Read The Art of Unpacking Your Life Online
Authors: Shireen Jilla
Connie knew she intended it to be a reassuring comment.
Lizzie continued, âLook at me, I was skinny. Do you remember? What I would do to get that body back.'
In the photo, Lizzie was thin with long straight blond hair, if the same hotch-potch clothes. Lizzie's arms, legs, bust, hips and waist had inflated, while her hair was frizzy from schizophrenic cutting and colouring sessions, ranging from deep mahogany to bright blond.
Thankfully, Connie noticed Katherine taking control of the camera. âYou guys, I need you lounging. Not necessarily on the ground, Lizzie. We don't have to go that far for authenticity's sake.'
She was drawn back to the photo. Connie, Sara, Luke, Matt, Dan and Lizzie on the roof terrace at Harley Place one hazy Sunday afternoon in early September of their second year.
Alan spoke. âWhat is that?'
âHaven't you seen photos of Dan's canary before?' Lizzie asked.
Squashed next to Matt, Dan looked minute and compact in that vivid yellow V-neck jumper he had always worn, an unsubtle attempt to signal to them he was gay. Connie caught Luke's eye. He smiled, doubtless remembering how they had dumped it in a bin outside the student union. She couldn't remember whose idea it was. In those days, their thoughts were interchangeable.
Sara folded her legs over one of the reception's wicker chairs. âI can manage to strike that pose.'
Sara had been perched in one of her many A-line vintage wool dresses, on the only chair on the terrace. She was more curvaceous these days, though still beautiful
with an old-fashioned elegance that, coupled with her sharp wit, was undoubtedly the reason she intimidated men. Her face was like Grace Kelly's: liquid green eyes framed by the dark, permanently questioning curve of her eyebrows and her thick wavy blond hair matching her perfectly white complexion.
Luke caught her eye again. In the photo, their long, lean bodies were parallel; their legs were like chopsticks criss-crossing each other. Luke was tauter then, though he still had the same mid-brown hair cropped close to his narrow head. His brilliant blue eyes made his immaculate face unmissable. Connie felt awkward.
Sara was on to them. âYes, it would be great if you two could possibly stay unwrapped for this photo. Please.'
Connie and Luke laughed lightly.
âOkay, guys, let's take this picture,' said Katherine impatiently. âReady?'
They finally moved together, in position.
âOne, two, three. Say safari.' Katherine scrutinised the photo she had taken. âGreat. One more, for luck. Okay, we're so done here.'
Julian was still looking at the original photo. He could hardly be jealous. It was all so long ago.
Connie, Sara, Luke, Matt, Dan and Lizzie had been residents at Wills Hall in their first year. Connie had a room on the same floor as Lizzie and Sara. Twenty-two years later, their friendships had equity that only time can give.
The Kalahari? Julian looked incredulous when Connie first tested out the idea. Why? Julian needed a strong argument for any plan that diverted dramatically from their norm, which was, Connie was the first to acknowledge, lovely and fortunate: four
teenage children, weekdays in London and weekends in the constituency in Oxfordshire. Julian forcefully pitched for a birthday party at their country house in Adderbury. They could invite everyone they knew, including her university friends.
Connie's grandfather had built this hunting lodge, which was currently a privately owned safari reserve. She had known this fact for years and had never acted on it. She had been so busy with the children. Now Connie yearned to experience what her grandfather had created. Once she had thought of the idea, it was impossible to let it go.
The second time Connie had suggested the Kalahari, Julian gave way. By then, their housekeeper Sally had announced that she was pregnant and Connie wondered whether they would practically be able to go. Julian had suggested the holiday would give Sally some space to pack and get organised for the baby, before leaving to stay with her parents. While they were on holiday, Sally would obviously be in sole charge of the children, so Connie was surprised, but secretly relieved. She wasn't going to employ another housekeeper â she couldn't replace a close friend who had lived with them for over a decade. This was her chance to get away for a week without the children.
Gus approached the group, playing with his brown leather bracelet. âWelcome to the Gae. I'm Gus â if we haven't already met. And I'll be riding out with you this week.'
It was time for them to go. Sara slipped her BlackBerry into her bag and Matt put his arm protectively around Katherine's shoulders.
âI can honestly say that Gae is the most beautiful place on earth. One hundred thousand hectares of the most undisturbed wildlife. George Sanderson's inspirational vision.' Gus nodded towards Connie. She was touched he knew about her grandfather.
âOh, I must tell you. We have been to the Kruger,' Katherine interrupted, âI was covering it for my magazine.'
Gus nodded. Connie wasn't sure whether it was in agreement, or merely a reflex.
âHand on heart that's a zoo compared with what you will see here. We have only six vehicles on the whole reserve. You will experience something like no other safari. Trust me, eh. This evening, we'll take our first proper orientation drive out â see some action with the Southern Pride.'
âSouthern Pride?' Julian interjected.
Connie caught Luke eyeing Julian.
Gus smiled more easily than they did. âThe Southern Pride are our young lions, who were spotted this morning at a water hole.'
Already, Gus seemed able to bind them together in this adventure in a way that Connie had so far failed. His rebellious blond-brown hair had a laid-back shapelessness that reminded Connie of her eldest son, Leo. She wondered how Gus saw them. A lost, pale lot.
âThis is Ben, our tracker. We are lucky to have him, eh?' His slight nod and direct gaze made it clear that âwe are'. âBen was born here on the northern part of the reserve. He worked in the mines, but made it back here a couple of years ago. Nothing
out in the bush escapes him. I trust him with my life.' Even broader grin. âI
have
trusted him with my life.'
Ben gave a slight smile of humble acknowledgement that didn't risk exposing his teeth.
Julian leaned forward politely to shake his hand. âBen, great to meet you. Julian.' His long white fingers were engulfed by Ben's deep coal palm. âWe can't wait to learn from you.'
âBen understands English, but it is his third language. His first is Tswana and we speak in Afrikaans.'
Sara jumped in. âYou speak Afrikaans? Isn't that rather un-PC?'
âIt's still an important way of communicating, eh? Let's go for a drive.'
They hovered politely, clearly no one wanted to be the first to grab the front row of seats. Matt held Katherine's hand, though she nimbly swung a lean leg up to the step above the wheel and into the front seat. Matt struggled to follow her, grunting heavily as he grabbed frantically at one of the vertical metal bars supporting the tarpaulin roof, before lurching into the seat behind the driver.
âI haven't seen my bag,' Lizzie said anxiously. âIt's got my photo albums in it. They're irreplaceable.'
Gus touched her arm gently. âThey'll bring them on afterwards.'
Cameras were removed, handbags placed on the floor. They shifted shoulders away from the sun. Ben sat on the metal tracker's seat out on top of the bonnet. Gus reversed aggressively down into a ditch. The vehicle lurched, fell. Lizzie and Sara clutched at a bar, Connie thumped against Julian, who took her hand.
âAardvarks. Their holes are everywhere,' Gus explained cheerfully. âThe word is Afrikaans for earth pigs. Too right, eh?'
Ben half-inclined his head towards Gus, speaking in low Afrikaans. Gus halted the vehicle abruptly enough for them to be thrown, yet again, towards their hot crossbars. âLook. There.' He swung his arm out to the side. âA roan antelope. After eland, they are the second heaviest of our antelope.'
A single animal with backward sweeping ridged horns moved lazily through the long sour grass, no more than a couple of metres from the vehicle, unperturbed by Gus's driving. Strawberry blonde, it moved with the weight of a large animal, but the grace of a fawn.
The group turned paparazzi, snapping away even when its haunches were barely visible behind a thorny bush.
âLook at the size of its ears.' Gus turned round to talk to them. His reddened tan was shiny in the light. âGreat for detecting danger, eh?'
He started the vehicle again, driving one handed and leaning round. âA roan female. Very rare. Great first spot.'
Julian was smiling. He squeezed Connie's hand.
Gus grabbed his radio. âGus to lodge, over.' After a long pause. âGus to lodge, over.'
A sleepy voice like a faint echo drawled, âAbraham to Gus. Where are you?'
âApproaching the lodge.'
Connie saw the lodge two wide sweeps of road away. It was a collection of a half-dozen squat primitive buildings in the armpit of a sweeping mountain. Great
swathes of this wilderness encircled and enveloped it. Orange stone buildings hid under grass-thatched roofs like Vietnamese farm girls under their conical hats. Connie grinned at the strangeness of their holiday accommodation.
As the vehicle pulled up, a rotund black man in a gleaming white uniform, presumably Abraham, was positioned on a wooden path raised above the thick Namibian sands and grasses that weaved towards the lodge. He held out another plate of iced towels.
âWelcome to Gae,' he said with a broad smile.
Sara hadn't brought her camera to Africa. She hadn't packed her own bags. She had left her cleaner instructions on the sweep of kitchen granite. She only agreed to come earlier this week, just a few hours after walking out of the Bailey on the last day of the trial of Joanne Sutton.
Sara quickly concluded that the holiday was not what she expected. It was her own fault: she hadn't even looked at the website. She hadn't had time. Or the desire. She had been totally focused on the case. Connie, delighted that she could make it and sensitive to how exhausted she must be, had arranged it all.
Sara regretted delegating her desperately needed holiday.
âI feel deeply uncomfortable,' murmured Julian. âThe
Guardian
would have a field day.'
âToo right. Christ, the blatant social inequality. How smug rich do you feel, Julian Emmerson?'
The pounding heat made Sara desperate, trapped by her own instincts. She wasn't going to be the one to impose their white wealthy Western authority on the laid-back smiling Abraham. Lizzie slumped down on the path; Alan sat fanning her; Connie more effectively used her brochure. It took Katherine's New York chutzpah to get them moving. âReally, I do need to lie down, Abraham. Could we go to our rooms please?'
As the others followed Abraham down another exposed path, Sara made a beeline for the nearest conical building. Inside, the open plan sitting room was cosy with cream sofas and cushions and photo books about the Kalahari stacked by a stone fireplace. A spiral staircase led up to a balcony, which was filled with museum-style cabinets. Above, the thatched roof was un-ornamented. The combination of primitive materials and European sophistication reminded Sara of a ski chalet.
Sara's eyes were drawn back outside. She moved on to a veranda sheltered by a flat roof. Out beyond the comfort of circular wicker chairs, the terrace and the swimming pool, white butterflies moved rapidly between the sour grass and wild yellow flowers; countless impala grazed; miniature beige birds dipped their toes into the pool, where the lone swimmer was a vast black beetle backstroking in ever more frantic circles.
Sara was exhausted. Her body started to ache as if she was getting flu. Since the trial ended, she hadn't been able to shake off the tension that cracked through her temples.
âIt's unreal, isn't it?' Connie was at her elbow, her eyes shining with excitement. âI feel proud that my grandfather built it. It's crazy I've never been here before.'
âAmazing.' Sara squeezed her arm. âHow did he end up here of all places?'
âI have no idea. My mother wasn't a keen traveller â his story doesn't interest her. I'm hoping to find out. There's a small library of Kalahari artefacts in the gallery upstairs.'
Connie led her across the swimming pool deck down another wooden path towards three more conical houses. She opened the first heavy wooden door that scraped the stone floor before revealing an elegant sitting room. They looked straight back out to the Kalahari through the sliding glass doors that took up all of the back wall. There was no getting away from it.
Sara felt the tingle of air conditioning. Thank God.
âGirls, hello.' Lizzie had tipped the entire contents of her two bags upside down, straight on to the floor. âCan you believe it? We're sharing a house again, Sara. It's like being back at Bristol.'
Sara had always found Lizzie's disorganisation trying. After everything she had gone through, she needed a relaxing holiday. There was nothing relaxing about this chaos. They might as well be camping.
âI had forgotten that you're such a slob, Lizzie Gibson.' Sara instantly regretted her tone. After all, this was Lizzie. She was one of her oldest friends.
âI know, I have put on three stone. I have a middle-aged spread already. God knows what's going to happen when I hit the menopause.'
âLizzie, don't be silly,' Connie immediately answered, which made Sara smile. Ever-protective Connie.
âDo you remember how skinny I was at university? I was as thin as Connie.'
Sara couldn't remember. Unlike Lizzie, she didn't look back. Whereas Lizzie was always talking about the past â what they looked like, what they said, where they went â Sara had a powerful but short-term memory.