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Inheritance. Part 4

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'My client requested the change. You will see her signature, and mine and another witness to the deletion.' I admit I took a small pleasure in pointing out the detail. 'And the deletion duly dated,' I added. Simone said I was outrageously smug. Perhaps I was, but the fellow riled me. I held out my hand for the will and had to wait several stormy moments before he complied.

Jeanie put a comforting hand on his, then turned to me. 'He's had a hard time recently. The plantation is damaged; there is much to do.'

Such a small woman so fragile to look at. And yet there was a quality in her that I found hard to pinpoint. As if a fine bright line of unbreakable steel ran through her.

Roper calmed at her words. He was a strange man. Simone declared he needed Jeanie and loved her in a possessive kind of way. I only saw him as a self-centred bully.

'But can't you see?' he said to her, pleading for her to take his part.

'It's alright,' she said calmly. 'Father has inherited. It's all in the family.'

She might have been speaking to a child.

Elena Back in Wellington, I had reports to write and meetings to attend. Project Jeanie had to take a back seat for a week or two. I thought about her from time to time though. During the slow drone of departmental meetings I would gaze out the window of our high rise office block, watch the cold waves driving up the harbour and think back to those warm, scented months in the islands when we became inseparable friends. Or were we? Obviously not, if Jeanie was prepared to break our friendship so thoroughly. Now that I had found her, I needed to know. My mind kept drifting back to those days, looking for clues.

I remember seeing Jeanie for the first time at my impossible Great Aunt Gertrude's welcome party. What a charade! Gertrude had never invited Tiresa, Teo or me to anything before. Not once, although our family home was only a few miles away on the coast. This time we were invited simply to view her triumph the discovery of a family to inherit her precious plantation. Everything was arranged to make clear the divide between European status Samoans and those of us who live fa'asamoa. Gertrude even removed the flower Jeanie had put behind her ear! Teo saw that too and egged me on to welcome her with a little siva. Provocative, but what the h.e.l.l. (Hamish would call it mischievous!) And Jeanie loved it! Her big eyes alive at the sight of the two of us swaying and whooping. She was itching to join in, it was written all over her, the way her arms twitched and her feet shifted. I knew immediately that we would get on well. What was it about her? Her size, I suppose, was the first thing you noticed. So small and fine boned. I thought of a trim and delicate wading bird. Then her eyes large and dark, not Chinese like her father's, but a little pointed in the outer corners. Bright teardrops lying on their sides, with a fine dark brush line above. Such beautiful eyebrows! I don't think she knew how lovely she was. I never saw her preen or flirt. But we got on well from that first day. Our physical difference was no barrier quite the opposite. I think she enjoyed my size and solidity, as I loved her delicacy.

Gertrude, her old, blue eyes cold as New Zealand winter, led the newcomers away towards a group of palagi. My great aunt belonged back in the nineteenth century was born in it and never progressed out into the modern world. It made me mad to see the way she seated Tiresa and our patele on the mats with the unt.i.tled people. But then later Jeanie came and sat with us. She wanted to know more about the Samoans at the party, what we did, who we were.

Teo looked away, wouldn't answer. He tended to smoulder, back then, in the presence of palagi. Silly boy. He had spent the last eight years at an expensive boarding school in New Zealand, perfectly happy to socialise with well-heeled white boys, but as soon as he was back in the islands, his old inherited prejudices took over again.

I dug Teo sharply in the ribs. Jeanie wasn't to blame for our family's misfortunes (twelve dead in the flu and two gunned down by New Zealand military on that infamous day during the Mau). Teo frowned at me and turned his back on Jeanie. My mother clearly approved, patted his thigh, which made him turn back again to us! Oh what a mixture he was then, my young brother! Wayward, spoiled by our mother, full of half-baked political resentments, yet under all that, a sweetness that one had to hope would eventually come to the fore.

Soon we were all three chatting and laughing. Jeanie had that special quality of being able to draw people easily into conversation. She was genuinely interested in the people she met, in Samoa's history and customs, in the politics of Samoa's new independence. My ridiculous brother forgot all his resentment and put on a great show of charm, boasting about his political science degree, offering to take her on a tour of the island in his new car, laughing in his high, silly way and slapping his thigh. Unfortunately, he was very attractive to women. Tiresa was about to lead him away when Jeanie's wretched husband did the same to her.

'You are being discourteous to Gertrude,' he said, in a loud hectoring voice. 'Come and take your proper place.' No word of greeting to us. Jeanie smiled her apology and went with him a relief to Tiresa, who had Teo earmarked for an important marriage and wanted no hint of flirtatious behaviour to be witnessed by the patele.

Proper place, he said! Jeanie had been sitting among high-born Samoans. Stuart Roper would have to learn a few manners if he was to settle in the islands. We were an independent country now and fa'asamoa was the proper way of life.

Our patele, of course, made great play of the hurricane being G.o.d's punishment on all sinners, as witnessed by the fact that the LMS pastor's house collapsed and his survived. A triumph for the Catholics. My mother, Tiresa, joined in the orgy of incriminatory p.r.o.nouncements, solemnly claiming that Gertrude's death was a punishment from on high for her shameful treatment of her own 'aiga at the feast.

'She ignored our pule, seated us in a position not befitting. So!' Tiresa truly believed this. She loved to make spooky proclamations about the wrath of G.o.d. Naturally, as a devout churchgoer and generous contributor to the patele's lavish way of life, she expected the Lord's wrath to mirror her own.

'It was no accident the banana palm fell just then,' she said. 'The finger of G.o.d struck it down in punishment!' Tiresa wagged her own finger at me, to make sure I took note (and renounced my sinful ways).

It had taken two days for news of the accident to reach us. Our own village was badly hit seven fale had lost their roofs, all the falela'iti'iti'i collapsed into the lagoon, their fragile rickety walkways now an undignified heap of broken poles rising from the shallow water like the bones of a beached whale. We would have to go back to relieving ourselves in the bush and that could create its own problems. Already I was designing an education programme. But in those first days no one had time to worry about problems in other areas. We were cut off anyway no radio, roads blocked. Nearly the entire banana crop for our village was gone. We were busy picking what we could, storing the green bunches in pits. An old matai said they used to make masi a sort of fermented, rotted banana mush, which would last months in the ground, but none of us fancied the sound of it. How were we going to feed all the families? Most of the breadfruit trees were gone too. The taro survived, but banana and breadfruit were the staple.

On the third day my cousin Samasoni battled his way down through our devastated banana plantation in search of me. He arrived, sweating and scratched, with the news that Gertrude was desperately ill and needed a doctor. Would I come?

'Things are bad up there,' he whispered. 'A person like you should be there.' This whetted my curiosity, as he knew it would.

What a nightmare trip back inland! The track had virtually disappeared under a tangle of vines and fallen debris. Suffocating damp rose from the ground clogging our lungs. I had to stop often to lean against a tree and cough. We could have been breathing pure water. Samasoni went ahead, hacking with his bush knife, but, even so, it took three aching hours to cover what should have taken a quarter of that.

Gertrude lay still on her bed, hardly raising a hump under a snowy sheet. The housegirl waved a fan back and forth over her body. Perhaps stirring the heavy air brought some relief, but I doubted it. The old lady looked dead. Waxy pale, scarcely breathing. I took her pulse. It was there, fluttering weakly like a trapped moth. The arm was bruised from shoulder to wrist and badly swollen below the elbow. Surely broken.

Stuart Roper sat slumped in a chair in a corner of the room. He looked dreadful unshaven, his clothes dirty, face haggard. A rifle was propped against his chair, which I found odd. Had he been threatened? Surely he need not keep discipline with a gun?

'What happened?' I asked.

He spoke belligerently. 'A clump of banana trees came down on her in the storm.'

'Good heavens!' I said. 'What on earth was she doing out in all that?' Perhaps I spoke too sharply. Of course I meant 'How could you have let an old lady go out in a hurricane?'.

He stood up, facing me like a cornered animal. 'She had her own reasons I suppose. How would I know? She didn't say. Why does everyone blame me?'

There was fierce anger in his words, but something desperate too. I turned back to the old lady; lifted the sheet. No external bleeding, but other parts of her body were badly bruised too. I suspected broken ribs. What could I do? I had pethedrine with me and could have injected it, but the drug might well stop that tiny heartbeat.

As I stood, undecided, Gertrude opened her eyes. Her breath came in shuddering rasps. 'Stuart,' she whispered.

He came forward eagerly, touched her hand, quite gently, I thought.

But Gertrude's gaze was pure hate. 'd.a.m.n you,' she croaked, 'you were supposed to be helping me.' And then added, mysteriously, 'Hamish was quite right.'

Those were her last words, spoken with her last breath.

Stuart knelt by the bed and cried. He was drunk we could all smell the whisky on him. I thought at the time he was genuinely grieving; perhaps he was. But looking back now, I would not grace him with fine feelings. I imagine he was crying for himself his shame.

It turned out Gertrude had been pinned for six hours under a collapsed clump of banana palms in her back yard while the storm raged and lashed. Being old and weak she could not pull free, but any able-bodied man could have rescued her. By the time a worker found her, she was close to death. Samasoni told me the sorry story. He had no love for the old lady she was as sparing with her praise as she was with her purse but he had a certain respect for his boss.

'No way to die,' he told me sadly. 'Alone all that time. I heard that banana come down and thought no more of it. Trees were crashing everywhere. But where was the son-in-law? How is it possible he didn't check on her?'

Stuart had stayed the night in Gertrude's house with her. Or, obviously, without her. The stupid or criminally negligent fellow had found Gertrude's supply of imported whisky and drunk himself silly. He was still incoherent when the plantation workers brought her in, dripping wet and b.l.o.o.d.y, only semi-conscious.

It soon got out that Stuart Roper had been d.a.m.ned by the old lady's dying words. Differing and increasingly bizarre versions of Gertrude's death spread like a plague. Stuart Roper was determined to inherit the plantation so had deliberately left her to die; Stuart had suggested she go out to check on her precious sacks of beans, then shut her out of the house; Stuart had pushed her down the stairs and then disguised his actions by cutting down a banana tree and dumping it on her.

Drunk and negligent were just as culpable in my book.

We buried her next to her husband behind the house. Hardly anyone came the roads were too difficult, and let's face it, Gertrude had not been loved. John O'Dowd and Jeanie managed to drive up with Hamish and Simone. Poor John wept like a child to see his aunt dead. It was touching he'd only known her a few weeks, but clearly she meant a great deal to him. Such a shame. Maybe he could have sweetened the old dragon in her last years with a bit of family devotion. All her babies died in the flu epidemic. John said a few words and the palagi minister read the rites. A short, insignificant sort of burial, by Samoan standards. Sad.

Stuart Roper stayed on in the house, alone, drinking. The workers continued to clean up the plantation, but they took their orders from Samasoni, not Stuart.

I kept wondering about Jeanie. Surely living with her husband must be a nightmare?

A few weeks after the hurricane, Teo announced that he was sick of clearing away debris too depressing! He had the idea to take Jeanie and her father out to see the archaeological site near our village. They should know something of our past, he said, if they were going to settle here. Teo would have had other reasons an attractive girl; a chance to make an alliance if the inheritance went against us; but he wasn't completely wayward and wild as some of the elders would have it. He was pa.s.sionate about the dig, and not only because the young archaeologist was an attractive palagi woman. He had a genuine interest in what our past might have been. His views often flew in the face of the elders who offered rather ridiculous explanations for the existence of the great stone mounds. And being Teo, he didn't hesitate to point out the flaws in the views of our patele and our most senior matai. Which didn't help Tiresa's promotion of her son for a good t.i.tle.

Teo was in Apia with the truck, having just delivered a small number of banana to the wharf. The harvest this time was pitiful. The ship might not even arrive next month, some said, if the crop didn't increase. But how could it increase? The situation worried me. My work would suffer too, if shipments weren't regular. Hurricane relief supplies were coming we were told, but where were they?

Teo drove up Leifiifi Road to the hospital at Moto'otua, where I had an office, and danced around in the drive until I noticed him. What a show-off he was in those days!

'Come out to the dig!' he shouted. 'Let's take Jeanie and her father.'

No mention of the husband, I noticed. It turned out Teo knew Stuart was up at the plantation. No one would want to be crammed in the truck with that boor. He had ruffled feathers on more than one occasion already with his insensitive remarks and loud views. I had been invited to a tennis afternoon with some of the palagi community and was partnered with the wretch. He cheated blatantly! Had to win at all costs. In front of everyone's eyes called b.a.l.l.s out that were clearly in; abused me for missing a shot when the ball was in his area of the court; argued with the other pair over silly little details. Lord, it was embarra.s.sing. How that nice Jeanie came to marry him was a complete mystery. I wanted to find out.

'I'll come,' I shouted through the mosquito screens. 'Give me half an hour to finish this report.' In Samoa such impulses are possible. 'And tell them to bring a lavalava. Or togs. We'll go to Papaseea afterwards!'

Teo gave me the thumbs up and headed down to the Ropers' place. He came roaring back, horn blaring, with Jeanie. No father. Not very proper, especially with half the hospital staff and a good number of the patients watching through the screens.

'I've brought a picnic,' said Jeanie, smiling to see me. 'Sandwiches, some cake, mangos and pawpaw. And lime juice. Will that do?'

She was learning our ways fast. Every occasion needs a feast! I liked this girl immensely. Evidently the father was busy with a Samoan lesson.

'If we are to make our lives here he wants to be fluent in the language. Hamish is teaching him,' Jeanie said. She grinned, 'But I think also he knows he would not enjoy b.u.mping over rough roads and climbing around an archaeological site in the heat.'

'You won't mind?'

'Oh, no. Simone was right two weeks and I seem to be acclimatised. Already I find the air-conditioning inside MacKenzies uncomfortable.'

She was proud of her easy adaptation to our climate; enjoying the sights and sounds. On that bouncing trip into the site, she chatted about her father, her training as a nurse (that interested me! I resolved to use her), her excitement over this new turn her life had taken. Never a word about her husband, I noticed. She was full of questions too. Such an alive person!

The three of us were crammed into the cab of the truck. Just as well the father didn't come or I would have been roughing it in the open tray. Jeanie sat between us. Teo's eyes constantly left the rough track to give her the full benefit of his charming smile.

'There's a big project on just now,' he explained, 'to find out how our ancestors lived. I help with this one, now and then.'

'Now and then' would have been Teo's favourite phrase in those days. Never a full-time commitment. A bit of this, a bit of that, and nothing much in between, while I walked straight into a strenuous full-time job with the World Health Organization. The archaeological thing was interesting though. New Zealanders and Americans working together to uncover and doc.u.ment as many of the overgrown old mounds as they could. Some time ago, it seems, our people lived inland and built these huge stone mounds, a bit like pyramids, but flat-topped. This one was star-shaped. Today, almost all our villages are strung out along the coast, and none of the stone foundations of our fale are anything like the size and scale of these mounds. Even our many and monumental churches can not rival the mounds. Teo had his theories.

'I'll bet they were for ritual sacrifice. Our elders don't want to think we might have killed other humans and offered them to the G.o.ds.' He laughed. 'Or, horror of horrors, eaten our enemies like the Maori. But why else would they build such things? One old matai says they were platforms for catching birds, can you imagine! In the middle of a village! They just don't like to admit that they haven't a clue.'

'Teo,' I said, 'have some respect. You'll be shocking our guest.'

Teo put an easy arm around Jeanie's shoulders and drove one-handed. 'Am I shocking you, teine?'

'And don't call her teine. Jeanie is a perfectly good name.'

Teo laughed and squeezed her shoulder. 'I will call you Siene then, how about that?'

Jeanie, it seemed, liked it quite a lot. She laughed along with him and let his arm lie where it was. My cheeky brother, honestly. She was married and he practically engaged to a very high-born taupou. If my mother had been there she would have given him a good slapping, grown lad though he was.

We ground our way over the roughest of tracks, ploughing over saplings and weeds, bottoming on great boulders, lurching madly from side to side. Teo was forced to return the wayward hand to the wheel. For some reason we were all three madly happy. I started up a Beatles song, 'Penny Lane', and the three of us roared it out, harmonising at will, la-la-ing when we forgot the words. Above us and around great trees leaned in. A wild, forgotten area.

Finally we bounced our noisy way into the clearing. It was a truly impressive sight; much more so than I remembered. Several small mounds had been uncovered. As the truck engine steamed and gurgled, we stared out through the windscreen at a great stone heap stretching up higher, I would have said, than a three-storey building. The carefully stacked boulders of volcanic rock stood out black and shocking against the green riot of the bush. Here and there in the clearing, smaller stone mounds were half cleared, vines and creepers still clinging, like unruly hair, to their sides. Something like steps or a pathway formed a slash in the side of the great mound facing us. Clearly people had once climbed up this to the flat platform on top. The small hairs on the back of my neck p.r.i.c.ked. Tears welled. There was something huge here in the air. I thought of giants, of half-human rulers like the Greek heroes. Of mighty deeds. Who were they? Who on earth were they, these ancestors of mine, and why did I not celebrate them and their deeds? How had we forgotten? Why had we deserted this inland place, which they had built with such care? Why had we moved to the coast?

Jeanie touched my arm. She had noticed my tears. 'Yes,' she said quietly, 'if I can feel some part of this, what must you be feeling?'

She understood.

Over to the right was a small canva.s.s lean-to, protecting a table and chair and a few instruments. Further away, three lads were slashing at vines and weeds that seemed to be hiding a smaller mound.

'I can't believe it,' breathed Jeanie. 'However could they get the stones up there? It's like the pyramids!'

Teo didn't seem so moved by the enormity of what we saw. 'We've always been mighty builders,' he said. 'Look at our churches!' He, of course, was prepared to take the credit on behalf of his ancestors. He jumped down from the truck and helped Jeanie out, leaving his sister to make her own way.

'Come and meet Janet, the archaeologist,' said Teo. 'She'll be here somewhere. You'll like her.' He spoke as if he owned her and the whole project, while in fact he had probably put in a couple of desultory hours waving a slasher. Teo is no expert with the bush knife, or anything else except charm and driving too fast.

Probably my memory is too harsh. The truth is that for a while he led Jeanie away and left me behind.

For some time I stood in front of that great mound, mesmerised, listening for the voices of ghosts. I felt them; their tombs would be here, their spirits wandering among the trees. Were they angry that we no longer visited this place? Did they scorn our small villages on the coast and our palagi churches?

I walked slowly up to the mound, and then began to climb, step by rugged step, until I reached the top. It had been well cleared of debris; the platform of interlocking stones revealed. Here and there were holes, which might have once housed poles for a giant roof. At certain points stone seats or tables were set into the platform. Perhaps altars? One seemed particularly suited for a normal human being. I sat and waited, looking in to the dense foliage of the canopy. Tell me; talk to me!

An army of cicadas filled the air, their high-pitch scream and click so familiar that normally I would not notice. That day nothing was normal. I craved silence. I needed the ancestors to speak. For years I had been schooled in New Zealand; had learned palagi subjects and palagi ways. Here was evidence of an important forgotten Samoan history; of pagan ceremony, perhaps; of a grand village where my ancestors lived and loved and fought before the missionaries encouraged us to forget the past.

I must have fallen into some kind of trance. I opened my eyes to find Jeanie looking anxiously at me.

'Elena! You look so pale. Should you be sitting in the open sun like this?'

She took me gently by the arm and led me to a shaded area of the platform. We sat together on a stone slab, neither of us speaking. Below, we could see Teo and Janet examining drawings at the little table. They seemed so distant and unimportant.

'The cicadas!' said Jeanie finally.

'Yes. Are they sending us some coded message?'

Jeanie smiled and shrugged. A little later she announced, 'This was a place for kings. They were set high here.'

I liked the poetic way she spoke. She seemed sure and strong that day. We felt the same mystical power of the place Lo taua mea lilo.

'What?' Jeanie touched my arm. We were so close there in the suffocating, windless heat, above the ordinary world yet enclosed by trees and the sound of the cicadas! 'What did you just say?' she repeated.

I hadn't meant to speak out loud. 'It was just something I felt. You and me, Jeanie. Our secret place. It's not secret, we are not alone, but I feel we are sharing something mysterious.'

No doubt I was over-emotional, tearful I was much younger then but she understood. Such opposites in many ways, Jeanie and me; she so neatly made and me so big-boned. Her sandalled feet looked so vulnerable beside my broad brown paddles; her fingers disappeared inside my wide palm. We held hands and sat there until Teo shouted from below that we should come down and take our picnic to Papaseea.

Sliding Rock was not far away. In our family we consider our district, Tuamasaga, to be the most beautiful in all the islands. Those from Apolima would argue of course, but I consider our bush is richer, our mountain, Fao, is definitely the tallest, our plantations the most productive and of course, we have not only beautiful Palolo Deep on the coast, but the lovely cool Papaseea Falls among the trees. Inland, the water is crystal clear and cool, while the shallow water of the lagoon is so tepid it's scarcely worth bathing. At Papaseea, the stream, coming fast from the mountains, has smoothed the rocks to gla.s.s. In the whole descent over the waterfall at this spot, there is not one sharp projection.

I have never been one for acrobatics, but Teo was out of the truck with a whoop, bounding up the rocks, securing his lavalava as he ran. At the top he raised his arms, dancing and showing off, then hurled himself at the slide. Down he came on his backside, leaving little of his body to the imagination, twisting with the natural chute to crash into the cool water of the pool. That Teo! How different he is now! He burst, then, from the water, sleek and brown as a trout, laughing and inviting Jeanie to join in.

And she did of course. Jeanie would try anything. Down she came sliding, out of control, twisting to land back-first, feet in the air. Teo, naturally, was on hand to scoop her up, make sure she was unhurt; to hold her for longer than necessary, smoothing back her wet hair. They laughed together, almost kissing I thought. I scolded Teo in our language, called to Jeanie to join me where I floated, more decorously, in the shallows. But she pleaded for another turn and ran up with Teo. They came down laughing and shouting, hand in hand. Well they were young. We all were.

Teo felt it too that special closeness with Jeanie. With Teo, of course, s.e.xual attraction was part of the mix, but it was not only that. We two were newly returned to Samoa after years away; were easing back into fa'asamoa. Jeanie was completely new to it, but open as the breeze and eager to learn. Her freshness and excitement, her questions and her friendship helped us accept, when we had both tended to be critical of the old ways, of the conservative outlook, of the strict hierarchy. We had come back feeling like outsiders, but in some way that is difficult to explain, Jeanie helped us bridge the two cultures.

We are an odd mixture, Teo and I. Our palagi education sitting like a smart coat on top of our Samoan upbringing. I suppose you might say that I have kept my smart coat, changed it perhaps for an even smarter one, while Teo has shrugged his off. Or has he? Perhaps he has been more successful in integrating the two. Back in those days when we first returned to the islands, he could be so angry against palagi ways. At others he would rail against our own antiquated customs! He was just a wild lad.

We were brought up to respect and love our own ancestry. Our father, Samuele, was a very proud Samoan, proud of our heritage, our customs and our ways. I think now that perhaps he was very intelligent, though he had practically no palagi education. He knew all the old stories, though, and the legends of our ancestors. Teo and I used to love listening to him in the evenings, in the big fale, with all the 'aiga, listening while he told the stories. He would lean his back against his particular pole, the low light from the hurricane lamp above him shining on his oiled skin and handsome face. We only knew him young and handsome. But even in his forties he could bring those old stories to life better than any older matai. He would use a high voice for the women, and drop his voice down for the dramatic bits. Oh we loved it! Teo is five years younger than me but Samuele could hold us all little children and old women with his tales. Some nights the patele would take over the storytelling and try to bring the bible tales to life. He didn't have our father's knack, though. Of course we listened politely, and then yawned, and then fell asleep on the mats, with Tiresa our mother giving us the odd slap with her fan if we wriggled in our sleep.

Sometimes Samuele would tell of more recent times. We never asked for the flu epidemic story it was too horrible but my father would raise a finger at our complaints and say it was part of our family's history; that loss and death must be honoured as much as the happy times. I would lower my head and try not to hear his words. The picture he drew was too clear. I could see smell even the dead bodies. Whole families lying dead together in their fale. One of Samule's 'aiga, a high-born matai, had died in Apia while visiting there. My father almost chanted that part of the story. From that village close to ours, the people sent a fautasi to collect his body. Forty-eight strong men set off, rowing the funeral boat, slowly so that villagers could send their prayers and blessings with them. None returned. All dead, chanted my father, real tears rolling down his cheeks, every oarsman dead within one day or the next. So quickly did the flu strike. Some of the women would wail as they do at a funeral, crying for their own family deaths. I would put my hands over my ears, and Teo would try to run away.

But Teo would always hang on every word of the Mau stories. Samuele told those with vigour and pride. His father, our grandfather, was killed on that dreadful day of the march. No one was allowed to forget that! Teo loved to hear of the shootings and the anger of it all. We all did. Old and young grew silent when Samuele told it. He made us see the great column of marching people, upright and dignified in their Mau uniform a purple lavalava with a white stripe, and, for the Mau police, a purple headband. Samuele had been a young man of nineteen, marching proudly alongside his father down Beach Road. The march had been banned, but the people felt so strongly, said Samuele, that they felt they must march, in peace, to show their dismay. Many of their matai had been deported sent away from their own homeland to a cold and lonely place, or even imprisoned in New Zealand! (A gasp of horror from the audience.) Many respected matai had been stripped of their t.i.tles! My father would pause for the groan of outrage; would perhaps give a single heavy clap to show his respect, and we would all follow suit. Then, on with the story. Sometimes he would use little stones to create a map of the roads. Here were the marchers; here the soldiers, waiting in a side road; here the gunmen on the verandah of the police station, with their deadly Lewis gun. In my father's version the marchers were all peaceful, and perhaps they were. The Mau movement was determinedly a pa.s.sive-resistance one. He made us see the pandemonium, the fear of the marchers when the gunfire rang out, the bullets raining down from above, the women and children who had simply been watching the march, showing solidarity with their men-folk, screaming and rushing to hide in the market only to be trapped there and wounded themselves.

It was such a widespread movement, the Mau, and so heartfelt for so long, that I suppose every child in Samoa was brought up on that story, as were Teo and I. And the tales of the men hiding in the bush. Of the women organising the pa.s.sive resistance. And the funny story of the time some Mau members were arrested and then hundreds more came forward to offer themselves for arrest! The prisons couldn't cope. The men were put into a fenced corral which had the sea on one side. They would swim home to see to their gardens and harvest the bananas, and spend time with their wives and then swim back again! We all laughed at that one!

I remember one special night when Samuele told this story of Black Sat.u.r.day. He had just reached the part where the great leader Tupua Tamasese Lealofi III walked into the angry crowd with his hands up, beseeching them to be peaceful. The New Zealand police force shot him in the back. And when our grandfather, with others, rushed to cradle the dying man, they shot him too. My father told it with great sadness, not in anger. But young Teo jumped to his feet, in front of the whole family and shouted. 'We should kill them back! Why didn't you kill them all?'

My father gave his son a slap, then, for interrupting the story and for showing anger.

'Tupua Tamasese was not of our family as you know, son,' he said. 'We are Malietoa, but we are related through our n.o.ble blood. We respect Tupua Tamasese's sayings as of our own. Remember his dying words.' And he looked at all his family expectantly. We chanted the words with him. 'My blood has been spilt for Samoa. I am proud to give it. Do not dream of avenging it, as it was spilt in peace. If I die, peace must be maintained at any price.'

I loved my father. He was a gentle and wise man. He was among the many who were wounded that day a bullet to his leg but I never heard him call for revenge for his father's death or his own wound. Certainly he spoke sternly about that time; about the stupidity of the New Zealand administrators, and his earnest hope for independence. Alas he never lived to see that day. A simple scratch from live coral; a neglected infection from the poison; a fever from the infection, which was wrongly diagnosed as flu. He died in our own fale when he should have been in hospital. It was his preventable death that encouraged me, I think, to become a doctor. Perhaps his desire for independence and his telling of the story of our grandfather's death led Teo towards political science and gave him a taste for political activism in those early days.

I asked Tiresa why she let us both go to New Zealand to study. I would have thought she harboured some anger against that country. But even my feisty mother was pragmatic on that point. She looked up from her plaiting she and a group of friends were working on a fine mat.

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