Song Beneath the Tides Read online




  SONG BENEATH THE TIDES

  is a GUPPY BOOK

  First published in 2020 by

  Guppy Books,

  Bracken Hill,

  Cotswold Road,

  Oxford OX2 9JG

  Text copyright © Beverley Birch

  Illustrations copyright © Salvador Design

  Map copyright © Neil Gower

  978 1 913101 23 7

  1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

  The rights of Beverley Birch to be identified as the author of this work have been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permissions of the publishers.

  Papers used by Guppy Books are from well-managed forests and other responsible sources.

  GUPPY PUBLISHING LTD Reg. No. 11565833

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

  Typeset in 11/16pt Sabon by Falcon Oast Graphic Art Ltd www.falcon.uk.com

  Printed and bound in Great Britain by Clays Ltd, Elcograf S.p.A.

  To IRIS and OLIVE and all the adventures and explorations ahead of them

  The winds call our names

  We hear, we hear

  And the drum takes up our song

  Our song

  flies on the seas

  soars on the winds

  swells on the great tides

  They hear, they hear

  from Songs of Zawati

  first day – whispers

  second day – warnings

  third day – invaders

  fourth day – secrets

  fifth day – warriors

  sixth day – vultures

  seventh day – attack

  eighth day – storm

  one month later, London – dancing

  first day

  whispers

  One

  It begins with a forest, and with Ally.

  Light slants green through a high, leafy canopy. Hanging creepers sway and rustle. Everywhere, chirrups and cheeps and whistles and trills, and the flit of small, busy wings . . .

  She spins round, braced to run.

  No one there: the path empty. Sunlight dapples the scuffed sand so that it seems to move, but it’s just a track, curling back to a dark outcrop of coral rock, then turning out of sight.

  The hair on the back of her neck prickles. Something’s about to appear. Between the curtains of leaves. Or the bushes. Or from behind that rock.

  She watches. She shifts her gaze to a claw of roots from a tumbled tree. Arches of shadow like a vast skeleton, sheltering – what?

  The forest stirs. Ripples of light speed towards her. She fights the urge to back away. A rush of sound. Birds whirl in fright.

  Common sense says a ripe coconut has fallen.

  It takes all her nerve to hold still, listen, then turn away, present her back to the path and resume her trek towards the sea. She should yell for her brothers – moments ago she’d seen them against the sheen of water beyond the trees ahead, Jack’s tall silhouette beside Ben’s stocky little shape.

  She’s reluctant to probe the forest with her voice.

  She walks faster. And at once has the same unnerving sensation of nearness, of brushing the warm contours of something live, of eyes following her, of a soft breath exhaled.

  This time she runs, breaking through the last trees into the blinding brilliance of the open bay. She clears the mounds of drying seaweed in a single bound, kicks off her shoes, grabs them and leaps down through the soft powdery sand towards the reef, putting distance as fast as she can between herself and that menace – that terror of the forest.

  *

  I dream . . . I dream . . .

  I flee the festering walls of our prison.

  I walk the paths of the forest.

  I seek Hope, a flame of life in the dark.

  In my dream I find Her. In my dream I speak to Her.

  She gives no answer.

  Is it the poison that dreams?

  Is the sickness in me now?

  *

  ‘It’s a leopard! It’s stalking you!’ Ben said. ‘Pad, pad, pad, just behind you! Bet it is – cos that rock’s called Ras Chui an’ that means Leopard Rock.’ He waved a hand along the beach towards a coral promontory like a knobbly finger pointing to sea.

  ‘No, really!’ Ally protested. ‘It felt . . .’ She trailed off. Spooky sounded too ordinary.

  ‘Well, it’s a forest, so there’s animals all over.’ Jack shrugged off her alarm. ‘No leopard,’ he pretended to whack Ben over the head, ‘you can see people use this path a lot. Leopards’d keep clear.’

  He said it with a tone of certainty that made Ally grind her teeth. Jack had taken on this all-seeing, all-knowing air since they’d stepped off the plane from London.

  ‘How can you see? You’ve only been here five minutes like me!’

  Jack pulled a face, then grinned. ‘Yeah, well, sure. But you heard Carole say it’s a track used by people from that village along there. You know, she showed us on the map – Shanza, it’s called.’

  ‘Well don’t walk so fast,’ Ally finished lamely.

  In this bright air, way out on the open reef where she’d caught up with them, with the tang of coral pools and warm salty seas carried on a light breeze, the menace of the forest walk was fading fast.

  ‘Didn’t mean to leave you behind, Ally,’ he waved a hand at the sweep of wide white sands, ‘but look – no one for miles— Hey, Benjy!’ He set off at a run towards their brother splashing gleefully across the coral towards the seaward edge of the reef. ‘Benjy! That’s deep sea out there!’

  A tickle brushed Ally’s toes – a cavalcade of tiny crabs scuttling to a rock pool. She crouched, tracking the pale shadows along the sandy bottom. Then she stood, looking round, only now taking in how far the tide had ebbed to expose the honeycomb landscape of miniature coral mountains and lakes, forested with seaweed, crusted with shells, popping and crackling in the warming sun.

  A month ahead, a whole month here. Africa! Ever since that morning at home, her mother opening the email from their aunt, Carole, she’d felt this spiking thrill.

  ‘Send Jack and Ally for as long as they can come. Benjy too, if you trust those two to keep track of him. And make him promise to OBEY them! I’m being posted to work in a hospital in Ulima on the coast for a while . . . so NOW’S THE TIME.’

  Ally’d printed out the photos Carole sent, pinned them all over the walls in her room, debated every one with Zoe – Zoe wailing, ‘I’m coming too! I wish my mum’d let me! Ally, you owe me an email every single day! Promise! Everything, everything, everything, you got to tell me, yeah?’

  Ally inhaled the salty, tangy air. How? How can I make Zoe feel this? Green forest, creamy sands, the rainbow reef glittering as if it moved, restless in the sunlight. A dream! She’d only ever seen this in adverts and films. Never, ever, did she believe she’d see it for real!

  A ripple of shadow passed overhead. Just a wisp of cloud crossing the sun, the thread of its darkness travelling up the beach; she found herself watching till it merged with the forest.

  That weird feeling in there! It flowed through her again, a thread of a sigh, a longing, like an emptiness deep in her centre.

  She was oddly cold. She scanned the trees. They stared back – an impenetrab
le barricade along the summit of the sands, the path invisible.

  ‘It is someone,’ she whispered. ‘It is!’

  *

  I have been to their deaths, and returned.

  The fever brings this horror! Does my own death draw near?

  I dream – I dream, that I have been to all their deaths. Before the monsoon breaks they will be lost.

  I have been to their deaths, and beyond.

  Even as I write these words am I dreaming, still?

  It is the first hour of the first day of my sixteenth year, and I have a terrible dread. Vultures gather. Our ships rot on their moorings. Two more men have died, and three begin to fail. We dig more graves in the court below and soon there will be no square of ground to take more dead.

  We should have burned the corpses, burned every man, woman and child who died. So my father said even as he died. But we have no firewood.

  We have not eaten these seven days. Only the children had the scraps of food we had saved, and now there is nothing.

  Where is Hope? In the secret paths of the forest, I fly to find Her.

  Amid the green trees, I see Her.

  Her face is fierce. Her hair flames like the rising sun.

  The fever conjures Her to me, it is the poison in me!

  I speak; I beg.

  She turns from me.

  Is there no hope left for any of us?

  *

  Leli paused on the spiny ridge of Ras Chui for his friend to catch up. He surveyed the reef below with satisfaction.

  ‘You are right, Huru,’ he announced. ‘These strangers are the expected ones. There, you see! Two cross the reef. These are the brothers. That one, alone, is the sister. She has the strange red hair, like the doctor auntie. Red hair, like a fire!’

  ‘Why do you speak to me in English?’ Huru demanded, in English, puffing from the short, steep climb up the rocks from the village. ‘This language sits like a stone on my head.’

  ‘We practise! So that they will know our words and hear that our greeting is good!’

  Huru snorted. ‘You are mad, Leli. Very mad! These tourists will not want to be our friends. They will not want to hear our bad English. This red-hair girl—’

  ‘Afraid, always!’ retorted Leli, but with a grin. He was watching the third figure with interest, how she trailed the others, stopped to look at something at her feet, how she turned, how her hair caught the glow of the sun, how she looked back at the shore, and stood watching, as if she saw something.

  ‘How can we know if we will not try?’ Nudging his friend forward, together they scrambled down the rocks, still arguing, and veered in long, easy strides across the reef towards the three distant figures.

  Two

  Deep green water lapped the edge of the reef.

  ‘Too far to swim,’ Ben said, crestfallen. ‘I thought we could swim to your island!’

  He directed this at Ally. She’d been first onto the beach at dawn. And there was the little hillock of land, stark against the pink dawn sky. It rode the tide like a ship. Surf creamed from its high bluff like the wake of a boat, mists wreathed its summit, a drift of birds coiled above the trees.

  Then the rising sun tipped the island’s rim. Fire flooded its slopes, streamed towards Ally across the waves. She was drenched in sunlight. She gasped in the startling delight of it – like the thrilling soar of a song.

  Now, she scrambled up onto a ridge of coral to get a better view over the rippling stretch of sea. ‘It’s a mile away, more, maybe,’ she echoed her little brother’s disappointment.

  ‘So, we’ll find a boat, then,’ Jack insisted. ‘That’s if we want to get out there. We do, agreed?’

  ‘It is forbidden.’

  The voice came so unexpectedly that Ally whirled to look, slithering on seaweed, nearly falling.

  Two boys stood lightly balanced on a nobble of coral, tall and black against the sky’s hard glare.

  ‘The island is forbidden to strangers!’ The speaker jumped down and advanced towards them, hand out for shaking. ‘I see you are the family of Dr Carole, the children of her sister, from England. This is my good friend Huru. We come to say a big, big welcome!’

  He turned, bright-eyed, to Ally. His gaze seemed to envelop her, and, unexpectedly, brought a flush to her face.

  ‘You will visit our place?’ he said – more a demand than a question, leaving her no time to answer. ‘You will stay how many days? I am Leli! Come to Shanza for welcome, now, now!’ And off he charged, signalling them all to follow, drawing them into a stumbling run behind him, across coral ridges and rockpools towards Ras Chui, Ally struggling to keep up.

  ‘Jack!’ she hissed at her brother’s back. ‘You know what Carole said about strangers!’

  ‘Not strangers,’ he hissed back. ‘They’re from Shanza village.’

  ‘So, what about Carole’s rules?’

  ‘Here’s the deal,’ their aunt had said last night, leading them up to the breezy flat roof of her house to recover from the scorching drive up the coast from the airport, ‘you know I don’t usually make rules, but—’

  Ben had groaned and crossed his eyes. She’d crossed her eyes back, ‘Listen, you, I’ve rented this house specially for your visit. Punished myself – eighty miles driving every day, down the coast to Ulima Hospital and back – just for you. What a sacrifice!’ Laughing, sweeping a hand at the coastline’s lazy curves – long white bays, mangrove creeks, soft dunes and sandflats, on and on as far as they could see in the waning dusk.

  ‘But, the point is,’ she gave a mock glare at Ben, ‘I can’t get holiday for the first two days you’re here, we’ve several doctors ill. So, Rules of Engagement, you hear? I’m trusting you, Benjy, you in particular, or I’ll haul you to the hospital with me to watch me work, and that’s no picnic! And by the way, put your phones away – no signal here. The nearest landline’s a mile away, so Rule One: for help, go to Shanza along the shore. I’ve only been here three days, but the Elders invited me to tea, so everyone knows you’re coming and staying in this house – they call it the Old Fisheries House for some reason. Rule Two: no wandering off with strangers . . .’

  There’d been several more, but nothing about talkative boys from the village hijacking them for obscure reasons. Nor anything about boats, and Ally could hear Jack and Ben eagerly negotiating a boat-trip now as the two Shanza boys led them all up the rocky slope of Ras Chui and down into the bay beyond.

  ‘My cousin Saka will help,’ the boy called Huru assured them. ‘He has a boat. We can take you everywhere!’ Airily he flapped a hand towards thatch roofs and brown walls in the mottled shade of palms. There was a buzz of activity along the shore below, their scramble down the rocks met by a torrent of small children, yelling, jiggling round them, plucking at their clothes, leaping to touch Ally’s hair.

  ‘It is the colour.’ The taller boy – Leli – turned back to wait for her. ‘They are curious. They have not before seen this colour hair. They say it is like the sun! And they are always happy for guests. I, too!’ Again that eager, warm gaze: she felt it flood over her, heating her cheeks.

  In fact curious glances came from all sides. Two girls kept pace with them, making some remark to Leli in what Ally guessed was Swahili.

  ‘We greet you!’ One switched to English, addressing Ally. ‘But we leave you to Leli, for now.’ Linking arms with the other girl and strolling away, giving a backwards, mischievous glance.

  Leli sternly ignored her. ‘Eshe and Koffi being foolish,’ he told Ally. ‘Jokes, always!’

  ‘What’s the joke about?’

  He tossed his head to throw the question off, steering her along the shore between boats unloading their catch. A few still sculled inwards with a raucous escort of gulls. A small dhow dropped sail and ran at full tilt up the sands. Baskets of fish, hoisted past, vanished into shady spaces
between the homes. And all along the ribbon of seaweed and shells at the highwater mark, gulls and crows strutted and squabbled over fish scraps.

  Now two tiny girls were attached like limpets to Ally’s hands. She allowed them to haul her further along the beach and station her for a view of a mushroom-shaped rock offshore.

  ‘They want to show good swimming,’ Leli said. ‘Specially they make a show for you.’

  Ally glanced up at him, startled, then at the splashing cavalcade of little bodies heading for the rock, clambering up, somersaulting back into the water shrieking.

  For her? Like she was someone important, famous!

  She laughed. He laughed happily back. ‘For guests – always special things! Every person enjoys guests! Me – I am specially, specially happy for you to come to Shanza!’

  But I must not talk too much, he thought. I must close my mouth, or this English girl will be very bored.

  He stole a sideways look at her. Eshe and Koffi’s little sisters had run from the water and were swinging from her hands, lifting their feet off the ground, almost pulling her over, and she was giggling with them.

  She does not look bored. But she is not saying much. He studied how she looked around and listened.

  He scanned the fishing beach, scattered nets, ropes, baskets, screeching gulls, seeing it as she would. To his eye, suddenly, it was noisy and messy. And the fish smell was strong. A girl from a city in England would not like the fish smell. And the grandfathers were cackling like old crows where they sat to watch the boats. The girl would not know that Eshe’s grandfather told very funny jokes. No one could stop laughing at his stories. The girl would just think the grandfathers were madmen.

  A wobble of nerves went through him. Is her place in England shiny and everything modern? She will not like Shanza! Her brothers will not like Shanza. It is a mistake to bring these tourists to my place.

  Huru is right, she will not like my bad English, either.

  He watched her watching the children dive from the rock. Her brothers were in a knot of boys steered by Huru to the boats, and Huru’s voice carried clearly.