The nights here are beautiful, even if they are colder, darker and lonelier than I am used to. The nightlife in Cape Town is glorious and can even transform an early bird like me into a night owl. Victoria Road in Camps Bay is notorious for this transmutation and is known as the ‘sunset strip’ amongst locals and tourists alike. Camps Bay has tables on the pavement and on raised platforms – all the better to toast the setting sun. My friends and I have a favourite destination, Café Caprice. Overlooking Camps Bay beach and those spectacular sunsets, this beach bar-bistro gets the most out of the surf-sprayed air and the residual heat of the African sun while retaining the best views of the bay. The bar is most busy in summer when there is plenty of air-kissing between platinum blondes and bronze men – their bodies sculpted like Greek Divines. On some nights, a truly eclectic array of friendly and enthusiastic hedonists spill out onto the pavement like a wave upon the white sands, making the most out of what is on offer. Camps Bay is the ultimate retreat for the indulgent, the elite, the beautiful and the affluent. This seaside suburb offers a slice of the high life – opulent, luxurious settings for sun-downers, superior food and wine, and a level of glamour and sophistication rarely rivalled elsewhere in Cape Town.
I miss my home and I miss my friends. I miss being someone special to some degree as well – I am willing to admit that. Here, I am no one but a stranger and it is confusing to me how I can feel both at home and at sea in this city. I feel like Harper Rock has a lot to be explored and understood. I can see the fabric of the veil tearing with each passing day – the veil that keeps the unknowing in the unknown. Not everyone is so accepting of magic and divinity and darkness. They will sooner turn their noses up and dismiss the possibility here – in a
civilised world. It is impossible to them that the things they do not know about or fully understand can exist beyond them and that makes people insecure about their existence. They see the supernatural as a threat or an object to exploit. They even use the word
supernatural to define it as something that is beyond nature, when the truth of it is, this is simply another side of the natural world that man has yet to fully appreciate and acknowledge.
There are few people in our world who reveal themselves as magical, psychic, supernatural or whatever the defining label is. They are scared that they will be shunned, cast out, or worse – killed – because of their knowledge and skills. It is normal to feel this way. The survivor’s instinct makes us keep our secrets. I have been cautious too. I have a lot of secrets that I cannot share safely with others and that is another reason why I mourn my little world back in Cape Town. Harper Rock does not make me feel safe – not even a little. I feel as though there are always eyes on me, that whatever presence watches over us and makes decisions in our lives is paying particular attention to this spit of life in the snow and the ice. It makes me wonder if this presence I feel is so strong because there is so much activity here, or if the watchful eyes are attached to deciding brains and ailing hands – bringing the activity here in the first place.
These questions and these thoughts have set my brain on fire. I am not paying attention to what I am doing. I believe I am
walking on auto-pilot as I turn a blind corner. I did not hear the approaching footsteps, the wind is at my back, blowing ebony hair in front of me as I stomp across the sidewalk. I do not suspect anything is to come to me until a weight, a cold and dead weight, impacts my shoulder. I blink myself awake, assuming I have hit a lamp post and to the surprise of my wide green eyes, I find a woman and not metal or concrete. Her obsidian eyes regard me with the same expression I am giving her. She did not expect to see me either, I feel. She apologises in the same instant that I do.
“I am sorry. I did not mean to bump shoulders with you.”
I know my accent is heavy on my words and can sometimes confuse people. Still, my English is good enough to compensate. I hope that this accidental bumping does not turn hostile, for I have had my fill of hostility in this city. I am not
dressed to fight and bicker with strangers, but having had the chance to look her over, I wonder if she’s thinking the same thing. There is a vibe from this woman – a familiar and unfamiliar feeling. I decide I will take a chance.
“Are you ok?”