes of representation, as did its sequel, The Leopard in the Luggage (1993). In more recent years, Goldstuck has turned his hand to ghost stories, another non-realistic genre, in his two collections, The Burglar in the Bin Bag: Urban Legends, Hoaxes and Mass Hysteria (2012) and The Ghost that Closed down the Town (2012). The Burglar in the Bin Bag is a variant of The Rabbit in the Thorn Tree and Leopard in the Luggage: a light-hearted look at South African hoaxes that have put the wind up large sectors of the population. The Ghost that Closed down the Town is subtitled The Story of the Haunting of South Africa and deals with ghost stories that have circulated in the country’s cultural unconscious for centuries. (One of the most famous of these is the tale of the Flying Dutchman, the captain of a spectral ship that did not make it around the Cape of Good Hope, and was punished to sail the seas in its ghostly form for eternity.) In these highly successful non-science fiction and non-fantasy collections, Goldstuck makes the point that the social reality, although imposing and controlling, is not the only thing worth writing about.

            It is not an exaggeration to say that South African science fiction and fantasy went international when Lauren Beukes started publishing. Beukes, a native of Cape Town, completed a Master’s degree in Creative Writing at the University of Cape Town. Smart, sassy and fast-paced, her first novel, Moxyland (2008), described a near future in South Africa’s Mother City where four young people head towards a personal and social inevitable apocalypse as they risk their lives on different kinds of technological gamble. Relentlessly multicultural, Moxyland also examines the gritty realities of South African life — poverty-stricken townships; illegal immigrants marrying South African citizens cynically for a chance to stay in the country; the superficiality and sexuality of the Cape Town art scene — in ways that remain in the reader’s mind long after the novel has reached its climactic end. Beukes’s streetwise, snappy dialogue and hard-bitten humanism won her second novel, Zoo City (2010), the prestigious Arthur C. Clarke prize for science fiction: the first time the prize had been awarded to an African author. Zoo City blends science fiction with fantasy in its novum. In a recognizably realistic Hillbrow, a young woman called Zinzi lives with a sloth. She is one of the Aposymbiots (called “zoos”), those found guilty of a crime and sentenced to life with an animal magically bound to them. Zinzi, along with many other zoos, will find that life with an animal attached to you is neither uncomplicated misery nor uncomplicated blessing as she navigates Johannesburg’s dark criminal underworld.

            After Zoo City, Beukes took up part-time residence in the USA as a writer for DC Comics, a position that sharpened her already impressive command of style and pace. Her next two novels, The Shining Girls (2013) and Broken Monsters (2014), blend science fiction and fantasy with crime narratives set in the USA. The Shining Girls tells the story of a time-travelling femicidal criminal and his eventual apprehension, while Broken Monsters recounts crimes that bizarrely result in the victims’ having some of their bodies replaced with animal body parts. Beukes’s latest novel, Afterland (2020), describes a gender-specific pandemic and is, in true Beukes style, a rollicking road trip through Midwestern America, via a den of hippies, a posse of women assassins, and an evangelical cult. With her remarkable grasp of narrative structure and her razor-sharp irony, masterfully poised on the edge of caricature, as well as her lyrical evocations of place, she is a phenomenon in her own right in South African science fiction and fantasy.

            Nevertheless, Beukes was not alone in her literary success. Fellow MA in Creative Writing graduate, Sarah Lotz, occasionally works with Beukes on writing projects, and is the author of eighteen novels to date. Lotz is remarkable for her practice of writing with others, including her daughter Savannah, with whom, as Lily Herne, she has published a string of socially relevant zombie novels; the Johannesburg-based novelist Louis Greenberg, with whom, as S.L. Grey, she has published a series of macabre urban fantasies; and with Cape Town authors, Helen Moffett and Paige Nick, making up the pseudonym Helen S. Paige. Lotz has a well-known fondness for the macabre, and her work often borders on horror, as does many science fiction authors’, including Theodore Sturgeon, Arthur Goldstuck and Lauren Beukes. Not all of Lotz’s prodigious output can be classified as science fiction or fantasy, but most of it is securely located in the speculative.

            Another South African author who dabbles in science fiction and fantasy, but does not embrace it as her primary metier, is Henrietta Rose-Innes. Rose-Innes is an acclaimed, but slightly under-the-radar, Cape Town-based author with six published books to her credit. In 2008 she won the Caine Prize for African Fiction for her science fiction short story, “Poison”, and in 2011 her novel, Nineveh, won the Sunday Times Prize for fiction: it is not coincidental that her two literary prizes have been garnered for speculative fiction. Prophetically, both “Poison” and Nineveh foreground environmental problems, which have come to the fore in the second and third decades of the twenty-first century and have spawned a whole new sub-genre of “climate fiction” or “cli-fi”. The plot of “Poison” is catalysed by a dangerous chemical explosion, and Nineveh describes what happens when an infestation of beetles mysteriously takes over an upmarket new housing estate. Nineveh is partly tongue in cheek, but also partly serious about the hubris of human attempts to dominate nonhuman creatures.

            Zambian-born South African science fiction author, currently residing in the United Kingdom, Nick Wood’s Water Must Fall (2020) picks up the theme of environmental degradation. The novel’s novum is a near-future Africa where almost all sources of water have dried up (a situation that is currently unfolding in real time in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province). The title riffs on the well-known student protests of 2015 and 2016, with the hashtags #RhodesMustFall (demanding the removal of university statues to arch-colonizer Cecil John Rhodes) and #FeesMustFall. Alistair Mackay’s début novel, It Doesn’t Have to Be this Way (2022), is a cautionary tale imploring consumers to take better care of the nonhuman natural world, so that the nightmarish future it depicts will not come to pass. Mackay’s novel is remarkable in South African (speculative) fiction for its unapologetic focus on three gay male characters. The text does not centre the characters’ sexual orientation or sex lives, as much gay fiction in previous decades has done, and thereby normalizes their sexuality, making a welcome shift in the representation of sexual and gender diversity.  

            Charlie Human, a graduate of the University of Cape Town’s creative writing programme, is author of Apocalypse Now Now (2013) and its sequel Kill Baxter (2014). The setting of the former is Cape Town’s supernatural underworld, with Baxter Zevcenko and bounty hunter Jackson “Jackie” Ronin embarking on an epic quest to rescue Esme, the girl of Baxter’s dreams, after she is kidnapped by what are loosely termed “dark forces”.

Despite being a typical fantasy quest narrative, Human adds a uniquely South African flavour, by including Sieners and San mythology. Cassandra Khaw notes in a 2014 review in Strange Horizons that Kill Baxter turns the urban fantasy setting of the original into a more direct approximation of the Potterverse:

While Apocalypse Now Now only alluded to similarities to Harry Potter, Kill Baxter feels like a more active attempt at paralleling the universe that J. K. Rowling constructed. Shortly after visiting a market filled with Hidden Ones, the blanket term for the book’s ecosystem of magical races, Baxter is enlisted to attend Hexpoort, Kill Baxter‘s answer to Hogwarts. There is even a mandatory train scene, where Baxter is slowly acquainted with the supporting cast, many of whom come across as nightmare versions of Harry Potter characters.

Despite acknowledging the superficial similarity between the Potterverse and Kill Baxter, most critics also note that Human puts a decidedly zany, dark spin on Rowling’s magical education trope (which, itself, owes an enormous debt to Ursula Le Guin’s Earthsea cycle).

Andrew Miller appeared out of nowhere in the midst of dedicated South African science fiction authors with his 2015 novel Dub Steps, which won the Dinaane Literary Award for best début novel. Miller is a speaker, ghostwriter and poet, who has never ventured into science fiction since publishing Dub Steps. The novel follows the (mis)fortunes of a group of people who have mysteriously survived the disappearance of most of the humans in South Africa. After driving across the country, the group of survivors settles in an abandoned mansion in Johannesburg, where the narrator, Roy, establishes an archive documenting their existence. As they learn to get along, and not get along, to create children and educate them, to raise food and eat it, all kinds of disasters and strange serendipitous discoveries take place and they muse, obsessively and Socratically, on what makes a good human life. It is a remarkable reflection on what has been called “the human condition” under extreme pressure from the environment. 

Andrew Skinner might have been considered an unusual person to publish a science fiction novel. While working on his PhD in Archaeology, Skinner wrote (and twice re-wrote) his début novel, Steel Frame (2019). It is a space opera set in an unknown region of the galaxy where a gender-indeterminate narrator called Rook is given a “shell”, the remains of a giant robot, to patrol a permanent cosmic storm called “the Eye”. The book was a success on Amazon.com, and Skinner is currently planning another novel in the same universe. Rook is a variation on Han Solo in Star Wars: a hard-bitten, cynical pilot who has fallen on hard times, but receives another chance. Steel Frame is one of the least South African-flavoured novels published by a South African author: there are no local jokes, no indigenous dialect, and certainly no landscape to link it to Skinner’s homeland.

At the other end of the spectrum in relation to situatedness, Mia Arderne’s 2020 novel, Mermaid Fillet, is saturated with South African flavour. There is multilingual slang, even multilingual puns, and numerous references to Cape Town’s Northern suburbs with all the kinds of people that one meets in such environments, including the tree-hugging vegan, the hippie, and the banggat (scaredy cat). With babies being born wearing Nike Air Jordans and a sky goddess who menstruates whenever a woman is violated in South Africa, Mermaid Fillet is more fantasy than science fiction, with a generous dose of noir crime woven in for good measure.

            South Africans frequently feel as though the(ir) world is coming to an end. Popular media are full of dire prognostications such as “If so-and-so becomes President, that will be the end of the country,” “If the country’s economy is downgraded by Standard & Poors, that will be the end of the country,” and so on. This may account for the high number of apocalyptic fictions published by South African authors; but also offers an opportunity for authors to explore the limits of human endurance and resourcefulness under extreme circumstances. For example, Fred Strydom’s The Raft (2015) is premised on everyone on Earth suddenly losing their memory. Protagonist Kayle Jenner can vaguely remember something, which, he gradually realizes, is the fact that he had a son. He builds a raft with which to search for the son he can barely recall and, on the journey, confronts his hidden inner self. Similarly, Lauren Beukes’s Afterland (2020) eerily anticipates the COVID-19 pandemic that brought the world to a near halt. Fellow graduate of UCT’s Master’s degree in Creative Writing, Ilze Hugo’s The Down Days, also published in 2020, features an apocalyptic post-truth society where a mysterious epidemic dooms people to laugh themselves to death (literally). The novel was praised by critics as far afield as Tor.com and Powell’s Books.       

All the books we have discussed thus far are worthy South African works of science fiction and fantasy. However, they are all written by white authors and most of them feature pre-eminently white characters. The exceptions are Beukes’s Zoo City, whose protagonist is a black woman called Zinzi December, who interacts with a multicultural and multiracial range of people; It Doesn’t Have to Be This Way, where the main characters not only include people of colour but gay people as well, and Water Must Fall, which, like Wood’s other science fiction novel, Azanian Bridges (2016), features a multiracial cast). One of the most exciting developments in the last decade years has been the gradual appearance of authors and characters of colour in the genre.

Imraan Coovadia has been director of the University of Cape Town’s Centre for Creative Writing since 2011. His novels include The Poisoners: On South Africa’s Toxic Past (2021), Tales of the Metric System (2014), The Institute for Taxi Poetry (2012), which won the M-Net Prize, and High Low In-between (2009), winner of the Sunday Times Fiction Prize and University of Johannesburg English Literary Award. Coovadia holds a Bachelor’s degree from Harvard and a Doctorate from Yale and has written for leading publications such as The New York Times, The Boston Globe, The Los Angeles Review of Books, The Independent, The Mail and Guardian, Times of India and The Sunday Independent.

Tales of the Metric System (2014) is interesting due its basic narrative structure of ten days spread across four decades in South African history. Where this novel succeeds so brilliantly though – and it is an overall success that overshadows its main difficulty with narrative time – is its approach to South African history. Instead of dealing with the main touchpoints that we know so well, from the Soweto riots of 1976 to the World Cup of 2010, from the unveiled horrors of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission to the equally horrific consequences of Thabo Mbeki’s denial of HIV/Aids, Coovadia’s stories take place in the dark cracks of history. It offers stories of ordinary people who are quite unaware they are living in a historical moment; a moment that will become embalmed in history, leaving us bereft of the specificity of that moment as lived in time. It is Coovadia’s ambitious aim here to recreate some of that specificity, which is apparent from the Paul Kruger quote at the beginning: “I set forth how I viewed the history of my people in the light of God’s Word. I began by addressing my hearers: ‘People of the Lord, you old people of the country, you newcomers, yes, even you thieves and murderers!’”

Time is also an integral theme in A Spy in Time (2018), a dystopia where Johannesburg’s extensive network of mine tunnels allows it to survive the fallout from a supernova. The main character is Enver, a time-travelling agent for the Historical Agency who hops backwards and forwards in time to preserve the integrity of the agency. In a 2018 interview with The Johannesburg Review of Books, Coovadia told Jennifer Malec about his love for SF and reading Isaac Asimov, Greg Egan, Stanislaw Lem, Octavia Butler, Robert Heinlein, and Ian Watson, among others. As a teenager, Coovadia expressed an interest to be a physicist, a notion that surfaces in ‘A Spy in Time’ with concepts such as probability theory (Malec 2018).

Shanice Ndlovu was born in Zimbabwe but has settled in South Africa. Her début, The Pride of Noonlay and Other Stories (2020), marked her foray into the realm of high fantasy writing, replete with feudal economies, warring monarchies, swords and sorcery. It is a rollicking good read, and the stories that comprise it are told with economy and style.

Probably the best science fiction novel of recent years, though, is Triangulum (2019). Author Masande Ntshanga completed a BA in Film and Media and an Honours degree in English Studies at UCT before enrolling in the MA in Creative Writing programme under the Mellon Mays Foundation. He completed the degree under the supervision of Imraan Coovadia. In 2020, Ntshanga joined the Rhodes University MA in Creative Writing Programme as a part-time lecturer, and took over the literary journal New Contrast, becoming the first black editor since it was established in 1960. Also in 2020, Triangulum was shortlisted by the African Speculative Fiction Society (ASFS). Ian Mond’s review for the Locus Magazine website notes that Triangulum is “a coming-of-age story that neatly transitions into an adult novel about the deep rifts in South African society” (Mond 2019).

The book’s fractal take on time and narrative – shifting from the long-forgotten history of the failed Ciskei experiment to Special Exclusion Zones a couple of decades in our future – speaks clearly to our Covid-19 world in a way that the author could hardly have anticipated. In author interviews Ntshanga is very careful to refer to injecting SF tropes into what he clearly considers to be a literary novel. In an interview with the Mail & Guardian, he states: “We have a tendency to take things for granted because we live here and because there are so many stories that get told about [South Africa]. So now there’s this idea we can’t write books or fiction on apartheid anymore. I’m not sure about that” (Hlalethwa 2019). In his acknowledgements, Ntshanga expresses his gratitude to writers whose output he considers invaluable: Victor LaValle, Stanislaw Lem, Colson Whitehead, Samuel R. Delaney [sic.] Significantly, most of these writers work acrossgenre. Therefore, the issue of Triangulum’s provenance as a specifically South African science fiction novel becomes far more complex from an African perspective. Nevertheless, the novel is deeply rooted in the country’s toxic and traumatic past, where “homelands” were created by government fiat for different race groups to live in, and looks forward, in the same way as It Doesn’t Have to Be This Way, to an environmental apocalypse. Ntshanga’s work adds to the trends of regionalised science fiction and fantasy adding to the internationalisation of the genre. From India to China and Cuba, local voices are becoming more and more important. We hope the trend continues and we see more proudly South African science fiction and fantasy.

WORKS CITED

Arderne, Mia. 2020. Mermaid Fillet. Cape Town: Kwela.

Atwood, Margaret. 1986. The Handmaid’s Tale. New York: Houghton & Mifflin.

Beukes, Lauren. 2008. Moxyland. Johannesburg: Jacana.

Beukes, Lauren. 2010. Zoo City. Johannesburg: Jacana.

Beukes, Lauren. 2013. The Shining Girls. Johannesburg: Penguin Random House SA.

Beukes, Lauren. 2015. Broken Monsters. New York: Harper.

Beukes, Lauren. 2020. Afterland. New York: Mulholland Books.

Camoes, Luiz Vaz de. 2008. The Lusíads. Translated by Landeg White. London: Oxford World’s Classics.

Coovadia, Imraan. 2009. High Low In-Between. Johannesburg: Penguin Random House SA.

Coovadia, Imraan. 2014. Tales of the Metric System. Johannesburg: Penguin Random House SA.

Coovadia, Imraan. 2018. A Spy in Time. Johannesburg: Penguin Random House SA.

Coovadia, Imraan. 2021. The Poisoners: On South Africa’s Toxic Past. Johannesburg: Penguin Random House SA.

Goldstuck, Arthur. 1990. The Rabbit in the Thorn Tree: Modern Myths and Urban Legends of South Africa. Johannesburg: Penguin SA.

Goldstuck, Arthur. 1993. The Leopard in the Luggage: Urban Legends from Southern Africa. Johannesburg: Penguin SA.

Goldstuck, Arthur. 2006. The Ghost that Closed Down the Town: The Story of the Haunting of South Africa. Johannesburg: Penguin Random House.

Goldstuck, Arthur. 2010. The Burglar in the Bin Bag: Urban Legends, Hoaxes and Mass Hysteria. Johannesburg: Penguin South Africa.

Heady Mix. 2022. “Heady Mix interviews Masande Ntshanga.”   https://www.headymix.co.uk/interview-masande-ntshanga-part2/ (accessed on 4 August 2022)

Hlalethwa, Zaza. 2019. “The science of writing fiction.” Mail & Guardian. https://mg.co.za/article/2019-07-26-00-the-science-of-writing-fiction/ (accessed on 7 August 2022).

Hugo, Ilze. 2021. The Down Days. New York: Skybound Books.

Human, Charlie. 2013. Apocalypse Now Now. Cape Town: Umuzi.

Human, Charlie. 2014. Kill Baxter. Cape Town: Umuzi.

Khaw, Cassandra. 2014. “Apocalypse Now Now and Kill Baxter.” Strange Horizons. http://strangehorizons.com/non-fiction/reviews/apocalypse-now-now-and-kill-baxter-by-charlie-human/ (accessed on 7 August 2022).

Mackay, Alistair. 2022. It Doesn’t have to be This Way. Cape Town: Kwela.

Malec, Jennifer. 2018. “A Spy in Time.” The Johannesburg Review of Books. https://johannesburgreviewofbooks.com/2018/06/04/its-clearly-more-harrowing-to-be-time-travelling-when-black-imraan-coovadia-chats-to-jennifer-malec-about-his-new-spec-fic-novel-a-spy-in-time (accessed on 7 August 2022).

Mashigo, Mohale. 2018. Intruders: Short Stories. Johannesburg: Picador Africa.

Miller, Andrew. 2015. Dub Steps. Johannesburg: Jacana.

Mond, Ian. 2019. “Ian Mond Reviews Triangulum by Masande Ntshanga.” Locus Magazine. https://locusmag.com/2019/08/ian-mond-reviews-triangulum-by-masande-ntshanga/ (accessed on 7 August 2022).

Ndlovu, Shanice. 2020. The Pride of Noonlay and Other Stories. Cape Town: Modjaji Books.

Ntshanga, Masande. 2019. Triangulum. Ohio: Two Dollar Radio.

Piercy, Marge. 1976. Woman on the Edge of Time. London: The Women’s Press.

Rose-Innes, Henrietta. 2009. “Poison.” The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2008/jul/09/caineprize (accessed on 4 August 2022).

Rose-Innes, Henrietta. 2011. Nineveh. Johannesburg: Penguin Random House South Africa.

Skinner, Andrew. 2019. Steel Frame. Oxford: Solaris Books.

Suvin, Darko. 1979. Metamorphoses of Science Fiction: On the Poetics and History of a Literary Genre. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Tutuola, Amos. 1952. The Palm-Wine Drinkard. London: Faber & Faber.

Tutuola, Amos. 1954. My Life in the Bush of Ghosts. London: Faber & Faber.

Wabuke, Hope. 2020. “Afrofuturism, Africanfuturism, and the Language of Black Speculative Literature.” Los Angeles Review of Books. 27 August. https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/afrofuturism-africanfuturism-and-the-language-of-black-speculative-literature/ (accessed on 4 August 2022).

Wilhelm, Peter. 1994. Mask of Freedom. Johannesburg: Ad Donker.

Wilhelm, Peter. 1984. Summer’s End. Johannesburg: Ravan Press.

Wood, Nick. 2016. Azanian Bridges. London: NewCon Press.

Wood, Nick. 2020. Water Must Fall. London: NewCon Press.

Gerhard Hope completed his MA on Afro-American SF writer Samuel R. Delany in 2001 under the supervision of Professor Deirdre Byrne at Unisa. A long-time SFFSA member, Gerhard is Head of Content at NGAGE Marketing in Johannesburg.
Deirdre C. Byrne is a full Professor of English Studies and the former Head of the Institute for Gender Studies at Unisa. She is the co-editor of the academic journal, scrutiny2: issues in English studies in southern africa. She has published several academic articles on the writing of Ursula K. le Guin and on gender in speculative fiction. She belongs to the steering group of an international research project on Gender and Love and is the Director of ZAPP (the South African Poetry Project). Her latest publication is “Two Gates into Jane Hirshfield’s Poetry” in Contemporary Buddhism (in press).

The White Necked Ravens of Camissa – Nick Wood

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Illustration for White Necked Raven story in Omenana Magazine

The Inside: Making Mad Choices

The Camissa Dome lies, like a huge, shiny pimple, on the top of a long and sandy slope, that – in aeons past – used to be known as Table Mountain.

The Dome itself is more of a three storied hill mound of solar mirrors and smart glass, with very few entrances, either in or out.

None for those on the ground floor, the Level One Bottom Level dwellers.

A safety feature, I’ve been told, as power comes from occupying the high ground. We need to keep everyone safe.

The sinking sun still burns at the carcinomas on my face and, knowing I have limited living time left, I hurry inside. My AI chainsaw, Atropos, swings painfully against my ageing right hip, on an insufficiently taut shoulder strap. 

But it’s the two birds following me, that I’m most worried about.

What do you do, when you know you’re dying?

Do you go mad? And is this what madness feels like?

Why else would these two big birds have followed me in from the Wild Outside, all the way to our small home cubicle on Level Two, within this Giant and sterile Dome? More to the point, though – why can no one else fucking seemingly see them? Are they avian avatars, or psychotic harbingers of my pending death?

Our small home unit shrinks further, as Thandi steps inside to sit opposite me – back from her day overseeing titrated watering, within the Dome wheat house. Even the rigid grey ceiling, two meters above our heads exactly, looks closer to my gaze, as if it is slowly, slowly sinking downwards, ready to crush the tops of our heads, then our bodies, and, lastly, our twitching legs…

Thandi’s steady gaze, however, is squarely on my face.

There’s not even the flicker of a glance upwards at the shrinking ceiling – or sideways, to the half metre long black and white birds perched painfully, one on each of my shoulders.

Shit, Thandi clearly can’t see them either.

I rub the increasingly bizarre and rough contours of my pale and bearded face, blooming with skin death from a life hunting wild wood, on the dreaded sun-bleached Outside. I no longer dare look in the mirror, at an increasingly frightening stranger.

But Thandi’s gaze seldom falters…she sees me, without flinching.

My shoulders sag under the weight of a white-necked raven perched on each – I remember seeing similar birds in clips of the animals that used to live in the Outside, now almost all long gone, from increasingly hot and dry skies.

How can these ravens be so fucking heavy – and painfully sharp clawed, if they’re just ghost-birds? 

Castor, the slightly heavier bird on my left shoulder, Krawws in my ear. 

Thandi’s eyes do not flicker, as she sips from a tiny cup of water.

She clearly can’t hear the birds either.

 Slowly, she lays down the empty blue cup between us. “No trees cut down and brought back at all, today, Frank? Atropos, your Super-Saw is here, I see, but where’s your zero-grav backpack?”

Atropos is switched off and silent, offering us no commentary.

I laugh wildly and swig from a much bigger cup – a stronger brew too, a bitter, fermented purple grape – a limited and expensive luxury I was indulging in, in the hope it might douse these two fucking birds from existence.

“I’m sorry,” I say, “I met some outsiders and they had very little, so I gave them the backpack – and I left the tree, after they persuaded me to stop sawing it down – it was scarred, but alive, and still capable of growing. They said it could offer far more living, rather than dead. And you know how scarce, the wild trees are.”

As for me, no respite from my coming death awaits for me, I’m sure.

I wait for the censure, a sigh of exasperation – even of disappointment.

Instead, Thandi smiles.

Pollux flies over and perches on her left shoulder, but she pays him no heed. 

“That was kind of you, Frank.” She reaches over and plucks my large bright green clay mug, to swig – and then cough, over her hasty slug.

I always enjoy her praise. But she normally doesn’t join me in drinking grapes. What’s up?

My Lotto Wife of five years, Thandi had come up to the middle zones after winning a Social Mobility Partnership ticket, leaving Bottom Level One, to her great relief, behind her.

I thought I’d grown to know her well, but she still surprises me with her reactions…Like the time I’d finally told her about those two young boy-men I’d killed, in a fight over a tree. I thought her support would ease my years of guilt – but she’d gone very quiet, for the better part of a month after that. Her anger, largely hidden, throbbed deeply.

That was the one, long time, that she struggled to look at me.

Today, at least, her anger seems far away.

“There’s more,” I say, still somewhat guardedly, “I promised to bring them some water around the same time next week, as there is so little moisture for them out there.”

“Outsiders!” Thandi slams down the now empty mug on our symmetrical, concentric ringed wooden table. Cheap internally grown stock, of course, not subject to the vagaries of a wild and external climate. 

And yes, I know, outsiders are dirty and inferior, lacking the resources and skills to access the Dome…but Thandi never spoke of them in that way. Her animation is hiding something more, too?

Her dark face is flushed, her eyes dancing with a weird intensity and excitement.

What is up with her?

Castor flaps noisily onto her other shoulder, pirouetting clumsily to face me. Thandi’s shoulders fail to sag at all.

I look up. The room is still shrinking!

We have fifty centimetres, or less, of ceiling above our head. There’s no room for me to stand anymore, as the ceiling continues its relentless creep downwards.

She doesn’t see that either… she offers no consensual validation of this reality either.

I nod, “I think the Outsiders speak your other language.”

“isiZulu? That could have been our language, Frank!”

She pushes her chair back to stand, the ceiling now hovering barely above her skull.

I was wrong. Anger is never far away from her, just as guilt and cancer it is, that eats away at me. I should have tried learning to speak her home tongue when she tried to teach me, those heady first months after we met, but so few others of my other friends and companions spoke more than English – or, perhaps, Nuwe Afrikaans.

Castor and Pollux are back, perching painfully on my bent shoulders.

Thandi leans over the table towards me, her face fierce and focused. “You have three choices for what you promised those Outsiders next week, Frank…”

All three of us, birds included, look up at her.

“One. You can sit here and do nothing. Like you refused to learn the language of my birth.”

Ouch.

“Two. You can smuggle them out a jug of water and pat yourself on the back for the rest of your life, ever wishing you could move up – and join the affluent Elite, at the very top,”

“Or, what’s Option Three…?”

Deadpan, Thandi proceeds to lay out a plan of action that is both terrifying and yet, by her words, and suddenly calm demeanour, appears to be a seemingly reasonable option.

To me, it is absolutely anything but…Fucking hell. More madness. Everything lost – and for what gain?

The room has stopped shrinking, the ceiling halting at a height that is far too low for me to stand.

All nonsense. Test your senses, Frank. Everything is just the side effects of your growing death anxiety. Stand up and see! 

I get to my feet slowly, eyes closed, waiting for my head to smash the ceiling.

Nothing. See?

I open my eyes.

The ceiling is at its usual two metres height, a comfortable twenty-centimetre clearance for my head. Aha, thought so – purely claustrophobia, an anxiety reaction precipitating sensory disturbance – nothing more, nothing less.   

How can I give up everything I know – and the security of food, roof and walls? Time for some common sense.

I pick up my large green mug and hold it in front of me. “Option Two. Quite a few of the Outsiders should be able to drink from this…”

Thandi’s eyes close, a shadow of disappointment washes over her face. Still, I can also smell the sour grapes on her breath. She must be just a tad drunk…

In time, we do all come to our senses…

Ker-thunk!

Two big birds smash against the roof, shrieking loudly, spattering feathers and blood. Again and again, they batter their bodies and wings against the ceiling, the grey paint streaking a deeper red…

I drop the mug.

It shatters at my feet. Several black feathers float down onto the green shards.

Thandi is looking up – watching me again, eyes wide.

I cannot speak, and numbly hold up three fingers.

Fuck, sometimes, all you can do, is fly with the madness.

After all, I no longer recognise myself, and death takes everything, in the end.

***

The Inside/Out: Breaking Free: One week later. Pre-Dawn, Level Two, D-Block.

I still wish I could take the front fucking door, but…

“Now!” gestures Thandi across the dark Water Room towards me, her small frame propping the corridor door – both keeping watch – and readying herself for a quick getaway. Being both muscled and fat, she makes for a sturdy door jamb. Dressed all in black, she oozes a powerful, almost immovable presence. 

Time to back out still, Frank? No crime committed. 

Yet…

Just thumb print your regular daily water allowance into the demarcated unit, G413, from this huge drum and you drink and walk away, to live yet another day…

Castor shrieks in my left ear.

Yes, I know, fucking bird, a promise is a promise.

I rev Atropos up, my giant AI saw that can cut through anything, bracing my body as I aim for the weaker wall fusion point at hip height, between the grey Water Drum and the Dome skin. 

Atropos yells a bright red, as her blade races fruitlessly over the joint unable to find purchase. Sparks sting my face, scarf wrapped as it is, to avoid camera scrutiny.

Maybe she can’t cut through everything? Stop, before it’s too late.

Through the whine of the blade, I hear Pollux shriek in my right ear.

No stopping now.

I almost lose my footing, as the blade bites and slows, pumping tingling resistance down the round haft and into my shaking hands, arms and biceps.

Rebrace yourself.

Try again…fuck, yes!

Atropos is carving open the wall, alongside the water tank, and the burning air is damp with acrid, escaping moisture. With a groan, the wall peels away in front of me and a small adjacent hole springs open in the tank, spouting spray at first – and then, releasing a sudden roar of water, as it ruptures.

A fountain of ferocious water, cascading out into the gloomy dawn.

Sirens shouting red murder. Now, it all kicks off.

The birds shoot off my shoulders, squawking, disappearing through the flapping hole in the wall, out into open sky.

I turn and gesture Thandi to follow me, as she stands at the door, beyond the angle of the room’s cameras.

It won’t take them long to figure out who I am – and that she needs bringing in too.

She shakes her head and waggles her fingers in a ‘give it to me’ gesture. Her eyes tell me, stick to the fucking plan.

I sigh, bend, and fling Atropos across the floor, on her smooth rounded hasp.

Thandi scrabbles, hefts up the Blade, shoulder straps her on and, with a brief wave, they are gone. 

Will I ever see you again?

Focus, Frank.

Now, this is going to hurt.

I jump into the raging torrent and am swept outside, face slapped hard as I fall. Falling in dark wetness.

Uhnnnn…shit!

I’d tried to land on braced feet, but the water has swept my legs away.

I lie, arms and legs akimbo on what feels (thankfully) like sodden and yielding earth, as water sprays into my face, my scarf gone. Used to being water rationed, I force my choking mouth closed. Water can drown, water can kill, too.

Above the siren shrieks and cascading water, I hear Dome vents squeaking open, readying to launch hunter drones. 

I sit up, preparing myself for capture. Probably bruised, but back not broken at least! Well, so much for joining the Elite – if I’m lucky, they’ll just send me down.

Into ‘Hell,’ as Thandi called it, ‘where you would have had to learn a local language.’

Level One. The Bottom.

Arms grab me roughly on both sides, yanking me to my feet.

I am frog-marched across the spongy ground until it firms up beneath my feet and I shake my eyes clear of water. My left eye hurts like hell and my cheek underneath puffs up; a price paid, for riding that cascade of water.

Hard to see anything, even with one good eye.

Dawn is leaking pallidly across the horizon, and I almost lose my footing, as we drop into a crevasse in the parched earth.

“Duck low to your right,” I hear a familiar voice rasp. 

The arms have let me go, so I stoop under a rocky overhang and slowly straighten.

I can see – from the solar studded cells glowing inside – that we are inside a small and cosy cave, barely big enough to stand up in.

Akhona, the old Outsider woman, stands at the far wall, fingering her solar watch.

“We were waiting for you,” she says, “Right on time. But we expected you to take the much easier front door instead.”

They laugh.

How many?

On my right, I can see the younger man who, only last week, had given me the fever tree seed I have, snuggled in my pocket.

I have to turn, to see who is on my left.

A muscular young woman looks back at me, grinning. “Amahle, you gave me your zero-grav backpack, remember?” 

She points. There is a huge clay gourd inside the backpack near the cave entrance, dripping water. She’s made a good haul. They seem very prepared.

The old woman holds the index finger on her left hand to her lips, while flapping her right hand at the ground, as if inviting us to sit.

“We must be quiet,” she whispers, “their sky-eyes are buzzing around, looking for you, right now.”  

The cave smells musty and dank. My back and backside ache from the fall and a part of me wants to lie down on that rough earth, to rest and hide.

But slowly, and with reluctance, I shake my head.

“I can’t,” I whisper, “I told Thandi I would meet her by the tree I sliced. I gave her directions – and I need to see if she managed to get out – and if she’s safe.”

“Why is she not with you?” asks the young man, quietly.

He reminds me of those two young nameless boys whom I’d burned…

“I’m sorry, please let me know your name,” I ask him. Names matter.

He smiles, a short thin man with his ragged blue overalls over a red T-shirt. “Bonginkosi, but you can call me ‘Kosi. Why is your beloved not with you?”

Another subdued ripple of laughter, but I am in no mood to laugh.

“She wanted to cut open a hole for those at the Bottom of the Dome, for those who wished to run free. You can be sent down, for anybody mad or bad enough – but you seldom get sent up.”

“Are you sure the rotten have not already risen, right up to the very top?”

I ignore Akhona’s question.

Tramp of approaching feet on dry earth. Tense glances.

A bird whistle, and the group relax.

I too, am hugely relieved, to see that the two humans who straighten up after crawling inside, are familiar: the older man and a young woman, forming the same group of five, I’d met near that disputed tree, barely a week ago.

“Well met, both,” says Akhona, “I was starting to worry. Did you succeed?”

 “Yes,” says the older man, “we managed to plant eight Jacaranda trees in the softened earth, before the eye-spies got too close. Trees that, in time, will burrow through their concrete and pipes, drilled deep into the water veins of our beloved Earth.” 

“Good, job well done.” Akhona turns to look at me, “This is a sanctuary cave – and the stale water at the back is fine, once boiled. Are you sure you don’t want to have a drink and wait, until their sky eyes drop down again?”

“No, I must go. Now.”

Akhona shakes her head, “we cannot risk our family, until another day passes. We will join you at the tree tomorrow. Why must it be now, for you?”

I get down on my hands and knees. “Because, despite everything, I’m mad about her.”

Anger or no anger.

Just follow your madness.

The batty fucking birds have gone, at least.

Outside, the sun is bristling with heat, even though it still lies low in the east.

Just as well I know my way around, out here.

***

Lost.

Fucking lost.

You need two eyes for good depth perception and my left has closed completely, swollen and throbbing – the sand dunes around me all look the same, and I’ve given up trying to judge distances.

Finally, I sink to my knees.

Should have listened to the old woman.

Sorry, Thandi.

I get to die outside, at least.

Small, fucking hot, mercies.

***

Something nips my nose.

I am sprawled, left cheek down, in burning sand, and open a bleary, burning right eye. 

Another nip.

Fuck off.

What are you?

Bird, with big black bent beak, that has hurt my nose, like shit.

I blink.

No, not seeing double.

Two of them.

I push myself up to sit.

The birds squawk and dance off warily. Two white-necked fucking ravens. Come to eat me?

Both tilt their heads at me for a moment and then launch off with a raucous ‘krraw!’ – flapping laboriously upwards, until they start circling above me, as if spiralling on heat thermals.

Slowly, I stagger to my aching feet, mouth stuck together in mute and puckered thirst.

The birds head off.

Ah, thought I was easy meat, but they’ve given up, when I showed signs of life.

I wipe the bridge of my nose and peer at my hand, through a scratchy and dry right eye. Blood on my fingers. My blood.

Loud squawks from above.

I tilt my head.

The two ravens are back, spiralling again, above my head.

And then they fly off, in the same direction.

As if they want me to follow.

Surely…not? Castor — and Pollux?

I follow, one dragging step at a time, as they circle back and then head off again, in a repetitive cycle of bird call and flight, as if taking me on a journey, onwards and onwards, until…

Down the dune slope, I see a tree.

And, as my blurred, blinking right eye finally focuses even further, I see someone standing under the tree.

A mirage?

I tumble down, losing footing, in my desperate haste.

World spins and spins in a blurred blast of yellow sand, heat and vertigo.

My body lies still, but my head continues to turn in desperate darkness, my eyes closed. Mirage, dream, or death? 

My head is cradled, my face gently brushed, and water dribbles onto my lips.

“You took your fucking time, Frankie boy…”

None of those options?

I open a wet right eye, to see a blurred, but familiar face.

Thandi?

“You look a right fucking mess, but you’re still a sight for sore eyes, you old bastard.”

…that’s Thandi…

***

The Outside: Hard and Wild Truths:

“No,” says Thandi, “You can’t plant a companion tree there. It’s too close – their roots will compete, and they won’t grow well, particularly in the shade of the other.”

My injured tree still has a fair crown of leaves left, more than I remember.

Thandi marches a further ten paces away, from where I’d started digging with my hands. She digs her right boot into the soil and twists it, leaving a dent in the earth.

“Here,” she says.

Grudgingly, I move over to where she stands. “How do you know that?”

Her hands sit on her hips. “I’m originally from the Outside.”

I rock back onto my heels, from where I’d started digging a new hole, and look up at her, stunned. “You never told me.”

She does not look at me, gazing up at the fever tree instead. “For a start, too ashamed. You don’t know how much stigma is attached to those of us who have lived outside, captured by Dome recruitment gangs. We were the lowest of the low – even the Dome born bottom dwellers lorded it over us. Well…eventually not me. But challenging them cost me. You learn to mostly keep quiet about those things.”

“I’m sorry.”

She shrugs. “Did you know, we, The Free, have our own towns, our own salvaged – and new – technology?”

“No, I didn’t.” Dirt people, dreg-men, scum of the earth, the starving few…Dome terms raced through my head. The wild outside is clearly not so empty…

“We are the many,” she said, “Earth guardians. But, to fully save the earth, we need the Domes cracked open, to share their wealth. There is enough for everyone, enough to revive the earth itself – we can flower a new Eden, but only if we all learn to share, to give up something, for a greater shared gain.”

“They won’t,” I say.

I’d met a few of the Elite while bargaining wood prices several times with paid special Elite visit permits. Shunted upstairs, a lift had taken me into a spartan red room, bristling with walled security, where several silk-robed, beautiful people lounged, with their stretched faces, colourful lunar glassed drinks — and their hard and evasive eyes.

I had stood and showed off my wood, and not once did anyone look at me.  

Thandi kneels next to me and scuffs a few more handfuls of earth away. “No, they mostly won’t,” she said, “We have kept asking them, talking about a better world, where everyone has enough – and where enough is enough. But no answer. To them, we are just the wretched of the Earth. Infinitely expendable, their war against us is silent and hidden away from you Insiders.”

I sense a thin wall – or door? – has fallen between us, with her words.

She leans back to look at me. “There, Frank, that’s deep enough. All we can do is plant – and keep cracking open their Domes.”

She throws her head back and laughs.

Her laugh always cools me inside, like a damp, caressing cloth. 

I place the seed carefully into the pit and we cover it with the piles of nearby sand.

Thandi stands and waters the ground, with the sun dipping low in the west, and less likely to leach the soil. She tips a gourd she has surreptitiously saved for a week, from the Dome’s wheat-house supply.

“To our surviving tree companions – and to a new Earth.”

“Amen,” I say, standing next to her.

“A – fucking men!” pipes up Atropos, lying where Thandi had left her, under the fever tree.

Thandi reckoned fifty people or so had escaped the hole in the Bottom Level they’d cut open, before it was resealed; all scattering to the wind, to minimise their chances of being tracked and caught. Atropos had proved her added value throughout the day, her sensors warning Thandi twice – in good time – to hide in the nearby dunes, whilst drones arrived to buzz the fever tree. 

We move to lean against the tree, as dusk descends, the brown sap bleed from last week now hard and congealed over a ragged trunk scar.

From me, not Atropos.

Thandi drags a small box with dusty screen, from her baggy sand-pants.

“What’s that?” I ask.

“An old solar recorder of mine,” she says, pressing the screen.

The moving figures on the screen are blurred, but I can see two man- boys by a tree, one throwing what looks like balls, down at the other.

Apples.

I’m cold as fuck.

The tree bursts into flames.

The screen goes dark.

“Siphiwe and Mandla,” says Thandi. “They were my younger cousins. I arrived too late.”

It’s far, far more, than a wall between us.

I look at her, through my one open, gritty eye, blinking with an increasingly familiar wet sting: “You. You knew all along…you must hate me.”

She does not look at me, as she wrestles the box back into her trouser pocket. “At first, yes, but what good is hate? And none of us is defined by terrible past acts – unless you keep repeating it, of course. Have you?”

“No,” I say, rolling to kneel in front of her, “I’m… so, so fucking sorry, Thandi.”

Thandi stands up to prop Atropos carefully against the tree, as if she were alive.

She pats the haft, gingerly. “Your Atropos, we, the Free, call ‘Horse,’ because she has been a Trojan for us, an AI receptive to our external messages, as she too, sees the need for earth regeneration and social justice. Burst Open the Domes! They sit like giant leeches on our land, sucking everything dry around them. Atropos it was, who secretly wrangled with the Camissa Dome AI, for me to be…uh, your ‘random’ wife. To water the earth. To free the slaves. That blade, she can indeed cut through just about anything.”

“Fuck…!”

“And so yes, I do know, Frank, how much you wish you could rewrite what you have done. Sometimes, I feel the same.”

Not just anger in her – hurt, loss, and powerlessness too.

I look up, above and beyond Thandiwe, at the topmost branches of the fever tree, tracking the sound of flapping feathers.

Two white necked ravens perch in the crown of the tree for moments, briefly becoming man-boys, one with red shirt and black shorts, the other in blue overalls, before vanishing in a puff of feathers.

I weep as I stand.

Pollux, Castor — No, not Grecian mythical twins after all – Goodbye Mandla, goodbye Siphiwe.

Thandi beckons me closer towards her. “Come on, Frank, it will be cold tonight. Let’s keep each other warm, while we wait for our new family. I believe you already know Akhona.”

She taps her left ear. “Internal flesh cochlear implant, scan resistant, before I was captured by Middle Level Dome draft gangs. Akhona and her seeding family are on their way here.”

What. The. Fuck…so all of it was a giant plot. A set up?

A giant fucking revolutionary hoax.

Who is this woman, really?

I back away, angry, barking, “Is your name even fucking Thandiwe? Why did you not tell me any of this?”

“You’ve kept your life pretty shut too, Frank, even over five years together – I did not want to test your loyalties, with my precarious position. So, instead, I gave you a choice, to stay – or cut loose and run. Over those years, after all, I have shared how much Level Two squeezes all those below it too – the Elite are a matter of perspective.”

Yes, I know, complicit in structural pain too. And, of course, she had set this up as a choice. For her, though, it had always been a plan.

So, I am not here, because of God playing dice, with Spouse Lotto.

Nor is she.

“Hey, both of you,” says Atropos, “Speaking of real names, I want to change mine. I’m not really Atropos – or an Equine Beast, I’ve had enough of your fucking Greek myths. We’re in Camissa, the southern tip of Afrika, for fuck’s sake.”

“Oh,” Thandi asks, “So, change your name to what?”

“Call me Fanon.”

Thandi laughs, half bowing towards the voice of the blade.

What’s the joke?

Her face sobers quickly, as she looks at me again. 

Very directly. “My name is Thandiwe Bengu and, over the years, I have grown to mostly love you, Frank Brett, despite your taciturn moods – and what you have done. Time is running short, for us to share yet more of our lives together.”

She opens her arms.

I do not need reminding about how little time there is.

And she still looks at me, without flinching.

I see she has forgiven me, even if she holds her memories close.

Forgiveness is the most precious thing.

I do not need a second invitation.  

“Mostly?” I ask, hugging her.

“Whoever fully knows and loves someone completely?”

No longer a wall – or even a door then – just human skin (and experience) between us. And I feel five years of her word seeds, germinating softly inside me, too…

***

We sit together, waiting for night to come.

“Ahhh…how sweet you two look,” says Fanon.  

 “Both of you do know, that when our family arrives tomorrow, all future conversations will be in isiZulu,” states Thandi.

“Ayikho inkinga,” says Fanon.

“Why?” I look at Thandi with my good eye.

“English is the official Dome language,” Thandi said, “Words are weapons too. From now on, this will be the space for our words. The English Domes continue to rape Mbaba Mwana Waresa, with their words of objectification – and ownership.” 

“Yebo,” I say.

Thandi laughs, “You’re going to have to do a lot better than that, to keep up. Do you even know what Camissa means, Frank?”

I shrug, “It’s the name of our old Dome and where we live in Afrika, it used to be called Cape Town.”

She pulls a face. “Language and hidden histories matter. It’s from Kora, the tongue of the First People of the Cape, the now extinct Khoe. It means sweet water for all. The First Name for this place.”

Thandi closes her eyes.

That is clearly that.

So, I’m old, dying, hunted, and with a new language to learn.

Why then, am I so fucking excited?

In time, though, I sleep.

***

A tickle wakes me on my right thigh. Something has fallen from the tree. More leaves?

I pick up the feathery, flat object and inspect it closely with my good eye. The moon -and a brilliant array of stars – leak near and ancient light.

The vast expanse above me lifts my soul.

I channel my elation, into focusing on recognising the light and fragile object.

No, not a leaf, but a black bird feather.

I throw the feather up into the cool breeze – it wafts away quickly, up and out of sight, into the darkness.

Krawww

To the White-Necked Ravens of Camissa.

So, what do you do, when you know you’re dying?

I hug Thandi, as the night grows cold.

She hugs me back, but with an almost incoherent grumble, “stop disturbing my fucking sleep, Frank.”

Cosi cosi iyaphela.

Ends.

Nick Wood
Nick Wood is a Zambian born, disabled South African (naturalised) clinical psychologist and SF writer with over two dozen short stories published variously (Collected in LEARNING MONKEY AND CROCODILE, 2019), as well as a novella in South Africa (Young Africa Series): THE STONE CHAMELEON (2004). His debut SF novel is AZANIAN BRIDGES (2016) and his follow-up is the African SolarPunk novel WATER MUST FALL (2020).

What pushes against this moment – VH Ncube

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Illustration for What Pushes Agianst this moment, story in Omenana Magazine

The dimly lit platform was packed with early morning commuters; Cingashe squeezed and ducked in the empty spaces between the rush of bodies. As she made her way: her bag’s strap was tugged, she gripped it tighter against her chest; An unseen hand groped her ass, she swatted it away as she pushed through more bodies. Why doesn’t The Agency provide Messengers with additional protection? She thought in frustration.

When the doors to the MyCiTi bullet train opened, she shuffled inside with the rest of the commuters. Peak-time meant the only space available was at the back, squarely in between a group of rowdy teenage boys, dressed in untucked white shirts, navy-blue blazers, and loose ties. Cingashe squeezed into the seat; wary that this was the best decision but also stuck.

“Unyanisile maan! Jonga.” The biggest boy in the group, proving his point about an argument they were in the middle of, slipped a silver bar out from his pocket and switched on the hologram. The clip blared on.

Cingashe grimaced at the noise which made her headache worse. She rummaged in her handbag for her Darkmodes. Where are they?

She had left Lerato’s place in a rush—gathering the contents of her bag, her shoes and black coat while Lerato moaned softly in her sleep—and crept barefoot until she made her escape. Lerato was good fun, a bit too clingy but not a thief—she wouldn’t have stolen them.

“Mxm.” She kissed her teeth in frustration. They were not in her bag.

Darkmodes would only be invented five years from now, but she doubted leaving them in this iteration would make much of an impression on time.

Unable to use her Darkmodes to block out light and sound for the rest of her journey to the V&A, she patted the shoulder of the boy closest to her.

“Yebo sisi,” he responded, turning to her with a grin. He tilted his head.

“Please lower the volume.” She managed a smile.

He nodded then spoke to his friends, too loudly. While he was relaying the message, they looked over at her; they smiled as they nudged each other. The biggest boy made a show of picking up his device which lay in the centre of the group. He lowered the volume. By one bar.

She groaned inwardly. John Mathebula’s voice, the “revolutionary leader” these boys were watching, became impassioned: “…Our movement has bread and butter issues that it must address, first. Even these feminists, cannot deny that our struggle has been carried by our grandfathers and fathers—it’s just facts.”

The nonsense Mathebula spewed had gained traction. It angered Cingashe, but she also felt guilty. It was her fault he could support his rhetoric with “facts”—a historical record that made no mention of South African women’s role during the Apartheid era.

In this iteration of time, it was true. It didn’t have to be, but The Agency rarely allowed Messengers a second chance to redo their failed missions.

The train slowed as it approached its next stop, the city centre. The boys took their belongings and hurdled out the doors, jostling and laughing the entire way.

Cingashe let out a quiet sigh of relief. She was still hungover—her head felt too heavy, her eyes were sensitive to the light and every noise made her irritable—but it wouldn’t be long before she reached her stop. She glanced at her wrist:

7 July 2045 06:46am

Cape Town Station: 33° 55′ 20″ S, 18° 25′ 35″ E

Riyadh will be irritated that I’m late.

A Messenger arriving late was a bad look, and the Agency had already warned her about her temper and her tardiness. She could try to get to places early, but the anger in her, that was something else…

When the train stopped at the station, Cingashe bolted through the automatic doors— handbag tucked underneath her arm—as she made her way to the docks.

***

There were only two types of ideas: those that took hold, that Cingashe and other Messengers had successfully ushered into the zeitgeist and those that had withered in their hands. She never forgot her failures. They were etched in her mind, despite the countless iterations she encountered. Sometimes she took the pills The Agency administered, to forget, but mostly she wanted to remember. She wanted to feel the weight of each mission.

And hearing Mathebula’s rhetoric triggered her thoughts of the last mission: how her anger had caused her to punch the target, Lisbet, instead of persuading her of The Agency’s message. This stirred Lisbet’s anger and emboldened her to go through with her plans to kill Bertha Gxowa and Helen Joseph. The death of these two women did more harm than even Cingashe could’ve foreseen. And when she arrived in 2045, she felt the harm.

Cingashe nearly missed Riyadh as she ran down the pier. He was wrapped in the early morning fog and his back was turned towards her. He wore a kufi on his head, a black coat and his hands were folded behind him.

As she drew closer, she noticed how he clenched and unclenched his fists.

She stood beside him, overlooking the ocean. “Riyadh.”

He turned to her. “A late Messenger? No,” he said, pretending to be shocked. He wasn’t their team leader, just a deputy, but you wouldn’t know it the way he was always on her neck about everything.

“Did you get the message and the coordinates?” Riyadh continued.

“I’m still waiting.”She was anxious about what it would be, and where it would take her. There must be a reason The Agency assigned Riyadh to meet me. Maybe we’ll be going together for this one?

It wasn’t unheard of for two Messengers to be sent to deliver one message. Usually though, different Messengers from the same team would be assigned to different targets to ensure the message reverberated through time.

They faced the sea, neither of them saying anything. Seagulls squawked overhead, and the waves crashed into the rocks. Workers on the large ships that had already docked, trudged back and forth carrying equipment.

Cingashe’s timepiece vibrated. She raised her wrist and read the message:

9 June, 1956 06:46am

Atteridgeville: 25° 46′ 24″ S, 28° 4′ 17″ E

M: Lisbet Manamela doesn’t have to go through with her attack on Bertha Gxowa and Helen Joseph—there’s another way. 

Reading the familiar coordinates and message caused her heart to sink. Why was The Agency redoing this failed mission? She wanted the idea to take hold, to have Lisbet believe that she didn’t have to be impimpi, an informer and saboteur, but what would be different this time around?

Riyadh broke his silence, “You know, it’s rare that the Agency is giving us a second chance. See it as an opportunity.”

“You knew our team had to redo the mission and you didn’t tell me?” Cingashe turned to him. “Why? And what will be different this time around? “

“It’s your duty, Cingashe. The outcome must be different.”

“Yes, it’s my duty to make sure messages take hold, but if people don’t want…” She shrugged. “Why does it have to be on me.” She knew the message was important, but she also knew herself. “Look, I tried, and I failed.” And that should have been the end of the matter.

“You didn’t just fail to persuade the target, you actively interfered with iteration 236.6B by punching the woman! What if you had gotten hurt, or killed? And the gadgets on you were left in that iteration?”

“Right, because it would be a disaster if I left my tech behind, never mind my life!” If Riyadh or anyone found out about the Darkmodes I misplaced…

“Luister, this is hard on the whole team—not just you. We all have to go back and redo our work to make sure things happen as they should. Just get it right this time.” His words dripped with condescension. Of all her teammates, Riyadh found his way underneath her skin the easiest.

“I won’t, because I intentionally move between time periods fucking shit up.” Cingashe’s voice was raised, and her fists were clenched.

“But. You. Do.” With each word, he shoved his finger in her sternum for emphasis.

Cingashe swatted it away. “You touch me again, and our team will be fishing for your index finger in the Atlantic.”

“You’re scared, and you’d rather feel anger. I get that.” His words seared through her rage, making her feel even more shitty.

He’s right. She was afraid; afraid of what The Agency would do if she interfered with the timeline out of anger, but she also didn’t want to live in an iteration where the Mathebula’s of the world felt justified in their misogyny.

Riyadh continued, “You can do this.”

The reality was that she didn’t have a choice.

***

9 June 1956, Atteridgeville

Cingashe walked between the box-shaped brick houses with corrugated roofs. All the yards were enclosed with mesh wire. “The street” was a dirt path that had emerged from years of bicycles, donkey-carts and pedestrians trudging along this route. Kwela—with its upbeat tempo and the melodic pennywhistle—blared from one of the houses further down the street.

She passed a yard where, inside, an elderly woman hung clothes on a washing line: a baby blue cloak, a matching long skirt, and a white shirt. The uniform revealed that she was Mme wa seaparo, a member of one of her church’s sodalities.

“Dumela Mma,” Cingashe greeted as she passed. The woman greeted in response. It wasn’t much of an interaction, but Cingashe had to repeat everything she’d done in this layer. She had to stick to the same path she used to reach the target’s house and change little of how she had manoeuvred—minus punching Lisbet.

She had changed to a pleated skirt that went beyond her knees and a blouse that was period appropriate before she travelled.

 To travel, Cingashe had to arrive at the right layer, the one that pressed the most against the moment she wanted to change. Time was not a long string, with the past on one end and the future at the opposite end. It was layered; the past lay beneath the present, which was beneath the future. So, she caught a flight to Lanseria International Airport, took a taxi to Atteridgeville before travelling down to this layer.

And if her message took hold—if, because she still wasn’t sure how this mission would be different—then the new contours of this layer would create the impression The Agency needed in 2045.

By the time she reached Lisbet’s house, the streets were filled with more pedestrians and a group of children at the end of the street played a game: they huddled in a circle, then launched a ball into the sky. They shrieked loudly as they dispersed before it was caught.

Just like the last time, Cingashe thought as she stared at them for a moment, waiting. If she could, she would happily swap places with another Messenger: she didn’t want to be here, she doubted she’d succeed but there were a number of principles The Agency maintained. These were principles that made it impossible for another Messenger to take her place even if she’d messed up the mission the first time around.

Once an idea was assigned to a Messenger, it couldn’t be re-assigned; it would have to flourish or wither in the hand that had received it.

As she’d expected, the ball—made of newspapers wrapped tightly in multiple layers of thick plastic—struck her on the shoulder. Cingashe knelt, picked up the ball and held it out to the girl who was running towards her.

“Are you Ousi Lisbet’s new friend?” The girl took the ball.

Cingashe laughed. “No, I’m just going to all the houses to sell products.” It was a stupid excuse, she knew, but it was the same one she had used the previous time.

“Oh hoh,” the girl responded, eyeing Cingashe’s small handbag—which obviously contained no products—before running to join her group of friends.

Cingashe let out a deep breath before entering Lisbet Manamela’s yard. Like the last time, she would be alone. Cingashe walked to the open door.

“Ko ko,”she said, announcing herself.

“Ke mang?” Lisbet demanded from inside. Her voice was tense, suspicious of unexpected visitors.

Just like the last time. From the doorway, Cingashe used the same cover story: she was an activist and ahead of the visit by Bertha Gxowa and Helen Joseph from the Federation of South African Women, she was speaking with community members about the role they could play in the movement.

“Come in,” she said in Setswana, still sceptical. “Are you talking to all the women?” Lisbet was seated at a wooden two-seater table, drinking black tea. She looked as if she was in her mid-twenties. She wore a dress with a faded pink floral print and her hair was wrapped in a red doek.

Cingashe took a seat. “We’re talking to everyone.”

Cingashe tried not to stare too much as she noted how everything was in the exact same place: the plastic fruits on the stone bowl at the centre of the table, the coal-fired stove with a cream-coloured enamel kettle on the upper left plate, and the brown pattern vinyl floors.

Riyadh’s voice came to mind; see this as an opportunity. She nearly scoffed at the thought. She was so worried about messing up the mission that she had resorted to quoting Riyadh—of all people.

“Ousi Lisbet, our organisation knows you’ve been approached to disrupt today’s collection of signatures.”

She jumped from the chair. “Get out.”

Cingashe stood up slowly, her hands in front of her. “I won’t tell the community—I just want you to know that you can still change your mind. Don’t go to the meeting.”

She laughed. “That is not how it works, I have to—” she stopped herself, shaking her head.

“You don’t have to take any innocent lives.”

“Am I not an innocent life as well?”

Calm down, calm down, Cingashe thought as anger threatened to cloud her judgement. “Please, what you’re thinking of doing…it’ll cause so much damage.”

Lisbet waved at her dismissively. “There’s always a protest, always a petition—it doesn’t amount to anything. And this small petition these women are bringing also won’t amount to anything.”

“But it will, it can,” Cingashe said, her voice high-pitched from desperation. She couldn’t check the time—her device was stuffed deep inside her handbag and it was too distinct—but she knew this conversation had to end. She glanced at the open door; Lisbet’s mother would walk through soon. She had to accept that the target wasn’t buying into the message. She had to walk away.

But I can’t. “You don’t understand—even if it looks like resistance amounts to nothing, it eventually will. It’s all important.”

Lisbet shook her head, unconvinced. “I used to think the same way but after—”

This person. Cingashe scanned the room as Lisbet droned on. Punching her hadn’t worked the last time, it had only annoyed her more. I should just leave.

“…And you’re a beautiful girl. Why are you wasting your Saturdays running up and down the streets? Politics isn’t the place for—”

Lisbet crumpled over, spilling the remainder of her black tea across the table; she groaned in pain.

Cingashe had struck her on the head with the stone fruit bowl. Plastic green apples and oranges rolled across the vinyl floor.

What have I done? What have I done? Cingashe couldn’t see any visible injuries and the groaning meant Lisbet was at least conscious. But I’ve actively interfered with this iteration—again. She laid the bowl on another counter, away from Lisbet.

I just need to make sure that this time, Lisbet doesn’t leave. She noticed the glimmer of keys dangling from behind the door. She grabbed her purse, the house keys and locked the door behind her. So long as Lisbet was trapped until after the women’s meeting, just before lunch time, then the effect on this iteration would be the same as if she had been persuaded of the message.

Cingashe approached the group of kids. She called out to the young girl.

“Is your mother going to the FSAW meeting?”

The girl nodded.

“Then hold these keys.” Cingashe laid them in the girl’s hands. “You’re not allowed to give them to anyone except Mama neh.”

The girl looked at the keys in her hand and then at Lisbet’s yard. She nodded.

Cingashe walked to the bus stop, she’d travel to another layer from there. She didn’t know how The Agency would respond when they found out. The thought worried her, but if she succeeded, how much had things changed?

***

6 July 2045, Cape Town

“I can’t believe you’re making me walk in these.” Lerato wobbled in her heels, partly because they were outrageously high but also because she was tipsy. She pushed her braids from her face. She wore the glitter navy bodycon dress that Cingashe liked.

Cingashe took her hand. She was just as tipsy but had worn a more practical pair of heeled boots. As they walked down the street, stumbling and giggling as they neared the club, Cingashe felt different, safe.

In another iteration, this street would’ve been considered unsafe for women—let alone openly lesbian women. She didn’t know the full impact of actively interfering in the previous layer. She hated that she couldn’t convince Lisbet that resistance could amount to something, that it pushed against the present, shaping its contours for the better. 

But she would think about that later, tonight, she was focused on groove.

VH Ncube is a South African, Africanfuturism writer and activist lawyer. At the heart of her writing is an exploration of the path paved by individual and societal choices, and her writing is often informed by her work on socio-economic and environmental justice issues. Find more at www.vhncube.com