John Serval. 18 years old. Northcliff, Johannesburg.
The barbell made the ceiling shake.
Not catastrophically — just that particular deep vibration you got when forty
kilograms crashed onto the bench stand at 5:47 AM in a room not designed for this.
His dad had complained three times this month. His twin brother Joseph had
complained at least fifteen. Vera — his elder sister, five years older, perpetually
exhausted, perpetually present — had stopped complaining and started wearing earplugs
to bed. A fact she mentioned every Tuesday morning with the exact same flat expression.
John didn't stop.
He'd started lifting weights the year his mom passed. He couldn't explain why,
not in a way that satisfied anyone who asked. His school counsellor had said
something about control — about building certainty in a body when certainty left
the world. John didn't fully believe that. He just knew that when his arms burned
and the weight refused to move and he made it move anyway, the noise in his head
got a little quieter for a while.
He sat up on the bench.
The room was small. Soccer posters on one wall. On the other, framed — a photo
of him and his mother at a taekwondo competition when he was thirteen. She had
raised his arm up with both hands like he'd just won a national title. He'd come
third. She hadn't cared. She'd wanted the photo. He was grinning in it with his
mouth open, slightly surprised, and she was laughing at him laughing. The bar
in his hands was still warm. His reflection in the mirror on the door looked like
someone who hadn't slept quite enough.
He hadn't slept quite enough.
His mother, Hana, had come from Kyoto — one of those people who carried elegance
without trying, who moved through spaces with a specific quality of stillness
that other people instinctively stepped aside for. She had trained taekwondo since
childhood in Japan and taught it in South Africa and she had put John on a mat
at age six and said: "First, learn to fall." He had fallen a thousand times after
that and gotten up a thousand and one. The first lesson had never stopped.
She died when John was fifteen.
He had not cried at the funeral. Not because he wasn't feeling it — because he was
feeling it so completely that there was nowhere for it to go. It sat in him like water
with no exit. He had looked at his dad Marcus standing at the graveside and for the
first time understood the specific shape of grief that could make a person go quiet
for years.
He still understood it. He just didn't know yet what to do with that understanding.
"John." Vera's voice through the wall. Not annoyed — she'd been awake too. "It's
almost six."
"I know."
"You need to eat before school. Trials start in three weeks, you can't train on
empty."
"I know, Vera."
A pause. Then the sound of her moving toward the kitchen, and then: "Pap and egg.
Don't let Joseph eat yours."
He smiled. Not a big smile. The kind that came automatically when someone who loved
you did something small and specific that proved it without being asked.
The kitchen smelled like butter and warmth. The particular morning smell of the
Serval house — which was not their real name, but none of them knew that yet.
Marcus Serval stood at the stove with his back to the room. A big man — not the
kind that advertised itself, but the kind you noticed on a second look. Shoulders
that had carried things. Hands that knew the difference between holding something
and gripping it. He made eggs without turning around even when both his sons entered
the kitchen. He had been doing this for years. The kitchen was their territory in the
morning. He occupied it but he did not fill it.
Joseph came in like he always did — already talking.
"—swear Coach Ndlovu is putting me in the starting lineup this weekend, I've been
on point in every practice, you should come watch—"
"You say that every week," John said.
"This week I mean it."
"You say that every week too."
Joseph grinned. He and John had the same face the way two songs could share a melody
and still sound completely different. Joseph's version was louder. More comfortable
inside itself. He had the kind of easiness that drew rooms toward him without effort —
teachers liked him instinctively, every popular crowd at school had tried to claim him,
even people who were trying not to have favourites somehow ended up with Joseph as
a favourite. It wasn't manipulation. It was just Joseph. John had examined the thing
he felt about it carefully — turned it over, looked for resentment — and found
something closer to awe. A bird that was particularly good at flying. You were glad
it existed.
"Dad. Good morning exists," Joseph said.
"Morning," Marcus said to the stove. He plated eggs. Three plates — John, Joseph,
and then one for the hallway, for Vera, before he disappeared to his room to prepare
for his early shift at the logistics company. He did this every morning. He never ate
with them anymore. Not since.
John watched his father's back and said nothing.
Put yourself in someone else's shoes before you decide how to feel about what they
did. His mother's instruction. He'd applied it to his dad a hundred times in three
years. His dad's shoes had walked into a hospital room and walked out carrying
something that had no name and no exit. There was no blame in that. There was just
grief wearing a coat that looked like distance.
"Ey." Joseph nudged him. "You're doing the thinking face."
"I'm just eating."
"You're eating and also solving someone's emotional pain from across the room."
John looked at him.
Joseph shrugged, gesturing with his fork at the space Marcus had occupied.
"He knows you care, bro. He just can't hold it right now. Give him the three years
he needs. Maybe four."
"I know."
"Okay." Joseph went back to eating, dropped it entirely. That was the other thing
about his twin. He could locate the exact centre of something difficult in a sentence
and move on without making it a wound. John carried things longer. Joseph carried
them efficiently.
Vera came through — grabbed her plate without sitting, kissed both their heads in
passing like they were still twelve, disappeared toward the bathroom. John rinsed his
plate, looked at the family photo on the kitchen wall for two seconds, and left.
He took the long way to school. Twenty-two minutes instead of fifteen, through the
back streets behind Northcliff ridge where you could see the whole city spread below
in the early morning light. Johannesburg doing what it always did — existing at
enormous scale without asking whether you found it beautiful or overwhelming. He
found it both. Usually at the same time.
Trial exams in three weeks. He was ready. He'd always been the one who actually
studied in this family — Joseph relied on memory, Vera had stopped writing exams years
ago, and the squad's approach to studying was a matter of ongoing philosophical debate.
He thought about Life Sciences. About the Maths paper on Thursday. About the
strange pressure he'd been feeling in his chest lately — not an exam feeling, something
different. A coming-storm quality to the air that had been there for about eleven
days now and hadn't resolved into anything he could name.
His phone buzzed.
Miiko: broooo are you walking the long way again
John: leave me alone
Miiko: JOHN WE LIVE 8 MINUTES APART
John: 22 minutes
Miiko: WHAT ARE YOU DOING FOR 22 MINUTES
John: thinking
Miiko: about WHAT
John: stuff
Miiko: I hate you
Miiko: also Bob says he's going to be late because his sister hid his left shoe
Miiko: she's 6
Miiko: update: found it. it was in the fridge
John: why
Miiko: she said it was hot
He put the phone away, looked at the city one more time, and started walking toward
school.
