Chinwe wiped
the sweat from her eyes and adjusted baby by jiggling him around
on her hips so he would stop crying.
One of the women from the yard who was also doing
her washing looked a bit concerned. “That child sounds hungry….
Have you fed him?”
Chinwe’s mouth moved fast like a child’s
with hot food, her eyes cold as she met the accusation in the other
woman’s eyes. “I’ve already fed him…he is
refusing food.”
The woman shook her head and sighed. “I have
some small Bean cake and bread…maybe he might like that.”
Chinwe put her hands on her hips. “Are you
trying to tell me I don’t know what to feed my child?”
The older woman looked at her and shrugged. “No,
I was just trying to help.”
Chinwe lowered her glare and directed it at the
large pile of washing in front of her; her neighbours soiled clothes;
Mr Johnson’s Agbada and trousers and his wife’s blouse
and skirt, Mama Ezinma’s caftan, some shirts from one of the
bachelors in the yard and some trousers from the Landlord. She bent
down to the washing and attacked one of the collars.
Baby started to cry again and she whispered to
him. “Ay…ay…my child. It is going to be all right.
Your Daddy will get a job today and we shall be ok again.”
Baby kept on crying and she stood up drying her
hands on her faded wrapper, eyed her neighbour and crossed the yard
to her room, took baby off her back gently laying him onto the most
comfortable part of the bed where the springs wouldn’t dig
into his soft skin and felt a warm rush of wind force itself into
the airless room. There was going to be a storm soon. The skies
were heavy ready to shed their burden - impatient like just a Mother
with child.
Chinwe noted that her son had stopped crying and
was watching her with dead eyes like the washing stones she used
for her laundry. Her eyes searched out the covered bowl of Ogi-
corn pottage and she added the last of the carnation milk into it
and tried to spoon it into his mouth. He spat it out and twisted
his head away from the spoon and she gave up. Where was the lively
child she had given birth to …this one wanted to be carried
all the time? Landlord’s wife said he should be walking by
now and she should know – she had eight of them.
She looked outside at the indigo skies, heard the
first burst of thunder and ran outside to scoop up the load of dirty
laundry. He was cradling his son when she came back in head bent
under her load. “Lanre….you are back.” Chinwe’s
lips parted into a smile as she greeted her husband, putting the
bundle into a corner.
He nodded. “Unless it’s my spirit sitting
here.” He laughed and it was like the laugh of her village
masquerade during the Yam festival, harsh and bottomless.
She twisted her hands and took a step towards him.
“How did it go?”
“I got to the office, did the interview –
afterwards they shook my hand and thanked me for coming.”
“So you got the job?”
He laughed again and the thunder chose the same
time to announce itself.” They are making me Managing Director
on Monday- don’t you see how I am dancing and jubiliating.”
He closed his eyes. “I had so much hope that I would get this
job. I answered their questions, did their exam. I have worked for
years as a clerk in the ministry and can do this job in my sleep.
I don’t know anyone- all I have is my qualifications and six
good years of experience and that’s not enough to get a job
in Government nowadays. They said it was going to get bad after
the British gave us our independence ….now I understand why.
” He sighed, “What am I going to do to provide for you
people?”
She moved to sit by him and touched his shoulder.
“With God on our side…. He will help us. I’m going
to prayers tonight and I have been fasting.”
His shoulders shook. “We have no money for
food. That is no longer fasting my friend. That is necessity.”
“We must have faith.”
“Faith in what?”
“In God and knowing that whatever we face….we
love each other.”
He put Baby down, looked at her and laughed again.
“I don’t believe in God anymore remember.” He
caught her close. “I still believe in love though….so
what do you say? Let’s make another baby right here…right
now. Let’s create our own storm.” His eyes flashed with
a wicked fire and her heart started to pound, “Are you mad?”
she asked.” We can’t cope with a baby now.”
He nodded. “Isn’t that what our parents
said when we said we wanted to get married.” He pushed her
down onto the bed and laughed as she struggled. “What’s
wrong – where is all that love you were talking about before?”
The Baby started to cry again as they struggled wordlessly.
“Let me go to my child cant you hear him
crying?” she pleaded.
He looked down at her, shook his head and got up
from the bed and moved to the window watching the rain beat against
the cold concrete floor of the yard.
She lay there hands over her breasts staring at
the ceiling and let Baby cry. “I am not your enemy you know.”
He shrugged. “Your Mother says that I will
never amount to anything as if she thinks I am happy to let my wife
wash the neighbour’s dirty clothes for money. I have gone
for so many interviews and have found nothing…. It is like
the spirits are working against us- just as your Father said they
would when we got married.”
Chinwe remembered how her parents had refused to
give them their blessings and how they had got married at the registry
with Lanre’s widowed mother and one of his uncles - the only
witnesses.
“My parents were upset that I hadn’t
completed my sewing apprenticeship. When I got pregnant they were
disappointed.”
“Do they think that their daughter was the
only one who had dreams of how life was supposed to be? They just
didn’t want you to marry a common ‘Ngbati’
government clerk so don’t tell me about your apprenticeship.
Besides you were quite happy to sneak into my room in those days
and spend time in my bed when your parents were asleep when we shared
the same yard. I never forced you. It didn’t matter then that
I came from the other side of the Niger River.”
She stood up from the bed and picked up the child.
“Don’t insult me Lanre. My family don’t want to
know me anymore, yet I am still here with you trying to support
you…..yes even taking in dirty clothes to wash and hearing
all the gossips in the street laugh at me.”
He sighed. “I’ve heard their laughter
too, Chinwe.” His voice gentled a bit then he was silent looking
out of the window again. “Is there anything to eat?”
She looked at him seeing him as she had eighteen
months ago as that bright star that had burst into her life - so
handsome and clever with his smart pressed khaki trousers and big
English. Broda ‘Akowe’ they used to call him in a hushed
tone of respect as he was one of the few people in the yard that
could read and write English. He did have a job then and a big shiny
bicycle that all the government clerks had. He told her he was going
to be a Big Man one day and she still believed him.
A Big Man one day.
That’s what he told her the first day they
had met under the mango tree. They had both gone to fetch water
at the street tap, got talking and she had forgotten the time and
her parents had worried where she had got to.
She went over to him and looked into his eyes.
“I have some Gari you can soak and some groundnuts.”
He shook his head and smiled. “E go better
o. I will have some small Gari.” He held out his hands and
took back his son. The storm had started to quieten now and Chinwe
could hear her voice singing praise songs to her God as she poured
the cassava into a plastic bowl and added water.
“Chinwe……”...
“Yes.” She turned round and saw the
shadow of a smile on her husbands face as he bent over to play with
his son. She served him the Gari.
“See Chinwe. Our son is now crawling.”
Baby was smiling and clapping his hands at his
achievement.
“When?”
“Just now.”
So they sat and waited and Lanre talked about this
job he had seen advertised on the school gates down the road - they
urgently needed a janitor and he needed a job. “Maybe I should
see that Headmaster tomorrow. It’s not a permanent thing…just
to bring something in until I get a job in the Government.”
“Of course.” She nodded and as she
did so she saw Baby turn slowly and lift himself forward towards
her.
“Did you see that?” Lanre clapped his
hands and smiled at his son.
She felt like clapping too.
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