SHORTLISTED FOR 2003 THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE
Shortlisted for the Dublin IMPAC Award 2003 'Dangor's writing, and the world he creates with it, exude a vibrant physicality... Dangor's vivid prose, narrative fluency and facility for literary experiment make Bitter Fruit a considerable achievement.'-- Shomit Dutta, Daily Telegraph The last time Silas Ali encountered the Lieutenant, Silas was locked in the back of a police van and the Lieutenant was conducting a vicious assault on Lydia, his wife. When Silas sees him again, by chance, twenty years later, crimes from the past erupt into the present, splintering the Ali's fragile family life. Bitter Fruit is the story of Silas and Lydia, their parents, friends and colleagues, as their lives take off in unexpected directions and relationships fracture under the weight of history.It is also the story of their son Mickey, a student and sexual adventurer, with an enquiring mind and a strong will. An unforgettably fine novel about a brittle family in a dysfunctional society.

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Contents
Part One
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
Part Two
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Part Three
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Part One
Memory
I will teach you that there is nothing that is not divinely natural, ⊠I will speak to you of everything.
André Gide, Fruits of the Earth
1
IT WAS INEVITABLE. One day Silas would run into someone from the past, someone who had been in a position of power and had abused it. Someone who had affected his life, not in the vague, rather grand way in which everybody had been affected, as people said, because power corrupts even the best of men, but directly and brutally. Good men had done all kinds of things they could not help doing, because they had been corrupted by all the power someone or something had given them.
âBullshit,â Silas thought. Itâs always something or someone else whoâs responsible, a âlarger scheme of thingsâ that exonerates people from taking responsibility for the things they do.
Silas watched the man, the strands of thinning hair combed all the way across his head to hide his baldness, the powdery residue of dry and dying skin on the collar of his jacket, the slight paunch, the grey Pick ân Pay shoes, the matching grey socks. The man leaned forward to push something along the check-out counter, and turned his face towards where Silas stood, holding a can of tomatoes in his hands like an arrested gesture. Yes, it was Du Boise. François du Boise. The same alertness in his blue eyes. A bit slower, though, Silas thought, as Du Boise moved his head from side to side, watching the cashier ring up his purchases.
Silas went closer, accidentally jostling a woman in the queue behind Du Boise. Silas watched him pushing his groceries along, even though the cashier was capable of doing this on the conveyor belt. Typical pensionerâs fare. âNo-name brandâ cans of beans, tuna, long-life milk, sliced white bread, instant coffee, rooibos tea, denture cream.
So the bastardâs lost his teeth.
Silas pictured Lydiaâs angry face, were he to return home without groceries. Todayâs Sunday and the shops are open only until one oâclock. Sheâd suppose out loud that sheâd have to do the shopping the next day, because his job was too important to allow him to take time off from work. All the same, he abandoned the trolley and followed Du Boise out of the store. Halfway down the length of the mall, past shop windows that Du Boise occasionally stopped to look into with familiar ease, Silas began to ask himself what the hell he thought he was doing, following a retired security policeman about in a shopping centre? What Du Boise had done, he had done a long time ago. Nineteen years. And Silas had learned to live with what Du Boise had done, had absorbed that momentâs horror into the flow of his life, a faded moon of a memory that only occasionally intruded into his everyday consciousness. Why did it matter now, when the situation was reversed, and Silas could use the power of his own position to make the old bastardâs life hell?
The manâs smell, a faint stench of decaying metabolism, was in Silasâs nostrils, as if he were a hunter come suddenly upon his wounded prey. Du Boise stopped at a cafĂ©, pulled a chair out from under the table, ready to sit down. Silas stood close to him, facing him, and suffered a moment of uncertainty. Shit, this man looked so much older than the Du Boise he remembered. Then he looked â startled â into the manâs equally startled eyes.
âDu Boise? Lieutenant Du Boise?â
âYes?â he said, and looked Silas up and down, his bewildered manner changing to one of annoyance. He sat down, uttering a weary sigh, trying to draw the attention of other shoppers. Look, here was a youngster bothering an old man, a pensioner.
âDo you remember me?â Silas asked.
Du Boise leaned back in his chair, his air of open-armed, Iâm-being-put-upon vulnerability quickly bringing a security guard closer.
âShould I?â he asked quietly, caught the eye of the security guard, then raised himself from his chair and pushed his trolley towards the exit.
Silas watched Du Boise disappear into the bright sunlight, watched the security guard watching him, and then turned away. The rage he felt was in his stomach, an acidity that made him fart sourly, out loud, oblivious to the head-shaking group of shoppers who had gathered to witness a potential scene. The guard spoke into his radio, the cafĂ© owner pointedly dragged the chair back to its neat place beneath the table. Silasâs rage moved disconsolately into his heart.
He drove home and, without saying a word to Lydia, took a six-pack of beer from the fridge and walked up Tudhope Avenue towards the small park. He found a tiny island of green in the bristly grass. A couple of hoboes, smiling generously, moved over to make room for him to sit down, legs sprawled out. He smiled back, but ignored the obvious hint. He placed the opulent, still-sealed pack of beer between his legs, and leaned back on his elbows.
Silas remembered how Lydia had looked up from the paper, then put it aside to watch him as he collected the beer from the fridge, walked out through the door. Her eyes had followed him as he passed the window where she sat, and when he turned to close the gate, he had seen the wariness in her face, and the tiredness. What unspoken trauma had he brought home, she must have been wondering. He felt guilty for a moment, then opened a can and drank, long deep gulps. He paused, burped, heard one of the hoboes remark that âsome people have it good in this new South Africaâ. Silas turned and stared defiantly at them, then continued drinking, slow, slaking swallows, until his eyes swam and his face flushed warmly. The hoboes got up and walked away in disgust.
At ease now, he stretched out his legs, smiled at passers-by. The park, even with its ragged lawn and fallen-down fence, provided some relief from the hot criss-cross of streets. Located on a busy intersection, it reminded him of those unexpected patches of green in the townships, where you could go without fuss. None of that âletâs go to the parkâ kind of ceremony that people so quickly acquired when they moved to the suburbs. Just tiny oases, where you could start off by yourself, a spontaneous decision to seek some solitariness, and the very peacefulness of you sitting on your own, sipping beer, would summon a whole group of bras to join you, all bringing along their own âammoâ. Soon there would be a group of guys squatting in a circle and talking bra-talk, a mellifluous flow of gruff observation and counter-observation, no topic serious enough or dwelt upon sufficiently to maroon the hazy passage of a pleasurable, forgetful afternoon.
No one pressed you for answers or confidences, you soon forgot the problem that had driven you and your pack of beer into the street, you were just one of the âmanneâ, deserving of your privacy. Until a wife or a mother, or a formidable duet of mother and wife, came along to tell you that this was no way to resolve your problems, drinking in the street like a kid, or worse still, like a tsotsi who had taken to petty crime because he couldnât face life. And drinking in public was a crime, petty or not.
The worst was when the cops arrived, all cold-eyed and admonishing, revving the engine of their van until you and your friends slowly dispersed, a herd of dumb, resentful beasts being driven from a favoured waterhole.
Silas cracked open his third beer, lay back on the grass, resting his head on the three remaining cans. The sun pressed down on his eyelids, a hot illumination that would soon make him feel drowsy. This must be the way blind people absorbed light into their heads: raising their faces to the sun, to Ra, god of the blind. Everyone needed real light, not just the artificial, thought-up light of the imagination.
âGod! You are so insensitive!â Lydia would have said, had he repeated this thought to her. An innocuous, light-hearted thought, born in a truly carefree moment. She would punish him for it. Lydia had an unforgiving mind. What went on in her heart these days? Well, heâd find out soon. Have to tell her about Du Boise. Not good at keeping secrets ⊠well, not really. It struck him that he and Lydia spoke very little these days, and when they did, it was about something practical, the car needing a service, the leaking taps, the length of the grass at the back of the house.
And about Mikey. Speaking about Mikey was the closest she came to revealing herself. Not exactly pouring her heart out, but hinting at what was in there, the anxiety eating away at her calm exterior. She was always asking Silas to âinterveneâ, to take an active interest in his son. Hadnât he noticed how Mikey had changed, how he was no longer the easygoing kid they once knew?
âWe all grow up, Lyd, and suddenly the goingâs not that easy!â
Words he would love to say, but dare not.
âTry and speak to him, Silas, try and find out whether heâs got any problems, you know, a girl, drugs, things happen to young people.â
Meaning he doesnât speak to you, is that it?
Someone loomed above Silas, shutting out the sun. Served him right for falling asleep in a public park in the heart of Berea. Steal your shoes off your feet, people say.
âDad?â
He opened his eyes and sat up. Mikey was smiling at him in that condescending way he seemed to reserve for his fatherâs drunkenness.
âDad, we have to be at Jackson and Mam Agnesâs by three.â
This was Lydiaâs doing, sending Mikey out to find him, to humiliate him in public, lead him home, steering him by the elbow. Well, that hadnât happened for a long time. Silas imagined Lydia telling Mikey that his grandmother would be frantic. Mam Agnes was relying on Mikey to drive her to this wedding in Lenasia, because Jackson wouldnât go with her. Mikeyâs grandfather is strange, the way men can be. He doesnât like Mam Agnesâs Lenasia friends, not because theyâre Indian, but because they gossip. More likely because they donât booze, and, in any case, Jackson was probably in his âhigh ninesâ by now.
All of this would have been said in motherly tones, full of nagging intimacy. Mikey would have been reading, or listening to music, or sitting at the back staring into God knows what kind of nothingness. He would have looked at his mother, not pleadingly, simply to convey his annoyance, and then he would have strode out of the house to come and find Silas.
The way he looks at me, Lydia says. As if he were the adult and I the child.
Mikey extended a hand and helped Silas to his feet. It was a comradely gesture, Silas knew, a warning to expect nothing but cold scorn from Lydia when they got home. He farted loudly as he rose to his feet.
âChrist, Dad!â Mikey said, and walked away.
Silas didnât mind this anger. It brought the kind of understanding he needed and knew Lydia would not offer, a recognition of his ordinariness, his capacity for weakness, it drove the anger out of him, replaced it with a sense of fulfilment that was light, somehow, even if it was accompanied by a mortal belching and the sly emission of pungent farts.
Simple things that helped ordinary people to cope with life. Lydia asked Mikey to drive, as if to demonstrate the need for a âman around the houseâ. Usually, she wanted to drive even when Silas was sober. Women are better at these things, we donât have egos to parade. Mikey, who had only recently obtained his licence, drove now, fast and resolute on the freeway, slow and careful when they took the off-ramp to Soweto. An afternoon haze of smog turned the sun to brass. When they pulled up outside Jackson and Mam Agnesâs house, Silas said he would wait in the car. The vehicle wouldnât be safe if left unguarded, and, in any case, âYouâre on night duty and we canât stay long,â he said to Lydiaâs disappearing back. Soon, Jackson, his face burnished the colour of dark wood by a day of drinking in the sun, swaggered out through the gate, his oversized shorts flapping around his sturdy legs.
âSielas, Sielas, theyâll steal you along with the fucken car,â Jackson said, delighting in the musical tone this emphasis gave Silasâs name. âWhy donât you come in and have a drink?â Silas went inside to have a beer with his father-in-law. Mam Agnes gave the two men chiding looks, while Lydia became stony-faced. Mam Agnes, dressed âlike the queen bee in dragâ, according to Silas, made some remark about men who did nothing but drink beer all day, then handed Mikey the keys to Jacksonâs car (an old but stately Rover that âneeded a slow handâ, in ...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half-title page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Contents
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