It's been a busy week for me.
On Monday I was proceeding - on my feet and legs - at a steady pace in an easterly direction. I can tell because it's sort of in the general direction of Brakpan, my lodestar, though my gorgeous wife, who does not fart like a horse (actually, as far I can tell, my wife doesn't fart at all), my wife says the direction to which I am referring is actually northwards because Pretoria is just there. We have, you can tell, a great deal of scintillating debate in our family.
Anyway, that's what I was doing, on the banks of that odd body of water, Zoo Lake, dodging the mess that the ducks and geese make, cogitating on the dearth of the grass on the lake's south side and on whether Little Julie Malema is in truth quite smart.
My interests were not entirely horticultural and political. I was also, may Colleen Lowe Morna et al forgive me, ruminating on the wondrousness of the construction of the female body (two joggers who were clearly of Amazonian descent had just run by - I think it was Penthesilea, who participated in the Trojan War, and her sister Hippolyta), when I received a call from Martin Williams, the editor of The Citizen, regarding something he had just read in the morning newspaper.
Why Williams should spend the early hours of a glorious Monday morning, when he could be at a coffee shop or jogging (which, heaven help us, he actually enjoys), reading a specimen of what my brother Bullfinch calls the dead tree media, I cannot tell. But Williams - who performed years of yeoman service under the hardest and maddest taskmaster of all, one Johnny Johnson - knows, one must presume, what he's doing.
"I need to check something with you," said Williams in the slightly puzzled tone he sometimes affects (or, maybe, after years of working for his particular proprietor and for Johnson, may he rest in peace, Williams is indeed puzzled), "but do you or don't you write the Karen Bliksem column?"