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This sample of urban legend is the excellent penmanship of
Danny Katz of the New Age Newspaper in Melbourne.
The Braai
I would not bother sending this to any woman, they would never understand in
their life time, this is men's business, serious men's business!
Mac was at the braai and Stu was at the braai and I was at the braai; three men
standing around a braai, sipping beer, staring at boerewors, rolling them
backwards and forwards, never leaving them alone.
We didn't know why we were at the braai; we were just drawn there like moths to
a flame. The braai was a powerful gravitational force, a man-magnet. Stu said
the thin ones could use a turn, I said yeah I reckon the thin ones could use a
turn, Mac said yeah they really need a turn - it was a unanimous turning
decision.
Mac was the Tong-Master, a true artist, he gave a couple of practice snaps of
his long silver tongs, SNAP SNAP, before moving in, prodding, teasing, and with
an elegant flick of his wrist, rolling them onto their little backs. A lesser
tong-man would've flicked too hard; the boerie would've gone full circle, back
to where they started. Nice, I said. The others went yeah.
Kevin was passing us, he heard the siren-song- sizzle of the boerie, the braai
was calling, beckoning, Kevinnnnn ...come. He stuck his head in and said any
room? We said yeah and began the braai shuffle; Mac shuffled to the left, Stu
shuffled to the left, I shuffled to the left, Kevin slipped in beside me, we
sipped our beer.
Now there were four of us staring at the boerie, and Mac gave me the nod, my
cue. I was second-in-command, and I had to take the raw boerie out of the
plastic bag and lay them on the braai; not too close together, not too far
apart, curl them into each other's bodies like lovers - fat ones, thin ones,
herbed and continental. The chipolatas were tiny, they could easily slip down
between the grill, falling into the molten hot-bead-netherworld below. Carefully
I laid them sideways ACROSS the grill, clever thinking. Mac snapped his tongs
with approval; there was no greater braai honor.
Luke came along, he said looking good, looking good - the irresistible lure of
the braai had pulled him in too. We said yeah and did the shuffle, left, left,
left, left, he slipped in beside Kevin, we sipped our beer. Five men, lots of
boerie. Stu was the Fork-pronger; he had the fork that pronged the tough hides
of the Free States finest boerie and he showed a lot of promise. Stabbing away
eagerly, leaving perfect little vampire holes up and down the casing.
Luke was shaking his head, he said I reckon they cook better if you don't poke
them. There was a long silence, you could have heard a chipolata drop, and this
newcomer was a rabble-rouser, bringing in his crazy ideas from outside. He
didn't understand the hierarchy; first the Tong-master, then the Boerie-layer,
then the Fork-pronger - and everyone below was just a watcher. Maybe eventually
they'll move up the ladder, but for now - don't rock the Weber.
Wendy popped her head in; hmmm, smells good, she said. She was trying to jostle
into the circle; we closed ranks, pulling our heads down and our shoulders in,
mumbling yeah yeah yeah, but making no room for her.
She was keen, going round to the far side of the braai, heading for the only
available space . . . the gap in the circle where all the smoke and ashes blew.
Nobody could survive the gap, nobody had ever survived the gap. Wendy was going
to try.
She stood there stubbornly, smoke blinding her eyes, ashes filling her nostrils,
boerie fat spattering all over her arms and face. Until she couldn't take it
anymore, she gave up, backed off. Kevin waited till she was gone and sipped his
beer. We sipped our beer, yeah.
Mac handed me his tongs. I looked at him and he nodded. I knew what was
happening, I'd waited a long time for this moment - the abdication.
The tongs weighed heavy in my hands, firm in my grip - was I ready for the
responsibility? Yes, I was. I held them up high and they glinted in the sun.
Don't forget to turn the thin ones Mac said as he walked away from the braai,
disappearing toward the house. Yeah I called back, I
will, I will. I snapped them twice, SNAP SNAP, before moving in,
prodding, teasing, and with an elegant flick of my wrist, rolling them back onto
their little bellies. I was a natural, I was the TONG-MASTER!
But only until Mac got back from the toilet.
COPYRIGHT Danny Katz 1998
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