Tag: fiction

  • I Will Remember Your Name – Mayor Prosper Ihechi

    Because the seers follow you across lifetimes.

    I am dreaming, and in my dream, we are together again, Temisola- the girl I can no longer remember, you. There is no face. All that remains is a voice, scratchy, like a broken gramophone record, and a memory: a song, hazy, like it has been a long time since it has been played, regret. I still protect this. Like the other fragments of myself, hidden in this flotsam called my mind, it presents another piece to this puzzle- the riotous search for myself in the midst of fading memories. Someday perhaps they might become a whole, like this phase of the moon under which we played, and I might remember who I was, once.  I might remember you.

    Like every dream, I must wake up, in more ways than one, only now to the electric twinge in my spine- and to fear. The twinge was new, fear having since settled as an integral part of my consciousness, the quiet friend you had come to forget was there. It was the fear that saved you, the fear that made you you in this world that forbade hoping. It was the fear that held you back, that made sure you never had to feel this electric twinge in your spine. Because when you did, they would know. And when they knew, they would come.

    I do not remember how this world began. We were not taught to know, never meant to know. We only knew that it was, in the same way one knew of the imprint of his own name- your only possession in a world that gave you none. It was not our way to ask, to dream of asking, dreams being what they were- an aberration, a glitch in the Anti-Christ Equation they had created to unify human thought as an answer to world peace. They had succeeded, banishing the impulses that had driven men to violence but at a cost. We forgot. Nothing remained of our memories of Before, of ourselves before we changed. I had forgotten how to dream; forgotten what it meant to think for myself, to exist- a wild card, outside of the horde. Till now- and for that,  I had become a criminal in this world, as I was a witch in the Other World so long ago. And for that, I was always running.

    Silence. 

    There is nothing to hear in this stillness, nothing save the blood in your ears and your own thoughts, colliding. There is nowhere else to go. How did one love in a world like ours, where we could not even recall tenderness, where your only friend was fear? How did you love the fragments of a memory, a person you had come to fear was fiction? I did not know but I held on still. I had become a slave to these things, an addict to memory. In a world that had moved on, I could not look away or forget.

    Knocking. Wind. The sound of shouts outside.

    I do not answer. I am thinking, dreaming, memorizing this self again before their supreme act of violation. They would break into my mind again. I would forget. Nothing would remain- not these memories of mine, not the fragments of my journey across lifetimes. Nothing but you Temisola- this husk of self, this ghost latching on to my psyche like the messy trail of a spirit child. Nothing would remain save this memory: me, looking at you, from that world from which we came, and  a voice, yours. I would carry it to my grave.

    There will always be those who bind us to this world.

    Static

    DreamRec. April the 24th. 2048.

    Enter Log.

    #

    A long time ago, before our world began.

    There will always be those who bind us to this world. We call them seers.

    Temisola

    You remember. You always remember, don’t you? The inevitable expanse of other lives- memory, the disconcerting awareness of history repeating itself before your eyes. This- the moment when you died, when your people realized you were never truly theirs but yet could not let you go. I do not blame them. How could they? You were a spirit child, yes, and the other world was sealed within your mind like a brand upon cowhide. You were not like the others, yes, who were made to forget, who the seers had driven into forgetting their home world. But you were the only child. You were the only one who stayed beyond your mother’s painful birth, crying and kicking for being born again. You were the only one who couldn’t leave, who Chukwu–  Great One, Chief of all Creation, would not let you return home- to me.

    No, you were not like them. They had learned to stay. You were not like me. I never left.

    Long ago, a woman wanted children so she went to the sacred Boka tree. Night fell, when the spirits of little children came to play under light from the full moon and she called softly, to the little wind dancing in the trees that was the sound of children playing:

    Mother Tree

    Mother Tree

    Give me a child

    And then she waited.

    We were there. We were there and we laughed- at her petition, at that queer mix of strength and pain we found so amusing in humans. Was this our crime? Did Chukwu look down from Elu-Igwe, His mysterious home in the skies, to find two spirits mocking man, the crown of His creation? Was this our penance- you, damned to go through their cycle of rebirths, unable to return, me, to wander the spirit world alone, unable to reach you outside your dreams?

    I do not know. These things were past finding, even for a spirit. I only know that you laughed, and a moment later you were silent, listening to her song.

    How would it feel to live a human life? This was the question you would ask later, softly, as your eyes looked towards the borders of the human world. Of course I didn’t know- I had never been a man. But I had heard the stories, stories of what it meant to be mortal- of suffering, of sickness, of death. I told them to you, but when your eyes got brighter instead of dull, and your skin did not go pale with fear, I should have known it was only a matter of time before you left me to seek the mortal world.

    You left that very night, to that woman and her song, and even now I remember how the night took upon a shade: darker, like there was no moon in the sky, and a heaviness I could not name. Grief. Grief was a human thing, but I couldn’t stop myself, the same way I could not stop myself from running to the border between our worlds even when I knew you were already gone, searching perhaps, for a residue of you.

    Grief. Grief was a human thing, but we carried it across lifetimes.

    Asemoa

    I am a child of both worlds. All children are, only that time passes and we forget, human life being what it is- a leaf, tossed about by the currents of the Earth so that when we remember, we are already old and our eyes are already set on going home.

    When I was born, I cried for many days. All children do. We cried for the lost things, the memory, and the obligations that followed mortality. We cried for our fellows, who cried with us, waiting, on the other side of time, for the few who could return. I cried for my twin, Temisola, who I had left to pursue the wonders of the human world.

    Only a few knew this, why all children greeted this world with tears, and it was this few that would damn us in the years to come.

    Seers. Emissaries of mankind to the Great One Chukwu, Father of All Spirits. They were the ones who saw, who felt the ripple of the veils that kept apart their world and ours. They were the ones who knew, who left in their wake the leash that bound all spirits to the Earth: old age, and the trappings of mortality. Frightened mothers would run to them when a child refused to stay, when a child came again, known, by the marks of another life. One look by a seer and a spirit would spill our secrets, confessing where we hid our deepest treasures, our iyi-uwa, our link to the world beyond. We would forget. Nothing would remain of who we were or the world we left behind.

    Not me. I could not forget, not Temisola- whose name resonated within me the sound of ancient memories, not the spirit world, to which I was inextricably bound. Sometimes they crossed this world and theirs, and I would see my brothers- they were waiting for me, on the other side of time. They did not smile any more- I was a spirit touched with the human world now, I was an Ancestor. Someday I will die and my body will return to the Earth from which it came, the last, in a long series of rebirths. I would remain, spirit but changed, made sacred by the very world which held me bound, by the very weight of her memories. I will no longer be the same.

    I wonder now. Would she still remember me?

    I look at my mother and my mother knows. She looks at me with the tears she does not shed anymore. What did the seer tell her?

    “You are not meant for this world”, she says with a sorrowful shake of her head. I do not reply to her. There was nothing I could say. What did she know of the lines that bound all spirits, the ancient longings planted in our blood eons ago by Chukwu Himself? What did she know of her, my twin, bound to me since the dawn of our creation, drawn to me in spirit as I was drawn to her in flesh? Only death could separate us, and we were spirit. We could not die. Only death could bring me home.

    You mortals call it love. If only you knew. Love itself is spirit.

    Still, there were little mercies. I came to love this world, in my way. Life was an adventure under the fear of dying- you found life or death or nothing at every end of the bend. I remember the first time I cut myself, the look I gave the growing red puddle at my feet, puzzled. My mother screamed, and a hotness flared up my leg for which I had no name then. Pain. I Iay indoors, flitting between light and dark for weeks, my spirit brethren waiting, but I had never felt so alive.

    Another time, I came upon a snake wound tightly round itself. It was a hot day, and the snake was warming itself by the bushes near our home. It must have been very weak because it didn’t sense my presence, and when I gently touched its brilliant, ringed black coils, there was no sound, not a ripple to be heard. Something about its posture spoke to me–of the circle of rebirth, of sunset and sunrise, of the world moving round and round till it came to itself, and I might have continued there brooding to my death had my father not shoved me away just before the snake poised to strike. He was livid.

    “Are you trying to kill yourself?!” he had shouted. His face was a mask of anger and relief, and fear.

    I could not answer.  How did you tell your father you had actually forgotten that you could die?

    Mortality. Mortality hung over us like a knife on an edge, a grim cloud. A man was born to the knowledge of his death, and his entire life balanced on that spider web. There were no certainties. An old man longed for the afterlife. A child just died. You walked through paths that were unfamiliar, even though you knew they were there: good and evil and death. You lived for the moment, wherever it was. And so they loved, and died. They threw their parties, and they died. They lived wickedly, and died. And it was these moments they had, this belief in meaning, that made them who they were. Man. They knew what things were valued because they knew what things were lost.

    We are spirit, and we are wise, but this was something we had never learned. There are some things you could not learn without dying.

    I do not know when I finally decided to stay. I do not even know why. Maybe it was my mother and her pleas, this woman I had tormented for many years, who had met seer upon seer in vain. Maybe it was me, I had not had enough of the human world.

     It didn’t matter. I was letting go of the world I left behind and I felt that world slacken, the bond growing thinner with the times. I would not see my spirit brothers again for many years and by the time I did, I was already an old man, with a wife long gone, and my weary eyes waiting for the afterlife- or if Chukwu wished, another rebirth. It did not matter, not any more.

    #

    Perhaps, we never truly forget

    29th October, 2010.

    The Present.

    Somewhere, in between dreaming and waking, I see her again- Temisola. We are under the Boka tree and we are laughing, our voices wild and free, by the light of a full moon. We are not alone. There is a woman too, and this woman is singing. Her voice is beautiful and haunting, calling to me in its terrible depth. My mother, from a long time ago.

    A moment later and there is silence. I feel Temisola staring at me.

    “I did not forget you, Temisola”, I try to say but the words catch in my throat and I do not say them. I do not even try to meet her eyes.

    I woke up. There is no one here, just the steady sound of rain and the noisy ceiling fan. My wife is out, probably on an early morning shift, but the air still holds faint traces of her cologne, a smell I have come to associate with home. This should be comforting, but I do not even acknowledge it. 

    I have not dreamt of you for many years, Temisola. Why now? I ask this of the empty room.

    There is no answer, but the wind blows suddenly from an open window, filling the room with my wife’s cologne. Almost as if, to blow the thought away.

    I do not dream of her again, but I see her everywhere now- her eyes, in a colleague at work, her voice, in a storekeeper. Once my wife was talking and I just sat there, listening. I could have sworn that we have had this talk before, once, in a previous life.

    “You remind me of someone”, I said to her.

    “Who?”

    I smiled but did not say.

    The world had changed much since the world I left behind- walking through this world had become a journey through history. I was here, thirty years ago, when it was just a bush path, and it was there I suffered a particularly violent death. It had become a burden, these memories, this weight of other lives. I was living in the present, yet haunted by the past.

    Once, a lifetime ago, I could not bear it any more so I told  my mother.

    “I cannot forget, Mummy,” I said.

    “Forget what?” she asked.

    “My former life.”

    She had laughed it off. In that life, people had to begin to forget. In this life, they had all but forgotten.

    There is no one I can tell now. I am the last of my kind.

    I have learnt to hide them, these memories, and all the knowledge that came with it. Where once they saw the ogbanje, an abiku, now they saw a man burdened with the weight of years. An old soul, they call me.  If only they knew. If only they remembered.

    Still, there were always those who knew, at some level. They were drawn to you, and did not know why. Like my wife, Oma. I had met her at a friend’s party and had told her to marry me. She had laughed, and we spent the rest of the party talking to each other. She had left without leaving a contact, but I was unworried. She was my wife in a previous life. We met two weeks later in a library and a few months later, we were married. We have been married for eight years, and there is no one alive who could read me as well as she does. No one but this woman from my past, Temisola, who, for some reason, had chosen to haunt my present like a ghost–the only relic of my past that had any substance. But for what purpose? Vengeance? Love? Was this Your sign, Chukwu, asking me to return to the spirit world?

    What would I tell you, Temisola?

    I was a man now used to knowledge. Still, I could not answer this. I almost laughed. This was how Chukwu laughed at us.

    Deep in my thoughts, I do not hear a car speed by in the worst of the rain. I do not register the sound, mud splattering, until the gritty feeling on my face and clothes. I pause. I am livid.

    A woman alights from the car and in my shock, I do not hear her spirited apologies. She is very dark, and her looks are not one you would easily forget. I couldn’t. Hers was the constant of every memory, the one person I had searched for in others for a lifetime.

    “Temisola?”

    She pauses her explanations and looks me in the eye for the first time. Her face is blank, with one eyebrow raised in a question.

    She does not remember me.

    Mayor Prosper Ihechi writes stories for the voices in his head, and poetry for his soul. Through words, he reenacts the miracle of flight. 

  • The Gift that arrived at Night | Nande T.S Kamati

    Not so long ago, in a time when salt was as precious as gold, there once was a family whose story whispered through the winds of time. They lived in Shamba, a land of secrets and wonders, where every stone seemed to harbour tales of ancient glory.

    This family resided in a quaint village known as Ngula, a name bestowed upon it by the ancient founders, translating to “Tomorrow” in the ancient tongue of its founders. Their abode, a humble dwelling, occupied a space just a bit smaller than half a football field.

    Within the confines of their home resided eight cherished souls: Mr. Shetu, his four sons, his beloved wife, Ms Tuli, and the venerable matriarch of the family, Mr. Shetu’s ninety-year-old mother. To all the children, she was simply known as Grandma. For a full decade, this intimate group of eight had been the heart and soul of their household.

    But fate, like a tricky puzzle piece, wove a new thread into the fabric of their lives one sunny morning. As they toiled in the golden fields harvesting pearl millet, a sudden, sharp pain pierced Ms Tuli’s lower abdomen. She gingerly settled beneath the comforting shade of a nearby Marula tree and began massaging her belly in an attempt to soothe the distressing ache.

    “Quickly!” Ms Tuli urgently called out to her sons, her voice laced with discomfort. “Hurry to Mr Hishiko and let him know I require his donkey cart. Inform him that I’m not too far away. I must reach my mother’s house before the day darkens. I’ll have the help I need there. Go now, make haste,” she directed her eldest son.

    “I’ll come along, my dear. I might be old, but I can still lend a hand,” Grandma offered as she gently massaged Ms Tuli’s swollen feet. She had chosen to accompany her daughter-in-law on this journey since her son, Mr. Shetu, the third of his lineage to embark on the king’s salt-mining expedition, was far away at the salt plains.

    Of course, Hafeni, the youngest of the four sons, pleaded to accompany them. “Pleeeeease, mama, take me with you,” he begged, his eyes wide with anticipation.

    “Okay, fine. You can come along,” his mother agreed, though her response was accompanied by a somewhat exasperated sigh.

    For the past few months, Hafeni had keenly observed his mother’s tummy gradually getting bigger with each passing day. He didn’t need anyone to explain it to him. His mother was expecting a new little brother or sister. After ten long years, he would no longer hold the title of being the youngest child in the family.

    The prospect of having a new baby sibling brought a mix of emotions. On one hand, he looked forward to the exciting adventures and activities he’d now be able to enjoy, just like his older brothers. On the other hand, the new baby will get all the attention.

    With the assistance of Mr Hishiko and his trusty old donkey cart, Hafeni, his mother, and Grandma reached their destination just before the sun dipped below the horizon. As the cart rolled to a stop, Hafeni’s maternal uncle and his mother’s mother, whom the little boy affectionately called Grandmama, rushed out of the house to greet them. With gentle care, the men helped Ms Tuli off the donkey cart and swiftly carried her into a hut that Grandmama had prepared in anticipation of her arrival.

    Hafeni, although eager to stay with his mother, knew he couldn’t accompany her this time. Instead, his aunt, who happened to be his mother’s youngest sister, led him to the cooking area where a warm dinner awaited him, surrounded by the comforting presence of extended family.

    As the family gathered around the crackling fire, Hafeni found himself bombarded with questions from his curious cousins about the adventures he’d had accompanying his father to the salt plains.

    But despite their enthusiasm, Hafeni struggled to focus. His thoughts were consumed by worries about his mother, and his anxiety was palpable. He kept stealing glances in the direction his mother had gone earlier, his concern etched across his face.

    Although fatigue eventually weighed down his eyelids, Hafeni was determined not to succumb to sleep until he saw his mother safe and sound. He lay down beside the comforting warmth of the fire, gazing up at the night sky.

    Suddenly, a shooting star streaked across the heavens, as if in reassurance that everything would turn out fine. After a while, his eyelids grew heavy, and he finally drifted into slumber. His caring aunt gently scooped him up and carried him to bed.

    As the morning sun graced the new day, Grandmama went to fetch Hafeni from the hut he slept in to take him to his mother. She found the boy already awake. Before Grandmama could greet Hafeni, the boy dashed past her and ran to his mother’s hut. Hafeni’s face beamed with joy when he saw his dear mommy. She looked exhausted, but still radiated beauty and warmth. She stretched out her hand, and Hafeni eagerly took it, with a beaming smile mirroring his mother’s sweet expression.

    “Come,” she whispered, her voice filled with love, “Come and meet your little sister.” The happiness in the air was so palpable that it seemed to make the morning itself shine a little brighter.

    The new-born baby lay beside her mother, so tiny that Hafeni hesitated to hold her, afraid he might hurt her. Ms Tuli gently picked up the baby and brought her closer to him, her eyes gleaming with pride.

    “Look, Hafeni,” she said with a warm smile, “This is your baby sister.”

    Hafeni’s eyes widened in astonishment as he gazed at the baby’s tiny head. He couldn’t help but notice, “Mama, the baby has white hair like Grandma and Grandmama.” Tenderly, he ran his little fingers across his baby sister’s delicate hair.

    “Yes, she does,” his mother replied with a gentle nod. “She’s one special little girl. Her hair is like that of ancient star travellers, the divine messengers that come from the highest place,” Ms Tuli said, her eyes filled with pride as she spoke.

    Hafeni’s heart swelled with wonder at the mention of the Highest Place, a name his ancestors had given to the kingdom far beyond the stars. It was the kingdom of the good King who ruled over all creation from the mountain at the edge of life.

    Since Mr. Shetu was not there to give his little girl a name as is tradition, the two grandmothers decided to name her Nuusiku. It means “the one that arrived at night.”

    Nuusiku was truly unique. It was as if the light of a million stars shone through her hair, which was whiter than the grey hair on both her grandmothers’ heads. The little baby looked unusual in more ways than one; her hair was not the only remarkable thing she was born with.

    Grandma reached for a cloth woven from the inner bark of the baobab tree, the very tree from which Hafeni’s ancestors believed the first woman fetched milk to feed her children. They called it the “tree of mothers.” Slowly, Grandma unwrapped the cloth, revealing a lock of white hair adorned with twelve knots. These knots gleamed like the bright midday sun. She brought the lock of hair closer to the boy.

    “Look here,” Grandma said, “Your sister came to us already filled with power. This lock of hair rested on her forehead and fell off shortly after she was born. This is how the divine messenger travels from beyond the stars to our world. They arrive with this lock of hair draped over their faces. The ancestors called it the ‘horn of power,’ but today we know it as the ‘garland of twelve suns.’”

    “It is said that when a clan is truly fortunate, one of its daughters will be blessed with a baby who is a divine messenger. Nuusiku is the second messenger of the good King to be born into my clan. I am truly blessed to have lived long enough to see both of them,” Grandmama said with immense pride.

    “But who is the other messenger?” the curious boy asked.

    Grandmama chuckled warmly, “My grandmother, your great-great-grandmother. She, too, had white hair like that of the divine messengers of the good King, who rules from the mountain at the edge of life.”

    Hafeni pondered all that his mother and grandmother had shared with him. There was still one burning question in his mind. “If she’s the good King’s messenger and she was sent to us, what message did she bring?”

    “We will only know that in about seven days’ time when her umbilical cord falls off. On that day, a wise San man or woman from the tribe of the Ancients will come to our house. They will shave off Nuusiku’s white hair, and the hair along with the garland of twelve suns will be burned in an ostrich’s egg,” Grandma explained.

    “Yes, once the hair and the garland of twelve suns are completely burned to ash, the wise San elder will smash the egg on the ground. A message will be revealed on one of the pieces of the broken egg, clear as daylight to the wise elder to see. Only they will be able to understand the writings and explain it to us. It will be a message for the whole kingdom to hear,” Grandmama explained.

    Hafeni felt his excitement bubble up. He couldn’t wait for the seven days to pass so that he could hear the message his sister brought them. “When I grow up as big as Papa, I’m going to be a divine messenger too. Just wait and see. I’ll have white hair and a message for the people to hear,” the boy declared, full of confidence.

    Ms Tuli, Grandmama, and Grandma burst into laughter so hearty that tears ran down their faces.

    After three days of rest, Ms Tuli, Grandma, Hafeni, and the baby returned home, just a day after Mr. Shetu’s arrival from the salt plains. All the older boys rushed out of the house to greet their mother, led by their father, who held a massive spear.

    Before his wife, mother, and baby, Mr. Shetu thrust the spear into the ground and began to dance. He stomped the earth with his feet in joyful celebration. Grandma joined in with ululations of pride as she looked on. Nuusiku was then gently handed over to her father. Mr. Shetu cradled his daughter’s breath-taking face in his hands as he slowly walked to their hut, a smile radiating from his face.

    When everybody had sat down, Mr. Shetu started telling his family a story. “Long ago,” he began, “this beautiful kingdom of ours was gripped by the worst drought our people had ever experienced. Not a single drop of water was to be found anywhere in the kingdom.

    The strongest of men risked dying of thirst by travelling to the kingdoms of our ancestors to get water. But by the time the men would return, the calabashes of water would be as empty as when they embarked on the journey. 

    As everyone settled in their seats, Mr. Shetu began to tell a story. “Many, many years ago,” he started, “our beloved kingdom was gripped by a terrible drought, the worst our people had ever known. There was not a single drop of water to be found anywhere. The strongest of men risked dying of thirst by travelling to the kingdoms of our ancestors in search water. But alas, when they returned, their calabashes were as dry as the day they set out.

    Every day, the women of the village gathered, dancing to the rhythmic beat of the drum, their voices rising high as they called upon the rain. The rain still chose not to come. 

    A young bachelor and a young maiden rode a black cow into the sunset to fetch the rain as the oracles of the Ancients advised. The fiery sunset consumed both the cow and the maiden. Yet, even after such a sacrifice, the rain still chose not to come. 

    The animals began to die, and the seeds planted in hope began to rot in the ground. Tears flowed freely from the eyes of the young and old alike, their hearts heavy with despair. In the end, the whole land was devoid of hope.

    Finally, the wisdom of the elderly men and women led them to remember the merciful hands of their Maker. They remembered He who is said to have formed their skin from the mud of a riverbank and their bones from the marrow of a bulrush.

    With hopeful hearts, they raised their voices to the sky, seeking the benevolent Kalunga, the good King who ruled from the mountain at the edge of life. Through endless days and starry nights, their fervent cries filled the sky as they called upon His name.

    Finally, on the eve of the seventh day of their relentless pleas, something utterly extraordinary occurred. A colossal, flame-covered rock descended from the sky, landing with a resounding boom right in the heart of the forest, at the very centre of the kingdom. The earth quaked, sending ripples of fear through the land. Yet despite their apprehension, the people emerged from their villages to witness the awe-inspiring event. 

    ‘Did you see that?’ they asked one another.

    ‘Did you see the fire fall from the sky?’ somebody was said to have asked.

    ‘Surely the sun has fallen out of the sky,’ another person ventured to guess.

    Arming themselves with spears as protection against any wild beast they might encounter, the people trekked all night to the forest at the centre of the kingdom. 

    Right in the middle of the forest, they found a huge rock, unlike any they had ever seen before. Water was gushing out of the earth beneath the rock, creating a bubbling spring. To their amazement, they heard the faint cries of a baby emanating from the top of this wondrous rock. 

    Though the rock felt slightly warm to the touch, a resilient and elderly San woman, a member of the tribe of the Ancients, fearlessly climbed on top of it. And there on top of the rock, lay a baby boy, squirming and wriggling. A lock of hair with twelve knots hung delicately from his hairline.

    The San woman tenderly lifted this lock of hair off of the baby’s face, revealing the most exquisite infant she had ever laid eyes upon. The hair on his head is said to have been as white as the milk of a cow, and the twelve knots gleamed like a radiant garland of suns, as if it were the middle of the day.

    The baby boy continued to cry and wiggle as the San woman, filled with awe and reverence, carefully wrapped him and his horn of power in a blanket made from the bark of the tree of mothers. 

    The San woman raised the baby boy high into the air, presenting him to the gathered crowd. “Look! Look!” exclaimed the joyous elder. “A divine messenger has been sent upon a star to bring us the gift of water!” Her voice rang out with pride and wonder.

    The women began to ululate with delight, while the men celebrated by pounding their spears into the ground. Even the forest’s wild inhabitants, the jackals, ostriches, and elephants, joined in the jubilation. Their howls, honks, and trumpets echoed through the land, proclaiming the arrival of this miraculous gift.

    Days later, the garland of twelve suns and the baby’s milky-white hair were ceremoniously burned in a large calabash. The message from the King who rules from the mountain at the edge of life was unveiled:

    “I have heard the cries of My people. 

    They remembered Me, 

    And therefore, I have chosen this very day to save them.”

    “Did that really happen?” inquired the second youngest of Mr Shetu and Ms Tuli’s sons.

    “Well, of course it happened. That’s how the spring at the centre of the kingdom came to be. Its waters have never failed once, and the kingdom has never seen drought since the star came down with the divine messenger,” Grandma confidently affirmed.

    As Hafeni listened to his father’s story, he realised how special his little sister was. Convinced that his sister had arrived upon the shooting star he had seen on the night of her birth, Hafeni moved closer to his father’s chair and asked, “Now, Papa, you too have to give her a name. What are you going to name her?”

    His father paused for a moment and then replied, “Magano. That is what I am naming her.”

    “That means ‘gift!’” exclaimed the eldest of the boys.

    “Yes,” Mr. Shetu confirmed with a smile.

    “In four days, we will get to hear your message,” Hafeni thought. He then tenderly planted a kiss on his little sister’s cheek and whispered her full name into her ear, “Magano Nuusiku, the gift that arrived at night.”

    Author Biography

    Nande Thomas Sakaria Kamati is a 30-year-old Electrical Engineer. Nande’s true passion lies in writing captivating children’s fantasy stories set in Alkebulan (Africa) as it once was. Drawing inspiration from his Bantu, Khoisan and Christian heritage, he seeks to transport young readers to enchanting realms filled with adventure. In April 2024, his children’s story “Hambie:  A Purr-fectly Mysterious Tale” was published in the Writers Space Literary Magazine. It appeared on page 12, 13 & 14 of the magazine and received the honour of being selected as the editor’s choice. This marked his debut as a published author. You can find his story in the April 2024 edition of the magazine, accessible via this link: Writers Space Literary Magazine 

  • Petrichor

    Petrichor. 

    That’s the word he used—the one he called the scent you said you perceived outside. The scent of rain, soil–the one curling into your nose right now.

    “I can swear,” you began. “Swear?” you remember, he said, interrupting you as always. His head had tilted slightly to the right. 

    You remember how the light bounced off the tiny golden hoop earring in his left ear, how his taupe-coloured eyes twinkled, how his cold fingers traced wet lines on your cheekbones.

    You watched sweat trail down the side of the Cold Stone ice cream paper cup—the one beside the packet of testosterone pills he purchased at the pharmacy before you arrived. Despite leaving the house thirty minutes earlier, you were ten minutes late, thanks to Lagos’s never-ending gridlock. He didn’t mention your lateness, but you saw his eye glance at his watch when you walked in. He could annoy you in a million ways, like how you were a bit pissed that he ordered before you came in.

    But what he wasn’t–what he never was–was tardy. You once joked that if the rapture were a thing, if indeed the blast of a trumpet by the archangel of the homophobic god whose name was also ‘love’ could make people become human magnets- an irony you are yet to understand. He would be amongst the first to be caught up in the clouds, one of the first to arrive at the pearly gates.

    “If the angels are half as pretty as you are, Omalicha Nwa, you bet I would,” he replied.

    You remember how he bit his lip and did that annoying hip swing while locking you in place with his mesmerising gaze. At that moment, you knew he could trade eternity for you. You could wager that, for you, he would catch a grenade, hijack a plane, take a bullet in the brain, or whatever Bruno Mars said in Grenade. And you knew that you could do the same for him.

    But you let the yinmu and “better washing” slide out of your lips. You even accompanied it with an eye roll; playful deflection was your love language. You had yet to master the ability to reciprocate love. Perhaps affection wouldn’t have been strange to you if you had grown up in a household where “I love you” was used as often as “I pray you remain rapturable.”

    You remember the earliest days of your relationship when such action would have attracted a frown and a reprimand. But you both had outgrown that part of your lives. In the last eighteen months you had both shed those old skins of judgments and grown into new ones.

    So, that day, in the matchbox flat on Bode Thomas, Surulere, you smiled so hard your cheeks hurt when he flapped his hand like a big bird as he drifted towards you. There and then, you could tell that the flutters in your belly belonged to a thousand giant monarch butterflies. 

    You wished you had flapped your arms and ran towards him, too. You wish you had succumbed to the prompts of your heart and pretended to be a goofy goose. Instead, you side-stepped him just before he got to you. You wanted him to chase you. 

    If you knew then that time was already ticking, you would have let him hold you for all the minutes you allowed him to chase you around the frayed pink couch. You would not have done small shakara.


    At the Coldstone outlet four days ago, you wanted to tell him to use a spoon like every normal person. The perfectionist in you wanted everything to be perfect. You would have added, “for once, Somto” to get his attention, but the dimple that formed on his right cheek when he smiled distracted you from the faux pas, as always. It was easy for him to sway your emotions and change your mind without effort. And sometimes you wondered if it had anything to do with you loving him more than he loved you. You wish you knew the answer to this or to anything at all. You cannot remember if you knew someone who once said their partner annoys them as much as they amuse them. 

    Or maybe you heard it in one of the Agony Aunty segments of Jola and Feyikemi’s  I Said What I Said podcast. You don’t know which.

    Right now, your head feels like those refuse heaps stacked beside gutters in shop fronts on Thursday sanitation days; your head feels like a mix of mess. 

    To be candid, on some days, you didn’t even bother about his ice cream habits or any of his quirks in public. Why should you? You once dated a girl who drank beer straight from the bottle. An old-time girlfriend preferred slurping her palm wine from the calabash; you’ve had your fair share of weird drinkers and wack lovers. You have kissed a hundred frogs before your prince came along. But Somto was the only person you knew who ate ice cream directly from the cup. Spoons and spades be damned, he would say.

    You don’t know why the memories are tumbling in; why every moment you shared is coming back to you, but right now, you remember the dust, nylon, and paper swirling outside the glass. You remember the ‘E’ missing from the ‘Cold Stone’ inscribed on the glass.

    “Swear about what, my sweet love?” he asked. Your faces were so close you could see the pebble-like smoothness of the mole on his lip. So close in that public space that throbbed with strangers’ laughter, chatter, and patter of feet. So close that you were covered in the haze of caramel, frozen yoghurt, Oreos—and that scent you are wearing now. The cologne he left in your house. The empty bottle that best describes how you feel.

    “That you’re the only one that knows this word in this place,” you answered him. Your index finger–the one with the black chipped nail paint and the matching tattoo of a half heart–traced a halo in the space above your head. You didn’t care then that it was a preposterous claim. 

    In a room with men in nice suits and women in colourful chic office dresses. You didn’t mind that you were in Lagos’s Silicon Valley: Yaba, where your love story began. It didn’t matter how preposterous it was that you thought Somto was the only one who knew the word for the scent of rain. That both of you were in love or even sharing that same space was considered unthinkable by many. Even in 2024.

    Ayobami Adebayo’s “Stay with Me” was what brought you together. So much for a love story. Movies were your thing, so when you picked up the book on that green plastic table crusted with leftover Egusi and porridge beans in the crowded cafeteria. You did what every non-reader would do: you glanced at it casually, like someone inspecting a specimen; you flipped through the pages; ran a finger over the spine and made a comment when you saw the title. The newness of the book and boredom were what attracted you initially; you didn’t see the title till you flipped the book over.

    “So, she didn’t have any title for her book other than Sam Smith’s song?”

    “And who said ‘Stay With Me’ was exclusive to Sam Smith? The voice that answered you made you jerk your head upwards. Something about the voice made you look twice at the person. Beneath the hoodie and behind the dark Ray Bans, you could tell that whoever they were, they were not like everyone. They would never be like everyone. That’s how you met. It didn’t surprise you when he told you of his pills and potion on your first date two days later.

    “Potion?” you curled an eyebrow at him. “I’ve known that I was different since I was a child. He shrugged, and you witnessed him biting into ice cream. You watched him eating ice cream from a bowl for the first time. You had your deal breakers, and such a quirk as his was one of them, but as you watched him, you drew a faint line over it. That would be the first of many compromises.

    “You know if you didn’t tell me that you were…” You drew spirals in the air because the word was still too heavy to pronounce. You were still in a daze, wrapped in a cloud of surprise and infatuation. You were not a stranger to queer relationships. You have always found the minds and bodies of women more appealing than men’s. At first, you thought it was a form of rebellion against your spooky evangelist parents. Eventually, you realised that it was what it was—you were a girl who loved girls more.

    “A trans man… A guy, man?” he replied in his raspy voice, a result of smoking two packets of Benson Switch daily. Your body tensed, and the Oreo in your mouth tasted like chalk. Your eyebrows must have shot into your hair when you reacted. He waved your fears away with a flick of his head. That was when you fell in love completely with him. A few days later, while your belongings were still folded in your big Echolac box pushed against the wall of your room, you kissed for the first time. 

    Stay with Me was the first book you completed without being forced or cajoled. Nikki May’s Wahala was the next. You became a reader after that day. He became a podcast listener afterwards. You both agreed that it was a fair trade.

    ***

    Pain shoots up your palm as the gravel in the black soil bunched in your hands pushes against your skin. But that pain is nothing compared to the one in your chest. It is a drop of water to the ocean, a speck of dust to the sand in the Sahara Desert. If you had known that the ice cream date was your last day together, you would have stayed there forever. Fused to that uncomfortable, gaudy wooden chair, stuck on it like an old bubble gum.

    Your eyes are pressed shut. So tight it feels as though the bones of your eye sockets are touching. A sound that can pass for a muffled groan and stifled moan ricochets in your head and chest. You want to let the light in, but to let in the light, you will also be letting in the dark. If you do, you will see the tombstone and the lies—‘beloved daughter’ etched in neat block letters.

    If you open your eyes, you will see the footprints of the ones who never accepted him on the freshly dug soil. The ones he shared nothing with but a last name. The ones who had hurriedly dumped ‘the family’s embarrassment’ into a final resting place. Their excuse—according to the blog—according to religious rites.

    Somto was no daughter even before he began taking the testosterone pills. Neither was he loved. You had screamed this when you first saw the concrete tombstone. You pounded your rage into the dark earth. As though you wanted to dig your way to him.

    Until you heard the cough. It belonged to the guard who had let you in. It and the smell of his sweat-stained body in the worn faded overalls. Together they pulled you back from that brink. Even if you wanted to go on, you couldn’t. The way the guard glared at you made you realise he didn’t believe your story about being a relative who arrived late for the internment. You knew he would have called to confirm if he had Somto’s parents’ contact..

    The way he snatched the one thousand naira note from you when you came in showed that he was tired of the throng of visitors for the day, but he would not turn down your gift. Or any other. 

    When you turned to face him, you had to swallow your grief.

    If Somto were here, he would tell you that the guard was more of a receiver than a giver. Straight people! He would say. That’s how he sometimes saw the world: Straight. Queer. Good. Bad. But you understood because sometimes trauma can affect one’s worldview. The people he always called bad never disappointed. The good ones, too. He knew so much about the human condition that you had begun to think it was a gift because only gifts are that perfect.

    How come the gift failed? Why didn’t he know that the stranger on Tinder was a killer?

    It was a question you had asked yourself a hundred times. Even if you knew that there would be no answer. Not even a lie masked as one.

    Behind your lids, a shadow settles, and a blanket of cold air settles on your skin. The former, you would have been scared to be alone in this place with crumbling tombstones, gleaming granite, and Gone-Too-Soon’s. This place with gnarled tree trunks and wilting flowers.

    This vast expanse of land with its ominous mounds and the smell of decay. But you don’t feel anything. You’re not different from the residents of this place—people who once lived, people who no longer feel.

    So, you press your eyelids tighter as the gravel burrows deeper into your palm. As your knees sink deeper into the soil. The iron fist tightens around your heart and throat. Your chest heaves as you drag in the glue formed in your lungs. You have asked yourself if the tightness in your chest would have been lighter. You want to know if you would have felt better. If the memories of the day you mentioned those words to him did not constantly dart around like bats chased from a tree.

    “Let’s see other people … if that will make you happy,” you had said, even if you knew you couldn’t see anyone else. You wouldn’t. You would rather be a hermit, a worm under a rock, than be with another. But you said it. And meant it. Because love for you has always been what Oprah once said: it is being your best when the other is being their worst. And that was the best thing you could think of after he confessed to the affair. The best was what you always wanted for him.

    You would see the news feature on your phone if you open your eyes. ‘Transman Stabbed to Death.’ 

    Over two decades of his wondrous existence is summarised in four words; his eventful life is limited to one sentence. Even though you had spent hours replying to every vile comment online, telling people to fuck off and directing the keyboard warriors to their choice places in hell. You still can’t believe that it has happened. You want the unreturned phone calls to be another of his pranks. Your ears are pricked for the beep announcing an incoming text; notifying you that he is back; that this was all a bad dream. But you only hear the dull thud of rainwater on the soil. And that smell: Petrichor.

    OBADITAN OLUWAKOREDE (OBA.T.K) is an independent writer whose childhood memories consist of sitting beside his father’s beaten box, devouring almost every book in the African Writers Series.  In those nascent moments, he discovered the power of stories to grip and groom. But it wasn’t until his twenties, after meeting his mentor, that he discovered how to wield and weave stories. His writing is vivid and vibrant, exploring stories never told or amplifying the ones quietly told. He lives in Space, but he can be found in Lagos, Nigeria. He can be reached on 08026893106 and on Twitter(X) @KingofKontent. 

  • Famished – Ikechukwu Henry

    Life’s bitterness persists, an unrelenting stream of woes akin to a newborn’s initial grasp on a mother’s breast – feeble and uncomprehending. The weight of its despair becomes truly apparent only when you venture into the once bustling Ụmụdi market, tasked with getting the cooking ingredients carefully whispered into your ears by your mother. “Buy a  packet of Maggi seasoning, three bulbs of onions, a bounty of catfish, and the modest elegance of periwinkles,” her words lingered, albeit with a painful residue as her hands relinquished their grasp. 

    In your community, the specters of destitution and famine have taken residence, perched like a vulture upon a camwood tree. The community now embraces these grim companions with a reluctant cordiality. The once-vibrant Ụmụdi market, a hub of bustling commerce, has faded into a shadow of its former self. It evades description, for fear that articulating its decline would magnify its lamentable state.

    You navigate the labyrinthine market, sidestepping puddles left by last night’s rain, the same rain that had serenaded your sleep beneath the haven of your bed covers. The pre-dawn hush was heavy, laden with the scent of moistened earth, as the moon retreated, its light borrowed from the sun.

    Mind where you dey go! If my wares fall, you’ll pay,” a vendor chides, rousing you from your reverie. 

    “Sorry, sorry.” Apologies fly from your lips as you survey the nearly deserted market.

    Your journey leads you to the onion lane, a sight you’ve grown accustomed to, yet this time only two sellers grace your vision—your customer excluded. Undeterred, you approach a Hausa vendor, perched upon a large mat adorned with an assortment of onions.

    “How much for this?” you gesture toward a cluster of four modest bulbs of onion, their dimensions scarcely surpassing those of limes. The vendor arches an eyebrow, his gaze darting across his array of onions as if the one you’ve indicated eludes his sight. A memory surfaces—your younger brother, Chidiebere, often played this same game when tasked with fetching specific ingredients for your mother’s culinary creations. His eyes would dance above the exact spot she pointed at, a charade that brought amusement to you and vexation to her. He would linger there for so long and your mom had to check whether he was subtracting the meat she intended to use to cook. 

    “Ebere, What’s holding you?” she would ask, her hands posed akimbo.

    “Mum, I can’t see the onions you said I should bring,” he would whine and your mom had to muffle her chuckle, staring at the onions that lay right between them.

    “Look at it here before I beat the hell out of you.” she would point but Ebere’s eyes would be wriggling above where your mother’s hand darted until she squatted his head to the exact spot the onions lay. 

    Much like Chidiebere, the vendor forces your hand: you squat, pointing once more to the elusive bulbs, mirroring your brother’s antics.

    “Ah, that one is five hundred nairas,” he finally concedes.

    You reel back, as if his words physically push you. Five hundred what, for these diminutive onions? “Isn’t it two hundred naira?” you attempt to negotiate, only to be met with a toothy grin, tarnished by the hue of tobacco-stained teeth—a mirror of the woman at the funeral, her annoyance concealing her smile.

    Money slips through hands like water through a sieve, a realization you’ve witnessed before. At the  burial, you elbowed your way to the front of the line for refreshments, your urgency akin to others jostling for their share. Fingers brushed against food, others’ as well as yours, and the sensation of salvation mingled with the fervor. When your turn arrived, the distributor bypassed you for a scrawny boy clutching his portion as if it were a lifeline. The boy’s hungry eyes and lips devoured the rice, drenched in red oil, his feeble frame a testament to the cruel sting of scarcity.

    You waited but she kept testing your patience as she served others without acknowledging you anymore.  “Aunty I dey wait na,” you reminded. 

    She bared her teeth. “ No be people I dey serve? You too big for this thing oh.” You clenched your fist, your ego crushed. So you left the burial ceremony without informing your mother of your departure. Muttering how biased she was. 

    If you no want buy, abeg leave my shop. Na money we dey find for this country,” the hausa man reminds you, swatting off flies. You shake your head, fishing out one thousand naira notes from your pocket and handle it to him. He grabs it and lifts it higher as if it’s a telescope, a fake note.

    I hope to say this money no be canta?” he says and tosses it into his bag.

    Oga, you go give me jara oh. Five hundred naira no be beans.” you jokingly say as he hauls one more into it and stretches the tied onions to you. You take your change and trudge off. You hope the money your mother gave you would sustain all the things she needs for her cooking. Life no balance sha, you think.

    *****

    Hours earlier, before your mother dispatched you to the market.

    You were returning from the football field, when a piercing scream reverberated from your home. Instinct urged you to intervene, but familiarity bred a kind of apathy towards the tumultuous symphony within your household. Your father’s once-commanding voice berated, “You must be mad, Chinelo!”

    Does a drunkard discern the boundary between reality and his intoxicated musings? “Why haven’t you cooked since four hours ago?”

    Approaching the window, you observed your father’s wrath descending upon your mother, her arms protecting her face from the storm of his blows. His arms, vessels of inebriated strength, struck her with an unholy fury. It was a scene familiar to you, as regular as the rhythm of your heartbeat.

    In the corner, your younger brother sobbed, a witness to the macabre theatre of domestic discord. Your father, Amaobi, wielded his anger like a weapon, unleashing its venom on the most inconsequential provocations. His words stumbled out, hindered by the stammer that had long held him captive.

    He glared menacingly at her as she whimpered on the floor and then, he stormed off to his room, the echo of his rage trailing in his wake. He had always been a tempest on the precipice of eruption, his ire triggered by trifles. You watched your mother pick herself up from the floor and shuffle to the kitchen, her limbs carrying her weight with an air of resignation. Your brother followed, tears painting his face. But why? You had asked no one in particular severally. Had they spent a happy time together? In a gladsome ecstasy? 

    Why was she musing all this beating alone, spending her days sobbing in a pathetic depression? You pondered the reasons behind the torment your mother silently endured. What brought them to this point? Were there once moments of joy, now buried beneath the weight of resentment? Why did she bear the brunt of his aggression, spending her days imprisoned in this cycle of melancholy?

    Hours later, after your father had departed to engage in his vices, your mother received a call that elicited an ear-piercing scream. The phone call was met with a response that seemed to exude elation, an emotion incongruent with the news she had received. Her body language exuded an almost giddy anticipation as she wiped tears from her eyes, as though she had been praying for this very moment. 

    Ọ bụ gịnị? What it’s?”

    Your mother sprawled on the floor. “A hit-and-run car ran over your father. He’s dead. ” Her eyes beamed with sunlit happiness, momentary giggling gliding off her lips as she dusted her dress and went inside. You realized in those eyes of hers shone a hunger for normality, for regalement, for comfort and succour. Her body longed for freedom from this den called marriage.

    Unbeknownst to you, her hunger for freedom must not be limited to emotional emancipation alone. Aside from that, there was hunger for survival.

  • I.T. People – Doug M. Dawson

    We enjoy our birthdays until they make us feel old, remind us of our mortality or portend something unpleasant. Jack Adams had his one month earlier. He had mixed feelings the day he turned 47. When he got home from work he had put on his ‘happy face’–what else can you do when your wife has made you a special dinner, bought you a beautiful, down-filled ski jacket that must have consumed half a week of her after-tax salary and the kids have strung up the house with banners saying “Happy Birthday Daddy” and all–squealing with delight at the very sight of you–come running to the door?

    Jack wasn’t sure what his problem was. It wasn’t being tied down to a home and family, guilt over some extramarital affair or something bad he’d discovered about his own health or that of his loved ones. It wasn’t the mortgage, the car payments or having to buy new clothes every few months for his ever-growing brood. He thought it might have something to do with getting older and wondered if he could be getting ready to have a mid-life crisis.

    After all, he’d always wanted to live in a McMansion and drive a sports car like the 1994 Toyota Supra Twin-Turbo he once saw in a showroom. Yet, there he was: rotting away in an ordinary, three-bedroom split-level and puttering around in a Toyota Camry.

    After rethinking his finances, he believed that with one more salary increase he would be able to afford the bigger house or the new car, but not both. Not simultaneously. Pending mid-life crisis aside, what made his stomach grind at work and forced him to hide his discontentment at home was his job; some days he just didn’t enjoy it anymore and other days he simply hated it more. Lately, the latter have outnumbered the former.

    Jack spent the day after his birthday putting out fires– taking calls from irate customers, walking them through solutions where possible, writing a report for each “trouble call” and digging into code to debug software problems. At the end of the day, he looked around at the clutter on his desk, then took out his cell phone and made a call.

    A friend answered. “Hello?”

    “Hey, buddy. It’s Jack. Want to hit the usual place after work?”

    “Sounds like a plan. Come by in fifteen minutes?”

    Jack cleaned up his desk, logged off his computer and as he walked away from his desk, he made another call. This time his wife answered.

    “Hello?”

    “It’s me. I’ve got to do some more stuff at the office; I’ll be late.”

    “Ok, but not too late. Okay? Jennie wants you–not me–to help her with her homework and I want her to do it early. Later on, she’ll be too tired to do it.” 

    “Okay, honey. Bye.”

    He walked down a long corridor and into an office that was about four times the size of his. In it worked the mathematically-oriented “Brainiac” programmers of his company. Jack walked to his friend’s desk and stood behind him looking at the complex C Language code on the screen.

    “I can feel someone creeping up on me,” said Al.

    “Good thing it wasn’t a strangler, or you’d be dead by now.”

    “Hey, I never said I was quick, just perceptive.”

    “You still flatter yourself.”

    Jack watched as Al consulted with a technical book full of equations. He recognized the integral signs from his calculus classes, but the sheer volume of mathematical symbols on the page was intimidating. “I don’t know how you do that stuff,” he said.

    “All in a day’s work,” answered his friend. “I see it as a beautiful confluence of mathematical symbols, producing a shimmering pool of abstract thought.” There was a pause. “Did I say that? Gimme ten more minutes, okay?”

    Jack stood silently as his friend studied the bewildering page for a minute then went back to work on his computer code. In less than ten minutes he was logging off his computer and locking his desk.

    “Ready Freddie?”

    “Girls say that to their boyfriends,” said Jack.

    Al looked embarrassed. “Whoops! Glad I didn’t make that slip at a bar – they’d think I was…”

    “Yeah, they might think that. Let’s went.”

    “Let’s went? That’s from an old TV show.”

    “Yeah, the Long Ranger.”

    Al looked embarrassed for Jack. “That’s Lone Ranger, not Long Ranger and ‘Let’s went’ is from The Cisco Kid.”

    “You and your old TV shows.”

    Me? It’s you and your old TV shows.”

    “Whatever.”

    Fifteen minutes later both men took their places at a local bar and ordered beer. 

    “How do you drink that Schlitz stuff,” asked Al. “That’s for old men.”

    Jack said “That’s how I feel: old.”

    A black SUV pulled up on the side of the bar. A woman got out and walked to the front door and opened it a crack, doing her best not to be seen. As soon as she got the phone call from her husband saying he’d be late she made a bee line to where he worked, just a few miles away.

    Tailing him was easy, for she knew all his favorite haunts and had even joined him in several of them over the years. Peering in with one eye she spotted her husband sharing a beer with his friend. After watching for a few minutes, she drove back home, where a neighbor was watching the kids. This wasn’t the first such spying mission. Her husband has been “working late” one or two nights a week for several months.

    At first, she suspected it was “another woman”, but several trips to this and other pubs proved he was only drinking with his pals. She didn’t approve of her husband idling away his time in bars and didn’t think much of his lying about it either, but, considering what he might have been up to, the offense seemed minor and forgivable. She decided then and there, this was to be her last such expedition and knew she’d have to talk things over with Jack face-to-face. When she got home, she helped two of the kids with their homework then made a late supper for the whole family, hoping Jack would be home in time to eat it.

    Back at the bar with a few beers in him, Jack was starting to feel like his old self until the subject of his job came up.

    “Hey – a job’s a job,” said Al, followed by “If you don’t like it, go out and find another one!” 

    “Typical programmer,” thought Jack, who was used to dealing with young nerds who seemed to have the world by the balls. To his boss he’d described them as “no responsibilities, big salaries and incompetent at expressing feelings or dealing with anything but computer code and technical manuals.” He stopped and thought before responding to Al’s last remark, not wanting to blurt out an angry retort, but rather a reasoned answer, even though he was starting to fume.

    Al felt no such compunction to wait and think before speaking: “Hey, buddy – earth to Jack! You still there? You drift off into space or something?”

    “Excuse me, Al. I didn’t realize I was sitting next to a scholar of career choices and genius of compassion and empathy.”

    Al sat up, obviously affronted.

    “It’s not just this job, it’s this whole career. Used to think I had everything I wanted, good job, money, a loving wife, and good kids. What more could I expect? Swimming pools, Ferraris, a palatial estate? Then, I thought I must be suffering from some sort of condition from racking my brains all day and sitting there typing away at a terminal. I wondered how many others out there were just like me: fat, dumb, happy and discontented. Made me think about the computer biz and how it got this way.

    Once upon a time only engineers and math types studied computers. I’ve watched programming go from “assembly” language stuff you write yourself to pre-written off-the-shelf packages – just plug-and-play. At the I.R.S. way back when we typed our assembly-language code onto IBM punch cards, handed ‘em in and had to wait for the computer operator to run ‘em through the card reader, run the program through the computer and we were lucky to get our listing the next day. Computer operator! We couldn’t do anything without him. I bet you never even heard that term.”

    “So, you remember the good old days, eh?” asked Al, laughing “And today any kid can use a PC. Maybe you’ve lived too long, buddy.”

    “Sounds like you’re getting ready to send me off to meet my maker, there, buddy-buddy. Maybe I’ve just been in this business too long.”

    Yeah, maybe that’s it, chum – friend – pal-o’mine. Didn’t mean to come down on you about your career. Why don’t we call it a night?”

    The two men shook hands, paid their bar bill and left. 

    Back at work the next day, Jack felt he needed to unload his feelings about his career to the least likely person – his boss Jim Bakersfield, someone he knew well and trusted. Jim’s response came as a surprise.

    “About ten years ago I felt the same way you do. I’d been programming since the ’70s’, loved it and thought I was hot stuff, but I finally got sick of the whole thing: always digging through code, taking classes, carrying manuals home at night, carrying a beeper twenty-four seven. I used to feel like Microsoft employees – you know them, their motto is ‘If I’m awake, I’m working.’ Know what saved me?”

    Jack just looked at him.

    “Being promoted! Guess I’d done well or maybe I was the only guy around old enough to look the part of the manager. Suddenly I didn’t have to write code, debug the same, take trouble calls in the middle of the night from irate customers telling me our software doesn’t work. Not that management’s easy, mind you, just different. Lots of meetings, trips, talks with customers, sales reps and management, but I deal more with people, which I like. Hope that helps.”

    Jack thought for a minute before answering. “I think I need to make a more fundamental change.”

    Jim looked at him sympathetically, gave him a mock punch on the shoulder then turned toward his desk, looked up a number in the company phone directory and handed it to Jack. “Here’s a number you should call,” he said.

    “Who is it?”

    “A psychologist.”

    “Now, wait a minute, I’m not going to go postal on you.”

    Jim laughed. “Tut tut. Nobody thinks you’re going off the deep end, but something’s really bothering you and I’m not qualified to help, so I’ll put you in touch with somebody who is. This guy’s paid by the company to listen to people’s problems and concerns and help them deal with them. Try him. I’ll give you an hour or two off every week off to see him. You won’t have to make up the time.”

    “Are you sure?”

    “You’ve been a good employee; you deserve it. Hey! I’ve seen him myself.”

    “You?”

    “Yeah, some personal stuff a while back. He had some good ideas–really helped me.”

    Jack thought about it for a week then made the phone call. The psychologist told him he had a cancellation and could see him at 3:30 that afternoon. A little after 3:00 PM, Jack cleaned up his desk, logged off and got up to leave. He stopped by the desk of Timmy Bushell, who was only 23 years old and had been working there for six months. 

    “Hey, Timmy! Could you do me a favor? I’ve got to leave and I haven’t had time to install the DBRX package. Could you do that for me? Take you, maybe, twenty minutes.”

    Bushell gazed at him with a put-upon look on his face. Hey, man – I’ve got my own stuff to do, you know. DBRX is your baby, isn’t it? Maybe you should come back after you do your shopping and install it then.”

    Jack muttered “thanks” under his breath and stopped by the desk of James Martin, who was his own age, quite serious and a great deal more mature than Tim Bushell. “How’s it going, James?”

    James looked up for a second, “Okay,” then buried himself in his manuals and his typing again.

    “Got a minute?”

    “I’m really, really busy; got to get this interface done.”

    Jack looked over James’ shoulder at the confusion of X-Windows code on the screen. “Still taking those X-Windows and Motif classes?”

    “Yeah. Motif in-house on Wednesdays and X-Win stuff on my own time.”

    “I got to do an errand but I need some software installed. Twenty-minute job, tops.”

    James ignored him and kept typing.

    Jack’s last stop for help was at the desk of one Joannie, who told him she’d be glad to help in the morning. Jack told her that was too late, but thanks anyway.

    He glanced around the room for help but decided everyone else looked too busy to be bothered. He walked into his boss’s office. 

    “Jim, I have to go out; I’m seeing the man we talked about last week.”

    “Oh, are you? Good. Do what you have to do. Get that DBRX package working yet?”

    “No, I’ve been too busy fixing problems from the field. I got three trouble calls this morning and then I had to work on the fixes.”

    “Can’t somebody else do it? How about Bushell?”

    “He can’t.”

    “Can’t be bothered, you mean.”

    “I’m not complaining – he’s …”

    “You don’t have to say anything – he’s a brat, wouldn’t help his own brother if he was dying unless there was something in it for Tim.”

    “He’s busy.”

    “Not that busy. These kids today – to them it’s every man for himself. I had another career before this. When I started out, it wasn’t like that, people helped each other and they didn’t come right out of school and get a big salary either. That’s their problem; too much affluence…that, and their parents gave them everything.”

    Jack gave a smile of recognition, as if that were something he’d never quite been able to put into words. “I’ll do it first thing in the morning, Jim.”

    “That’s soon enough,” said his boss. “I told management we’d have it up and running this week. Will spending three or four days working with it be enough to make you comfortable with it?”

    “Think so, except…”

    “Except you have to have time to work with it and a full load of trouble calls won’t let you do it; you need somebody to handle your workload for a few days.”

    “But…”

    Jim’s voice went down to a whisper. “Don’t let this get around, but sometimes I really miss the technical stuff … I’ll take your trouble calls and help with the fixes. I just don’t want everybody around here knowing I can do their work for them if they get too busy, so I’ll have all your phone calls diverted to me. If it’s personal I’ll take the message. I’m making an exception for you ’cause you need and deserve the help. Let me know how it goes with the shrink, okay?” Jim winked at him.

    “Will do. ‘night, Jim.” Jack walked out breathing a sigh of relief. He knew a good boss when he saw one.

    All that was several weeks earlier. Since then, Jack had seen the psychologist and having someone to talk to about his problems made him feel better. A week ago he had his third appointment and he hadn’t expected any big revelations, just another chance to “let it all out,” but at the session he saw a look of recognition on the doctor’s face.

    Finally, the psychologist said “I think I know what the problem is. I started to suspect it on your first visit but I wanted to get to know you and your situation a little before even suggesting anything I might call a diagnosis. I think you’re suffering from a condition that’s probably not in the medical books yet and may not even be recognized by many doctors, but it’s very real. I call it “I.T. burnout”.

    A hint of a smile crossed Jack’s face. He finally had a name for his malady and, boy, did it fit the condition perfectly! He wondered why he hadn’t thought of it himself.

    “Think of it this way. The human body and mind evolved over millennia around physical work and the need for human contact. In this machine age of ours, we’ve replaced both of them to a certain degree with mental stimulation. That’s fine up to a point, especially when it comes to entertainment like video games and television, but when it comes to sitting all day in front of a terminal, people adapt to it in different ways. As a psychologist, I don’t like to use words like ‘nerd’ but you know what I mean. Some people seem to never get tired of programming, debugging, hacking, manuals; they thrive on it. They love problem-solving, constant mental games, their minds always going at full tilt.”

    Jack nodded with recognition at the description of his profession.

    “Some of these so-called nerds escape their mental rat race by eventually moving up into management.”

    Jack smiled again.

    “But many people work very hard to get into this business, do it for years then find they can’t take the stress anymore. That sounds like what’s happened to you. A girl that worked here used to say ‘My mind’s always going at 90 miles per hour.’ She put her finger on the problem without realizing it. Not only was there not enough ‘people contact’ for her, the mental stress of having to fix computer problems all day wore her down.”

    “What happened to her?”

    “She now teaches at a college. She moved to Charlotte, North Carolina–I just heard from her last month. She’s doing very well.”

    “So, changing careers fixed her problem?”

    “That and moving to a less-crowded area. She said the traffic around this whole Washington metro area got to be too much. She told me she was moving to a less-crowded area to get away from it all.”

    “Got any suggestions for me?”

    “Yes, first I think you should take the Meyers-Briggs Type Indicator …”

    “I’ve heard of that – isn’t it some sort of aptitude test?”

    “Not exactly. It helps point out your personality type, which can give important clues about jobs or careers you’d fit well into. You can take it next time you come in. For now, I’m giving you a book, it’s What Color Is Your Parachute by Richard Bowles. I’d read it cover to cover if I were you. It’s been called ‘the career-changer’s Bible’.”

    The following morning Jack felt different, like he’d finally faced his problem, instead of trying to blot it out with beer and bars. He walked into the office with two boxes of Krispy Kreme donuts under his arm. 

    He stopped by Timmy Bushell’s desk, opened one of the boxes and held it out. “Want one of these?”

    Bushell looked surprised. He grabbed a donut, looked up and said “What are you gonna do next, blow me?” He grinned as if he’d said something terribly clever.

    Jack just stared at him.

    “You’re supposed to thank people when they do something nice for you,” said Jim Bakersfield in a loud voice. He’d noticed Jack walking in with the doughnuts and came over to grab one.

    Bushell briefly looked at Jim then turned back to his terminal, but Jim wouldn’t let him off the hook. “Hey, I’m talking to you, Bushell!”

    “C’mon, I was just kidding – he knows that.”

    “I couldn’t tell you were kidding and I’m standing right here,” said Jim.

    Bushell typed away, pretending he couldn’t hear.

    Jim leaned over his shoulder. “Next time you say something like that, we’re going to have a little talk in my office, capiche?”

    Bushell had a smirk on his face like the whole thing was a big joke and he was too busy to be bothered by it.

    Next, Jack stopped at James Martin’s desk.

    “Hey man, want a doughnut?” asked Jack.

    “Thanks!” said James, sounding surprised that anybody would do something for him, even something as small as giving him a doughnut.

    Jack looked over his shoulder at the X-Windows reference manuals and the Motif textbooks piled up on his desk. “How long do you have to keep taking those classes, buddy?”

    James turned around. “A while. Worked on X-Windows Calls last night.”

    “Yeah? How’s it going with that?”

    “Learn something new every time I go through the manual and the book.”

    Jack looked back at Jim, who grinned as he walked away.

    “Don’t mean to tell you what to do, but why do you go through all that?” asked Jack. “I mean that stuff takes forever to learn and now they’ve got kits and tools like Visual Basic to do all that graphical user interface stuff in a fraction of the time.”

    James looked perplexed for a second or two and then a smile came over his face, like he was a college professor, about to lecture a naive student who couldn’t possibly grasp the subtlety and depth of what he was about to hear.

    “My dear fellow – what you seem to be utterly unable to comprehend is the power of the X-Windows system. GUI builders are the poor man’s way to go about it. I’m aiming for mastery of user interfaces and you can do so much more at this level. You can …”

    “You can do the exact same thing in two hours with Visual Basic that’d take you a week to do with that shit,” piped up Timmy Bushell, who’d obviously been eavesdropping. “It’s getting so that anybody creating a user interface is going to use a GUI builder with a WYSIWYG editor. Right? Anybody who does it the hard way is a dummy!”

    The look on James Martin’s face would have stopped a clock. In fact, he never spoke to Bushell at all unless it was work-related. The problem between them started when Bushell was hired. James knew Tim from way back and James expected to receive a recruitment fee for any and all of his friends who came aboard. James would obtain their resumes, turn them in and collect said fees if they were hired.

    Bushell had never anticipated coming to Kenmore Software Systems and had fortuitously run into Jim Bakersfield at a job fair, where he presented Jim with his resume. By the time he realized his colleague James Martin worked there it was too late to give Martin the resume and hence James received no recruitment fee. When it came to money Martin had a long memory and as long as Bushell worked there he’d never be forgiven.

    Jack carried What Color Is Your Parachute under the boxes of doughnuts. He’d take a whack at it at lunch and then when he got home. The previous evening had been his “breakthrough day” and he’d had to celebrate. He even informed his wife of his intentions and she joined him at the bar.

    His problem wasn’t solved, it was only identified. But, at least, he now had a goal; he would continue his talks with the company-provided psychologist, he’d take stress-relieving medication, if that was called for and he would devour every piece of information of career choices he came across, starting with the book he was carrying around.

    He knew he had a long hill to climb and that it wouldn’t be easy to leave Information Technology and start a new career, but a clear direction uphill is a lot better than being stuck in the quicksand of ignorance and indecision regarding one’s plight and how to go about dealing with it. Jim Bakersfield had said something that struck a chord–something about working with people. Jack would focus on finding a career where he got to work with people, to help them–sounded like a plan.

    Doug Dawson has written for the U.S. Defense Department and for car and trade magazines and has had his short stories published by Academy of the Heart & Mind, Ariel Chart, Aphelion Webzine, Literary Yard, Scars Publications, The Scarlet Leaf Review and many others and are included in the print anthologies “The Devil’s Doorknob II” and “Potato Soup Journal’s “Best Stories of 2022.” His book “Route 66 – the TV Series, the Highway and the Corvette” will be published by BearManor Media in 2024.

  • Venn Diagram – Abasi-maenyin Esebre

    It wasn’t there.

    When Victor Akan cut through the small passage just behind his rented apartment and greeted his neighbours in a bright tone underscored by a neutral face, he never imagined his broken-headlamp, paint-bleached, cracked-windscreen, always-breaking-down Audi 80 would be gone-gone.

    The only thing left of the car was a wet tyre trail and the steering wheel, which he picked and turned left and right as though navigating through the smoky, blue morning haze.

    Victor stood still for the longest as if the events leading up to the car’s disappearance would reveal themselves in an astral projection like in some futuristic crime thriller. He picked an oddly smooth gravel in the centre of a triple Venn diagram. After studying its surface, Victor tossed it into his pocket and lumbered to his rented apartment.

    He didn’t wince after stepping on a nail and impaling his toe. Victor felt the pain as a mere itch, an echo of pain. Shoulders slouched, he prodded back home, keeping the news to himself.

    Blessing, his neighbour, threw hot water from filtered parboiled rice on the ground just as Victor rounded the bend. The scalding-hot liquid splashed on Victor—who didn’t flinch—and rinsed off the blood trickling from his shanked, bleeding toe. The bowl dropped from Blessing’s hand and clattered to the ground. She raised her hands to her mouth, unable to settle between shock or an apology, to comment on the hot water soaking through Victor’s clothes or the nail poking through his toe.

    Eno caught a glimpse of her husband’s gravel-shaped head through the half-parted curtains still draped over her closed fist.

    The baby had finally dozed off after rationing insomnia to everyone the previous night, forcing her parents to writhe awake like logs turning into vipers.

    Eno dashed outside to urge Victor to open the gate quietly, but he jangled the iron, clanged the bolts, and swung the gate back on the frame with enough force to tear it off its hinges.

    The baby’s peal broke the calm and the haze afforded by the morning fog. Eno raised her eyes to the ceiling and threw her poisoned gaze at her stupid, useless husband.

    Victor slammed the steering wheel against the butterfly sewing machine that sat in the right corner. He stomped to the bathroom cursing heaven and hell, his parents, the government, his wife, but not his precious, little daughter.

    The previous day, after having spent ten thousand naira—all the money he’d made that morning from driving—to retrieve his impounded vehicle, Victor came home to an extra pair of oddly familiar shoes on his often-decluttered veranda.

    Under normal circumstances, he wouldn’t have returned home so early. Hard worker that he was, he would’ve stayed patrolling the streets of Calabar till late in the evening when he would come home with suya or Agege bread for his doting, beautiful wife who was at home all day taking care of their child, whom a neighbour once called an eyesore.

    All the doors of all the other houses in the compound were shut. The initial bustle of the early morning had dwindled, and now, everyone had dispersed to where money dragged their aching muscles and parched throats as the midday sun split the wispy clouds to reveal a lapis lazuli sky.

    The thump of a struck ball resounded through the slanted louvres from Victor’s house. He walked up to the door and found it slightly ajar. Pushing it open, he furrowed his brow at a football match blaring on the TV, its volume at the highest.

    The commentator’s smoky voice filled the parlour like incense.

    Victor picked the remote and pushed a button down, sucking out the depth from the commentator’s voice until a silent whimper crept into the parlour. He listened for a while before tentatively raising the TV’s volume. Victor parted his lips to voice his wife’s name, but he tiptoed towards the bedroom and peeped through the slightly billowing floral print curtain.

    His heart sank to the floor. The view from the slanted curtain knocked out the air from his lungs. Throwing the curtains back, Victor leapt from his slightly crouched position and grabbed Gideon, the plumber who sold toilet seats and pipes just out front, by his slacked trousers.

    Gideon unmounted Eno and attempted to fumble his belt into the buckle, but Victor drove his shoulder into Gideon’s stomach and took him down. They shuffled in the tight space, bumping their heads against the bed’s legs, and grunting as they squeezed their palms around each other’s necks.

    Gideon punched Victor in the face; Victor scratched the bastard’s eye. Gideon managed to writhe out of Victor’s death grasp and rattled across several lanes while Victor gave chase.

    A few minutes later, Victor slunk into the living room, heaving and puffing. His chest and shoulders expanded and compressed like an accordion played by an amateur.

    He stomped to the bedroom.

    “In our house! In front of our daughter! Chai!”

    “My love, forgive me.”

    “Eh eh, better call me Victor. Who’s your love? Who’s your love?” His voice broke.

    “Who is your love?” He fought the tears brimming in his eyes.

    Silence bridged the intervals between their heavy breaths.

    Eno slowly folded her wrapper over her chest.

    Victor slumped into the sofa and gazed at the TV, but his eyes were focused inwards on imaginings he couldn’t project. His pulse leapt and dipped as if plotted by an electrocardiograph going haywire.

    He sat still while Eno quivered in the corner next to him. She knelt to beg.

    He looked into her eyes and knelt next to her.

    Holding her hands in his, he asked, “How could you?” in a voice so tender, a voice so levelled you could feel the summit it was trying not to reach.

    The woman was too stunned to speak. She scrambled her words and tried an incorrigible lie, but Victor, undeterred by her ramble, cut through the charade.

    “How many times? I just dey waka dey suffer for wetin?”

    The commentator on TV parroted on, filling the silence that followed.

    “How many times? How long, ehn, how long has it been going on? So, I’m just there, sweating under the sun to bring money for another man to be sweating on top of my wife? Chai!”

    Victor let go of her hand.

    “How long!?”

    “This is the first time, I promise. My love, it has never happened before.”

    “Liar! How long? So, I’m just there driving up and down, here and there, collecting insults, and you’re here doing all this. Everyday. Is this why you always call me to ask when I’m coming back?”

    “No. It was a mistake. It was a mistake,” her voice cracked. Tears sluiced down her burning cheeks. 

    Victor looked past his wife to the girl in the cradle. A wicked thought cut across his mind. His heart leapt in his chest and lost its rhythm. He’d heard stories of men whose children weren’t theirs, how some of them had died from heart attacks, how families dissolved into strangers held together by a broken illusion of unison, of a Venn diagram split into random circles with no single overlap.

    He tried to declutter his mind but couldn’t shake the ugly thought out of focus.

    “How am I even sure that is my daughter?” He gestured at Idong wriggling in her cot.

    “What kind of nonsense question is that?”

    Eno’s agitation emboldened Victor.

    “Ehne, nau. How am I sure?”

    “Say anything, but that. Don’t say that, don’t say that at all. This is the first time I—”

    “I don’t want to hear it. Don’t even. In fact, tomorrow we’re going to the hospital. We’ll do a DNA test.”

    Eno broke into a callous laughter.

    “Yes o! Let us go. Let us go. We can even go now if you want.”

    Victor could see the fire in her eyes. He wanted to believe her, but to do so he had to call her bluff.

    “Tomorrow, we’re going!”

    “No problem.”

    “And I swear to God, if I find out that you’re lying, tomorrow-tomorrow, you’re going back to your father’s house.”

    Victor couldn’t believe what he’d just uttered. To shake off any lingering doubt about the decision, he stood up, scooped the car keys, and drove out.

    The cool air dried off the sweat from his temple. Elbow leaned against the car’s door and stroking his chin, Victor ran the events over and over in his mind, to both convince himself of its reality and to dilute the pain, just like how repeating a song too many times invites an inescapable nausea.

    While dropping off a passenger at the Marian walkover, task force members, greasy men with afternoon sweat caked into their cassava-starched shirts, swarmed his vehicle. They smelled like the losing team after a football match; their foul breath could kill a fly or light a cigarette.

    One of them, wearing a striped shirt, fished for the key in the ignition, his other hand grappling with the steering.

    The frustration of having just caught his neighbour in bed with his wife, of having spent ten thousand naira to have his car released earlier in the morning, and now, these greasy men trying to swindle him of his hard-earned money brought Victor to the end of a rope.

     Victor let go of the steering. He popped his seatbelt and grabbed the task force man by the neck and squeezed like he was wringing wet linen, like utong unen. The other task force members yelled and cursed in Efik; they left the car and sprung on Victor.

    “Kpong enye, or aya mkpa mfin, mmbo fi, kpong enye, Victor kpong.” Leave him alone, or you’ll die today.

    They jerked Victor’s firm arm, which refused to budge. Others punched Victor’s head now ribbed with veins, but he didn’t budge until a higher-up in the Task Force came and quelled the altercation by whispering in Efik and taking Victor under his shoulder to the foot of the walkover.

    Now, today, when they were supposed to go for the DNA test, his car was stolen.

    He sat on a low stool and stared at his wife. Clenching his right fist, he counted his knuckles with his other palm. If he could yank out his eye and hurl it at her like a golf ball, he would. He sufficed to rest his chin on his interlocked fingers as a thought began to form in his head.

    Maybe this was a sign, God’s way of telling him to run. What if tomorrow, early in the morning, before the sun yawns over the horizon, he eloped with the ₦5,000 in the drawer and never returned? He could run to a new city where he could drape a new name over himself, learn a new language, get a different job, and never look back.

    He’d probably fund himself through a degree in civil engineering and settle down with a new family. If his daughter wasn’t his daughter, then that’d mean his ‘wife’ wasn’t his wife. It was either that or commit suicide or murder—he could barely suppress the rage coursing through his veins and his mind attacking itself. 

    How could he have been so blindsided? Now, his car is gone! How much bad news before a heart finally breaks? Why was life singling him out for all this trauma?

    He would’ve just sent her out if he wasn’t a man easily crippled by shame. Even when Blessing asked why he’d been chasing Gideon earlier in the day, he mumbled something unintelligible and walked past her. He liked to keep things contained: wine in a bottle, broomsticks in a bundle, a neck in a squeeze. If he was a sculptor, he would be able to carve the entire Marian market on a mustard seed.

    He drooped his head, stood up, and splashed cold water on his itchy face.

    “Dah!” he yelled, waking the baby Eno had managed to lull back to sleep again.

    She yelled at him to keep it down, and he screamed back that the car had been stolen. She heaved and dropped her hands to her side. Slowly, the baby fell asleep again.

    Victor, too busy making inquiries about the stolen vehicle and the whereabouts of Gideon, couldn’t find the time to head to the hospital. He hadn’t spoken to Eno all day. When he returned, he didn’t eat the eba and banga soup she placed on the table for him. That night, mother and daughter snuggled in bed, while Victor slept on the sofa in the parlour.

    While shrivelled in the parlour, the size of a baby’s clenched fist, a loud bang roused Victor from sleep. The second bang led a heavy boot through his front door that tore it off its hinges.

    Three men in balaclavas trooped into the yawning house.

    One lowered his gun at Victor while the other two went into the room and dragged Idong and Eno into the parlour. One held a knife to the child’s throat, another held a machete to Eno’s neck, and Victor stared down the nozzle of the gun pointed at him by the last robber.

    Victor’s arms fell to his side like steamed kelp; the weight of a dozen misfortunes in rapid succession tipped his hemispheres. Feeling every little pain chip back his already receding hairline, he chuckled—a deep, hollow laugh that stunned everybody, including his infant daughter.

    Victor guided the robber’s gun down to his chest and dared the towering man to pull the trigger. Death would carve a much-needed exit in his wounding life which is as empty as an anemone’s shell. The vein on Victor’s forehead bulged like a straw. He grew spirited and gestured and barked and sent spittle flying in all directions.

    Standing behind him, Eno begged and wailed, her face a web of snot and tears. She threw her hands back as Victor tackled the robber. They grunted as they tussled on the carpet.

    Pow!

    A shot rang out.

    A blackhole of silence sucked every decibel of sound from the room.

    Victor felt the vibration of the gun going off right in front of him and the torque of a bullet tearing through his tissues. He reached for the hole in his chest, but he felt nothing—no pain, no spiralling ache. Alerted by a cough behind him, he looked back to find his wife draped on the floor, blood dripping from her forehead like a bruised turnip.

    The robber who had fired the gun stared at them with his eyes wide open before he rushed to Eno and shook her, pushing Victor aside. Victor leapt on the man and clawed his face, pulling the mask off to reveal a familiar face.

    The robbers booted Victor in the face and pulled their exposed leader—who tugged the mask back over his face—out from under him. They shuffled out of the house like ninjas.

    If Victor’s reflection could form in his wife’s clotting blood, it’d have shown his face snagged and crinkled like a funeral kerchief.

    He yelled for the neighbours as he sat on the floor shaking his numb wife. Victor pressed his forehead to Eno’s. His tears fell into the tears in her eyes and trickled towards her ear.

    All through the morning, as he sat in his bathroom rolling his wife’s ring, which he’d now passed a string through, Victor cried. Life didn’t have to be this hard.

    How did the bullet pass through him? What sorcery could explain this madness? Isn’t the comfort of a difficult life the option of suicide when one’s self-help philosophy no longer suffices as a driving force? Wasn’t that the consolation prize for those cheated out of intelligence, beauty, wit, opulence, tax evasion and generational wealth?

    By morning, the hole in Victor’s chest had knitted scar tissue over itself. When he narrated the story to the crowd who surrounded the apartment, they thought him a witch who had used his wife for rituals. Blessing tried to explain the hot water and nail scenario to them, but a mob has no ears.

    It didn’t help that when they moved Eno, her blood had trickled into a rectangle that housed three intersecting circles. The bloody Venn diagram drew an impassioned uproar from the crowd.

    A ragged teen with a chipped tooth rolled two greasy tyres towards Victor, who’d already been doused with black-market fuel by a man in caftan. The mob broke into a deafening chant.

    A man in a wife-beater set a petrol-wet rug ablaze and smashed the glass on the pavement where Victor lay.

    The fire spread all over him.

    In no time, Victor was a licked kerosene mango as flames curled from his body in all directions. The sweltering mob parted for him as he broke into a frantic run terminated by a lurking man who struck the back of Victor’s head with a long piece of wood.

    Victor teetered into the gutter and sloshed through the spirogyra-polluted water before the dizziness forced his eyes shut. His head hit the water and never came back up. Fragmented words swarmed in his head, echoes of curses not sharp enough to break through the dense, black water. From fire to water; he went from burning to drowning.

    The image of his wife and daughter flickered in his fogged mind.

    The mob took hours to disperse. Unlike in some cases where a police van would screech onto the scene and interrupt the ruckus, no such thing happened. The mob was victorious, even though most people involved in the carnage had no clue why they were remitting violence or the crime of its recipient, justice was served. Jungle justice.

    Still stuck in the gutter, Victor’s lungs held more water than oxygen.

    Hours later, Victor’s brother, Micheal, and Eno’s sisters, Faith and Marigold, came to the house and took Idong from the landlord, who had kept the baby safe from the carnage.

    When night fell, Gideon and a couple of street boys huddled in a rickety pickup truck and drove to the junction to retrieve Victor’s body from the gutter. They groped the greasy, murky water with a long bamboo only to turn over charred flesh glued to worsted wool. They searched the entire length of the gutter.

    He wasn’t there.

    Once the mob dispersed and the corn sellers set up their rusted grills and coal, Victor swam through the spirogyra-coated water without once coming up for air. As evening dawned and moonlight filtered through the clouds, Victor roused to his feet, having reached where the thin gravel-studded gutter broke into a wider one. He crawled into an empty street at Parliamentary Extension where he spotted an abandoned building into which he stumbled.

    Each treacherous step he took forward set off an odd rattling sound in the sealed hole in his chest where the bullet had passed through.

    What could be making that sound? The bullet? No, it had passed through him. How had his body not collapsed into the hole in his chest? His charred flesh shed itself as he picked at it, turning from hot pink to brown, while the flesh on his tummy peeled back to reveal keloids that slowly caked back into unblemished skin.

    How could Eno die just the day before he wanted to run, the day they were supposed to do a DNA test, even though he couldn’t actually afford one? How had the bullet blasted through his back? So, Gideon was behind this? Was he also the one who stole his car? Why wasn’t the mob able to kill him? Who sparked the first rumour? Where was his wife’s body? Questions cloned themselves in his head and branched into a myriad of subquestions. One could imagine his synapses clogged by question marks wriggling like crochet hooks tangling his dendrites.

    Victor looked to the corner of the house where a coir rope looped over itself like a brown tree snake. He dragged himself there and tested the weight of the rope with a small toss. He whistled as he hurled the free end of the rope over a fan’s hook and secured it with a double knot. Victor levelled a block under the fan, stood on it, and looped the free end of a rope into a lasso.

    He fished out his wife’s ring, which had somehow managed to sink into his chest and kissed the cold metal. He rubbed his palms together and fastened the rope around his neck. He confirmed the knot with a slight tug and kicked away the cinderblock. 

    The rope constricted his oesophagus and dented his jugular. He struggled for air and flailed his legs as his face swelled like a puffer fish.

    Two hours passed, then three hours, then four. Instead of flies buzzing on his corpse, Victor woke up to find himself in a delirium, still suspended from the ceiling fan, with blood in his eye, a steering wheel in his hand, and a hood over his head.

    He was now somehow in his stolen Audi 80, suspended above the ground by the ceiling fan. On display in both side mirrors were memories of him and his wife in their happy days when their love was thicker than that seemingly impenetrable smoky blue morning’s haze, followed by a scene of him kissing a passenger a few months prior, while his wife stared from behind the windscreen, followed by a scene of Eno kneeling next to a river and crying and returning to a deadpan face on cue as directed by a high priestess dressed in red, followed by a scene where the priestess guided Eno to smash eggs and two olive oil bottles on a gravel in the centre of a Venn diagram, followed by a scene where Eno picked the gravel and walked away.

    In the rearview mirror, his wife’s wedding ring, the car’s steering wheel and the noose around his neck formed a Venn diagram that burst into flames. The rope snapped just as the image burned into his memory.

    He lay on the floor of the building, heaving and ugly-crying. He clasped one hand on his thumping chest and groped for the gravel, so he could throw it and try again. He swept his fingers on the floor and crawled all over.

    It wasn’t there.


    Abasi-maenyin Esebre is an Oron storyteller who centres Calabar in his writings. His essay Grief: Its Invisible Gerund was shortlisted for the continental non-fiction competition organised by Agbowo Magazine and won the 2023 SEVHAGE PRIZE for non-fiction. His essay Call Me By My Name has been published in AFREADA. He’s on Twitter @esebre20813 and Instagram @Abasimaenyin

  • Drowning Myself – Haliru Ali Musa

    This is my seventh day in the shower, attempting to wash away the sorrows of losing my lover.

    The hot water streams down, but it can’t cleanse the memories. It wasn’t always like this. I remember the first time I felt such profound loss. I had to grieve for my mother when I was just fifteen. I’m unsure if I remember how I managed to endure it, or if my memories have twisted themselves into something bearable over time.

    But it was a period marked by hardship, sadness, and a profound sense of loss—so intense that I believed I couldn’t survive without her. Yet, I reached twenty-five seemingly unscathed. Or so I thought.

    So, I knew the death of my lover would trigger a profound reaction in me, especially since I didn’t see it coming.  Everyone, I suppose, is destined to experience such devastation, at least, once in a lifetime. But, for me, it was more complicated; working at Kyauta Orphanage Home brought its own set of rules and boundaries: it’s against the rules for caregivers to fall in love with orphans under their care, and for a good reason. The power imbalance, for instance, makes it nearly impossible for orphans to freely consent to a romantic relationship thereby creating a fertile ground for potential exploitation.

    I don’t know what kind of message you’re supposed to decipher from my inability to justify my actions. Call it what you will, but I was in love. And my reasons were pure.

    Back then, when I resumed work at Kyauta Orphanage Home, falling in love was the last thing on my mind; my days were filled with diligent routines: checking on a few special orphans, helping them with meals, and simply sitting with them as they played.

    Nights, however, were different. I would go out and buy a bottle of cough syrup, a habit I had picked up during my university days. I never smoked or drank alcohol; the smell of both repelled me. Instead, I abused the dosage of the cough medicine. Most nights, I downed a full bottle, letting it lull me into drowsiness. By morning, I’d wake up feeling as fresh as a daisy.

    Naturally, a bond existed between me, a caregiver, and Jiddah, an orphan. This bond felt like the unseen roots of an ancient tree. It was not merely the comfort I could trace in her eyes, nor the warmth she said she felt when I was beside her. Rather, it was a sanctuary where both our souls drifted free—a kind of sanctuary likened to a “man and his bed’s”: An intimate space where vulnerabilities are laid bare and the essence of one’s being is unburdened  for a few hours each night.

    Eventually, when the man falls sick, the bed takes on a dual role; it becomes both a sanctuary and a prison–a place where the man is simultaneously cared for and constrained. The rhythms of his life slow, marked by the rise and fall of his fever, the restless shifting of his body, and the quiet moments of fitful sleep. 

    Such was what I felt when I fell in love with Jiddah, a deaf orphan I had cared for for over two years.

    Our bond began as something I couldn’t explain. At that time, it sounded wrong in my head when I tried to articulate it. Perhaps I never felt the need to articulate it until now…

    I remember her laughter: defined by her shoulders moving up and down, her smiles, her lips slightly parted, her eyes slightly squinted; and the way she would touch her chin with two fingers to indicate “Thank you.” Those moments made everything else fade away…

    And when she taught braille to younger blind kids, her fingers would trace the dots with rhythmic precision while her eyes were shut. In those moments, as she immersed herself in the world of braille, everything else in my mind seemed to fade. To truly appreciate the world of braille, one must witness it firsthand, and Jiddah was a master at it.

    But alongside those moments are memories of her that I tried to forget. One she passed to me in the most inconspicuous way: the secret of her violation by the house manager and her dream of leaving the orphanage someday to become a tailor.

    Perhaps, I tried to forget these things because, deep down, I knew they were actions I should have taken. I had my own problems, like my drug addiction, which was getting out of hand. I couldn’t go a night without drowning myself in several bottles of cough medicine. My speech slowed whenever a sound left my mouth. Each night blurred into the next, the haze of the medication masking my pain.

    But even in that fog, I knew I lacked the courage to take the appropriate steps to help her. I was trapped in my own cycle of self-destruction, unable to break free.

    And then came the day that changed everything.

    I was standing in the shower, letting the water wash over me, when the news of her death hit me like a cold slap. The shock froze me in place, the water pounding down but unable to wash away the sudden, overwhelming grief.

    “I know who did this to her, but I can’t come forth to say,” I murmured in the shower, repeating the words like a broken record, a thousand times more than my mind could count.

    Two days after she died, I sought out the house manager—the very man accused of betraying the trust of the vulnerable girls in our care. I told him about my need to leave the premises permanently. His face was somewhat expressionless, but I sensed an undercurrent of guilt. It wasn’t as pronounced as mine, but it was there, etched in the lines on his forehead.

    It took an immense effort to restrain myself from striking the man before me. Although what I really needed was to escape, to be anywhere but Kyauta Orphanage. Yet, strangely, I found myself unable to gather my belongings and leave. So, I resolved to confront him instead. Perhaps in the depths of his eyes, I would find a hatred profound enough—for him and for myself—that I would finally report him.

    “Don’t sweat it,” he said with a shrug. “These things happen. We do our best for the kids, but some things are just out of our hands.” 

    His words reminded me of what she had narrated he did to her on her 16th birthday. How he pressed his torso against her slender figure, consuming whatever space she occupied, while his hand stole the air from her throat and mouth.

    I stared at him, feeling a surge of anger. “Maybe I should just quit. Disappear. I can’t stay here with all these memories.”

    He raised an eyebrow. “Take some time off then. A few weeks, maybe.”

    “But…” I felt my resolve waver.

    He cut me shut . “No buts. You’re under my wing; nothing’s going to touch you. Ka ji.” 

    Then, I tried to block the mental image of the last time I saw her: her dark silhouette outlined against the stillness of her room, her slender frame lying motionless on the bed, surrounded by an aura of melancholy. Her bed was pushed against the far wall, its disheveled sheets tangled as if in a struggle. A lone pillow, stained with tear streaks, lay abandoned on the floor beside her.

    I tried to avoid imagining the perpetrator in the act. He was my reflection, aged and thickened, his features honed by the years. Clutching a bottle of pills that I eventually retrieved, I struggled to banish the vision of her frail hands. Some of the pills had fallen out of their container and were now scattered aimlessly across the room. On the floor laid the sentence she had written, a last farewell to a man she loved who had failed her: “Drowning myself.”

    Right now, in my shower, I am haunted by a truth I cannot utter. My hands, bound by invisible threads, mirror the act of swallowing the same pills she once did, seeking silence in the way she found it. Water cascades down my chest, mingling with my labored breaths as memories and emotions converge, battering me with their relentless force. I stand there, helpless, beneath the crushing weight of it all.

    And there it was—the hands that had stripped Jiddah’s innocence and left her shattered, now trying to rejuvenate me. 

    “Don’t do this, Yassir. Don’t do this. Someone, call a doctor!” His voice resonates through the corridors of my memory, reaching back to the earliest moments of my life. It’s a voice I have come to despise. It is my father’s.


    Haliru Ali Musa is an engineer whose passion for storytelling knows no bounds. Hailing from Katsina, Nigeria, he now calls the bustling city of Lagos his home.

  • Nanny Burrows’s Potions – Ian Douglas Robertson

    The summer holidays had come at last and I couldn’t wait to get out on the farm. Jimmy Comerton had commandeered three of the men to help him dip the two hundred and fifty sheep we had at the time. It was a messy job.

    One man would toss a sheep in one end of the dip and two more would drag it out the other. Two men were required at the far end, as the saturated wool would weigh a ton and the sheep needed help to clamber out of the water. Once out, they would start shaking frantically in an effort to shed the water, drenching anyone within a three-yard radius.

    Fortunately, it was a warm day and everyone was in their shirtsleeves – and oilskins – enjoying the tepid Irish sun. There was an audible sigh of relief, however, when we saw my mother arrive with tea and sandwiches. We dropped everything and headed for some hay bales in the shed opposite. Sandwiches were grabbed but the tea ignored in favour of the stout that had been poorly concealed at the bottom of the basket. 

    That morning my father had been into Ross to see Dr Quighan about an annoying cough he couldn’t shake off. So, the conversation inevitably came round to doctors and quacks, which, in Jimmy Comerton’s eyes, were one and the same. 

    “That was a terrible risk you were takin’ now, Boss,” says Jimmy, popping the top of a bottle of stout.

    “Oh, why’s that, Jimmy?”

    “Goin’ to see that quack Quighan. Sure, you’d go in with a thorn in your finger and come out missin’ a limb. He’d as lief amputate your hand as take out the thorn. With that cough you have, you could have come away with only one lung.”

    “I wouldn’t go near the fucker,” says Mylsey Murphy, the pigman who had been requisitioned into helping Jimmy. Mylsey had a weak arm and leg, which meant he walked with a hobbly-wobbly lopsided lope. “When I was on’y six, didn’t me mother take me into Ross to see Quighan. In those days, we had to take the ass and car. It took us about three hours to get there and then we had to sit another hour or two in the waitin’ room. That was terrible hardship for a six-year-old lad, I can tell you.

    Anyway, Quighan’s receptionist finally calls us in and me and me mother stands there opposite his desk while your man spends five minutes writin’ in a big ledger. Finally, he raises his head, takes one look at me and says, ‘Jesus, you’re one miserable looking fucker, aren’t you?’ He got up and told me to strip. I was as thin as a sprong handle back then. No matter what I ate, I couldn’t keep the flesh on me. ‘Christ!’ says he, a look of horror on his face. ‘Where did they salvage you from? Auschwitz?’  He thought this hilarious and fell into fits of laughter. He took out his stethoscope, anyway, and held it to me bare chest.

    A second later, his face went into contortions. ‘I can’t hear a fucking thing. Is he alive or only pretending? If so, he must have a heart the size of a midge?’ ‘He’s always been a bit wake, Doctor,’ says me mother. ‘Weak? Is that what you call it? Moribund is more like it.’ ‘What’s that now, Doctor?’ says me mam. ‘Well, I can tell you it’s not good.’ ‘Is it serious, Doctor?’ ‘All I can say, M’am, is that it’s in the hands of the Lord whether he lives or dies. I’ll prescribe a bit of ould medicine for him but the state he’s in he’ll be lucky to make it to his next birthday.’ ‘What can I do, Doctor?’ ‘Pray to God that he goes nice and gentle.’ Anyway, he scribbled out a prescription, shoved it into me mother’s hand and straightway lit up a cigarette.”

    “Well, you’re still goin’ strong, Mylsey,” says Jimmy.

    “No thanks to that fucker Quighan, I can tell ye.”

    “There was a time when only the worst doctors would end up in a small country town like Ross. Did I ever tell ye about a doctor by the name of Brian Muldoon?”

    “Oh, Jes’, wasn’t he a terrible man for the drink.”

    “For the life of him he couldn’t function sober. If he could look ye straight in the eye and was able to stand straight, ye needed to watch out. You wouldn’t know what he’d stick into you, nor what poison he’d dose ye with.

    Once, after visitin’ him when he was sober, I went into the Chemist’s and handed Cory the prescription. He took one look at it and says, ‘Ah, this must be from the sober Muldoon. If I were to give you this, you’d die a very prolonged and painful death. But I think I know what he’s getting at.’ Now, if he was drunk you were fine.  He’d laugh and joke and give you a thorough examination without a word of slander out of him. A perfect bedside manner, you could say.”

    “Do ye remember, Boss, the time when Mick fell and cracked his skull on the side of the harrow and ye took him to Muldoon?”

    “Could I ever forget? It was past midday so Muldoon was already two sheets in the wind. He took one look at Mick and said, ‘I know you. You’re one of the Roches from that dirty back lane where all the babbies come from.’ ‘No,’ said Mick. ‘The name’s Kehoe.’ ‘All right, Roche. I’m going to stitch you up. Now, I don’t want any squealing out of you. It’s not good for my nerves.’ Mick told me afterwards he was in agony because Muldoon didn’t use any anaesthetic.

    Mick didn’t dare make a sound, though. When he’d finished, the doctor put a net cap over Mick’s head. ‘Now, Roche,’ he says, admiring his handwork, ‘that is not for cosmetic purposes.’ He found this uproariously funny and was still chuckling away to himself when we left the room. But, as Jimmy said, when he’d had a few to drink he was an excellent doctor.”

    “Oh, back then, Boss, ‘twas a terrible job bein’ a doctor. You’d be called out at all hours of the day and night and in all weathers too, all for a few rotten eggs or a mangy ould chicken or a lump of salty bacon. Sure, the people had no money in them days. They lived from hand to mouth, so to speak.”

     “I’ll never forget the time ould Quighan was called out to Paddy Byrne’s place,” said Mylsey “The ould fella was on his death bed. There was nothin’ much anyone could do for him. Anyway, all Meg Byrne had in the house was a salmon.

    Oh, a lovely big salmon it was too. Now, how Paddy Byrne come by it, I don’t know. Anyway, Quighan was delighted. He loved salmon. So, Meg wrapped it up in greaseproof paper and gave it the doctor on his way out. Halfway home, Quighan got a whiff of the salmon on the back seat.

    He thought it smelt a bit high but put no pass on it. When he got home, he proudly presents Josey with the salmon, thinkin’ she’d be thrilled. But when she saw the fish, she nearly threw it back in his face. ‘What in God’s name do you expect me to do with that, Quighan? Sure, I wouldn’t give it to a starvin’ cat.’ They say Josey Quighan gave him a fair ould latherin’ after that. ‘You go out in the pourin’ rain,’ says she, ‘travel halfway across the country and you come home with a stinkin’ fish. Well, you can go to bed with an empty stomach now and maybe that’ll knock a bit of sense into you, so you won’t come home emptyhanded again.’ Oh, she was a cranky ould biddy was Josey Quighan. He was well rid of her when she died.”

    “Now,” says Jimmy, getting comfortable between two bales of hay. “I’m goin’ to tell yez a story you may not know. Do your remember Nanny Burrows that did live next to the Ballagh bridge?”

    “Oh, aye,” said Mylsey. “I remember Nanny well.” 

    “Well, Nanny Burrows was better than any doctor and she never took a penny piece from no one. You wouldn’t credit the number of people she cured.”

    “Didn’t they say she was a witch?” said Mylsey.

    “Ah, Father Malachy branded her a witch ‘cos she didn’t go to mass of a Sunday but she was no more of a witch than I am. I wouldn’t be surprised if the doctors didn’t put Malachy up to it ‘cos she was takin’ away their business. No. Nanny Burrows wouldn’t hurt a fly. And when I say wouldn’t hurt a fly, I mean it. Sure, one summer’s evenin’ we were sittin’ by the river, Nanny and meself. She’d given me a glass of her cherry brandy. Oh, she was very fond of the cherry brandy. She made it herself out of the cherries she had in the garden. As you can imagine, the place was hummin’ with all sorts of insects; midges, bees, flies, you name it. Well, a fly was hell bent on taking a sup of me cherry brandy. So, I went to squash it between me hands. But Nanny lets out a shriek as if I was about to murder someone. ‘Jimmy Comerton,’ says she. ‘Don’t you dare! That fly has just as much a right to this space as you have. If we don’t respect nature, it won’t respect us.’ Some said she wouldn’t even kill a spider. There were others too who said she kept them to use in her potions, but I wouldn’t credit that. You see, Nanny had great knowledge of botany. All the cures and potions she knew had been passed down from mother to daughter for generations. You’d see her wanderin’ the ditches and along the river bank all hours of the day and night in search of weeds and grasses that she’d use in her potions. The whole house was full of jars with liquids of all hues. To be honest with you now, they looked more like what you’d take to the microbiologist than somethin’ you’d dose yourself with, but anyway. Did ye ever go into her place, Mylsey?”

    “I did not. If it was dark we’d take another route home and if it was day we’d make sure to pass on the opposite side of the bridge.”

    “Ah, Nanny was a harmless ould soul. I often went up there to see that she and the lad was all right.”

    “Didn’t she have a boy that was not all there?”

    “Ah, Donal was a grand lad. He’d come up to ye and put his arms around ye and give ye a rare big hug, as if ye were his long-lost uncle. He was what they call a mongoloid.”

    “Down Syndrome,” corrected my father.

    “The very same. Nanny could have put him in a home, but she wouldn’t do anythin’ like that. She said, ‘I love that boy more than anythin’ in the world.’ Donal went everywhere with her, helpin’ her look for all those plants. Nanny had taught him how to read and he could write a bit too. He didn’t speak all that clear but he could talk the hind legs off a dunkey, if you gave him half a chance. Oh, Nanny and Donal were very close but she had a terrible fear that she’d die before him. Now, the mongoloids, or as the Boss calls ‘em, the Down Syndrome people, don’t live all that long as a rule. They’re very prone to illnesses. But Nanny was in her forties when she had him and she was goin’ on eighty-five at the time. I don’t know what happened to Mr. Burrows. Some said he died. Others said that he scarpered as soon as he clapped eyes on Donal. Anyway, Nanny and Donal were as happy as Larry together.”

    “As you can imagine they got lots of visitors from all over, people who had tried doctors and got no results, or simply people who believed in the old medicine. Anyway, one day a grand car pulled up outside Nanny Burrows’ humble abode – a Bentley I think it was – and out got a very glamorous lady, all in purple silks and shiny furs. The chauffeur got out too and escorted her to the front door. ‘Is this the residence of Mrs.Nanny Burrows?’ the chauffeur calls out in a haughty voice. ‘It is,’ says Donal, jumpin’ up from behind a tree. The chauffeur gave him a quare look or two and says, ‘Is Nanny here?’ ‘Mammy,’ shouts Donal. ‘Some grand people are wantin’ ye.’ Well, it turned out anyway that the lovely lady was a famous actress from Dublin. She was in all the great plays of the time and in a good many films too. Apparently, she had been diagnosed with breast cancer. Now we know that that can be a killer if you don’t have a …what’s that called now, Boss?”

    “Mastectomy.”

    “The very same. Now bein’ a celebrity and all, she was loath to have her breast removed for fear it would ruin her career. She had a fine pair, so they say, that were the envy of many a young lady of the time. Somehow she’d heard of Nanny Burrows’ miraculous cures, so she thought she’d give it a go. Now, Nanny didn’t want to give her false hopes. So, she says, ‘I can’t guarantee you’ll get better.’ ‘But they told me you have cured cancer.’ ‘Tis true that some have got cured but I’m no miracle worker.’ ‘Well, I’ll be honest with you, Nanny. I’d sooner die than lose my breasts.’ ‘You can always wear a falsy,’ says Nanny. ‘Falsy!’ yelled the grand lady, makin’ Donal jump up in fright. ‘What’s a falsy, Mammy?’ says Donal, thinkin’ that it must be somethin’ terrible altogether. ‘Don’t worry yourself, Donal. It’s just somethin’ some women wear.’ ‘Not me,’ says the grand lady emphatically. ‘Now, when can we start treatment?’ ‘Are you absolutely sure? I don’t want you blamin’ me if it don’t work.’ ‘No, I won’t. In fact, I’ll grant any wish you want, if I get rid of the cancer.’”

    “Well, they started the treatment, anyway. And, ‘clare to God, about a year later, didn’t the doctors give her a clean bill of health. Oh, she was over the moon. Now, you might think she’d forget all about her promise to Nanny, but she didn’t. She was a woman of her word. One Sunday afternoon the Bentley pulled up outside Nanny’s cottage. Nanny was makin’ some potion or other in the kitchen but she sat down by the fire anyway with the lovely lady. Nanny wet the tay and they began talkin’. ‘I owe you my life and my career, Nanny, and I’ve come to carry out my promise. I said that I’d give you anything you wanted. I know you won’t take money, so what is it that I can do for you?’ It appears that Nanny didn’t have to think long. ‘I’m eighty-six years old and Donal is goin’ on fifty. I don’t know which of us will go first but if I do I want you to look after Donal for me.’ ‘Is that all?’ says the grand lady. ‘I could get you a new house in the town.’ ‘A house in town. Now what would I do with that? A town is a sterile place. Where would I find what I need for my potions?’ ‘Well, can I do up this place? A fridge? A cooker? A television?’ ‘Now what would I do with a fridge. Don’t I have a larder that do be ten times bigger than a fridge? I don’t need a cooker either. Sure, I cooks everything on the open fire. And a television, ha! They says it do nothin’ but soften the brain.’ ‘So, all you want from me is to look after Donal, if you should pass before him?’ ‘That’s right.’”  

    “So, the lovely lady left her address and phone number and went away back to Dublin. And, sure enough, about four or five years later, didn’t Nanny get a bad flu that turned to pneumonia. She refused to go into hospital because she was sure they’d dose her with all sorts of poisons, but her own potions were not strong enough to cure her. And late one evenin’ Donal comes runnin’ into Maguire’s yard shoutin’, ‘Come, come, me Mammy is chokin’.’ Well, that was the end of Nanny Burrows. By the time Maggie Maguire got to the cottage, Nanny had stopped breathin’ altogether. You should have heard the wailin’ out of Donal. You could damn near hear him all the way to the Rock.”

    “So, what was to become of Donal? Because as sure as hell he couldn’t live by himself and no one was inclined to take him in. There was talk of puttin’ him in a home run by the nuns but then I remembered Nanny tellin’ me about the grand lady from Dublin who had promised to look after him. We found her address and phone number but the phone was dead and no one replied to the letters we sent to Dublin. Somehow, though, I thought the message would get through to her. So, I says, ‘We can make a roster so that someone passes by the cottage every day and makes sure Donal is fed and kept warm until the grand lady gets one of the letters we’re after sendin’ her.’ So, that’s what we did. Donal remained in the cottage but he spent a lot of time in the houses all round. He seemed happy enough but I and some others were terrible afraid he’d forget to put the guard in front of the fire one night and he and the cottage would go up in smoke.”

    “Anyway, as luck would have it, didn’t the Bentley turn up one day at the Burrows’s cottage. The lovely lady was distraught when she found out that Nanny had passed away. Maggie Maguire was over at the cottage at the time givin’ Donal the bit of dinner. ‘We tried to get in touch with you,’ says Maggie. ‘Yes, yes, I’m sorry. I live in London now.’ ‘So, you got our letter, anyway?’ ‘No, I didn’t. It must have got lost.’ ‘So, what brought you down then?’ ‘The cancer has come back. In the other breast this time. Without Nanny’s medicine I’m going to have to have a mastectomy.’ ‘I’m sorry,’ says Maggie. ‘Nanny didn’t have a daughter to pass on her knowledge to.’ ‘But she had a son,’ said Donal. They all laughed. ‘I know, Donal. She had a son and a lovely son too, but she didn’t have a daughter to pass the knowledge down to.’ ‘But she had a son,’ repeated Donal. They thought there was no point trying to explain to him that all the potions Nanny had on the shelves in every room in the cottage were useless if they didn’t know what each one was for. ‘I’m sorry,’ says Maggie to the grand lady. ‘You’ll have to rely on conventional medicine.’ Then, Donal shouts out, ‘Falsy!’ They looked around at Donal wondering what he was gettin’ at. ‘No falsy!’ Then, the grand lady clicked. ‘I know what he’s saying. Women who have had a mastectomy wear a breast substitute, what Nanny referred to as a falsy.’ ‘No falsy,’ says Donal, lookin’ very disturbed. ‘What do you mean, Donal?’ says Maggie gently. ‘That one,’ says Donal goin’ over to one of the shelves, pickin’ off a jar and handin’ it to the grand lady. ‘Drink that and you won’t have to wear a falsy,’ says Donal. ‘You mean that’s the medicine your mother gave me?’ ‘Yes.’ ‘Are you quite sure now, Donal?’ says Maggie. ‘We don’t want to poison this lovely lady.’ ‘Of course, I’m sure.’ ‘All right, but will one jar be enough?’ The lovely lady looked worried. ‘I took it for about a year. I must have used about ten jars. One is not enough. What can I do?’ Donal’s face burst into a broad smile. ‘Nanny didn’t have a daughter but she had a son.’ They both looked at Donal in dismay, not understandin’ what he was tryin’ to say. ‘And so?’ says Maggie. ‘So, I have the knowledge!’ says Donal, clappin’ his hands like a child. ‘I can make more jars. I can make that many,’ says he, holdin’ up ten fingers.”

    “Anyway, after Donal had had the bit of grub, they sent him up to Maguire’s farm to help with the cows. He loved the cows and could milk them too. Oh, he was a grand milker. When he was gone, the two women sat by the fire and discussed the situation. ‘I honestly don’t think we can trust Donal,’ says Maggie. ‘He might end up poisonin’ you.’ The grand lady thought for a bit. ‘I don’t think I have much choice. I would far sooner trust Nanny’s potion than do chemotherapy. My hair would fall out and goodness knows what it would do to the rest of my body. And there’s no guarantee that it will work either. No, I’ve decided. I’m going to take a chance on Donal.’ And that’s what she did. Sure, Donal had seen his mother make up those potions thousands of time. He knew exactly how to do it.”

    “So, it was agreed that the grand lady would pay someone to live permanently with Donal. Sure, you remember Kitty Murphy, who was widowed young and her sons went off to England to become navvies. Well, she was only too happy to move into the cottage and look after Donal, and get paid for it too. So, Donal had a mission in life now. He spent most days searching the hedgerows for the ingredients for the grand lady’s potion. It took him a whole week, so Kitty said, to make just one jar. Anyway, after a year or so, didn’t the doctors declare that the cancer had gone, just as it had the previous time. The Bentley once again was seen parked outside the Burrows’s cottage. The grand lady got out, her cheeks all rosy with health. When she saw Donal she ran up to him and threw her arms around him and they hugged for a good ten minutes, so Kitty said. Well, she offered Donal everythin’ under the sun but like his mother he said he didn’t want nothin’. ‘All I want is Kitty,’ says Donal. ‘I love Kitty. Kitty’s my little woman.’ They all laughed at this. Kitty didn’t mind at all bein’ called Donal’s little woman. She knew he was harmless.”

    “Donal lived for another six years. Many people wouldn’t trust him with the potions. Others would and I’m damn sure he cured a good many. Donal died just like his mother with a bad dose of the flu. Kitty called the ambulance but it was too late. He’d stopped breathin’ by the time they reached Wexford town. Well, there wasn’t one person in Shannagh that wasn’t in mournin’ for the next good while. The grand lady came down and wasn’t she very tearful throughout the ceremony. Oh, there wasn’t another man or woman in the whole townland that got a better send-off. The church was so packed many people had to stand out in the rain during the service. Oh, Donal was very much loved. Sure, he was in and out of every house, always laugin’ and smilin’ and wantin’ to hug you. ‘Twas a very sad day when Donal died. And, worst of all, the recipes for all them potions and cures died with him. Once, a good while ago now, I says to this doctor I met at the Shannagh show, I says, ‘Now, if you quacks had any sense in you, you’d go up to the Burrows’s cottage, take away some of them jars and see why they can cure cancer when you boys with all your edication and noledge can’t.’ Well, do ye know what he says to me? He says, ‘That’s nothing but gobbledygook.’ ‘Now, what do you mean by that?” says I. ‘Nonsense.’ ‘Well, let me tell you, Sir,’ says I. ‘There was no mumbo jumbo out of Nanny Burrows. She never slagged the doctors like they slagged her.’ Innocent until proven guilty, isn’t that what they say. Well, until someone proves the opposite I’d as soon call the likes of Quighan and Muldoon quacks as I would Nanny Burrows. What I know for a fact anyway, she never killed no one, but I wouldn’t like to say the same for them quacks of doctors.”

    “Well, I suppose we’ll never know now,’ said my father.

    “And more’s the pity,’ said Jimmy, nodding his head. “Tell me now, Boss. Did Quighan give you a prescription?”

    “Yes, he did. He recommended a cough mixture. Cory said it should do the trick.”

    “Next time, Boss, save yourself a journey. I could give you the name of a cough mixture that always works for me. Though I wouldn’t say it’s as good as anythin’ Nanny Burrows could have given ye.” 

  • Catching the Wind – Theophilus Mshelia Sokuma

    1

    Bolaji showed me pictures of his mother the first week we started dating. We were seated side by side on a blue sofa in the living room of his flat in Surulere. The sky had been holding imminent rain and it opened and sent needles down to the earth, washing the air, cleaning up the atmosphere that had for days been coloured with smoke and dust. He brought out a large, embossed photo album with plastic flowers on the cover page and told me to go through it while he made lunch.

    In one of the photos, his mother was a young girl sporting a low-cut. She’d worn a blue pinafore and had stared into the camera with daring eyes. It was the same eyes Bolaji had, bulging eyes that glowed in pictures, and held so much and spoke so much. He only needed to look at me with those eyes and the ground under my feet would turn to water. In another picture, she was a young girl and was seated on a stool, wearing iro and buba, her gele a mountain on her head, a huge bag on her lap and a bright smile stretching her face.

    As I gazed at the pictures, I felt a pang of longing, a sort of longing for something you never possessed but nonetheless missed. As though sensing my thoughts, he mentioned that his mother put the album in his bag when he was moving into the flat, and told him in that melodramatic tone mothers always used, that he should show the album to any girl he wanted to get married to so she can know from the onset that he is a Mummy’s Boy. 

    “But there’s no girl in the picture. There’s never going to be,” he said. I smiled a sad smile on his mother’s behalf but also felt the slow budding of anxiety’s roots in me. 

    “So how many boys have you shown this album to?”

    “None. I never felt the need to. I guess it’s because of how you talk about missing your mum and how you always seem interested whenever I talk about mine. So I wanted to share my mum with you.”

    2

    I finally met Bolaji’s mother a year after he showed me the pictures of her.  I picked her up at MM2 airport, and after the initial inquiries about the flight and how she was doing, our lips settled on silence. I drove from the airport through busy Lagos roads. The city was alive and breathing. Cars were stuck in a bubble of stagnancy while hawkers raced in the traffic with bottles of cold water and soft drinks—lives were pouring into each other in chaotic bursts at every street corner—and I felt Bolaji’s mother’s exhaustion.

    Lagos was never a city she was keen on visiting. She preferred the sanity and slowness of Ilorin to the madness that lay on the street in Lagos. Bolaji had invited her several times to come spend time with him in Lagos, but she always resisted, saying she had her school to look after and Lagos was too much for her old frame to handle. Prior to this meeting, our relationship had solely existed via telephone calls. Bolaji had introduced me to her as his friend and flatmate, and after every call they had, she would tell him to “greet that your friend”. 

    When we reached the intersection at Allen Avenue, three child-beggars pressed their faces to the sides of the car, and Bolaji’s mother asked me to wind down. She reached for her purse and brought out three N100 notes and handed them over to the children, one after the other.

    “These children, they are everywhere,” she said.

    “Yes,” I answered, not quite knowing where “everywhere” meant.

    Sitting beside me as I drove, her face had such a striking resemblance to Bolaji—the same eyes that roamed around when caught in an uncomfortable situation—and it reminded me of when both of us would wear makeup, our heads covered in the many wigs we acquired over the months as we posed, in our room, before a camera, and I felt within me a thick sadness, and a prayer hummed inside me: that Bolaji be caught once more within the glittery web of pure, unbridled freedom and aliveness.

    Four days ago, Bolaji and I were in the middle of playing Monopoly as was our ritual every Saturday when he began complaining of a headache. I assumed he was just trying to escape being beaten yet again, but when the complaint persisted, I placed my hand against his forehead to check his temperature and his skin felt like a burning plate against my hand. We assumed it was his yearly Malaria visit, and I rushed to the pharmacy down the street to buy antimalarials, but by evening, there was still no relief. I suggested a hospital visit, and in his typical nonchalant way, he thought I was getting worried; he would be fine in no time.

    When we got to the hospital, while waiting in the reception for the doctor to attend to us, his fever intensified. The nurses rushed him into a room and placed him on a drip. His fever broke, and it seemed as if everything was alright. He fell asleep. Hours later, he was still asleep. I tried to wake him up so he could take his bath and eat, but he simply stayed there–unmoving. I remember my hands taking on a life of their own, tremors coming alive in them. Later that night, when Bolaji’s mother called like she always did, I explained what happened to her. I wanted to tell her not to worry, but the words felt untrue on my lips.

    “Should I take you to the house first or the hospital?” I asked.

    “The hospital, please.”

    “Alright, ma,” I said, as I passed the women selling food in large coolers at the junction, and then edged the car onto the street leading to the hospital.

    “How is he?” she asked.

    “The doctors have not said anything definite yet. They said it’s bacterial meningitis. He has been unconscious for 3 days now.” I knew she had been waiting for me to lead the conversation into the terrain we both were unwilling to venture into, but I had been too wary of her presence and everything it held, and this filled my mouth with silence. 

    I drove the car into the hospital, and my face held a smile for the security man, who had been warm and cordial during all our hospital visits. His warm nature always earned him monetary compensation from Bolaji and for the past three days I have been in the hospital, I could sense in his earnest gaze and fatty greetings a pecuniary expectation. I had always thought it mercenary, the expectation of benevolence people like him had of those caught in the embrace of pain, grief, and uncertainty but Bolaji thought it to be rather humane. “No one chooses to shed their dignity by begging unless the situation demands it,” he would say. 

    After parking the car, I moved away from Bolaji’s mother to the security man, eager to breathe air different from her. I took out a thousand naira from my pocket and handed it over to him, and his entire being bent into a shape of gratitude.

    The hospital was a towering white mass, and I walked into it with a lethargy that was becoming of me. The inside was cold. In my movement was the visceral contemplation of where to place myself in relation to Bolaji’s mother. Should I be in front, or should I walk behind her? Despite the frequent greetings we exchanged over phone calls, there was still a pang of uncertainty, and movement, unsure with her. I had been a feature of her son’s life for the past two years, inhabiting a space that should be inhabited only by a wife. But what was I to her son? 

    The nurses at the reception smiled at me, especially the one with the light skin and a voice that was soft like the wind on your skin, who had shown a peculiar interest in me or in Bolaji rather. Agnes was her name. She looked like the kind of girl every mother would want for their son. She was beautiful and had a calm face. She always came into the room to see how I was and to check up on Bolaji and would ask if I was served lunch even though I always told her I was fine and had already eaten something. The nurse curtsied to greet Bolaji’s mother and I imagined Bolaji falling in love with her and his mother blessing their union. I imagined the joy that would line his mother’s face at their wedding. How she —dressed in the most expensive lace—would move around from table to table as the guests called her “Iya Oko.” (Mother of the groom).

    A few months ago, she had begun talking about marriage to Bolaji. Always starting the story with yet another tale of a cousin, a nephew or a family friend who had recently married or given birth. Once, she asked me to talk to Bolaji: “He needs to remove his head from work. It’s not every time ‘work, work’. He is not getting younger; ‘thirty years’ is no longer a child. Neither  am I getting younger. Beg him for me o. If he does not want a Lagos girl, I can get one for him here in Ilorin. ” 

    I remember asking Bolaji about it one cool evening. We were together in the bedroom. He was tending the potted plants he had dutifully acquired over the years while the sun splashed orange rays on them. 

    “She is my mother, and we are close. She thinks we are just good friends,” he said as he examined the plants and sprayed their leaves with water. 

    “So, you don’t think she knows?” I asked.

    “I don’t know. She may have her suspicions. Remember I told you she caught me kissing a boy when I was 7? And there was this time when she took me from church to church to pray the gayness away. If she doesn’t realise the truth, then she is lying to herself. Mothers always know this,” Bolaji replied.

    “Do you think you will ever tell her about us?” I asked.

    “When we get to that bridge, we will cross it.” and he returned to spraying his plants. 

    I knew his ignoring this conversation was a way of not upsetting his relationship with his mother. In his silence, there was a maintenance of whatever character of denial in which his mother was. Bolaji’s relationship with his mother was one I found admirable and made me aware of an emptiness in my life. Even though he had brought me into the hallowed circle consisting of only him and his mother, there was still the thick air of fear that surrounded the both of us.

    Bolaji was someone I considered wholesome, with enough roots in him. His job involved photographing queer bodies in different poses of defiance. His most recent exhibitions had been described by Ade Coker, the popular art critic, as bold and daring, pushing the boundaries of freedom for queer bodies. But he had struggled with fully actualizing this freedom for himself.

    Mothers always know, I have heard several times. But my mother died while I was still a baby and I as such was not privy to this communion between mother and son. My father and brothers had turned their backs on me after I came out to them in my final year at the university. Sometimes, I wondered if my mother would have stood by and watched my brothers send me out into the night if she had been alive.

    When we got to Bolaji’s ward, where he lay on his back as though in a peaceful sleep, I felt myself fold at the sight. His mother moved closer to the bed, gently touched his forehead, and suddenly turned toward me, asking to see the doctor. 

    “Bacterial meningitis,” the doctor repeated to Bolaji’s mother. “I’m sorry but we didn’t catch it on time.” We were seated in the doctor’s office, with its white walls covered with pictures of the human respiratory system and the cold smell of chemicals and something else. Fear. 

    “Is there anything that can be done?” she asked. 

    “We have administered some antibiotics and now we can only watch and wait.”

    From the moment the words that rang empty of hope dropped from his lips, I saw the silence come for Bolaji’s mother, engulfing her; her once bright eyes turned grey; her every movement paid obeisance to silence.. 

    After we returned to Bolaji’s room, his mother sat by his bed, her eyes fixed on him as he slept. Like a child caught in a beautiful dream,  he looked beautiful asleep. He looked so beautiful that my heart ached.

    His mother rummaged through the bag and brought out a bottle of Goya olive oil. 

    “The Bible says where two or three are gathered, he is there in their midst.” She looked at me. “And we are three here.” She said, pointing to Bolaji.

    “Do you believe?” she asked.

    My eyes were that of a child’s searching for its mother. She took my hands in hers and held tightly onto them. They were rough and I wanted to escape from the grip. She shook our hands in forceful motion and let prayer descend from her lips. She prayed with a deep earnest supplication, her faith driving the movement of her body and I felt obliged to imbue my amen with a faith larger than a mustard seed.

    When the prayer ended, she dipped her finger in the oil and drew the cross on Bolaji’s forehead. Then, she asked me to come closer and she lined my head with the oil while muttering God bless you. After we finished, I looked at Bolaji, at how quiet his face was and hoped for a fluttering, the movement of fingers that indicated he was returning to us.

    Bolaji was not a believer. He had left the church years ago and never turned back. I, on the other hand–even though I had left the church, too–tend to have dark moments that would have my head turning, yearning to feel once more the sense of safety being in the church brought and I would stroll to the church down our street and join in their service. Bolaji never understood why I still had a soft spot for religion. I didn’t understand either. All I knew was that on some days, being in church was the only thing my soul craved. On every call he had with his mother, her pleading voice came at him, begging him to go to church “for the days are filled with evil.” Once, she asked me if I frequented church and I lied and said yes. 

    “Please make sure Bolaji goes with you. He can’t be going through life as if he owns his life. He needs to acknowledge God in his life.” 

    As I said, there are moments when I feel overwhelmed by a profound sense of the supernatural—a recognition of the potential for the divine. So, when Bolaji’s eyes fluttered to life the next morning, I firmly believed that the prayers had worked and that miracles do happen. His mother’s praises to God filled the air, and the nurses gazed in wonder. But the testimony was short-lived. When he opened his eyes and I looked into them, I could not see Bolaji in them. And when his mother called his name and said, “My son, it is me, your mother,” he looked at her with the gaze of one wondering what words meant.

    At first, the doctor said he needed time to return fully to himself, but I knew something was wrong. There was a light within me that wasn’t coming on, and there was a light in him that wasn’t coming on. The white in his eyes was gone. 

    I convinced Bolaji’s mother to go to the house to sleep while I remained with Bolaji in the hospital. I promised to keep her updated on everything that happened. I offered to drive her but she suggested a taxi. Before she left, she held onto Bolaji’s hands and squeezed them. 

    “Let me know if anything happens,” she said as she hugged me.

    That night was filled with turmoil. It was as though Bolaji’s body had forgotten how to be a body again and his mind had melted inside him as it came to in a pool of vomit and shit. He looked at me but did not see me and I struggled to reconcile the fragile body I held in my hands to the body that shared thick passion with me for the past three years. I held on tightly onto him, cleaning everything that poured out of him while trying to hold back my fear. As each moment ticked by, I could feel Bolaji disappear into the icy darkness of death. I held his hands tightly, weaving prayers into a web to bind the two of us together but even that had not been enough. 

    When the Doctor told me that Bolaji had not made it. I went blank, descending into a black hole, and tumbling into a disorienting spiral. I felt as though I was being exorcised from myself. My mind flashed to the blue notebook we wrote our plans for the coming months. Death wasn’t something we had factored into the plans for our lives. We had planned to see the House of Slaves museum in Senegal in a few weeks.

    Bolaji was planning a photography and film exhibition in Lagos. It was supposed to be a documentation of queer bodies in different slavery sites from Badagry to Senegal to Sierra Leone as a way of engaging the dehumanisation queer people faced across Africa. We had plans to go to South Africa to get married since we couldn’t get married in the country. Him dying was not something we bargained for. What will happen to all our dreams and hopes now? I thought. Bolaji had gone into the darkness and left me alone in the rain, with a loud pain echoing in my ribs. 

    The first person I called was Japheth. He rushed down to the hospital with the rest of my friends and when I met them at the reception, I wanted to lob myself into them, to bend into them so they could steady me but I held my body in an unbending shape. Even though I was grieving, I still was worried about how my grief would be perceived by onlookers in the hospital. 

    3

    In Bolaji’s tradition, it was taboo for a parent to set eyes on the corpse of their child, so Bolaji’s mother remained within the walls of the guest bedroom in our flat. I had to tuck my grief away to find the strength to handle the intricacies of the burial. The candle night was filled with my friends and friends of Bolaji, and a few of his extended relatives.

    As I stood there amidst the crowd in Japheth’s flat, with the flickering candlelight casting eerie shadows on the faces of those around me, emphasising the gravity of the moment, I felt my heart shatter into a thousand pieces. His friends and my friends shared stories of Bolaji, recalling different tidbits about his life. Yet, I couldn’t help but feel a profound sense of loss—an emptiness that seemed impossible to fill. For many of them here, Bolaji’s death was an interruption to their lives, but for me, it was an overhaul, a complete destruction of every ounce of certainty I had had. I was standing above a ground that could sooner or later be pulled from underneath me, and there would be nothing I would be able to offer up in the form of resistance.

    The burial procession was a sombre affair, marked by the slow, deliberate steps of friends and family as we made our way to his final resting place. As the white coffin descended into the ground, a dam broke inside me and I felt myself breaking with it. My body no longer became my body but rather a site of pain, filled with cracks. My pain was thick in my chest, burning and I held myself to prevent myself from pouring away. Japheth came and placed his hands on my shoulder as though comforting a crying child and my arms were wrapped around myself because I was all I had now. My grief was mine and the only person I always shared my pain with was the person for whom this pain burned. 

    Back in the house, I was left with my silence and Bolaji’s mother’s silence. She stayed in her room, and I stayed in mine, surrounded by trappings that reminded me of Bolaji. The first day after the funeral, I remained in bed, unmoving. The bed felt empty without him even though the pillows still carried his scent. Even the plants in their vases seemed sad and lonely, waiting for his hands and face to shower them with attention. But that wouldn’t happen ever again, and in no time, they too would die.

    To come close to what I thought death would feel like, I set the air conditioner to the lowest and wrapped myself with a duvet. I stared at the ceiling, listening to the sounds from outside. The rankling voices of children echoed from the nearby school, chanting the alphabet, numbers and multiplication tables in a unison of childlike cacophonies. I remembered whenever Bolaji would hear those voices, he would shout from our bedroom, “You better enjoy this moment. You will spend your adulthood wishing you could return to it.” Do children, in their wish to become adults, ever realise that they were inadvertently praying to die? That, as we lean closer to adulthood, every year we mark brings us closer to death? 

    In my bed, I strained to catch the teacher’s voice, but it arrived as a feeble gust. The grating sounds of generators and moving vehicles filtered into the room, and I attempted to count the seconds between each horn, finding a sense of comfort in the rhythm. When this endeavour wearied me, I rose from the bed and fixed my gaze upon the world outside my window. The sky resembled a clean blue glass, adorned with feathery clouds. Children darted around the neighbouring compound in their yellow uniforms, trying to catch the wind. Hawkers bustled through the streets, balancing their wares atop their heads. The world had not stopped. I wished it had.

    Later that evening, Bolaji’s mother came to knock on my door. She was wearing a nightgown and over it, she tied a wrapper around her chest and her head was bare. The patches of grey hair on her head stood like a halo. Warm air from the corridor splashed on my face. 

    “Won’t you come out and eat something? You have been inside all day.” 

    “I am not hungry,” I answered.

    She sighed and returned to the kitchen. A few minutes later, she knocked on the door again.

    “You need to eat my son,” she said this time around. “I cooked. Do you want me to eat all alone?”

    I was suddenly aware of how dishevelled I looked. I had been wearing the same pink shirt and shorts for two days and was sure I was smelling like a pile of unwashed clothes and my hair looked like dirty whorls. I had not stepped out of the room since the funeral. I had a lot of pending work from clients who were waiting for their brand design but I could not bring myself to get out of bed.  The only thing I knew intimately was my grief and sometimes I wondered if Bolaji’s mother thought I was overdoing it. It should be the other way around. I should be the one waiting on her, making lunch and ensuring everything is alright. She was the one who had lost a son, and I had just lost a friend. 

    “Alright,” I said. “I will join you soon”

    I quickly took a cold shower before joining her in the living room.On the dining table were two trays of Amala and Ewedu placed side by side, in the exact spot Bolaji and I always sat. I realised she must have gone to the market. Bolaji and I were supposed to go to the market the previous weekend to stock up the house with foodstuffs but that was the day he fell sick. She took a seat at the head of the table and I sat beside her. Her skin looked tired and she suddenly looked small, unsure, and I struggled to reconcile her unwavering voice I had heard several times over the phone to the image in front of me.

    “The kitchen was empty so I had to quickly go to the market to get things,” she said as she washed her hands in the bowl of water on the table.

     “You people’s Lagos is a very crazy place. Some boys tried to rob me at the market. One of them took my phone but I don’t know what they saw that made them return it. They came back and prostrated on the ground, begging me to please forgive them.”

    “Ma, I am so sorry that happened to you. You should have come to call me and I would have gone to the market myself.”

    “It is fine. They did not succeed. The Lord is keeping watch over me. And I wanted to go to the market myself. Sending a man to the market is like sending a child to battle. Why are you looking at the food like that? Abi, you don’t eat Amala and Ewedu ni?” 

    “I do,” I said. But I did not move to eat the food. Instead, I gazed at it and wondered about the length it took her to tuck in her grief, to maintain the calmness she was exuding, to even think about food. 

    “Bolaji always wanted to eat Amala. At one point, he wanted to eat it every day. I told him if he wanted to, he would have to cook it himself,” she said. 

    This statement punctured a hole inside me because it meant Bolaji would never return. 

    “The food is really nice,” I managed to say.

    “We thank God,” she said. 

    We continued eating in silence, the only sound between us was the sucking sounds she made as she ate. When we finished eating, I gathered the plates to take to the kitchen. 

    She followed me to the kitchen and stood beside me as I washed the plates. The water was cold on my hands and the Ewedu made slime gather in the sink. I searched my head for what to say but my head was filled with bubbles of silence. Bolaji’s mother didn’t say a word either. Instead, she stood with her arms folded around her chest and I could tell she had journeyed elsewhere in her mind. We said our goodnight and retired to our bedrooms. 

    The next morning, she came to knock on my door again. “I made breakfast,” she said. There was a bonnet on her head and her face seemed brighter. 

    I joined her in the living room and sat beside her in the same spot as the previous day. Breakfast was Akamu with Akara.

    “Pray for us,” she said. Her demeanour was mild, calm and gracious. 

    We began eating after my breezy prayer. 

    “You people have an industrial blender in the house,” she said. “I saw it last night and it occurred to me to make Akara. I soaked the beans last night and blended them this morning. So fast and easy.”

    I nodded my head and ate in silence. When we finished eating, I packed up the plates and Bolaji’s mother followed me to the kitchen and again stood in silence a few feet away from the sink.

    In the afternoon, I got into my car and drove through the familiar roads that Bolaji and I used to frequent, each curve and intersection laden with memories of our shared adventures. Eventually, my aimless drive led me to Japheth’s house. As I pulled up to the familiar curb that Bolaji and I had reached together on several occasions, the curb that began our story together, the tears, which had been held back for so long, welled up within me. When my father and brothers kicked me out of the house, I moved in with Japheth and it was at Japheth’s place that I met Bolaji. With no one to judge or console me, I allowed myself to cry loudly, releasing the pent-up emotions that had been building inside. I remained there in the car, the sun casting its warm embrace overhead. The inside of the car felt like a cocoon, a sanctuary from the world outside.

    “How has it been?” Japheth asked when I finally entered his apartment. 

    “I don’t know. I still have moments where I expect Bolaji to walk through that door. I still turn in bed expecting to find him beside me,” I said. 

    “How are you putting up with having his mother in the house?” 

    “It has been strange. We don’t talk much.”

    “For how long do you think she is going to be at the house?”

    “I don’t know. I can’t wait for her to leave though. But I can’t do anything if she decides to stay for longer.”

    “Are you sure you will not come and stay here with me for a while?”

    “I will be fine. Thank you. The house is where I need to be.”

    I didn’t know when sleep overtook me. By the time I woke up, it was evening already. By the time I got back to the house, Bolaji’s mother was asleep. And on the table was a covered plate of jollof rice gone cold.

    The next morning, Bolaji’s mother came knocking on the door once again. It was a serene Sunday morning, enveloped in the absence of children’s chants echoing from the school next door. In its stead were the harmonious voices of the nearby church, which sometimes meandered softly and at times resounded with a forceful presence. I had readied myself for breakfast, yet this time, there was no mention of a prepared meal. Instead, she inquired if she could enter. Stepping aside, I granted her passage into the room. She gracefully positioned herself at the room’s centre, her gaze gently exploring the corners as if seeking some hidden truth.

     I saw her eyes fall on the portrait of Bolaji and me, and this realisation drew me back into reality. I had not remembered to hide the portrait. My mind flashed back to when the portrait was taken —it was a cold, rainy day. Bolaji had set the camera on a tripod, and both of us were in bed, caught in a tender embrace. We were both naked; the white bed sheet, the only thing covering our lower bodies. 

    “Whose room is this?” she asked.

    “It is Bolaji’s room.” 

    “And where is your own room?” 

    “The guest bedroom. That’s where you are.”

    “But it was empty.” 

    “Yes. I moved my things here before you came.” 

    “I’ll be leaving tomorrow,” she said. “I have some things I need to attend to in Ilorin.” 

    Relief petals opened up in me. She walked towards the wardrobe, and I could see in her movements questions and a pallid uncertainty.

    “Bolaji turned his room into a bush,” she said, gesturing to the plants around the room. “I need to take care of his things. I believe there are a few things I could give out to family members in Ilorin.”

    I walked to the wardrobe in a hazy bubble. I opened it and began staring at the clothes on the hanger. The blue corduroy shirt I got him because I thought they would look good on him, the Maroon kaftan I made for his 30th birthday photoshoot last year. The peach shirt I got for him just so he could own something in a colour that I loved. As I looked at each piece of clothing, wondering which one to pick out, the memories held within their seams—memories of passion, love, joy, laughter— jumped at me with a lucid potency and I began feeling tremors take over my hands and my knees. 

    “No,” I said, my voice quiet, scared. “I don’t think Bolaji would want us to get rid of his things so quickly.”

    “Oko mi, What happened?” She asked.

    “I’m sorry but I just feel it’s too early and it feels as if you are eager to get rid of his memory.” 

    “But he was my son.”

    “And he was my boyfriend,” I blurted out. “We were together.” I breathed.

    “No! Don’t say that,” she exclaimed, firmly. “Don’t say that rubbish,” she continued. Her words struck me more profoundly than my own declaration had. Placing her finger over her lips, she gestured for me to be quiet. I noticed tremors in her hands, and I saw it for what it was: fear. But fear of what?  Does a child cease to be yours the moment you realise their divergence from your expectations? What does parenthood encompass if not an unwavering embrace of your child? To bring a child into the world is an act of faith, as it involves nurturing an individual who will eventually carve their unique path, and to anticipate anything less is to undermine that very faith.

    “My son was not that kind of person,” she said. “Bolaji was a good son” 

    “But he was. He was gay. And being gay did not make him a bad son. And rubbish is you pretending as if you didn’t know and pestering him to get married knowing fully well what he was. Rubbish is what we have been doing these past few days—pretending to be cordial when we both know that you can’t stand to see my face because I remind you of what your son was. Rubbish is Bolaji dying and leaving me here all alone.” I rushed in one staggering breath.

    I could not stop the words from coming out. The tremors in my hands increased and I felt my chest tighten in pain and I wanted to run away. Bolaji’s mother stood there dazed, her eyes wide in shock. 

    “Did Bolaji ever tell you about his father?” She asked after a long silence. She had moved away from me and was at the work table, staring at the portrait of Bolaji and me.

    “No, ” I said. 

    “The stupid man died before Bolaji was born. He just died. Just like that and left me all alone with a heavy pregnancy. The night before he was to travel for that work meeting, I had a bad dream and I was screaming. He was the one who woke me up even. And I told him. I told him to not travel but he refused to listen to me. He refused. He said it’s my pregnancy that’s causing it. See, I was angry at him for not listening. Ah, I was very angry at him, I could not even allow myself to cry.”

    “So in my anger and my grief, I took everything he owned and gave it away. The ones I could not give, I burnt. I thought it would make the pain easier but it didn’t. I gave birth to Bolaji and every time I looked at him, it was Ajibola I saw. So I could not say pim about his father because grief sewed my lips with thread.”

    She took a deep breath and sat on the bed. “I spent a better part of his teenage years praying this thing away. I took him to one church after the other so this thing could go away from him but it never did. And now he is dead. What is the lesson here? That is what I have been asking myself. What is the lesson? Why did God allow this to happen?”

    My tremors suddenly stopped and in their place were clarity and a serene ease. I opened the other side of the wardrobe and pulled out two photo albums and walked to where she was.

    “He showed me this album the first week we started dating,” I said. 

    She didn’t need to open the album to know what was inside. 

    “And we started keeping something similar, too.”

    I opened the second album and placed it before her. The first image was of Bolaji and me standing on a rock on the beach. Our fingers were glued together. The picture had been taken on a cool evening at Landmark Beach where the breeze was a cool towel on your face and the ocean a soft, rippling blue sheet. Bolaji had chosen the picture to be the first picture that welcomed anyone looking through the album. “I feel this picture says everything that needs to be said about us,” he had said. I waited for her to flip through the pages, to enter into a world inhabited by just Bolaji and me.  There was joy in those pages and I wanted her to see it. To let her know that Bolaji was happy, that we were happy. She began flipping through the pages. She stared at each picture intently, at the life Bolaji and I had carefully cultivated. 

    “Where was this?” She asked, pointing to a picture.

    “This was the slave port at Badagry.”

    “He reminds me of his father here. His father too loved the sea.”

    I wanted to tell her Bolaji didn’t love the sea. He was scared of it. When she came across a picture of Bolaji kissing me on the cheeks, I noticed her face tense up. 

    “He looks so happy here,” she said, pointing to a picture of Bolaji on our third anniversary.

    “We still had so much to do together,” I said. 

    “Death,” she screamed out. “You have dealt with me twice. Ah. My son is gone. My son is gone! What will I do with myself now? What will become of me? No husband. No son. Nobody!”

     I felt the urge to apologise for everything, for Bolaji dying. For him dying without leaving her a family by which she could remember him.

    “I am your son,” I said, holding her hands. I knew Bolaji would have wanted me to say this. 

    “Oko mi,” she said. She dropped the album, turned towards me, and pulled me into a deep hug. I felt the heaving of her chest and the thickness of her grief. She smelled of Shea butter and coconut. She smelled of pain and hurt. I stayed there, bent into her while the horns of vehicles from outside rent the air and the cold air from the air conditioner poured over us like confetti. She pulled away and continued looking through the pictures. She flipped through the album, wading deeper and deeper into my world with Bolaji. I watched as she watched us and I knew that if Bolaji was here, he would have brought out his camera to take a picture of this moment.


    Theophilus Mshelia Sokuma is a Nigerian writer whose work has been featured in publications such as The Republic, Lolwe, Isele Magazine and others. He is an alumnus of the Purple Hibiscus Writing Workshop and an MFA candidate in Fiction at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. 

  • Domestic Accident – Chizitere Madeleine Nwaemesi

    Today you’re in Australia, in a few days you will be in Nigeria. You have failed your graduate studies courses. A lot of things need to be done. Firstly, you will report to work and resign without having to explain why you have been absent without notice for twenty-one days. Secondly, you need to tell your uncle about the shadow that bears Mmirimma’s physique and a masquerade’s phiz that kept muttering “God did not answer your mother” in fierce whispers into your ears at night. You did none. Instead you bought and booked a flight ticket to Nigeria. You need to see your mother, even if it will be for the last time.  Last two days, you went to Denis’ apartment and packed your remaining stuff into a Grebs eggs brown box while he sat on the bed staring, his face weak.

    “Please, rethink this decision.”

    You said nothing but kept packing frantically. The plastic sunflower vase had gone in first and there was still enough space for your abandoned journals, medium-sized transparent bottled pepper soup dry spice (the one you used whenever you were in high spirit for home meals), set of abandoned lingerie, ancient books that you never survived a paragraph on, the portraits of naked women that you bought at the art exhibition his younger brother hosted in Sydney last month, and your manual blender. 

    “You’re taking everything,” he sounded small, wounded and you imagined his lithe body slouched. He always slouched.

    The box could fit into the back seat of your car, comfortably. You thought as you lifted it into your arms. He stood and retrieved the box, offering to carry it. You let him. In his garage, he shut the car door after dropping the box and held your arm.

    “Zara. Say something. You can”t just leave me this way,” you know what he meant but what will you do with this persistent urge to burst things like you would the soft rashes that sprout on your keister after getting periods which you scratch and scratch until they turn sore and sticky, seeping blood.

    “Do you have to go?” he held your palms now. You have to go. You had spent twenty one days in this narrow apartment barring calls from work and relatives, listening to his gruff snores after sex, and hiding from the shadows that wouldn’t stop reoccurring. Yes, you have to go. You need to take out this blanket of darkness that silence has woven around your life. 

                            


    “Mmirimma—Good water” is your grandmother’s moniker.  It wasn’t a mere delusion that beauty runs in their bloodline. Beauty is a major characteristic of Ndulue’s lineage but hers is a revelation. When you see Mmirimma, you will understand why her beauty is a revelation. At almost seventy-one, she was a straight built woman with sharp face contours and body curves. But that’s not exactly where her beauty lies.

    The beauty you saw was in her phiz, albeit old age but her kind is the beauty that never entirely fades. The outline of her facial features down to her shoulders was a tactful representation of those you saw in the foreign magazines Uncle Jidenna used to send home among other numerous abroad things. “Edibles for Zara–to keep her mouth busy”, the tag on the large Ziploc reads, much to your excitement. Uncle Jidenna is your mother’s younger brother. Mmirimma is your mother’s mother. They were just two: Mmirimma’s children, beautiful and successful. Usonwa, your mother and a pediatrician at Amaku Teaching Hospital, Awka; Uncle Jidenna, her brother and a professor of physics in Australia. 

    Your mother had you in her teenage years, when, according to your grandmother, “men swarm around her like bees but she picked none”. She said picked with a sneer like men are items of clothing, you know, like the thrift wears the Eke market women heaped on a spread out wide raffia mats before and after sunsets on weekdays for the women who circulate them like termites would sugar, haggling prices, picking and dropping each until they finally made their choice and some eventually never make a choice. Like your mother. It was devastating for you. Your mother had strings of men to settle for and rejected all. Why? Who was your father? 

    Mmirimma ruled her daughter’s life. You knew from the way their bond had been all these years, clasping tightly, like two surfaces held with glue. After your mother birthed you, she left you with her mother and disappeared to London to study medicine. It was intentional. “A baby should not tie her down when I”m here,” your grandma told you years later albeit near naivety and impossibility of you understanding such words and the impact. You misunderstood her. You are important but not as her studies. Or her career.

    Your mother was as beautiful as Mmirimma. Light skinned and elegant. Uncle Jidenna called her “Mammy without water” on the days they made jokes about what should have been, who should have been this or that while they conversed on Facetime. His face–yellow and robust, your mother’s, slender, and cheerful.

    “Mmirimma is going to London for a medical check-up,” she told him one midnight after they had discussed the decline of the country’s economy due to mass emigration. They discussed loss of labor and unavailability of professionals, especially in the health sector. You were awake on your mother’s bed peeping into the laptop screen.

    “Aunty Chika will take care of her. She owes me that.” Your mother yawned before her brother uttered a comment.

    “I will send her some money,” he finally spoke.

    “Mba! Don’t do that. Why?”

    “Nobody owes you anything, Mammy. Aunty Chika has responsibilities to tend. You remember her eldest daughter tried to commit suicide last month? Chukwu aluka!—God performed miracles— If her teenage son hadn’t gotten back from his dance classes for early lunch, it would have been another story. I will send her some money. She cannot take care of my mother with empty hands.”

    “If you say so. She isn’t staying long anyways. Her appointment has been booked.” Your mother threw up her hands in resignation. Her hair extension pooled past her tank top down to her waist. You worried why she never had the discipline of sleeping in nightwear. You propped up on the pillow eavesdropping, then later gave in to sleep, knowing full well that they will go on and on, from one topic to another until 3am or farther.

    Mmirimma returned from London with a gait you didn’t quite recognize. Your mother had gone to receive her at Akanu Ibiam airport in Enugu in early March. That was two weeks after she received a call from Aunty Chika. It was midnight when she received that call. Uncle Jidenna did not call her that day. They had fallen out because Jidenna’s wife went to Paris with her friends for a short vacation. According to your mother, he shouldn’t have allowed such extravagance, such freedom. Your uncle was upset because his sister was telling him how to treat his wife.

    “You shouldn’t have married her,”your mother said after long moments of fat silence.

    “Mammy, should I have married you? Maybe it’s time you accepted that I cannot be here forever. I have a growing family and a woman I love. I cannot have enough yet deny my wife the happiness she deserves. I acknowledge the fact that you and Mmirimma don’t like her much but it’s definitely not your job to choose who I love, Mammy. Stop this madness.”

    Your mother fumed. “So, in essence, I depend so much on you…” her tone half asking, half shaky.

    “I’m not surprised you’re twisting everything to suit what you want to hear. You are good at it. And, yes, you have a point. Accept any of these men hovering around you and stop this jealousy.”

    Your mother was short of words. So, her brother continued.

    “I never delay Zara’s tuition. I never delay your allowances. I have paid for every property you demanded. What else do you want? Should I have married you? Zanu mu—answer me. Should I have married you?”

    When the call session ended, your mother slammed her laptop shut and stormed out into the night. You knew her destination was the Avocado tree just before her mother’s block. Uncle Jidenna had erected two blocks in the compound; the bigger one for his sister and the smaller one for his mother. But Mmirimma was mostly in her daughter’s block. When she came back inside the room, it was almost dawn. Her eyes, puffy and cheeks red. Two days after the silence, Aunty Chika called. Your mother thought it was her brother calling to apologize as usual but trepidation crept into her nerves when she saw the caller.

    “Aunty, don’t tell me that! Mba! Ekwuzikwana ya ozo!—No! Don’t say it again! Don’t tell me that!”

    You sat up on the bed, tired of feigning sleep. Your mother’s daily activities usually stretched to the wee hours of the morning, so it often intercepted your sleep. You grew up trying to take part in her daily activities, unconsciously at first, then consciously during pubescence because you admired your mother. You love how she sat legs-crossed,‘sitting pretty”–that was what your grandma called such posture–every evening, reviewing what you didn’t know on her laptop. You love her hair; dense and kinky. You love her slender fingers. You loved her pale skin when she undressed and wished you had such a delicate mold of buttocks, waist-line, clean fold of flesh between her legs. You love her accent when she chatted with her London friends. You knew you cannot speak such grammar. Why? Because you are finding it hard to understand anything in English studies, in all your school subjects generally, and you always never excelled in your exams. Your mother is intelligent. You are dull. Your mother is beautiful and graceful. You are homely and ungraceful. All these caused you insomnia.

    “You people have killed my mother!”she screamed again.

    Your heart churned. You put your feet down on the tiles. Its chilliness stung. But you walked on, steadily, until you stood behind your mother.

    “No! Don’t tell me that Aunty. Oh, God!  Oh, God!”she landed the phone on the bed, panting, her left palm on her forehead, the right hand on her hips.

    “They have killed my mother”, she told you after seconds of pacing up and down the wide room. “That crazy daughter of hers pushed my mother! How could she? She should have died that day! Odira should have waited until dusk to come back so she could kill herself! Bitch! She dared to push my mother.”

    Maybe Aunty Chika called Uncle Jidenna immediately your mother ended the call because he called minutes later. Your mother began crying. He pacified her, told her about the unsteady mental health of Onyinyechi, Aunty Chika’s eldest daughter, and reminded her that Aunty Chika was their father’s last cousin. Mmirimma only sustained head injuries and minor knee fracture. She should calm down. He would pay for Mmirimma’s return tickets immediately. Mmirimma would be fine. 

    Anugom“, your mother responded repeatedly, blowing her nose into the tissue she snatched from its box. “I have heard you.” 

    The day you fell down the staircase in school and passed out, your mother did not panic like this. They phoned her office line and she told them she couldn’t come right away. She would come after 4pm. She sent some money for hospital bills but they kept you in the school clinic until you resuscitated. When she came around 5pm, she scolded you about roughness so much that you wondered why she named you “Chizaram (God answered me)”. Did she really ask in the first place?  

    You checked yourself for any panic, the type that gripped your mother before her brother called but you couldn’t find any. Maybe…. Noo! Shame on you! 

    The Mmirimma that left for London was not the one that returned. This Mmirimma was different. She had purple eye bags. She hunched if she managed to stand. She was badly forgetful. She screams into space. She conversed with people she alone could see. She wees and defecates in her dress.

    Your mother was heartbroken. You had never seen her so heartbroken.

    “She shouldn’t have gone. I made a huge mistake, Zara. How could I be so clueless? Something more than a fall happened to my mother,” she lamented on the drive to the supermarket. Later, she stood at the Diapers section with a phone pressed to her left ear.

    “Jidenna, Nigerian diapers are not all that bad. There’s this one Nneka has been getting for her mother-in-law. I will try it.”

    You stood beside her, but your eyes never stopped darting across to the Pringles section. A little girl ran ahead of her mother to the onion-flavor row and grabbed two containers. Her mother stroked her face, bent to talk to her or, rather, negotiate with her before she dropped one. Her mother smiled.  

    “What do you mean you don’t remember Nneka? Nneka the prayer warrior!”

    Nneka is your mother’s godmother. Who doesn’t know Nneka? You wondered. Nneka that feeds on prayers like food. The first time your mother took you to her residence at Udoka Estate, her irrational obsession with prayers came as a shock to you. Your mother was away in Abuja for a one-week course while Mmirimma was in London.

    On the first morning, when the long awaited breakfast arrived by 10am, you wanted to jump into the food but Nneka reminded you that prayers had to be said first. Her line up of prayer intentions was just too much for food! You began crying. Later that evening, you overheard her on the phone asking your mom why she did not teach you the importance of prayers. You then understood why her children avoided home so much albeit all the luxury and comfort it provided.

    “Well…” She laughs shortly. “I will buy it for a start. Whenever we receive your package, I will switch.” 

    In the weeks that followed, activities changed at home. Activities had to change to accommodate Mmirimma’s new status. Your mother was always busy at the hospital so she suggested you forfeit living in the hostel. You had to school from home so you could take care of your grandmother while she was at work.  You had to cook with less or no salt at all so your grandma could be at lesser risk of heart attack.

    Your mother had taken her pillow, charger, and hair bonnet into Mmirimma’s block because she was spending most nights with her. She had to wake up as early as 4am every day to wash, clean and change her diapers while her mother muttered incoherent words. She cleaned out her room while you prepared breakfast. Anytime you cleaned her up, the stench clouded your chest and caused you lumps in the throat.

    During breakfast while you found it hard to swallow because the lump wouldn’t let you, your mother kept chattering about what to and what not to get for Mmirimma. Your tuition was delayed for a whole semester. Your mother remodeled Mmirimma’s bathroom. She changed a lot of her wears and restocked special food items for her. Mmirimma had to come first.  Slowly, your grandmother overshadowed the little existence you enjoyed, squeezing you out entirely from your mother”s schedules. Your mother stopped paying attention to your hair, your school books, your diet and choices. At 16, you are a grown-up, she said. You should take care of yourself. 

    One Friday morning, after a grudging late sleep, you stretched to full length before heading to your mother’s bathroom to collect the cleaning agents you needed for Mmirimma. Your mother had left early for Ukpo; someone had recommended a strong herbalist who could treat Mmirimma. She will regain her senses. Your mother was assured.  

    “Ugly child, you again?” her voice halted you at the entrance of the room. She let out a peal of laughter. Shivers spread out on your dry skin. The last time Mmirimma abused you verbally was when you broke her set of porcelain plates and hid them away on the crates packed behind the big blue water tank and forgot entirely about it until she discovered the mess.

    She told you how wicked you were from birth; how you almost cost your mother her life because she was hell-bent on bringing you into this world. She concluded with how different you looked (by different you know she meant ugly), it must have been the stupid man who sired you; of course, you don”t resemble her daughter in any way.  

    You ignored her sneer and headed to the bathroom where you turned on the water heater and fetched cold water from the tap below the shower. Then you came back for her. She let you lead her to the bathroom where you peeled off her wrap dress. The stench from her diaper hit your nose. A bigger lump formed in your throat. You swallowed hard. The bath lasted for five minutes after which you toweled her pale skin. Her body lotion went first before oil and vitamins. Allotted time was running out. You hastened to clean out her bed before you took her into your mother’s block. You had thought it was stressful for her but her daughter insisted. “She needs to move around, my mother is not an invalid”, she often emphasized.

    When you returned from school by noon, the air was humid with anxiety. You could feel it in your nerves, spreading to your fingertips. Your mother was not yet back so you checked on Mmirimma and found her in her chair with her head bent sideways. A pool of saliva garnered on the arm of the chair. It was long before she felt your presence.

    “Chizaram” her eyes had shrunken over the weeks and fallen back into its sockets. Her lips, thin and red. 

    “Mamma!” you answered and headed towards her.

    “Fix my bath.”

    You knew it would come next. She need not remind you. You flung your handbag and disappeared into the bathroom adjacent to her room. That afternoon, you let the water fill to the brim, past the brim and flowed down for long, then you went to get her. 

    Uncle Jidenna has sent different packages to your mother since Mmirimma’s fall but none contained any Edibles for Zara. None. Your mother doesn’t sleep in her room anymore because she keeps an eye on Mmirimma. Mmirimma has clouded your mother’s vision so sickly that you were beginning to find it really hard to breathe. These days you intentionally fling plates after washing so your mother calls out. Sometimes you end up breaking these plates but it wasn’t enough to distract her from Mmirimma.

    Back in her room, you ransack your box just to pick an item of clothing and leave others lying around. The only time she showed up was to take what she needed and head back to Mmirimma’s block. When your cramps came, she wasn’t there to squeeze out lime juice, mix it with little salt and hot water and cajole you to drink up.  She was in Mmirimma’s room shearing her hair. 

    You threw the lukewarm water on her bare back and she moaned. You wetted the grey sponge with little water and so much soap that the lather could be enough for two more baths. Then, you bent to her sitting position and began to scrub her skin, delicately at first and furiously with time. 

    The soap stung her eyes and she winced. You paused in scrubbing and watched. It was stupid to stand and do nothing but that was what you did. You didn’t know how long you stared before she leaped up and screamed your name. She beat around her arms wildly and you ducked. She launched forward and hit her arm against the shower stand and groaned in pains. You watched like a fisherman waiting on his hook bait to catch a fish like you used to watch the wall clock in your mother’s room, counting down on seconds, waiting for it to strike midnight. 

    Mmirimma caught your arm and cursed. She soon bent and her knees wobbled. 

    “Give me some water!”

    Water! Your mind raced. It was like the Rich Man pleading on Lazarus in the bible, “…even a drop,” the Rich Man begged Lazarus. Everything was in your hands and you felt like the messiah. You could have just muttered, “Mamma, I am sorry,” immediately or just go ahead to fetch some water to rinse her face so she could at least see. Instead, your mind went aloof. Hate possessed you.

    Maybe if Mmirimma dies, your mother will move back into her block with you and you will resume sleeping on her bed, watching her beautiful body while she undresses and nothing will ever change it again. Maybe if she dies, your mother could remember you existed. Maybe uncle Jidenna would realize that there was no other person but you to send goodies forever. Maybe there will be no one to ever remind you how odd you were. Maybe if Mmirimma dies, your mother will remember to tell you how you came about, who your father is. Maybe Mmirimma is old enough to die so she could rest.

    Her finger clenched your arms and her nails pierced your skin. Bile rose to your throat. Maybe if Mmirimma dies, you could be able to breathe in your mother’s house. Her arm quivered and disquietude crept up the depth of your tummy. You scooped water and poured on her low hair. She gasped and gently released her hold on you. You helped her sit back on the stool, then poured scoop upon scoop of water on her head, shoulder, and face until the soap lather dissolved into the flowing water and headed to the drain. It was not in your capacity to kill your grandmother, you thought. But you knew it was because your mother would blame you if Mmirimma died in her bath. She will not forgive you. You wore her fresh diapers and clean gown after you have toweled her body and led her out of the bathroom. 

    It was past 4pm when you heard a thud, whimpering and a shattering crash of something metallic. You were picking on the left-over of the vegetables and yam your mother prepared for Mmirimma in the morning before she left. The thoughts that the thud provoked in your head stilled you. When you got to her she laid face flat before the bathroom on the cold tiled floor. Blood seeped from somewhere on her face and formed a small pool beside her head; the curtain hanger had pulled from the wall and fallen on top of her lower body. The curtain covered her waist down to her slender calves. Her sprawled finger moved as she groaned deeply and then silence. 

    You dialed your mother and she picked at the third ring. Then you spoke lowly until she screamed “Ekwuzikwana!”—don”t say it again— into your ears and ended the call. It was Aunty Nneka who came and took you away, and throughout the drive to Udoka Estate, she prayed fervently clutching your left palm tightly.

    Then, prayed more after she asked if you were okay, if you needed anything, but your head was clouded and that saved you more questions like, “where were you when she fell?” and its kind. Something held your tongue to the roof of your mouth for days and you found Aunty Nneka’s prayers comforting and necessary. After Mmirimma’s body has been confirmed dead and deposited into the morgue and her room cleared out, your mother came for you. She emaciated within the days and her eye bags heavy with grief. Later that night when her brother called, she sat at the left end of the bed with Mmirimma’s photo album on her lap while flipping through it.

    “It is a domestic accident. She lost quite a lot of blood…” she mouthed, staring at a raised photo; the one Mmirimma took in a dancing regalia. Her ankles, neck and wrists were covered in fine Ola, her waist heavily rounded in Jigida and her body wrapped adoringly in a twinkle star Ankara. Her teeth shone as she smiled at the camera. She had taken the picture when she was still a member of a dance group in your hometown. Your mother told you sometime in the past. You almost forgot Mmirimma was once a dancer and you have seen her perform some breathtaking steps for her daughter in the past. It was all in the past now.

    Mmirimma raised her children single-handedly after the death of her husband in a fire incident at Onitsha in the early 90s. Their marriage was still young and Jidenna was a toddler. She grew famous in Onitsha market where she sold lace, maybe because her beauty could halt a downpour or because she was successful. After her son relocated to Australia, Mmirimma retired from her business. Her children could sustain her as long as life allowed. Mmirimma was everything her children wanted. They loved her. They cherished her. They placed her so high you envisaged her crash. 

    “It was a domestic accident”she sniffed noisily. “I should have removed all the tiles. I should have had everywhere covered with thick rugs. How could I be so stupid?” she raised the album to her face and sobbed into it. 

    “I shouldn’t have gone to Ukpo, Jide. I should have stayed home, but I needed to see the man. The man said we would bring her. She would have been fine.”

    You thought about how many times she had recounted these explanations to her brother and how long she stayed awake to cry at nights while you pretended to be asleep. She began to stay away from work and spent the long days in Mmirimma’s apartment, packing out her stuff, going through them thoroughly before tying them up in uneven bundles. She barely washed or ate. For relaxation, she watched Mmirimma’s photo album. The loss sat so deep in the air and you feared your mother may never love you as much as she loved Mmirimma. 

    During lectures in school, your mind drifts. You did not tell your mother that you sat on that verandah counting seconds into long minutes before you went in to see Mmirimma. You did not tell her that you stood and watched her groan in pain until she gave in to death. Then, you dialed her. You marveled at how much you hated Mmirimma. No. ‘Hate’ is such a strong word to use but what other word could qualify the disdain you felt for Mmirimma? Which even made you want to kill her? But no. You did not kill her. You reaffirmed yourself but there was a swivet;it was in your capacity to kill your grandmother. 

    Her burial date was fixed before you wrote your exams. The priest sprinkled holy water on her casket heavily and on everyone at the graveside like shower before she was lowered. The water prickled your skin and you remembered how her nails dug your arm and you shivered. 

    You left home afterwards and stayed at the hostel with a friend until school was over. At home, the insomnia you thought you could manage worsened. Every night when you try to sleep, you see Mmirimma. Mmirimma was everywhere–in the restroom, in your cup of tea, in your plate of soup, in the eyes of your mother, in your school books, in the face of everyone at the market, everywhere. 

    The next year, your mother broke the news of her marriage. A neurosurgeon in Enugu, average height, chocolate-brown complexioned and spoke through his nose. Your mother was going to Enugu. Your mother was leaving you. You wrote to your uncle and he directed you to apply for graduate studies. The day your mother drove you to the airport, she held you in a long embrace. Your braids squeezed under the crush of her arm. 

    “Remember, Australia is not your home,” she said before she released you. Where was home? You asked yourself many days later. Her big mansion in Enugu where the little one in her womb would soon occupy? Where do you even belong? Where was home?  

    You had thought the nightmares you suffered would not follow you to Australia. You were wrong. They boarded the plane with you and accompanied you to your uncle’s house. Mmirimma was also in her son’s face. She was everywhere–in everything you touched, saw or ate. She was dwelling in your head. Sometimes, you stared at the little scar on your arm where her nails had torn your skin and it reminded you of her curses, especially on the day you sustained that scar. 

    How could you have known so little? Mmirimma had seen the look in your eyes. She nurtured you until you turned six. She taught you how to wash your hands and wash your “flower” (that was what Mmirimma called the vagina). Mmirimma was aware her grandchild wanted her dead.

    But why was it so? How could you sell your soul to the devil? She would never forgive you. She haunted you until you could not concentrate on anything. She haunted you until you quit your studies. She haunted you until your uncle began suggesting you see a therapist. She haunted you until you left the only man who has truly loved you. She haunted you until you decided to go home and tell your mother how you watched Mmirimma groan in pain and die before you dialed her. Maybe you will have a home after all, if your mother would forgive you. 


    Chizitere Madeleine Nwaemesi is a Nigerian writer whose works have been published by Isele Magazine, African Writer Magazine, The Shallow Tales Review, Efiko and elsewhere. You can find her on_https://substack.com/@cmnwaemesi