A month after we moved to Eden Park, my mother brought home two cats. Black cats. Beautiful creatures. Some woman from her work had a litter of kittens she was trying to get rid of, and my mom ended up with two. I was excited because Iโd never had a pet before. My mom was excited because she loves animals. She didnโt believe in any nonsense about cats. It was just another way in which she was a rebel, refusing to conform to ideas about what black people did and didnโt do.
In a black neighborhood, you wouldnโt dare own a cat, especially a black cat. That would be like wearing a sign that said, โHello, I am a witch.โ That would be suicide. Since weโd moved to a colored neighborhood, my mom thought the cats would be okay. Once they were grown we let them out during the day to roam the neighborhood. Then we came home one evening and found the cats strung up by their tails from our front gate, gutted and skinned and bleeding out, their heads chopped off. On our front wall someone had written in Afrikaans,ย โHeksโโโWitch.โ
Colored people, apparently, were no more progressive than black people on the issue of cats.
I wasnโt exactly devastated about the cats. I donโt think weโd had them long enough for me to get attached; I donโt even remember their names. And cats are dicks for the most part. As much as I tried they never felt like real pets. They never showed me affection nor did they accept any of mine. Had the cats made more of an effort, I might have felt like I had lost something. But even as a kid, looking at these dead, mutilated animals, I
was like, โWell, there you have it. Maybe if theyโd been nicer, they could have avoided this.โ
After the cats were killed, we took a break from pets for a while. Then we got dogs. Dogs are cool. Almost every black family I knew had a dog. No matter how poor you were, you had a dog. White people treat dogs like children or members of the family. Black peopleโs dogs are more for protection, a poor-manโs alarm system. You buy a dog and you keep it out in the yard. Black people name dogs by their traits. If it has stripes, you call it Tiger. If itโs vicious, you call it Danger. If it has spots, you call it Spotty. Given the finite number of traits a dog can have, pretty much everyoneโs dogs have the same names; people just recycle them.
Weโd never had dogs in Soweto. Then one day some lady at my momโs work offered us two puppies. They werenโt planned puppies. This womanโs Maltese poodle had been impregnated by the bull terrier from next door, a strange mix. My mom said sheโd take them both. She brought them home, and I was the happiest kid on earth.
My mom named them Fufi and Panther. Fufi, I donโt know where her name came from. Panther had a pink nose, so she was Pink Panther and eventually just Panther. They were two sisters who loved and hated each other. They would look out for each other, but they would also fight all the time. Like, blood fights. Biting. Clawing. It was a strange, gruesome relationship.
Panther was my momโs dog; Fufi was mine. Fufi was beautiful. Clean lines, happy face. She looked like a perfect bull terrier, only skinnier because of the Maltese mixed in. Panther, who was more half-and-half, came out weird and scruffy-looking. Panther was smart. Fufi was dumb as shit. At least we always thought she was dumb as shit. Whenever we called them, Panther would come right away, but Fufi wouldnโt do anything. Panther would run back and get Fufi and then theyโd both come. It turned out that Fufi was deaf. Years later Fufi died when a burglar was trying to break into our house. He pushed the gate over and it fell on her back and broke her spine. We took her to the vet and she had to be put down. After examining her, the vet came over and gave us the news.
โIt must have been strange for your family living with a dog that was deaf,โ he said.
โWhat?โ
โYou didnโt know your dog was deaf?โ โNo, we thought it was stupid.โ
Thatโs when we realized that their whole lives the one dog had been telling the other dog what to do somehow. The smart, hearing one was helping the dumb, deaf one.
Fufi was the love of my life. Beautiful but stupid. I raised her. I potty- trained her. She slept in my bed. A dog is a great thing for a kid to have. Itโs like a bicycle but with emotions.
Fufi could do all sorts of tricks. She could jump super high. I mean, Fufi couldย jump. I could hold a piece of food out above my own head and sheโd leap up and grab it like it was nothing. If YouTube had been around, Fufi would have been a star.
Fufi was a little rascal as well. During the day we kept the dogs in the backyard, which was enclosed by a wall at least five feet high. After a while, every day weโd come home and Fufi would be sitting outside the gate, waiting for us. We were always confused. Was someone opening the gate? What was going on? It never occurred to us that she could actually scale a five-foot wall, but that was exactly what was happening. Every morning, Fufi would wait for us to leave, jump over the wall, and go roaming around the neighborhood.
I caught her one day when I was home for the school holidays. My mom had left for work and I was in the living room. Fufi didnโt know I was there; she thought I was gone because the car was gone. I heard Panther barking in the backyard, looked out, and there was Fufi, scaling the wall. Sheโd jumped, scampered up the last couple of feet, and then she was gone.
I couldnโt believe this was happening. I ran out front, grabbed my bicycle, and followed her to see where she was going. She went a long way, many streets over, to another part of the neighborhood. Then she went up to this other house and jumped over their wall and into their backyard. What the hell was she doing? I went up to the gate and rang the doorbell. This colored kid answered.
โMay I help you?โ he said.
โYeah. My dog is in your yard.โ
โWhat?โ
โMy dog. Sheโs in your yard.โ
Fufi walked up and stood between us. โFufi, come!โ I said. โLetโs go!โ
This kid looked at Fufi and called her by some other stupid name, Spotty or some bullshit like that.
โSpotty, go back inside the house.โ
โWhoa, whoa,โ I said. โSpotty? Thatโs Fufi!โ โNo, thatโs my dog, Spotty.โ
โNo, thatโs Fufi, my friend.โ โNo, this is Spotty.โ
โHow could this be Spotty? She doesnโt even have spots. You donโt know what youโre talking about.โ
โThis is Spotty!โ โFufi!โ
โSpotty!โ
โFufi!โ
Of course, since Fufi was deaf she didnโt respond to โSpottyโ or โFufi.โ She just stood there. I started cursing the kid out.
โGive me back my dog!โ
โI donโt know who you are,โ he said, โbut you better get out of here.โ Then he went into the house and got his mom and she came out. โWhat do you want?โ she said.
โThatโs my dog!โ
โThis is our dog. Go away.โ
I started crying. โWhy are you stealing my dog?!โ I turned to Fufi and begged her. โFufi, why are you doing this to me?! Why, Fufi?! Why?!โ I called to her. I begged her to come. Fufi was deaf to my pleas. And everything else.
I jumped onto my bike and raced home, tears running down my face. I loved Fufi so much. To see her with another boy, acting like she didnโt
know me, after I raised her, after all the nights we spent together. I was heartbroken.
That evening Fufi didnโt come home. Because the other family thought I was coming to steal their dog, they had decided to lock her inside, so she couldnโt make it back the way she normally did to wait for us outside the fence. My mom got home from work. I was in tears. I told her Fufi had been kidnapped. We went back to the house. My mom rang the bell and confronted the mom.
โLook, this is our dog.โ
This lady lied to my momโs face. โThis is not your dog. We bought this dog.โ
โYou didnโt buy the dog. Itโs our dog.โ
They went back and forth. This woman wasnโt budging, so we went home to get evidence: pictures of us with the dogs, certificates from the vet. I was crying the whole time, and my mom was losing her patience with me. โStop crying! Weโll get the dog! Calm down!โ
We gathered up our documentation and went back to the house. This time we brought Panther with us, as part of the proof. My mom showed this lady the pictures and the information from the vet. She still wouldnโt give us Fufi. My mom threatened to call the police. It turned into a whole thing. Finally my mom said, โOkay, Iโll give you a hundred rand.โ
โFine,โ the lady said.
My mom gave her some money and she brought Fufi out. The other kid, who thought Fufi was Spotty, had to watch his mother sell the dog he thought was his. Now he started crying. โSpotty! No! Mom, you canโt sell Spotty!โ I didnโt care. I just wanted Fufi back.
Once Fufi saw Panther she came right away. The dogs left with us and we walked. I sobbed the whole way home, still heartbroken. My mom had no time for my whining.
โWhy are you crying?!โ
โBecause Fufi loves another boy.โ
โSo? Why would that hurt you? It didnโt cost you anything. Fufiโs here. She still loves you. Sheโs still your dog. So get over it.โ
Fufi was my first heartbreak. No one has ever betrayed me more than Fufi. It was a valuable lesson to me. The hard thing was understanding that Fufi wasnโt cheating on me with another boy. She was merely living her life to the fullest. Until I knew that she was going out on her own during the day, her other relationship hadnโt affected me at all. Fufi had no malicious intent.
I believed that Fufi wasย myย dog, but of course that wasnโt true. Fufi wasย aย dog. I wasย aย boy. We got along well. She happened to live in my house. That experience shaped what Iโve felt about relationships for the rest of my life: You do not own the thing that you love. I was lucky to learn that lesson at such a young age. I have so many friends who still, as adults, wrestle with feelings of betrayal. Theyโll come to me angry and crying and talking about how theyโve been cheated on and lied to, and I feel for them. I understand what theyโre going through. I sit with them and buy them a drink and I say, โFriend, let me tell you the story of Fufi.โ
When I was twenty-four years old, one day out of the blue my mother said to me, โYou need to find your father.โ
โWhy?โ I asked. At that point I hadnโt seen him in over ten years and didnโt think Iโd ever see him again.
โBecause heโs a piece of you,โ she said, โand if you donโt find him you wonโt find yourself.โ
โI donโt need him for that,โ I said. โI know who I am.โ
โItโs not about knowing who you are. Itโs about him knowing who you are, and you knowing who he is. Too many men grow up without their fathers, so they spend their lives with a false impression of who their father is and what a father should be. You need to find your father. You need to show him what youโve become. You need to finish that story.โ