
- 416 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Kaleidoscope Song
About this book
Fox Benwell delivers a harrowing and beautifully written novel that explores the relationship between two girls obsessed with music, the practice of corrective rape in South Africa, and the risks and power of using your voice. Neo loves music, and all she ever wanted was a life sharing this passion, on the radio. When she meets Tale, the lead singer in a local South African band, their shared love of music grows. So does their love for each other. But not everyone approves. Then Neo lands her dream job of working at a popular radio station, and she discovers that using your voice is sometimes harder than expected, and there are always consequences.
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Yes, you can access Kaleidoscope Song by Fox Benwell in PDF and/or ePUB format. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Year
2017Print ISBN
9781481477680eBook ISBN
9781481477697South Africa is loud. Listen. Footsteps, engines, radio. The lazy buzzing heat and the singing laughing joy. The slap of palms when business strikes. The dance of it. The movement and the bustle, the spring of young and creaking of the old. The bars. Street corners. Schools. It has an energy in everything, a song all of its own. And itās a song that only works with every part in place. Every discord pushing forward. Every rhythm. Every voice, including yours.
Every voice is different, its pitch and tone and intonation as distinct as the words we choose and how we wrap our mouths around them. But everybody has a voice, and everybody sings. Oh, we all do it differently. Some of us sing quietly, alone, only in the dead of night or in the shower. Some of us sing a cappella, and some stand on a stage beside a band and let the whole world share their song. Some of us, some of us donāt sing at all, like that. We sing with other instruments: Thereās song in stories, and in art, and in getting up before the dawn and putting food onto the table. There are angry songs and sad songs and songs that make you want to dance. But everybody has a song to sing, their own personal story leaked into the world. And mine is one of love.
⢠⢠ā¢
It starts in a bar. One of ours, in the heart of Khayelitsha. Nothing special on the outside, but inside, tonight, two hundred people cram together beneath the corrugated roof and wait, turned out in their Friday Bests, because everyone knows you have to look good for the radio.
Tonight is special.
Tonight the hosts of UmziRadio are here, in this little bar of ours, for us.
Itās everything Iāve ever wanted. Worth the sneaking and the boom-boom-boom fear of my heart as I walked the streets at night, one hand curled into a fist and waiting, just in case. Worth the endless all week talk from my best friend. Worth every moment that preceded it.
It started in a bar.
. . . Or perhaps it really started with the argument.
āMusic isnāt realistic, Neo. Isnāt useful. You pick something else.ā Old words, tired. Hammered out so many times I feel their indentations on my skin. And thisāsmall and quiet as it isāis my rebellion.
Itās freedom.
And yes, I know you shouldnāt go into the dark alone. I know it isnāt safe. All the old words hammered out. But I didnāt mean to be alone. My bestbest friend was meant to be here too. It was her idea.
āWeāll show you what music is really,ā she said, all excited, āthe being there and being seen. Being part of something.ā
āBeing seen by who?ā I smirked, but she stared right back at me, refused to be embarrassed.
āYeah, well, all the better, hey?ā
If you asked Janet, she would tell you how sheās made for Maximillius, that their futures were entwined, that he just didnāt know it yet. And tonight, Max was public property, right here on our ground.
It was going to be perfect. Max and music: Everybodyās happy. But I waited by the BigTall tree, and Janet never came. So tonight, the night it all begins, I sit alone, my back against the bar. And I wonder where she is. Whether I should have waited or gone home. But Iām here, and slowly, as I sit, I let the safewarmfree of this place settle in my gut and the excitement build.
And there is excitement. Chatter. Bottles lifted, smiles and eyes and energy all shared and given free. And thereās a hush beneath it, the black-shirts working to make sure the mics are working and the lightingās right. The desk, hidden in the shadows to the right side of the stage. All businesslike. So radio.
I should feel nervous. Terrified that somebody will see my schoolgirl aura and drag me homeward by the ear. I should feel bad. Rebellious. But all I feel is right.
Janet would be loving this.
āSee?ā sheād say. āEveryone is out tonight. Itās a night to remember.ā
Sheās right. Itās mostly bright young minds and music lovers. Umzi fans. But here and there the old guard stand among us. Shopkeepers and fixers, teachers and those men whose only job is to observe the world. Weāre here together: a community.
Max is just there. Close. The golden voice of radio, right there, and his bright-and-chipper cohost, Sammi, too. Somewhere in the shadows of that desk theyāre waiting to bring us the best of evenings.
Are they nervous?
No. Of course not. Theyāre professionals.
Will we see them? Or will they hide back there all night and let the music have the light?
I wonder whether I should leave my seat, slip closer through the crowds so I can see? Get close enough to see them move the dials on the mixing desk, see Maxās smile and give my best friend something to be jealous of. But here I get a wide view: stage and audience and ambience. Here, itās music, not just technicalities and fandom.
I settle in my seat, breathe in the hot stale happy air. And something shifts, like a movement just outside your vision or a silent hushing in your ear, and suddenly all eyes are on the stage.
You can see it, right? You can imagine? Staring out over the crowd, every single one of you together in the moment.
And then with one sharp crackle-buzz, it starts.
āHelloooooooo, revelersāā
āMolweni!ā Their voices sound strange, fill-you loud and not quite real, but close, inside you, none of the crackled distance of a radio.
āThis is UmziRadio, and tonight in the very first of a new series, we are here to celebrate community. The same community that gave us our great leader, the community that birthed the Umzi legacy. We got promise in this place, and Umzi wants to share it. . . . Now across the series weāll be traveling through Khayelitsha and surrounding areas, bringing you the best of your neighborhood. And tonight, fittingly, weāre starting with the music. Weāre live in Site B, and just look at that crowd.ā
āAhh, yes. Look at all those beautiful faces out there.ā
āSo beautiful. And you know what else is beautiful?ā
āSunsets? Diamonds? Sunday-morning lie-ins?ā
āYes, yes, yes. More beautiful than that . . .ā
He breathes a smile. āThereās only one thing I can think ofāā
āLocal talent,ā Sammi cuts him off. āAnd let me tell you, I was listening to the sound checks earlier and some of these guys are ta-len-ted.ā
āRight? Right. This is R-Talent with Sammi and Max, bringing talent home.ā
āHa-ha-ha, you know how many times we just said ātalentā?ā
āShoā, and thatās one more. Letās bring it, before we wreck this show. You all know how this goes, the musicians are out in force andāā
āYeah . . . Please welcome our first and bravest: Tale and the Storytellers.ā
My bestbest friend was right. This night is perfect. Even before the first band steps into view, I am in love. With everything. The thick, wet air, heavy with anticipation. The richness of voices. The clink and hum and body crush of a live audience so different from school events or Sunday-morning church. With the promise, from Umziās Mr. Sid to us: a handshake, a you-can-make-it. With the mine-ness of it all.
Iām in love with the night even before Iām in love with the girl.
And the band steps up and there she is, and it feels like that moment when the CD player loads your favorite track, and you wait an infinity for the song that makes you whole and breaks you and changes something every single time. All in one forever-second.
There she is. The girl.
Sheās not even opened her mouth yet, just stands there waiting, fingers toying with the mic lead, teasing as she looks away and mutters something to the band, but the whole room is there with her, waiting.
And she knows. Draws it out, longer and longer until youād think weād all drop dead from breathlessness.
But if you watch, you see it coming: swelling inside her, pulling at her muscles, drawing her onto her tiptoes until sheās bouncing with anticipation.
Can you taste it in the air?
And then it comes. She turns, fluid, and her dreadlocks rattle out a brief applause against the mic. Her lips part in an easy smile. And just as I think Iām going to topple right off of my stool into those arms, Tale opens her mouth wider and she sings.
Thereās a story that my mother likes to tell of a girl who married for security. āA home over happiness,ā sheād say. But she never stood beside a stage, looking up into eyes as deep and dark and dangerous as sticking mud. She never heard that voice.
Every note draws me closer. Every word pushes the world further away, until thereās nothing left but her. Her and me. The singer and the schoolgirl. Us. Iād like that.
In an instant, I can picture it, the two of us poring over old CDs on Sunday mornings, her putting discs into my hands and urging me to listen, change my world. Walking along the shore, arms wrapped around each other, her singing quietly into my earāa whispered love songāas she leads the way across the sand. In an instant I map out our relationship, and I am hers.
Hers? I catch myself. She doesnāt even know me. And the world comes flooding back.
I glance at the crowdāall too close, too manyāexpecting torch and pitchforks. That girl, she is not right in the head. But the room is lit only by fairy lights and lanterns, and besides, all eyes are on the stage. Everyone is lost.
I breathe.
Tale winks as she picks up the pace, shimmying just ahead of the drummer, like water slipped right through his fingers.
Does he know? Is this how they rehearsed?
You can almost hear her taunting, Want me? Come and claim me. Pushing him to run.
Right? You hear it too?
Tell me you donāt want it.
The drummer chases, grinning madly at the crowd, but Tale is too quick and drives him faster, faster and wilder with every bar. And before I know it, Iām swept up and chasing too, with all my heart, and thereās laughter in Taleās voice. She knows.
Brighter and louder she climbs with the song, and everybody in the room is right behind her, backs stretched to the heavens and lungs filled with a weightless joy. On and on she soars, higher and higher, until the whole room looks as though we could fly, and then sheās there, right at the top of the song, hovering, and the whole room holds its breath. And as she sings she smiles, and her voice warms, and she sweeps her gaze from left to right across the room and I know sheās meeting every personās gaze. Every single one. Still singing that one note.
I can see her coming for me, and I want it so, so bad. I want to meet her eyes and smile back at her, tell her everything in that one wordless fraction of a second. But Iām not brave, not even a little, and right at the last moment, as I feel her eyes upon my face, I canāt. I twist away.
And I look back up immediately, wishing I could drag her back to me, yell, Iām sorry, Tale, I didnāt mean it, but sheās gone, continued on her way, and three seconds later itās all over.
Silence.
And foot-stamping applause.
āLadies and gentlemen, did I tell you we had talent?ā
āSmokinā hot, guys, smokinā hot.ā
āEish. Tale and the Storytellers. Wow.ā
āSheās good, yah?ā The bartender leans across the counter, close, so I can hear her.
I nod. āYah.ā One word is all Iāve got.
She slams the top off of a Green and holds it out to me. Beer is another of those things my mother would not understand, but the iron roof traps the essence of the crowd, all the heat and sweat and used-old-breath of it, and that sweet, sweet, bitter brew has been sitting in ice for hours. I take it gratefully, and lick the condensation from the rim before pouring half the bottle down my throat.
I turn back toward the stage, watch as Tale disappears into the crowd and the next actāa young boy with a bright-painted ramkiekieāsteps up. He looks nervous and the cr...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Dedication
- Chapter 1
- Chapter 2
- Chapter 3
- Chapter 4
- Chapter 5
- Chapter 6
- Chapter 7
- Chapter 8
- Chapter 9
- Chapter 10
- Chapter 11
- Chapter 12
- Chapter 13
- Chapter 14
- Chapter 15
- Chapter 16
- Chapter 17
- Chapter 18
- Chapter 19
- Chapter 20
- Chapter 21
- Chapter 22
- Chapter 23
- Chapter 24
- Chapter 25
- Chapter 26
- Chapter 27
- Chapter 28
- Chapter 29
- Chapter 30
- Chapter 31
- Chapter 32
- Chapter 33
- Chapter 34
- Chapter 35
- Chapter 36
- Chapter 37
- Chapter 38
- Chapter 39
- Chapter 40
- Chapter 41
- Chapter 42
- Chapter 43
- Chapter 44
- Chapter 45
- Chapter 46
- Chapter 47
- Chapter 48
- Chapter 49
- Chapter 50
- Chapter 51
- Chapter 52
- Chapter 53
- Chapter 54
- Chapter 55
- Chapter 56
- Chapter 57
- Chapter 58
- Chapter 59
- Chapter 60
- Chapter 61
- Chapter 62
- Chapter 63
- Chapter 64
- Chapter 65
- Chapter 66
- Chapter 67
- Chapter 68
- Chapter 69
- Chapter 70
- Chapter 71
- Chapter 72
- Chapter 73
- Chapter 74
- Chapter 75
- Chapter 76
- Chapter 77
- Chapter 78
- Chapter 79
- Chapter 80
- Chapter 81
- Chapter 82
- Chapter 83
- Chapter 84
- Chapter 85
- Chapter 86
- Chapter 87
- Chapter 88
- Chapter 89
- Chapter 90
- Chapter 91
- Chapter 92
- Chapter 93
- Chapter 94
- Chapter 95
- Chapter 96
- Chapter 97
- Chapter 98
- Chapter 99
- Chapter 100
- Chapter 101
- Chapter 102
- Chapter 103
- Chapter 104
- Chapter 105
- Chapter 106
- Chapter 107
- Chapter 108
- Chapter 109
- Chapter 110
- Chapter 111
- Chapter 112
- Chapter 113
- Chapter 114
- Chapter 115
- Chapter 116
- Chapter 117
- Chapter 118
- Chapter 119
- Chapter 120
- Chapter 121
- Chapter 122
- Chapter 123
- Chapter 124
- Chapter 125
- Chapter 126
- Chapter 127
- Chapter 128
- Chapter 129
- Chapter 130
- Chapter 131
- Chapter 132
- Chapter 133
- Chapter 134
- Chapter 135
- Chapter 136
- Chapter 137
- Chapter 138
- Chapter 139
- Chapter 140
- Chapter 141
- Chapter 142
- Chapter 143
- Chapter 144
- Chapter 145
- Chapter 146
- Chapter 147
- Chapter 148
- Chapter 149
- Chapter 150
- Chapter 151
- Chapter 152
- Chapter 153
- Chapter 154
- Chapter 155
- Chapter 156
- Chapter 157
- Chapter 158
- Chapter 159
- Chapter 160
- Chapter 161
- Authorās Note
- Support
- The Discography
- Acknowledgments
- About the Author
- Copyright