Thirsting for something

Ah yes, families. The fertile ground of  our growing years, the claustrophobia, the wisdom, the unexpressed love, the best intentions, the accretion of lies and  small crimes, the clinging and the wrenching away. In my short fiction,  the sisters have begun to talk to one another. The house, though, is falling down all around them, a dark airless box of a house shredding and dismantling itself, collapsing in on itself like a black star. Love gone sour, perhaps.

The dead parents are memory’s puppets. When I was very young I  would daydream I was an orphan waiting to be adopted. Or a changeling waiting to be found. Somewhere out there was another family, another destiny. Now I am in reality an orphan and the ghosts of my father and mother follow me from room to room in the derelict house, talking of incidents and family outings of which I have no recollection. They remember it all so differently, as do my sisters and brother.

Memory is always tricky and insubstantial, as is the way we read the present, what we choose to recall, what we consign to forgetfulness. How we simplify, edit, revise our own histories.

 

Outside in the  branching tipuana tree there is a gymnogene or African harrier hawk perched between two thick branches. Such a terrifying wingspan. In the Sahara  this hawk eats the fruit of the oil palm and catches  small rodents. Here it eats wild figs and hunts for  smaller birds and rodents. Gymnogenes nest in trees on the mountain slopes and come down to the village for water and to hunt.

 

The first time I saw the Sahara desert from a plane window I was six years old and  it seemed to me that  most of the world was desert. A rippling world of red sand dunes below me. Somewhere in amongst the dunes would be an oasis with  wells of  cold water, but I could not see any  palms or shady places, just the red sands stretching to the horizon. No roads, no signposts. Travellers would  have to find their way by the stars at night and measure time by the  sun passing overhead. Looking out of the window I began to tell myself a story of the traveller who finds an oasis after days of walking  in no particular direction. He leads his camels to the well, but the well is empty. No water. Is a miracle possible? At dusk the dew falls and he collects a cupful of dew, then another cupful. Tomorrow he will lead his camels out into the desert again.

 

Thirst. The story of my life.