1
The Mercedes coach looked new. The brown leather
of the tightly arranged seats squeaked as I adjusted my tote bag
full of books with my right leg. The engine hummed while the driver
fumbled on the dashboard as if he needed to make sure every button
was at its right position. More passengers boarded the bus, exchanging
greetings, adjusting their bags and belongings. My neighbour was
a corpulent, elderly woman with Nsukka-specific facial marks.
Responding to my good morning greeting, she sat down, dug up her
rosary, closed her eyes and began to count the beads. Like my
mother would, I thought.
At a quarter past ten o’clock, the bus lurched forward,
and gyrating to the shock of the many potholes typical of Enugu
roads, finally drove out of the crowded Ogbete Motor Park. This
was my fourth time using a public bus since I returned from the
US. I closed my eyes and attempted some kind of autosuggestion:
Think about Obiora. How does his wife look? Is she beautiful?
Are his children beautiful and as intelligent as he is?
2
Obiora and I became friends in the second term
of our first year at Nsukka, and in a most unlikely manner. We
had argued about the applicability of Shakespeare’s Hamlet
in Nigeria. I had believed it suited only a Western audience while
he argued that the renowned existential question couldn’t
be more adequate than in the face of Nigerian military brutality.
He won the class over with his eloquence. We had sex the evening
of the following day after he had invited me to a plate of nkwobi,
(cow leg) pepper-soup at Mama-Koso buka at the outskirt of the
campus. In the last year of our undergraduate studies, he proposed
to marry me. But I was an ohu, descendant of ex-slaves and therefore
an untouchable, while he was of a pure blood. He argued that it
didn’t make any difference for him; he was rather too enlightened
for such form of Igbo bigotry; it was a dead culture that must
be done away with.
“Your parents,” I said. “They don’t seem
to be willing to do away with that.”
“My parents, ach, my parents. They lived their lives. I
have to live my own life.”
I refused to buy into his storm of protest, insisting that he
discuss the marriage proposal with his parents. He did that, but
without broaching the thorny issue. As was usually the case, his
people asked about my family at Agbani. Having sniffed out my
family background, Obiora’s parents promptly forbade me
to visit him: I was undeserving of their son, for I had slave
blood in my veins. Obiora fought as much as he could to bring
his relatives to accept me. He broke up all communications with
his parents and siblings, and adopted my family as his. But it
didn’t last long. It couldn’t. The pressure became
too much for him to bear. After a while, he began to lose his
sense of humour; he became cynical and irascible, buckling under
the weight of his family’s rejection. I suggested that we
call off the marriage plans. I didn’t want to lose his friendship.
After ending the relationship, I had no other friendship that
lasted as long. Every now and again we would exchange emails lamenting
our lost opportunity to be together in family, sometimes concluding
our mails with words of affection. And this went on even after
his marriage to Joy.
3
My taxi stopped in front of Nr. 7 Ikejiani Street
– a two-bedroom bungalow, hedged by bright purple bougainvillea.
The white paint had flaked off most parts of the walls. A mango
tree stood by the right of the house a few meters to the entrance
of the spacious compound. I paid the taxi, and turning to the
house, heard the door click open. A young girl and a four-year-old
boy rushed out. I waved at them and at the same time, my eyes
fell on a small display board at the entrance of the compound:
BEWARE OF GERMAN DOGS! The girl rushed and grabbed my box while
I lavished my attention on the boy who had Obiora’s eyes.
I felt my throat contract as he ran up to me and held my hand.
I stroked the girl’s shoulder. “I’m Anna,”
I said. “And you?”
“I know,” she said and giggled. “My name is
Nonye.”
“You’re Anna,” the boy added. “I’m
“Obiora Jr.”
I thought as much, I said to myself. “A beautiful name,”
I praised in response. He carried the bag containing the treat
I bought for the family. “I know what’s inside this
bag,” he announced as we approached the house’s staircase.
“I bet you don’t know,” I played along.
Nonye turned to him and hushed him. Too late. “Eeh, I know,”
he insisted. “It’s okpa.” He laughed.
A child was crying inside the house. Then I heard a woman call
Nonye, and she answered between gasps as she dragged my box. I
offered to help her carry the box.
“No, no, it’s not heavy at all,” she objected,
grunting.
Some of the books I bought for Obiora were in there: Derrida,
Coetzee, Appiah, Mbembe, Bhabha, and the host of writers and cultural
theorists.
“Auntie!” Nonye called out, opening the second door
that led to the sitting room, “Auntie-America has come.”
A man’s voice boomed from the background, “Go and
welcome our visitor.” It wasn’t Obiora’s, I
was sure. Strangely, the words our visitor echoed in my mind as
I held the opened door. The living room was stuffy; I felt the
sharp contrast to the outside as a hot, sour-smelling wall of
air hit my face like a delicate invisible slap. I held my breath
for a second. The space between the outer door and the one that
led to the sitting room was about three paces, separated from
the room by a thin wooden wall. Garden boots, umbrellas, two tins
of groundnut oil, rolled carpets, bags of rice and beans, tubers
of yam were stored by the right hand side.
A tall young man with full hair walked up to me, carrying a two-year-old
girl in his left arm. “Welcome,” he said and extended
his hand for a shake. A firm handshake. Titus, Obiora’s
cousin. He had a pair of slippers and yellow brocade shorts. His
grey sweatshirt was loose on him. I introduced myself and reached
out to stroke the girl. She shrank and clung firmly to Titus.
A woman came into the sitting room from one of the rooms. She
wore a broad, woman-of-the-house smile, yelling a warm welcome
from afar. No doubt, Joy. She had a bright coloured wraparound
cloth with butterfly decorative motif. Her very loose blouse was
the same stuff. She held her newborn baby in her left arm so that
the child rested on her chest. We embraced, a soft warm milky
smell pouring into my nose.
“Mama, look, look,” Obiora Jr. showed her the bag
of okpa.
“And also this,” Nonye reached the other bag containing
bananas and peanuts.
“Oh, Anna, why did you bother yourself?” Joy sighed.
“Mama I’ll bring a knife,” Obiora Jr. called.
I couldn’t suppress a laugh.
“No, let Nonye handle it,” Joy said and instructed
Nonye to have the okpa cut for us. “I’m happy to see
you finally,” she said amid her many welcomes and unending
smiles. “We have been waiting for you since morning.”
“Our bus took off late. How are you?” I asked Joy,
reaching for the child. “What’s his name?”
“Chika,” Joy told. “I fed him a moment ago,”
she warned. “He’ll throw up.”
“It’s fine,” I said, balancing him the way he
had laid on his mother’s chest, every now and again patting
him lightly on the back.
Joy had a hearty, guileless smile that exposed a fine gap in her
upper teeth; a broad forehead and fleshy lips that reminded one
of Sade, the Nigerian-British musician. Obiora went for an emergency
meeting, she explained. The academic staff union had called a
meeting to consider actions against President Obasanjo’s
recent oil price hike.
“Nonye,” she called. “Send the box to that room,”
she pointed to the room at the right side of the living room from
the entrance.
We sat on either side of the sofa, which backed the wall, with
the doors of the two bedrooms flanking it left and right. Joy
sat near the door she had pointed to earlier. Parts of the sofa
were faded from many years of use. Titus sat on a swivel chair
diagonal to us, leaning on a navel-high embankment that separated
the sitting room from the dining corner, which shared a common
space with the kitchen. Every time our eyes met, he issued a nervous
smile, and then swivelled on the chair or tapped his feet on the
worn out vinyl carpet. On my right was an easy chair padded just
like the sofa, and opposite it, by the entrance to the room in
which my box was carried, was a wooden chair. I explained my profession
– assistant professor of African literature and films at
UCLA – and that I was in Nigeria to conduct a research on
Nollywood. Titus recently lost his job with Merchant Bank, Nsukka
branch.
Nonye had cut some balls of okpa into smaller pieces. She brought
them to us. Obiora followed her into the sitting room, biting
into a chunk. Swallowing the last bite, he called: “Mama,
I want some banana,” guiltily eyeing me from beside his
cousin. His sister helped herself to the delicious specialty,
also attempting to catch my eyes and then averting hers whenever
I looked at her.
“Did it rain in Enugu?” Titus asked.
I explained that it rained the whole night. But it stopped early
morning. It rained in Nsukka until about ten o’clock, they
explained. A light throat-clearing sounded outside the house,
and in seconds, the front door opened. A young man, probably in
his early twenties, entered and scanned the sitting room in a
familiar manner before his eyes settled for some seconds on me.
He greeted and stuck out his right hand for a shake, clutching
in his left hand an NYSC synthetic folder. He was Nnamdi, Obiora’s
cousin.
Joy took time to explain the relational constellation so far:
Titus was Obiora’s paternal, while Nnamdi was the maternal
cousin. I smiled, now handing over to her the baby who had fallen
asleep on my chest. I inquired for some more explanations. Titus
was the son of Obiora’s father’s elder brother while
Nnamdi, a pharmacy student, was the son of Obiora’s mother’s
sister. Nnamdi was all smiles, evidently amused by the ensuing
lighter moment during the explanation. He shyly slunk through
the small pass that ran diagonal to the dining niche, and left
through the door that led to what looked like a room. After about
thirty minutes, a middle-aged woman came in, closely followed
by a six-year-old girl. The woman bore an unmistakable likeness
to Joy. Eunice, Joy’s elder sister. Her husband left for
Germany six years ago and had never returned since then.
About thirty minutes later, a vehicle horn beeped in the front
yard. “Papa is back,” Obiora Jr announced and rushed
outside the house to welcome his father. Obiora came back, and
with him his youngest sister, Mary, a Theatre Art student.
Obiora was nearly bald, with splashes of grey hairs at the temples,
and a practically hanging belly. A wobbling paunch. “Hello,
Anna,” he crooned. His voice hadn’t lost its soothing
base. He extended his hands for an embrace as I stood up. He smelled
of sweat. I sat back to my position, welcoming his excitement
at seeing me after seven years.
Adjusting to my position, I felt my armpit become wet and a familiar
smell of stress exude from there. In spite of my Coco Channel
perfume, I perceived an acrid smell issue from within. I glanced
at my watch. Quarter after two o’colock. I called Obiora
to the side and inquired who among the people around was a visitor.
Perhaps it was a mistake to have asked; perhaps I thought too
much of my comfort. He was surprised at the question. “They
live here, ah, ah, they live here,” he said, staring at
me askance.
“I won’t spend the night here,” I said and clenched
my teeth.
He scowled rather fiercely as thought I had trod on a familiar
but unfriendly terrain. “What do you mean? My wife prepared
our bedroom for you. What do you mean?”
“Your bedroom belongs to both of you,” I said crisply.
We glanced at each for a second during which the truth of my utterance
must have become evident to both of us. “The university
has got guest houses,” I said in a more calmed tone of voice
in an attempt to assuage the hurt my utterance might have caused..
“Yes, they have,” he said with resignation in his
voice.
“Let’s go and get a room there now,” I urged
him.
He stared on, gnashed his teeth. “Can’t we do it after
the meal?”
“Let’s go now,” I insisted.
He went to the kitchen and informed Joy, who rushed out, face
contoured in a deep but controlled show of disappointment. I was
standing beside the exit. Our eyes locked on one another’s.
“Oh, but, but,” she stammered.
“We’ll be back soon,” I said, feeling my throat
choke. It was evidently a betrayal of our recently welded friendship.
Nevertheless, I refused to consider the option of spending the
night there, with eleven people sharing a two-bedroom house. Not
while there were alternatives.
There was an uncomfortable silence between Obiora and I as we
drove to the office. The harsh whistle of his nostrils blended
with the noise of his teeth. It promptly evoked some scenes of
our past. Whenever we had misunderstanding he retreated into himself,
gnashed his teeth, orchestrating a punishing silence, which almost
always wrenched apologies from me; I took the blame regardless
of who was at fault. That was a way to be a good girlfriend, we
learnt; a way to be a good wife and mother. My mother had drummed
that into me. My father was never at fault regardless of what
he did. How could he be ever at fault - the Lord of the house?
Eunice and Mary were in the kitchen when we came back. Shortly
after our return, they announced that lunch was ready. The big
pot of unripe plantain pottage and fresh Ogbaru fish and utazi
bitter leaves was placed on the table in the dining room. The
blend of utazi, oregano and parsley and yellow Hausa pepper spun
its way to my nostril and I swallowed a mouthful of saliva, walking
to the table. I opened the pot and promptly paid my compliment.
Joy laughed and expressed the hope that it tasted as well as the
smell promised. Eunice served all of us. Every person had his
or her dishes in their hands sitting at different places –
in the sofa, on the swivel chair, in the veranda and in the kitchen.
With the key to the guesthouse in my purse, I began to feel at
home at Obiora’s house. But the more relaxed I felt the
more uptight Obiora seemed to be. He rarely responded to my words
so that Titus, Joy and her sister became my interlocutors, asking
me how the US was, why the terrorist attacked the World Trade
Centre, and why I was interested in Nigerian films.
After lunch, Obiora sent Nonye to buy some drinks from the nearby
store. I took a bottle of Gulder while he had Guinness Stout.
Titus and Eunice went for Heineken while Joy – breastfeeding
– had coca-cola. The first bottle of Guinness loosened Obiora’s
tongue and he began to express gratitude at seeing me. He told
about our friendship; how we loved European socialist thinkers,
and how we had the best two results ever recorded in the humanities.
We were the stars of UNN, the revolutionaries of the campus; we
wanted to stamp out tribalism, nepotism, and so many other isms.
We were this, and we were that. Then, as though anticipating that
I had become too Americanized, he went on to praise Africa: Africa
was real humanity; humanity in the West was in a mess because
of modernity and science. The white people had no respect for
the elderly; they dumped their parents in old people’s homes.
I welcomed his soliloquy as much as the rest did: with smiles
and head-nodding. On few occasions, I tried to interrupt him by
interjecting issues that have semblance of present day cultural
discourse - Cultural hybridity, Postmodernism, globalization,
transculturality. Every time I interjected any new term hoping
that it will steer our discussion to some more fruitful end he
looked up, held some seconds’ silence, and then continued.
Then again, I asked, “Have you taught Derrida in your class?”
He looked up, blinked naively, hummed inaudibly and then went
on with his narration.
Obiora, I realized, still had the eloquence and the brilliance
for which he had been known in our student days, the brilliance
that lured me to bed with him. But it was brilliance frozen in
an apotheosized past.
4
When Obiora came to pick me up for breakfast,
the alcohol-induced joviality of the previous evening was gone,
replaced by a moody face a few creases short of a scowl. We drove
back to his house; I walked to the table where Joy had set out
a flask of hot water, a mini can of Nescafe coffee, teacup, sugar,
bread, pineapple jam and butter. I made myself a cup of coffee,
downed it to half. Minutes later, I was all smiles. After breakfast,
I sat back in the sofa, ready to play with Obiora Jr, and his
siblings. But I was never able to enjoy the children’s attention.
There were too many voices wanting attention. Chika whimpered
for his mother’s attention, Chinwe cried for the same, Titus
played with Obiora Jr, Eunice’s daughter argued with Nonye,
Eunice asked for some information from Joy, Nnamdi wanted my address
in the US; he loved my university.
Obiora didn’t stay long in the house. He announced that
he was going to the office.
“This office again,” Joy snapped. “Why? We’ve
got a visitor and you’re going to the office?”
As though he had peeked at darkening clouds that would soon pour
down with rain, Titus quickly left the living room through the
backyard door. A bit nervous, I wanted to exchange some words
with Obiora. “Do you like the books?” I asked.
“Oh, oh,” he blurted. “Thank you very much.
Derrida! Thank you very much. And that Ghanaian guy – In
My Father’s House!”
“Kwame Anthony Appiah?”
“He’s half cast, isn’t he?”
“You mean biracial?”
“Biracial?” he asked, frowning.
“Yes, biracial. His mother is white.”
“Okay, thank you for the gifts,” he said again.
Yet he didn’t stay. He was holding his key in his right
hand. He stroked his children, then, ignoring Joy and I, left.
I took it personally. This was intended as my punishment. He was
still the same, I thought.
Mary and Nnamdi were long gone. Joy, Eunice and I were left alone
with the children. Chika began to cry. Joy was sobbing. Eunice
went to her, hugged her tentatively, then took Chika from her.
Racking with sobs, Joy walked into their bedroom. An intense pain
tore through my heart. Was I the cause of it all? My decision
not to sleep in Obiora’s house? I followed Joy, sat beside
her on the bed, brought out two wrapped sheets of Kleenex for
her, and then placed my hand on her shoulder in silence. She began
to lament her situation: she thought she was the happiest woman
on her wedding day; she gave up her studies in order to raise
a family with Obiora. Now he had more time for other people.
I didn’t know what to say. After a while, she turned her
big, soft eyes pleadingly to me. “Could you please talk
to him?” she asked.
“Talk to him?” I asked, surprised.
She puckered her lips and looked down to the floor then turned
her head to me once more. “He has another woman elsewhere,”
she announced.
A wave of heat swept past my face and I feel dizzy.
“Obiora still loves you,” Joy went on. “If you
talk to him, he may listen and change his life.”
I couldn’t fathom why a woman would tell another woman to
talk sense into her own husband. Throughout our years of friendship
I never suspected him of straying. For some reasons I didn’t
want to believe Joy, yet I allowed room for that possibility.
“Are you sure he’s cheating on you?” I asked.
She shook her head. “No, I’ve never caught him,”
she said.
“Did you hear somebody say he does it?” I asked, feeling
stronger in my position.
“Why does he run away from us?” she asked despondently.
“Every time.”
“Has he been doing that all the time?”
She looked at me meekly as though some voice whispered to her
that I was on the verge of solving her problem. “He has
not been doing that. It began after the birth of Obiora Jr,”
she added.
I said nothing, wanting her to keep talking. I was ready to listen.
“My two sisters were living with us then.”
“Your two sisters?”
“Yes, younger sisters. I thought he liked them. But they
no longer live with us. My elder sister came to live with us after
I gave birth to Chinwe,” she said. “And then Mary
and Titus.”
I was irritated, but I struggled not to reveal it. At twenty-six,
Joy was fourteen years Obiora’s junior, and thirteen years
younger than I am. “After your sister others came,”
I said noncommittally.
She turned to me, her red eyes glowing apologetically. She said
nothing. I promised her I would talk to Obiora. And I was sure
I would.
Back in the guesthouse, I lay in bed staring at the whitewashed
asbestos ceiling of my room. Have I really lost track of Igbo
reality? Shouldn’t I have spent the night in that house?
Obiora’s pride wouldn’t have been hurt. He wouldn’t
have walked out on us. I wasn’t sure of anything. Not any
more. It has been a while now since I endured uncomfortable situations
just to keep the peace. I have since learnt to appreciate myself,
my comfort and convictions.
The sixty-watt Phillips bulb jutting from the position a fluorescent
bulb used to be appeared to burn more aggressively than usual.
It was held by red and blue wires, which brushed against the grey
curtain on which the bulb poured its harsh light. After a short
while, I heard some knocks on the door. Obiora called my name,
“Hei, Anna. Anna, here you’re. Oh, we’re waiting
for you. It’s time for lunch. Eeh, you left without a word.”
I sat up; looked at him, my eyes squinting from the abrasive rays
of the bulb. It couldn’t be the same Obiora who walked out
on us in the morning. My silence and indifference to him promptly
checked his affected excitement. He drew out the only chair in
the room from the table and sat, averting his eyes from mine in
the first few minutes of his sitting down. We stared at each other
for a long time without words. For the first time I felt like
crying. “I’m leaving for Enugu this evening,”
I said in an indifferent tone of voice and glanced at my watch.
Three o’clock pm.
He jerked. “Why? Why so sudden?”
“Joy knows,” I said. “She understands. Two of
you have to be alone sometime.”
“What’s wrong? Why?”
“Don’t ask why. You know.”
“But is this the way you intend to treat me?” he yelled
rather helplessly. “You came yesterday. You refused to sleep
in my house and now you want to leave us a day before your intended
date of departure.”
“Why did you walk out on all of us?” I challenged.
“I didn’t walk out on you. I went to my office.”
“You ran away from the mess of your house.”
“You’re calling my house a mess?” He jumped
up, fiercely looking down on me.
“Don’t play the offended,” I said.
“You just called my house a mess.”
“When you allow the whole world to settle in your house,
you can’t expect to feel comfortable there.”
He walked towards the window. “I knew it. Your years in
America have changed you,” he said as though in a disappointed
reflection. “You’re no longer African.”
“You’re no more African than I am,” I shot back,
infuriated.
“Then why do you hate our culture? Why do you hate our way
of life?”
I stared at him, amazed by his words. “You once called it
a primitive culture. You remember?” I looked at him.
It dawned on him. He had been more aggressive towards the Ohu
caste than I ever was. “You know that you’ve become
part of the problem you’ve always wanted to solve.”
He pursed his lips, his eyes glancing past mine in a cowardly
speed.
“Joy suspects you of having an affair,” I said, hoping
to shock him a bit with that. I achieved my goal as he looked
up, frowning as though to ask from where she plucked that absurd
idea.
“I know you’re leading a false life,” I added.
“You didn’t travel all the way from America to accuse
me here of leading a false life.”
“You know what I’m saying, Obi,” I said in a
whispering but solid tone of voice and calmly stood up and began
to pack my bag.
He held my left arm. I looked up. He smelled of beer. An amalgam
of pity and revulsion churned my inside. Beer before lunch? I
quietly withdrew my arm from his weak grip, letting him know I
perceived the beer smell. He still stood at a spot, his breathing
becoming faster, more stressed. “Please don’t go,”
he pleaded. “I’m sorry.”
I felt sorry for him. Looking at him standing an arm’s stretch
from me, oozing a stale stench, shoddily shaven, his stomach sagging
pitifully, I felt intense pity for him. I sat back on the bed.
He sat beside me. I didn’t like it, but I couldn’t
tell him not to sit there. I told him about Joy’s tears
that morning, what I thought about his walking out on us, and
the presence of Titus, Eunice and others in his house.
But I didn’t tell Obiora what he didn’t already know.
And that was the problem. Obiora knew that more people lived off
him than he could afford. But he couldn’t do anything against
that, he said. Titus came to him after his father appealed to
Obiora’s father and Obiora’s father appealed to Obiora
to do him that favour as a personal once-in-a-lifetime request.
The same line of reasoning went for the rest. In the end, Obiora
didn’t want to appear like a heartless rich man who had
everything but wouldn’t share it with his needy neighbours.
“Can I turn down anybody if there’s a sleeping space
in my house?” he asked weakly.
Of course, the living room was spacious. There was space in the
dining niche, the two bedrooms were large. How could he convince
his village people and the relatives that these spaces weren’t
meant to be occupied at night and that he, a university lecturer,
couldn’t take care of all these people, couldn’t have
time for his own family, and for reading and writing.
“I did it all for my parents and relatives,” If you
sent any of these people back there’d be trouble in the
village. People would call you all sorts of names.”
I had nothing to say against that. Those were apparently untouchable
aspects of his cultural world. Then, suddenly, Obiora opened up
in a dramatic change of tone and personality: He had no girlfriend,
he said. But he wasn’t sure he still loved Joy. Since we
went our different ways he had never been himself anymore. It
was the mistake of his life to have allowed our love to fall apart.
He had never stopped loving me.
Did I stop loving him? Perhaps not. Yet another reason to leave
now and never look back. He should have time to be with Joy alone.
5
I was in the bus back to Enugu. It was a different
Mercedes Benz bus: old, rickety. The seat leather was worn out.
On the right arm of my seat was a thumb size clump of freshly
chewed gum. Like you had under almost all the seats at college
lecture halls. A man in his early thirties hollered his message:
Jesus would save Nigeria from its descent into hell if only we
all believed in him. Ironically I was thrilled by his efforts,
nonetheless remarking that these preachers must be deeply unthinking
not to have realized how jaded this line of preaching had become.
Indeed, how stupid. Sweat streamed down his face. The armpits
of his white shirt have yellowed.
The lush green leaves of suburban Nsukka glimmered against the
soft late afternoon sun. I could imagine the whisper of the leaves
against the caress of a gentle breeze. Yet, my brows were drawn.
I couldn’t wish away what I felt was a gathering headache
however I tried. Or was it nausea? The type philosophers talked
much about? Some form of fed-up that occurred when you could no
longer understand your world. Neither the scenery nor even the
loud voice of our preacher was potent enough to fix my mind to
the life of now. At what point did I begin to be different and
dead to this part of the world? How didn’t I realize it;
why didn’t I do something about it?
Looking out from the bus at the undulating chain of Udi hills,
I did not notice the abundance of green spread as far as the eyes
could see; Obiora was at the Nsukka motor park to bid me farewell.
He waited for my bus to drive off, his eyes bloodshot like a wolf’s.
I took in his alcohol laced breath, his poorly ironed shirt. My
eyes clouded with tears. He didn’t deserve to be wasted.
Nor did Joy. Nor Eunice, who was still waiting for her husband
to come back home.