March
has been rough on the world. Earthquakes. Floods, Landslides.
Collapsing buildings. Plane crashes. Terrorist attacks. Honestly, if
you want to make any sort of difference, it’s difficult to know
where to start.
Out
of all the disasters and tragedies, I’ve decided to focus on the
devastation wrought by Cyclone Idai on the desperately poor African
countries of Mozambique and Malawi. On March 14th, this
powerful storm triggered horrendous flooding and mudslides that have
completely destroyed much of the already fragile infrastructure in
these two nations. At least a million and a half people have been
affected, nearly half a million in the city of Beira alone, which was
submerged until just a few days ago.
There
are, of course, many organizations working to provide rescue and
relief services in the face of this catastrophe. Today I’ve decided
to support CARE, which is particularly focused on the needs of women
and girls.
You can find out more about the charity’s efforts to
allay the suffering of Idai’s victims here.
Credit:
Direct
Relief.org
As
usual, I will donate one dollar to my chosen charity for each comment
I receive on this post. Furthermore, I’ll give away a copy my
latest release, Valentine’s Visit: Four-Way Friend Swap, to one
randomly selected commenter.
So
please, do say something to let me know you’ve read this post!
As
usual, I also have an excerpt to thank you for dropping by. Today’s
snippet comes from Monsoon Fever, a MMF romance set in India
just after World War I. It includes a disaster scene, which as is
often the case affects the poorest and most vulnerable people.
It
took nearly four hours for the auto to creep back to the plantation.
Full night had fallen by the time they arrived. The rain had
slackened, but it was still heavy enough to drench them, despite
their umbrellas, on the climb up the path.
Jon
must be terribly worried, thought
Priscilla. She imagined him pacing back and forth on the veranda,
peering into the night for any sign of them. Guilt weighed on her
spirit, though she knew she was not responsible for the weather or
the delay. Her intense reactions to Anil did not alter her deep love
for her husband.
She
had not, technically, been unfaithful. Still, she was honest enough
to admit to herself that, if the storm had not interrupted, she would
have gladly surrendered herself to Anil. In public, in a sacred
space, she would have been willing—no, eager—to allow the
seductive native access to her body. Her sex ached, remembering his
intimate touch. She looked up at him, but she could not read his
expression in the dark. Did he still want her? Would he try again?
Priscilla
tried to compose herself, to think only of Jon and his concern. As
the house came into view, she stopped short in surprise.
Normally
at this time, Lalida would have lit the kerosene lamps and golden
light would be spilling out from the windows onto the path. But the
bungalow was completely dark, and silent too, no sounds of clattering
dishes from the kitchen, no scratchy jazz coming from Jon’s
gramophone.
“Jon?
Jonathan?” Priscilla voice signalled her alarm as she and Anil
climbed to the porch. The door was half open, definitely a bad sign.
“Lalida?” Had they been attacked and abducted by some of bandits
that occasionally roamed the hills? But there was no sign of any
struggle or violence.
She
clutched at Anil’s soggy coat. “What could have happened? Where
are they?”
“Where
are the lamps?” Before she could answer, he located a lantern and a
box of lucifers on the mantel. In a moment he had it lit. They looked
around the parlour, seeking clues.
Priscilla
saw it first. The note was scrawled on a scrap torn from a ledger,
and fastened to the dining room door frame with a nail.
“Landslide
at the village. Gone to help.” The writing was barely legible, but
she recognised Jon’s hand.
A
landslide! Priscilla recalled the heaps of mud and rock piled by the
road on the way to Gauhati. “We must go to them,” Anil insisted,
reading over her shoulder. “A landslide can bury a whole town, or
sweep it away.” He searched her face. “Do you have shovels or
picks? And buckets, buckets would be useful.”
“In
the utility shed, behind the house.” Anil was already on his way
out the door.
Jon
had taken most of the tools, but they found a short spade and a
mattock. They grabbed them and scrambled up the slippery path toward
the village, rain still washing over them in dense squalls. As they
approached the site of the village, home to the plantation workers
and their families, shouts filled the air. Lanterns flickered in the
wet, black night.
Priscilla
had visited the village several times, bringing sweets for the
children and English soap for their mothers. She hardly recognised
the scene of devastation before her now. There was no sign of the
wooden huts that sheltered the workers. She saw only a vast sea of
mud, with splintered planks and beams jutting out at odd angles. Half
naked men dug frantically in the muck, looking like an army of demons
in the shifting lantern-light. Children hung onto their mothers,
wailing or watching the rescue efforts silent and wide-eyed. An
elderly woman, tattered sari clinging to her wizened body, crouched
under a tree half-crushed by a huge boulder.
Priscilla
saw Jon near the far perimeter, wielding a shovel and yelling orders
to the other men. She stumbled across the ex-village, the treacherous
mud sucking at her feet, and threw herself into his arms.
“Darling!
I was so worried.” she cried. “Are you all right?”
Jonathan
held her so tight she could scarcely breathe. His chest was bare and
streaked with dirt. His blond hair was black with rain and soil.
“Priscilla! Thank God! I’m so glad to see you!”
“How
bad is it?”
“Bad—nearly
all the houses were destroyed—but it could have been much worse.
Most of the villagers were up at the shrine when the hillside gave
way. We think that there are only a few people buried. We’re trying
to find them before it’s too late.”
***
Please
don’t forget to comment! It’s a small thing, but small things add
up. And you might win a free book!
12 comments:
So heart-breakingly relevant now, even though it's set just after WWI! But also so sensually intriguing.
A great cause. Thanks for doing this. :)
Beautiful cause, thank you for all you do & make all aware
March has been a month full of devastation, all around the world. This sounds like an ideal cause to focus on. You rock, Lisabet.
This is a very worthy cause you've embraced, one that I'm embarrassed to say I hadn't heard much about with everything else going on in the world. Nice excerpt, too!
Great snippet, Great cause!
Another wonderful cause that you've highlighted. Thanks for your commitment to the greater good.
Larry
Sounds like a great cause to support.
Great snippet, and wonderful cause to support. Well done, Lisabet!
I love that you do this for such worthwhile causes! Awesome snippet, too! :)
I'm stunned that hardly anyone has reported this before now...thank you so much!
--Trix, vitajex(at)aol(dot)com
Alas, another cyclone has just devastated Mozambique.
https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-africa-48081592/cyclone-kenneth-wipes-out-mozambique-villages
So I'm doubling my contribution. Sometimes I feel so helpless, though.
I have another Charity Sunday today.
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