Read The Story of the Cannibal Woman Online
Authors: Maryse Conde
“She must have loved her mother so much!” people would wonder. “So surprising after what happened.”
But what had happened? Nothing very much when you think about it. Everyone knows each of us kills the one she loves.
The coward does it with a kiss
The brave man with a sword.
Once her act was over, Rebecca bowed and left the stage amid the cheers. The lights came on again and the hubbub of conversation resumed.
“She's our greatest singer,” the man boasted.
“Nobody comes close to Hugh Masekela!” Dido flung back at him.
A woman dared contradict him.
“Hugh Masekela? Old hat!”
The discussion almost turned nasty. Fortunately, a new band started up. Old-timers who began to strike up the old, familiar tunes. Dancers poured onto the floor. Dido grabbed Paul's arm, the widower she was after, willowy and melancholic, who seemed frightened by her vitality. Rosélie stayed alone behind her drink.
Yes, there's something appealing about those songs whose words we cannot understand, something that speaks to us deep down. We can give them wings, embroider them with flowers and stars, and color them however we want. I've always preferred sitting down to listen to music. I've never known how to dance. Neither did you, Fiela. My reputation followed me throughout my teenage years: “She's hopeless at jamming,” the boys would whisper in contempt. For years I was a wallflower, like you, watching my cousins perform boisterous dancing moves with their partners.
When the music stopped, the dancers surged back to their seats, Dido delighted at having smooched with her widower. At that moment, Bishupal, still flanked with Archie, loomed up at their table. They formed an odd couple: Bishupal, handsome and melancholic like an archangel driven from paradise, and pretty-boy Archie with an evil streak. On seeing them, tongues began to wag. Shame on them! Those two with their vice and wickedness had gone to live with Archie's mother, the widow Anna van Emmeling. The poor woman had no idea two boys could make love together and, deeply shocked, she had run to her confessor. Ever since, she had been immersed in novenas. She couldn't sleep a wink at night while the two demons got drunk, copulated, and quarreled.
Oblivious to this gossip, Bishupal gave Rosélie a piercing look, then without a word, a smile, or a blink, he turned round and, dragging Archie with him, disappeared into the crowd.
Despite the liters of Plaisir de Merle ingurgitated and the late hour they had come homeâeven then Dido hadn't gone to bed and sat up all night watching Keanu Reeves in
Sweet November
, lamenting his solitude on film and her own in real lifeâthe sun hadn't opened its eyes when Dido dashed into Rosélie's room to announce the news.
The verdict was splashed all over the front page of the
Cape Tribune
.
Fiela had been sentenced to just fifteen years in prison. Naturally, the counsel for the prosecution had asked for life, deploring between the lines that capital punishment had been abolished along with apartheid. Only the ultimate punishment would have fit the horror of the crime. But the jurors hadn't agreed with him. The two lawyers requisitioned for the job, those pink-skinned, fair-haired youngsters whom everyone took for a pair of nincompoops, had accomplished wonders. Halfway through the trial they had skillfully changed tactics. They had called to the bar a load of witnesses from goodness knows where! One man swore he had seen Adriaan more than once blind drunk at some ungodly hour. A woman testified he had exposed himself to her eight-year-old daughter on a secluded path. One of his colleagues at the Vineyard Hotel complained he fondled her breasts and buttocks at the slightest opportunity. Another claimed he organized secret poker games in a corner of the hotel kitchen. In short, the picture of a model father and upstanding husband, a regular churchgoer, singing the Psalms loud and true, endured a setback. The two pink-skinned, fair-haired youngsters whom everyone took for a pair of nincompoops had introduced a doubt. That's all it needs in justice, a serious doubt! Suddenly Adriaan was suspected of having led a double, even a triple or quadruple life. Obviously, public opinion protested, convinced that Fiela was guilty. An angry crowd surrounded the courthouse, demanding an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. Kill the murderess. Cut her into little pieces like she had done to poor Adriaan.
There was a photo too with the article in the
Tribune
. Standing between her guards, a great gawk of a woman, like me, an enigmatic face, like me, preparing to add her name to the already long list of mad women and witches. Nobody would ever know the truth. Fiela hadn't said a word during the ten days of her trial. She hadn't betrayed her joy on hearing her sentence. She hadn't thanked her saviors. In short, she took her secret with her into jail.
Fiela, Fiela, during all this time I was so preoccupied with my own tormented life I neglected you. You at least know the path mapped out in front of you. It seems as if I'm on the brink of a precipice where I shall fall and never climb back up. Tell me. You can tell me everything. Why did you kill Adriaan? What was his crime? You forgave him the first time when he gave Martha, the little neighbor, a belly. What was worse about this new crime? Did your lawyers hint at the truth? What was he hiding from you again and again, that you finally found out?
Rosélie cut short Dido's recriminations she had already heard so many times about the barbarity of the country ever since the Kaffirs had come to power, and extricated herself from the sofa bed. Joseph Lema's consultation was at eleven o'clock on Faure Street. The buses took forever, so she would just have time to stop over on Strand Street. She didn't know what she was hoping for from Inspector Sithole. To talk. To talk about Fiela. To talk about Stephen too. Both stories were now muddled in her head.
Where does mine begin? Where does his end?
But Inspector Sithole was not at the police station, where there reigned an atmosphere of utter pandemonium. Black offenders, black and white police officers. Offenders and police officers, their brutal, vicious faces identical, as if good and evil, order and disorder, justice and injustice were one and the same thing. Probably through close contact they ended up looking like each other. A white officer, his face covered with acne, though he was long past the age of this juvenile scourge, his upper lip bristling with a führerlike mustache, as fat as Lewis Sithole was willowy, was sitting at his desk. Frowning, he put Rosélie through a formal interrogationâNameâAddressâProfessionâPurpose of Visitâbefore informing her:
“Sithole has lost his wife. He's left for KwaZulu-Natal. He'll be back tomorrow or the day after.”
As she was about to leave, he stopped her with the same old song, uttered in that indefinable tone of voice that was both reassuring and threatening:
“It's often said that the police don't do anything. But it's not true. We are not idle, and we always end up discovering the truth.”
Once outside, Rosélie walked in the direction of the Threepenny Opera without realizing it. It was as if her body were obeying orders from her brain without her knowing it.
Bishupal's incomprehensible rudeness obsessed her. Never very communicative or smiling, at least he was polite. One evening, tired of seeing him crouched in front of Stephen's study, she had brought him a chair and a glass of Coca-Cola, which he had accepted.
At this time of day the shopkeepers were still washing down the sidewalks. The homeless had cleared off, leaving behind their empty wine bottles, open cans of food, piles of old rags, and litter. Fiela's much too light a sentence was on everyone's lips. The way justice worked, in ten years she would be as free as a bird, free to reduce another innocent body to shreds.
She could see from the entrance that there was no trace of Bishupal or Archie at the Threepenny Opera. Sitting on a stool, a blond girl was leafing through a magazine. Some white customers were rummaging through the opera shelves, some blacks through world music. Mrs. Hillster looked more ravaged than ever. With her hooked nose and her beady eyes between wrinkled eyelids, she looked more and more like the wicked fairy, or rather the picture we have of the wicked fairy, since, should we forget, she is a fictional character. Mrs. Hillster must have been the only person not to be shocked by the jury's clemency toward Fiela. She had other things on her mind.
“I can't find a serious buyer either for the house or the shop,” she complained. “An African embassy made an offer for the house. But I don't trust them. You know what I mean, don't you?”
Of course! It's a well-known fact the African embassies are broke and leave nothing but debts behind them, in Washington as well as Paris. But Rosélie wasn't here to discuss African embassies.
“It so happens I met Bishupal yesterday at a wedding and he refused to say hello to me.”
At the mention of his name, Mrs. Hillster looked like a stunned boxer after receiving a punch in the stomach. Her eyes filled with tears.
“Bishupal doesn't work here any longer,” she stammered.
“Since when?”
The words couldn't get out quick enough.
“The boy I cherished like my own son is an ungrateful wretch. Since he sent me this good-for-nothing Archie, who knows nothing about anything except hip-hop, confusing Verdi with Rossini and Callas with Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, not anyone can work with music, you have to have some background, he smoked joints, and what's more he was unbearable, insolent, always on the phone, I called Bishupal to know when he was coming back. Nothing unusual about that, was there? But he was so rude, telling me he wasn't my slave and that I was a filthy colonialist like all the rest! Me, me? That I'd exploited him like all the others! Me, me? After everything I did for him, ever since the day Stephen introduced him to me.”
“It was Stephen who introduced him to you?” Rosélie asked in dismay.
“Oh, you didn't know?” Mrs. Hillster exclaimed, a gleam flickering at the back of her eyes. “Bishupal was a messenger boy at the Nepalese embassy. They fired him, I don't know why exactly, and Stephen, who liked nothing better than playing the Good Samaritan, flew to his rescue. He brought him here, paid for his correspondence courses with his own money, and found him a studio apartment.”
That was just like Stephen, overly generous, always surrounded by all sorts of protégés, students, young artists, poets, painters, and sculptors. But Mrs. Hillster dispensed her information with venom, visibly relishing the meaning that might be implied.
“He ended up screaming at me that he would never set foot here again, neither he nor Archie! What's more, he was about to leave this lousy country for England. I'm not surprised at what you're telling me, he always hated you.”
Me? Why?
But Rosélie didn't ask the question out loud and fled.
In her absence, Joseph Léma, feeling at home in his surroundings, had undressed. Uncovering his bony shoulders, he had lain down on the couch in the consulting room. He had already commented on Fiela's trial to Dido, who had offered him a cup of coffee. He was now ready to expose his point of view to Rosélie. South Africa was a very strange country. Its philosophy of reconciliation and forgiveness following the crimes of apartheid was most irritating. Fiela deserved nothing better than a public execution. It would put some sense in the heads of women who wanted nothing better than to imitate her and sink their teeth into their husbands. Nigeria was setting the example by stoning adulterous women.
Rosélie did not discuss matters further. Once again, she had other things on her mind.
A
fter a sleepless night interspersed with dreams no sooner forgotten than the memory of their horror lingered on, Rosélie went down to her studio. When she opened the windows, the sky stretched colorless and dismal. A cloth knotted tight above the city. A bitter wind lashed her face. In the murky half-light of dawn, the backyards emerged, cluttered with an odd assortment of garden tools, hosepipes, and pressure-cleaning equipment. She closed up again the shuttered windows and sat down on the sofa reserved for visitors without a glance at her gloomy canvases, like dejected daughters ignored by their mother.
Don't we mean anything to you? they asked her in silence. You seem to forget we are the blood that gives you strength, the blood that pumps your heart, your arms and legs. If you stop painting, you'll stop living. When are you coming back to us?
Soon, soon. I have to sweep in front of my own door, as they say in Guadeloupe. In other words, I have to sort myself out.
She clasped her head between her hands in a theatrical gesture. If she went and knocked on Widow van Emmeling's door, Bishupal would be obliged to see her and answer her questions, like all the others she had interrogated. But what would she ask him? Her knees gave way and her thoughts recoiled. She remembered her visit to Hermanus, Chris Nkosi and his puerile look: “You're crazy!”
He must have sniggered behind her back. Poked fun at her. Like Bishupal would poke fun at her. Like everyone else.
Like everyone else?
As if she were fleeing some kind of danger, such as a hurricane drawing inexorably closer to the shore, she dashed out of the studio and bolted down the stairs. While she ran down the stairs, the wail of a police siren heading for a police station with a van full of crooks beat time with her steps. Too bad for those who had been robbed, raped, and murdered under cover of night. Nobody suffered as much as she did who had lost everything. She ended up near the traveler's tree. In the meager light of day, Deogratias, still cramped in his night uniform, was sipping a root tea he had brought in a thermos. The Gospel according to St. Luke was wide open in front of him. He looked up from his reading and said in surprise:
“Up already?”
She managed to stammer a reply and went into Stephen's study. It was like stepping into a pharaoh's tomb. Treasures lay in the shadows within hand's reach, irresistible temptations for robber voyeurs. But she didn't switch on the light or pull up the shades. Nothing interested her. She didn't try to force the locks, open the drawers, or check the computer, sitting silent, pale, guarding its secrets. She simply sat down in the armchair that Stephen had used so many times, where his body had left its imprint on the leather seat. She laid her hands flat on the wood, recalling those years she had always thought were happy. Stephen and she never quarreled. She let him decide everything, arrange everything, and solve everything. In his opinion, he did what he thought best. From their very first meeting in the Saigon bar, the roles had been cast and had never changed. He was the lifeguard. She was the drowning swimmer. He was the surgeon. She was the heart patient. A bond of gratitude echoed that of love.
She relived those years. New York, Tokyo, Cape Town. Until that final night, which had brought it all to a grating and incongruous end. All those years laden with happy memories, seldom important or noteworthy, which put end to end made up a successful union. Successful? For the first time she dared scrutinize this word like a jeweler hunting for a flaw in a diamond. Soon tears streamed down her cheeks.
What was she crying for? She had to agree with Inspector Sithole's idea that Stephen's death was not the work of young junkies short on crack. It was not a routine incident for journalists out of a job. The gratuitous violence of modern times had nothing to do with the matter. A nauseous truth was lurking, like a baby swaddled in dirty diapers.
As for Stephen, deep down inside her, in that part where the light of truth never ventures, she had to admit that she had always known who he was. Moreover, on the first day, hadn't he warned her, quite casually, in his offhand, playful manner?
“I never accost women. They scare me too much.”
She had simply chosen to ignore the evidence. Blessed are those who have two eyes and see nothing.
Sa zyé pa ka vwè, kyiè pa ka fè mal
, says the Guadeloupean proverb. She had refused to pay the terrible price of lucidity.
So what was suddenly weighing on her? Why was she filled with a feeling of revolt, a feeling she had been duped? At this point in her thoughts, she clumsily tried to be ironic. No Simone de Beauvoir expressions, please! But irony didn't help. She hurt even more.
“Your Stephen is
de la mierda
!” Fina had screamed.
“You're sacrificing yourself for nothing,” Dido had said, going one step further.
Who should she be crying for?
In fact, should she be crying?
It was Dido who interrupted all these thoughts with her tray of coffee and the
Cape Tribune
. On the front page, Fiela, who was en route to the high-security prison in Pretoria, once reserved for the most recalcitrant political prisoners, had been replaced by another woman, white this time, united in the same madness and wickedness. Once again the righteous would be scandalized. This woman had drowned all five of her children, the youngest being only a few months old, in the family bathtub.
Rosélie cut short Dido's fulminations with a wave of the hand, drew a cup to her lips, drank a sip of the scalding liquid, then asked, very quietly:
“You knew, didn't you?”
Immediately Dido's expression clouded over. As if she had been waiting for this question for days. Like a night moth imprisoned by mistake in an attic, her gaze frantically fluttered around the room, then came and settled on Rosélie.
“What did I know?” she asked.
“Stephen,” Rosélie simply murmured.
All Dido's affection welled up in her eyes, which suddenly sparkled with tears. She hesitated, then stammered:
“Yes, I knew. Like everyone else. But what about you? When did you know?”
Thereupon Rosélie burst out crying, sobbing noisily.
“You never mentioned it,” Dido went on vehemently. “So I never dared bring it up. It was beyond me. I was in agony. I said to myself she must know. So she accepts it? Can one accept something like that?”
Rosélie poured herself a second cup and very slowly said:
“Deep down, I knew. From the very beginning. Accept it? I don't know whether I accepted it. I refused to admit the truth so that I wouldn't have to make up my mind.”
There! I've said it.
Halfway through that gloomy morning, Rosélie sitting on the patio, shattered, mulling over every moment of her life in a new light, Dido rattling her pans in the kitchen as if to allay any suspicions, Inspector Lewis Sithole walked in, obviously finished with mourning his wife and back to his usual workaday face. He was accompanied by two white officers, bundled up in their uniforms, a juvenile version of Laurel and Hardy. Rosélie said how sorry she was. But he shrugged his shoulders.
“We didn't live together. She lived near Pietermaritzburg with our two sons since she could never get used to Cape Town. We never got on together during or after apartheid.”
He went on without blinking.
“I have a search warrant. We would like to search your husband's study.”
Rosélie couldn't believe her ears. It was something straight out of a detective story. Agathie Christie or Chester Himes?
The Murder of Roger Ackroyd
or
A Rage in Harlem
? He motioned to his stooges.
“Go ahead, guys!”
Without further ado, Laurel and Hardy dived into the study.
Am I dreaming? A Spanish writer wrote: “Life is a dream.” So yes, I think I am dreaming. I'm going to wake up nestled against Rose's ample breasts, the taste of her milk in my mouth, the warm smell of her skin in my nostrils. I can't believe this is happening to me. What have I done to deserve such agony? What am I paying for?
The same crime again and again. There is no forgiveness for daughterly assassins.
Underneath his professional countenance, Inspector Lewis Sithole was ill at ease. His wily-tomcat mask was cracked in places and an embarrassed compassion showed through. By force of circumstance he had become Rosélie's friend and suffered in his role as tormentor.
“Everything is falling into place,” he said. “Yesterday we arrested Bishupal Limbu for the burglary of the Threepenny Opera last February, a week after your husband was murdered. However hard Mrs. Hillster swore blind he was innocent, we didn't believe her. Ever since, we have had him under surveillance. We knew that sooner or later he'd make a wrong move. And we were right. Not only did he quit his job and begin living it up, but he bought two plane tickets to London, two round-trips as required by the immigration authorities, one for himself, one for his friend, a certain Archie Kronje, and he paid for them in cash. South African Airways informed us immediately. He was unable to explain where the money came from. He said it came from his savings. From what he earned! We checked it out.”
Here he stopped so that Rosélie could no doubt compliment him on his flair. As she remained stunned, motionless, almost devoid of thought, he went on.
“We know that your husband got him a visa for the U.K. This was not the case for Mr. Kronje, who has never left the country. Mr. Limbu sent a telegram, then another, to a certain Andrew Spire, who had changed his phone number for some unknown reason, to ask him to vouch for his friend's visa. The post office sent us copies both times.”
“Andrew!” Rosélie exclaimed, aghast, the tournure of a diabolical coalition suddenly emerging in front of her eyes.
“Do you know him?”
The tone was unmistakably that of an affirmation and not a question.
“Yes!” she stammered. “He'sâ¦he was my husband's best friend. We spent every summer for almost twenty years with him in Wimbledon.”
Inspector Lewis Sithole leaned forward, closer, almost touching, and Rosélie could smell his wholesome breath, a mixture of tobacco and breath freshener.
“And that's where the plot thickens, and we have to deal with the second case, much more serious, concerning your husband's murder. You can help us by answering two questions. First of all, in your opinion, how did Bishupal Limbu come to know Mr. Spire?”
Rosélie's heart had slowed down to such a point she thought it had died. She managed to stammer out:
“Stephen had enrolled Bishupal in a correspondence course in London. Perhaps he had asked Andrew to help him.”
“Perhaps. Secondly, do you know whether Mr. Spire was thinking of giving him a room in the event Bishupal emigrated to England?”
“I have no idea,” Rosélie replied in agony.
Inspector Lewis Sithole thought for a while, then resumed his account.
“Despite Mr. Limbu's insistence, reassuring him that Archie Kronje was a protégé of your late husband's, like himself, Mr. Spire seemed to have got suspicious. He did not answer either of the telegrams. So Mr. Limbu went to the cybercafé on Strand Street and sent him a series of urgent emails, of which we have a copy. Still no answer. In your opinion, why did Mr. Spire choose to remain silent?”
I have absolutely no idea. Once again, Inspector, who is leading the investigation? You or me?
“Since we have no authority to interrogate Mr. Spire, we have asked our colleagues at Scotland Yard to do it for us, and we are waiting for their answer. We want to know the exact relationship between Mr. Limbu and Mr. Spire, how they came to know each other, and whether there had been a prior agreement between the two that Mr. Spire had finally broken.”
What agreement?
“It is possible that on the advice of your husband, Mr. Spire had promised to put Mr. Limbu up, and even help him financially to settle in England.”
All that didn't make sense. Stephen was far from being naive. How could he possibly advise an individual with no qualifications whatsoever to emigrate to England? At that moment, one of the officers, Laurel, emerged in the study doorway and declared in a whining tone:
“Boss, there's over a hundred videos here!”
“Leave them where they are!” the Inspector ordered. “There's no point looking at them, they won't give us any clues.”
No, it's only Verdi. Unless you like the trumpets in
Aïda
!
“And what about the computer? And the diskettes?” Laurel insisted.
“Take them away!” Lewis Sithole shouted without hesitation.
Laurel disappeared once again inside the room. Followed by a heavy silence.
“Don't you think,” the Inspector started up again, “that Mr. Spire suspected Bishupal Limbu of being implicated in the murder of your husband, and consequently wanted nothing more to do with him?”
How could he suspect anything seven thousand miles away, knowing nothing about Bishupal or the terrible events in February? I was the one who informed him. Breaking with his usual reserve, his coldness toward her, Andrew had immediately offered her a plane ticket to come to England. She could stay with him as long as she wanted. For a while she had toyed with the idea, given her state of mind.