Read Black Bazaar Online

Authors: Alain Mabanckou

Black Bazaar (17 page)

“Mr Hippocratic is desperate, he's the kind of person who only wants to hold your hand, but he doesn't know how to go about it, especially with you. Try to reassure him, to make a friend you can talk to. Remember he's a brother in colour, even if he doesn't know it …”

My pals from Jip's
know how prudent I am when it comes to money. I only spend what I've got and I don't covet other people's possessions. I don't want to owe anything to anyone. I refuse to be tempted by our consumer society. So I don't like loans, whether we're talking simple or compound repayments or by instalment, I don't like credit cards with payments either deferred or not, I don't like overdrafts that pretend they only cost you cents when the more cents stacked up by the banker the more the debt piles up. Cents are a bit like the yeast that makes the dough rise. Behind these loans, behind these cards and these overdrafts there are always shady schemes even if the banker has the friendliest smile in the world and suggests you pop over to the café right opposite his bank's cashpoint. When a professional invites you to join him for a coffee like that, it's so he can have you by the short and afro-curlies. It's not expensive, the café opposite a financial institution, but you're still the one who pays for it in the end. The thing about yeast is that you can't see when it makes the dough rise, you wake up one morning and it's already spilling over the edges. They add on interest for this and that to the coffee
you drank on a day you can't even remember any more, a coffee that wasn't even black and that was served up in something as small as a Coca-Cola bottle-top …

Deferred repayments? Overdrafts? I know what's inside those scalding hot cooking pots and how it all turns out. The men and women who end up paying off the whole debt are few and far between. Or why would the banks push us into placing the rope around our necks instead of them staking all that money on the stock exchange and leaving us alone in our poverty?

I've rumbled their business model: nowadays, poverty has become the best investment for a financial institution, there's no point in buying apartments and putting tenants inside any more, you've got to invest in poverty. Soon you'll be able to buy shares in it on the Paris Stock Exchange, and the shareholders, including the small investors, will make a killing …

I pay my taxes on time because I don't want the bailiffs turning up at my door with a sinister-looking locksmith. There's nothing worse than an ill-timed visit from these people with their long faces who proceed to itemise your hi-fi, your old typewriter bought from a second-hand shop in Porte de Vincennes, your electric toothbrush and your Italian cafetière.

Did I say bailiffs? Their grey suits get up my nose, I'm sure they always wear the same one. Their thick
glasses try my patience, I get the feeling they can stare right into my body, and that they can part my bones to see if I'm hiding a secret stash of money between my growth plates. As for the injunction letters, they stop you from sleeping at night because you can never understand them even if you read them a hundred times with the latest Code of Civil Procedure right in front of you. There's always a last minute article or a subtle qualification, the upshot of which is to make you pay the call-out fee for the sinister-looking locksmith as well as the administrative costs of the bailiff in the grey suit that gets up your nose …

In short, I am a man whose generosity knows no limits. Original Colour didn't understand this. I give money to the beggars who sit in front of the mosque at Château Rouge. Why them? Well, because I prefer them to the beggars who wear me out in the métro because you have to wonder if they aren't laying it on a bit thick. The beggars in the métro are aggressive, they accuse you of being responsible for their misfortune and they think you owe them something. Some of them even go right ahead and insult you.

I came across one on Line 4. He was as old as the prophets in the Old Testament who used to live for longer than we do. It was as if he'd been following me for several stops. Was it because I was well dressed or because I looked like I was a pushover? Maybe. Maybe
not. In any case I slipped him a few coins because he told me he hadn't eaten for four days and four and a half nights. I was happy to have done a good deed. I felt light-hearted and I held it against the other passengers for not smiling at him because a smile is the key to life after all, as our Arab on the corner likes to point out.

When the métro stopped at Etienne Marcel, the guy waved at me as he got off. He didn't realise I was getting out at the same stop. I watched him rush into the nearest Arab on the corner's and grab a bottle of red wine, which he started necking before my eyes. What a swindle, I thought, this guy hasn't put my cash to good use. I won't allow myself to be hoodwinked ever again by beggars in the métro.

So that's why I prefer the beggars at the mosque in Château Rouge. They won't get blind drunk like that. The eye watching Cain will prevent them. They're not aggressive, they don't insult anybody, they don't ask, they wait to be given something. And when you give, there is only the beggar and Allah witnessing this heartfelt act …

* * *

I'm not a fearful person, I don't lack courage or open-spiritedness. It's a question of strategy: a living coward is worth more than a dead hero. This was a very sensible piece of advice given to me by my deceased uncle who had deserted the army camp during the Biafran War
because he wanted to defend his humble being and die a slow death rather than for ideas that'll be obsolete in a few years as Georges Brassens, the singer with the moustache, puts it. I've realised that desertion runs in my family because I too fled military service in my country of origin. Weapons and all that, it's not my thing. In fact, when I spot a man in uniform – even the security guards at a shopping mall or for the cash machine of a local bank – I cross over to the other side, I pick up the pace and I don't look back. I imagine World War Three is at hand, that troops are moving towards Porte de la Chapelle, that the famous Senegalese soldiers will be called to the rescue as they were in the old days. That's why I hate war films, however brilliant the director. The last one I saw was
Saving Private Ryan
. Yes, it was a bit different from
The Longest Day
which was in black and white, but it was still a war film, there were uniforms, weapons and all that, explosives, detonations and human flesh galore and all tightly plotted, but in a proper war there's no plot, there's no close-ups, there's no wide-angle shots, there's no classic dialogue, people shoot themselves and the dead get counted so the historians from the Sorbonne and future generations won't bicker about the exact number of victims.

One of my childhood friends who advised me to do my military service over in Angola – and even to get myself recruited as a soldier – claimed that being in the military was a cushy number because during
wars the soldier has a better chance of survival than a civilian who, on top of everything else, will die without honours. But I love peace, I'd far rather die a civilian and be buried in a communal grave. Someone once recommended if you wish for peace, prepare for war. I don't agree with him. For me the person who wishes for peace must prepare for peace, end of story, the word war is surplus to requirements. And on that subject I have a photo of Martin Luther King somewhere in my suitcases. And in that photo, the black preacher is standing in front of a picture of Gandhi …

But back in the home country they were making us go to Angola to fight the war – they tried to cover up this up by saying we were going there to do our military service, and that we needed to be ready in case our neighbours the Zairians, who are a lot more numerous than us, attacked us to steal our oil, our timber and even our Atlantic Ocean.

It was at the time when we had to help the Angolans who were fighting against their rebel Jonas Savimbi and his men hidden in the maquis. So our government sent our young men to Luanda in their masses. We saw this as a punishment since the children of prominent citizens and other powerful figures in the regime didn't have to go, not them. And Jonas Savimbi's rebels hadn't done anything to me to make me hunt them in the bush where they survived by hunting, gathering and
fishing. Better still, I admired Jonas Savimbi's big beard, his big nose and his green mamba eyes. I was happy when he routed the Angolan armed forces, and I crossed my fingers for him to win the war. Why go and fight against someone you like?

If us plebs were in a hurry to go to Angola it was in the hope of clearing off to Europe from our neighbouring country, which was a den of traffickers working hand in glove with the airlines. All you had to do was raise the tidy sum of three hundred thousand CFA francs, and you could fly off to Europe. I managed to get the hell out for good from Luanda.

I first arrived in Portugal before washing up in Belgium, and then in France with the ID of a long dead compatriot whose brothers had sold his residency card to Angolan traffickers. I go by the surname and first name of this disappeared person, so you'll understand if I haven't revealed my real name up until this point, still less the name of the street where my little studio in the 18th arrondissement is located. Obviously, the day I kick the bucket my little brother who lives in the home country will rush to sell my papers to the Angolans who will, in turn, sell them on to some idiot keen to make the journey to Europe.

But look, I'm in good shape and good health, and my wake isn't set for tomorrow …

* * *

I don't enjoy recalling those times of sacrifice, the work I did well in spite of myself before going to Angola. I would get up in the morning and wait for a truck in front of a bus shelter opposite Studio-Photo Vicky, on Independence Avenue. I would climb up onto the truck together with some other guys. The truck would purr its way along the Avenue, stopping every two hundred metres to pick up more packers. By the time we reached the town centre, day would be slowly breaking. We could hear the waves roaring. The sea was just metres away. The fish sellers in the Grand Market would be parking their old bangers at the entrance to the port and waiting, anxiously, for the return of the Beninese who had the monopoly on fishing the Côte Sauvage. The natives thought it was a humiliating job. That was the sea for you. Fights breaking out between fish sellers, arguments that ended in fisticuffs in the middle of the ocean …

This was where I worked, having failed my baccalauréat in Letters and Philosophy and my father having concluded that school wasn't for me, that in any case it was a factory for turning out the unemployed along with people who wanted to become President of the Republic when in our country if you wanted to become President all you had to learn was how to execute a coup d'état and put your tribe in charge.

The truck would tip us out on the roadside like
sardines, and we would walk up to a barrier where men in uniform would check our identity, confiscate our bags, and only then let us through in single file. And so the hard day's work began, with the unloading of containers watched over by foremen. We were endlessly being accused of stealing objects from abroad in order to sell them on in Trois-Cents. At the slightest theft, the guilty person would be marched to the main customs office where he was stripped before being whipped with barbed wire and then a final settlement would be drawn up making him a debtor for life. With so many objects from all over the world the temptation to steal was there, no doubt about it. But it was the customs officers who indulged in this trafficking, we were just scapegoats. We the subordinates, we the less-than-nothings could only covet those marvels from a distance …

At one o'clock in the afternoon we were finally allowed to stop for a bite to eat. But even during our break, the foremen stuck to us like leeches. On each table they put a monster of a guard with a weightlifter's physique, who chewed big chunks of cassava, had a swivelling eye and was listening out for the slightest whisper. We didn't leave the port until evening, after interminable searches during which each worker was made to wear his birthday suit and put his hands in the air in a hut we nicknamed the “Screening House”. When we stepped outside, we felt as if we'd passed a tax inspection with flying colours.

At night, you had to sleep to be in good shape again for the next day …

* * *

My father would often impress on me that nothing was easy in a man's life. Earning my living at the port had the advantage of toughening me up, and of making me think before spending. And he cited the example of my uncle Jean-Pierre Matété who had spent years humping goods at the Pointe-Noire railway station. That was how he had succeeded in life. He had built a permanent house, owned a water pump, and had electricity. And to complete his happiness, he had gone to find the woman of his life back in the village because, as he reminded us, “women from the town marry the wallet”.

My father had ideas about success that I no longer shared as the years went by. For him, the ideal was to have a job, any job. You had to put money aside for a few years, and then build a permanent house before returning to your birth village to marry a submissive virgin and a good housewife. The money you had saved would be used for the dowry, of course. And indeed this was how he had married my mother. He had told me this story to buck me up, to give me courage for my job at the port …

I can see this man, my father, now. Stocky, kindly looking, he had been lucky enough to reach the second year of
elementary school, which meant he could express himself in French at a level envied by many of his friends. His work as a houseboy for the Europeans in the town centre was a sort of revenge, an opportunity to prove to the old people in the neighbourhood that he had succeeded in life. What's more, he used to label all those old folks as “Australopithecus” because in his view they had closed minds, with no culture or vision about the big problems in our world. He had often thought that serving, obeying, being in the company of, and listening behind the doors of the Whites had raised him to the pinnacle of western civilisation whereby he had an opinion on everything and nothing. As long as the Whites had said something, then it had to be true, and it was impossible to present him with evidence to the contrary, particularly if that evidence came from a negro.

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