Please Do Not Disturb Read online




  Please Do Not Disturb

  BY THE SAME AUTHOR

  Terms & Conditions

  Please Do Not

  Disturb

  ROBERT GLANCY

  For Mum and Dad

  Contents

  By the Same Author

  The Fox

  Bwalo Radio

  Charlie

  Hope

  Sean

  Josef

  Jack

  Charlie

  Hope

  Charlie

  Josef

  Charlie

  Hope

  Jack

  Josef

  Sean

  Josef

  Hope

  Josef

  Jack

  The Hen

  Bwalo Radio

  Charlie

  Charlie

  Jack

  Charlie

  Josef

  Sean

  Charlie

  Josef

  Charlie

  Sean

  Hope

  Josef

  Charlie

  Charlie

  Sean

  Jack

  Sean

  Charlie

  The Cockroach

  Bwalo Radio

  Jack

  Hope

  Charlie

  Josef

  Jack

  Josef

  Sean

  Josef

  Sean

  Jack

  Josef

  Sean

  Josef

  The Big Day

  Bwalo Radio

  Charlie

  Josef

  Charlie

  Hope

  Sean

  Charlie

  Sean

  Hope

  Charlie

  Hope

  Charlie

  Sean

  Hope

  Charlie

  Hope

  Charlie

  Sean

  Hope

  Acknowledgements

  A Note on the Author

  Terms & Conditions

  THE FOX

  Bwalo Radio

  Welcome, beautiful people of Bwalo. Cocks crowing, sun shining, maize rising and DJ Cheeseandtoast here to start your day the Bwalo way. If you’re listening to me, that makes you the luckiest man, woman or goat in the world, because you’re living right here in the sweet soul of Africa. Ha! Our countdown continues to the Glorious Day of Our Splendid Independence, when King Tafumo, warrior of warriors, King of Kings, talks to his people and we, with one heart and one voice, shall rejoice, rejoice – rejoice! In honour of the auspicious occasion our gracious sponsor, Life cigarettes, is selling a limited-edition pack that comes with five free cigarettes. Yes yes! Life are grown and made in Bwalo. So buy Bwalo, smoke Life, and always remember: never marry a woman with bigger feet than you. Ha! Now here to pleasure your ears is the new song, ‘Kwacha!’, by Bwalo duo Lost & Found. The Ngwazi is glorious!

  Charlie

  He appeared the day our hotel vanished. Adults always went on about how the hotel was invisible. Made no sense to me. Besides the King’s palace, our hotel was the biggest building in town. But Dad said it was all about the way you looked at things. And when they finished painting the hotel again, I understood. Under the burst-yolk sun it shone brand new and when I squinted it evaporated into mist, the sign suspended in haze: Hotel Mirage.

  She was repainted because the biggest day of the year was approaching, the Glorious Day of Our Splendid Independence. Which most of us just called the Big Day. A day when the King spoke to his nation, a day when everyone from across the country came to celebrate, a day when people sang, danced and polished their skin with Vaseline. A day, Dad said, when everyone made a big hoopla out of a wee fracas.

  The day celebrated booting out the men who stole Bwalo. When I asked how you steal a whole country Dad said, there’s nothing an Englishman can’t steal. When I asked if we’d be kicked out, Dad said, they never kick out the Celts, but Mum said, yeah right, and when I asked what she meant they told me to stop asking so many bloody questions.

  I stood with Dad and Ed at the front of the hotel and watched as the guest arrived. When the taxi pulled up, the passenger stumbled out, and Dad whispered through his smile, ‘Steel yourselves, men, we got a live one here.’

  Dipped head-to-toe in khaki, the man wore what Mum called the UWA, the Uniform of White Africa, which she always said as if smelling a fart, Uwwwa.

  In the posh accent Dad put on for guests, he said, ‘Welcome to the Mirage. We’re honoured to have you stay and . . .’ The man cut Dad short. ‘I reserved a room, eh.’

  People here put eh at the end of sentences. I used to do it but Mum made me stop, eh.

  ‘Great stuff,’ said Dad. ‘I’m Stuart, hotel manager, our concierge, Ed, and my boy, Charlie, he’s our hotel mascot.’

  Dad always made that joke. It wasn’t funny but Ed and Dad laughed every time. And the guests did too. This man didn’t. He just stared, until Dad said, ‘And you are?’

  At first the man didn’t reply. He just stood there like he’d forgotten his name, time stretching like chewing gum, until he finally said, ‘Willem.’

  Willem means William in Africa. Covered in copper freckles and with a big body but skinny legs, Willem was built like a badly baked gingerbread man. I followed him into the lobby, staring so hard at the sweat-lake on his back that I nearly bumped into him when he stopped, looked up as if checking the fans, then fell flat on his face.

  ‘Don’t just stand there,’ Dad shouted. ‘Help the man, call Dr Todd.’ But from the floor, Willem moaned, ‘No doctors,’ then slowly got to his feet, wobbly as a calf.

  Dad said, ‘Let’s get you to your room, shall we,’ and helped Willem to the lift.

  As Ed gathered the bags, I asked, ‘Do you think he’s a celebrity?’

  ‘Maybe so,’ said Ed. ‘I am hearing celebrities are often drunk in the mornings.’

  That’s all the town talked about these days: celebrities. The adults used to talk about how Bwalo was a broken nation. When I asked how you break a whole nation, Dad said, it’s complicated, which was what he said when he didn’t know the answer to stuff.

  When I said I’d put it into my school project so my teacher could explain, Dad said it was probably best to leave it out. But what else can I write about? Nothing happens here. Willem falling on his face is the only thing that’s happened all boring summer long. And since the King announced celebrities were coming, no one even talks about the drought or the broken-nation stuff any more; all anybody ever talks about is celebrities.

  So when Sean arrived and asked who the fainting giant was, I replied, ‘Ed thinks he’s a celebrity because he’s drunk in the morning,’ and Sean said, ‘That’d make me more famous than Madonna,’ and laughed a lot, because Sean loved his own jokes.

  ‘I thought you could use this,’ he said, and handed me an awesome Dictaphone. ‘This is amazing, Sean! Can I honestly have this?’

  ‘All yours, chief.’ Then he walked off to his favourite place in the world: the bar.

  When Dad crossed the lobby, I ran after him to show him my Dictaphone. But I stopped at the office door when I saw Dad and Mr Horst bent over, staring at the radio as if it were a television. TV was banned because, Dad said, the King was worried freedom of speech would spread like fire giving people the impression they had rights. Also the Internet was so blocked that most searches returned zero results. Dad called Google Frugal because it gave so little back. The King owned all media, bar the BBC, which, Dad said, snuck in like a subversive whisper. And Dad and Mr Horst were listening to the radio as if it were doing just that: whispering secret things to them. Mr Horst wore the UWA: wool s
ocks pulled up, khaki shorts, and a gold Benson & Hedges pack winking from his top pocket. And in his charcoal suit, Dad looked like Mr Horst’s skinny shadow. Dad scratched his beard, which he did when thinking, and Mr Horst scratched his balls, which he did all the time, as the BBC said: ‘This is the BBC World Service . . .’

  That posh voice travelled thousands of miles from a place where Mum and Dad were born but rarely talked about beyond how much it bloody rained. I’d never been but it sounded like a fairy-tale land – The United Kingdom – even though postcards from there were of punks in safety-pinned clothes. Normally the bbc reported British problems like strikes, taxes and bad weather. Things that meant little to a boy brought up in a country of black people, tea and sunshine. But today the radio said: ‘ . . . the international community is imposing sanctions against the Eastern African nation of Bwalo in light of the suspicious disappearance of Finance Minister, Patrick Goya . . .’

  I knew this was important by the way Mr Horst gave his balls a sharp yank. Bwalo is so small that we are almost impossible to find on a map. Yet here we were, on the BBC no less. It was exciting being on it but scary too, because the BBC only talked about bad things. I made a noise and, quick as a lizard, Dad flicked off the radio as Mr Horst turned and shouted, ‘Charlie! It’s just you. Howzit?’ But before I could reply, he turned back to Dad, ‘Right, Stu, time to put my hotel on the map, eh. Get her spick and span.’ Then, touching the windowsill, Mr Horst looked at his finger and said, ‘Dust. That’s the problem here; dust everywhere. Worse than bloody Rhodesia.’

  Mr Horst still called Zimbabwe Rhodesia, even though Rhodesia is its old name. Dad said that was because Mr Horst fought hard to keep it Rhodesia, therefore it was his right to keep calling it that but Mum said it was just because Mr Horst was an arsehole.

  Soon as we heard the tick-tack of heels, Horst snapped up straight as a mongoose. Mum said Marlene would fall on her face if she didn’t balance a fag in one hand with a whisky in the other. Luckily she had them both in hand today, leaning on the door, saying, ‘Hiya, boys.’

  Horst hissed, ‘We’ve the Commissioner tonight and you’re already half-cut.’

  Half-cut means completely pissed. Marlene just shrugged, then opened her eyes crazy-wide, pointed at a new painting of Horst on the wall and squealed, ‘Is that it! Is that what you paid a bloody fortune for? Sat all those dry-ball days for. Ha-Jesus Eugene.’

  ‘What do you know about art, woman,’ Mr Horst shouted. ‘And how many times have I told you not to wear those heels, you’ll pockmark the parquet. It cost me a bloody fortune.’

  ‘Parquet, my arse,’ Marlene sneered and tick-tacked away, as if really pushing her heels into the soft wood. Horst turned bright red then ran after her.

  Dad just shook his head and I noticed that Mr Horst had hung his picture higher than the official portrait of King Tafumo: that was against the law. I was about to warn Dad that Mr Horst would get in big trouble when Mum arrived, carrying fresh sheets stacked like pancakes.

  ‘Mum, look what Sean gave me. Cool, hey? Can I interview you guys?’

  Before they could say no, I hit record – Click! – and asked, ‘So Mum and Dad, when the BBC said Patrick someoneorother disappeared is that like our hotel vanishing?’

  Dad mumbled, ‘It’s complicated,’ but Mum said, ‘Here’s a nice story for you, sweetheart. First time Innocence bathed you, she slathered you in Vaseline so you were slippery as a wee seal. I told her white kids didn’t need Vaseline. You were so adorable.’

  ‘Mum!’

  Hope

  I wiped his sealed anus. Impotent hole hadn’t shat in years but he gets his phony wipe. Keeping up appearances, I suppose. Who we’re keeping them up for, I don’t know. Can’t even remember if he demanded the wipe or if it’s something I fell into the habit of. Habit’s all that holds us together. I disposed of the real waste, swapping his colostomy, draining his catheter, and all the while he admired himself in the mirror. Vanity dies last.

  In the bedroom, I got him dressed to go nowhere. Helped him into a suit that fitted him back when he was a big man but now he swims in it. His wardrobes were packed with clothes that fitted him fine, lines of black and white suits hanging like ironed zebras, so I whispered, ‘Why do you insist on wearing this big old thing?’

  Eyes blank as buttons. Shouldn’t talk to him like that but when he’s off in his own world I do it to keep myself company. Helped him back into bed. Pushed a needle into an arm so deflated the plumb drip seemed to be sucking him dry. That, I know all about. I used to think about me. Now I’m the empty husk thinking only of others. Whittled away. Strange to think there was a time when I’d happily have hollowed out my heart for you.

  From the window I spied on the Mirage and her pool stared back at me. With her fresh coat of paint she shone as brilliantly as she had on the original Big Day. On that first day, through the stirring dust of celebration, a name travelled on the tongues of a new nation: Tafumo. The hero who slayed our oppressors and granted us freedom. And on that day, with dancing and singing all around us, the air thick with the scent of cooked meats, my Josef got down on bended knee, a small ring in his shaking hand, and our love resonated with the joy of the nation.

  Everything was ripening: our nation was born, portraits of Tafumo were hung in shops and houses, to watch over and watch his people; I became Tafumo’s nurse and Josef was promoted to head of his department, the youngest man to hold the position.

  We honeymooned at the Mirage. Unusual for locals to stay there, as it was mainly expats and tourists. Part country club, part hotel, it was a world inside our world, rich pulp within the coconut, with its idling fans and uniformed staff. We must have looked so out of place. Josef in his only suit, a slight flare to the leg; me in my best dress. We stayed in the presidential suite, formerly called The Livingstone, but renamed The Tafumo. Above the four-poster bed a mosquito net rippled in the breeze whispering in from the window that captured a view of the capital: from scruffy markets along Victoria Avenue weaving its way up to Tafumo’s new palace on the hill. We rarely left the room, embarrassed, I suppose; scared we’d be mistaken for staff.

  Catching my reflection – Who’s that old woman? – shocked me into the present. Turning away from the fool in the window, I switched on the radio to hear the dim echo of a once bright day: ‘. . . and for the very first time, celebrities will be attending our Big Day. Superstar Truth is coming all the way from the US of America. Yes yes! He’ll be right here in Bwalo, sweet soul of Africa, to celebrate our greatest day of independence. Glorious Ngwazi . . .’

  The glorious Ngwazi was snoring. He was weak today but I was wise to his game. He didn’t fool me. He wasn’t done yet. African rulers are often likened to lions but Tafumo was a crocodile, lying static for weeks, a trap pulled taut, recharging his rage. I checked his pulse and made sure his drip was dripping. Then I sat, listening to crickets and air conditioners hum the tune of wasted time, until a nurse relieved me.

  I walked carefully down the buckled corridor of the staff quarters. This once magnificent wing had been left to fall to ruin. Built too close to a baobab tree, its roots were warping the floors into gentle waves as its trunk tenderly nudged the walls towards collapse. When I got to my room, I swapped my nursing shoes for trainers and chose a diamond necklace, a gift from a time when Tafumo still rained favours on his staff.

  My trainers squeaked as I made my way along the corridor into the bright gleam of the kitchen, where Chef had my breakfast in a bag. ‘Fresh guava for you today, Hope.’ He had to shout over the clatter of the kitchen, the relentless engine of the palace, this stainless-steel room with copper pots dangling like deformed fruit. In the centre of all the pale metal sat a scruffy wooden table, where Essop and Chef were drinking tea. They made an odd couple. Chef in his starched whites, hat rising like a puff of smoke; Essop in his crumpled suit, bald head garlanded by grey hair. All week the palace had echoed with whispers of Patrick’s disappearance. I could see in Essop’s eyes th
at he was thinking of him, however, with staff swirling around us, we shared a smile but held our tongues.

  I thanked Chef and walked out the kitchen door, through the palace gates, then off the road, following the path that ran like a dirty ribbon to my tree. Sitting in its shade, I ate, watching the reflected dots from my necklace dance on the soil. I scrunched up the bag, used my knife to scratch a scar into the bark, shoved the bag into the hole in the tree and returned for my next shift.

  Sean

  The phone woke me, wailing bloody murder in a far-off room. Straining to recall the night before, I trawled my tender brain but snagged not a thing. The phone stopped. Praise be for small mercies. Before moving, I checked my condition: it wasn’t good. Sprawled on the sitting-room floor, concrete cooled my face as rivers of ants dined on some sticky treat coating my hand. Summoning all my strength I stood up and prayed a shower would wash away the horror. With head hung low, the water working its mild miracle, I grabbed the soap. It felt odd, soft, and there, slopped on my palm, sat a toad. Disgruntled, as if woken from a sweet sleep. Well, I know the feeling, pal. A toad. Christ. First bad sign of the day.

  I dropped the toad out the window, got dressed, and discovered the second bad sign in the cabinet where I was digging for Panadol. Stella’s pills, with two days unpopped, staring at me like evil eyes. My heart did a jig. No kids, no way! Only good thing about not having sex was, bar an Immaculate Conception, Stella couldn’t be pregnant. Not by me anyway. Cold comfort for my aching balls. Two bad signs and they travel in threes. Pocketing the pills as ammo for later, I then found real medicine: a spliff, the only cure for a hangover of this magnitude. As I closed the cabinet I flinched from my reflection of burst veins, putty cheeks and general disrepair and went in search of coffee.

  The kitchen was a pure disgrace. Surfaces furry with dust, flies wallowing in rotten food. Stella had fired the cook; he was insolent apparently. She was the queen of insolence, so I suppose if anyone could spot it . . . I made a coffee, sat on the kitchen stoop, took a drag of spliff and, just as the sweet buzz settled in, the phone whipped it away.