Nwanne sat on the floor with her legs curled in front of
her like a Fulani beggar. At intervals, she looked up at her father Etee Kalu
as he ate his dinner of akpu and onugbu soup. Her
throat region jerked severally as she swallowed thick lumps of foamy saliva
watching her father munch a mouth full of pork meat. She looked up at her step mother thinking
that she had heard the sound of the movement of the saliva as it forced its way
down her throat. Their eyes met and she quickly buried her face on the floor.
She was shy. The expression on Nwunyediya’s face was blank. Nwunyediya,
Nwanne’s step mother was sitting by the right, adjacent the short kitchen stool
on which the food lay, waiting for her husband to finish so that she could
clear the table. That was the custom in Etee Kalu’s house – the wife that
prepared the food must be seated beside the man and wait till he was done.
Nwanne was drooling and waiting to take the left over. She was her father’s
favourite daughter. Nwunyediya handed
Etee Kalu a cup of water as he coughed furiously beating his chest. “Maybe pepper
has entered the wrong path” she said as she stood up and gave him several tender
pats at the back while he drank some water slowly. Nwanne dashed into the
kitchen and reappeared with another cup of water.
“kaa pa” she said in want of words as she handed her father
the cup of water and placed her tiny left hand on her father’s shoulder. “Take
it easy” nwunyediya added watching her husband with a show of care and love.
Etee Kalu looked up at her and his face creased in a smile. She smiled back and
recoiled to her seat.
“Nwanne!” Came Igbeneche’s laud voice from the inner room. Igbeneche
was Nwanne’s biological mother and Etee Kalu’s second wife. Nwanne stood up
hesitantly and sauntered uneasily into the room to answer her mother. She knew
why she was being called. Her mother had warned her several times to stop
milling around her father whenever he was eating especially when the food was
prepared by another woman.
“Onye ukpa, longer throat. Sit down here and don’t say a
word if u don’t want me to kill you” her mother snarled in a very low hoarse
voice such that neither her husband nor any of her co-wives could hear her. She
dare not beat Nwanne when her father was at home. She had once received a nasty
slap on her face for lifting a finger on the girl. “If u dare beat my daughter again,
I will show u that I carried palm wine for your head”, her husband had warned
and that was final warning. Etee Kalu was a no nonsense man. He had a long
thick leather belt with which he flogged his wives whenever they went against
his dictates. His first wife could not take such treatments, so one day she ran
away from the house with her only daughter to where nobody knew.
“Nwanne!” Rang Etee Kalu’s deep voice from outside. He had
finished eating and wanted Nwanne to come and eat the left over before Nwunyediya
cleared the table. Nwanne made to answer the call but her mother held her back
and pressed an index finger on her puckered pouted thick lips. She couldn’t
control the tears that trickled down her chubby cheeks. Nwanne wondered why her
mother could deny her of the food and felt much pains inside of her. “I must
tell my father what happened” she concluded silently in her mind.
“Nwannediya!” Etee Kalu called a second time, spelling out
the full name. There was no answer but he heard some little movements in the
inner room. “Ogbuefi, I’ve sent her on an errand.” Igbeneche lied. Etee kalu’s
wives addressed him by his title name “Ogbuefi”. Etee Kalu knew that it was a lie; he made to stand up
and felt some pains in his stomach. He held his belly and sat back sharply and
looked up accusingly at Nwunyediya who was waiting for an order to clear the
table. Nwunyediya looked surprised. Etee Kalu made to say something and fell
backwards from the chair. His legs tossed up and kicked the near empty plates
of food in the air and the food spilled all over the floor. He started shaking
convulsively saying things nobody around could understand. Nwunyediya screamed
and tried to hold him up. Her wrapper nearly went off untied. She readjusted it
immediately and knotted the ends firmly with her hair scarf. The other two
co-wives dashed out of their rooms screaming on top of their voices as they saw
their husband battling for life on the floor. They carried him up gingerly,
fidgeting as they called for help from the neighbours. There was no vehicle to
convey him to the hospital. Oga Jude the taxi driver next door had gone out
early in the morning. Igbeneche gave him a piggy back and the other wives held
him on Igbeneche’s back as they ran to the hospital with his legs dangling
limply behind and nearly touching the ground. Their children; all came out too.
Nwanne, leaned on the wall with her legs crossed and her right hand crossed
over her belly held her left elbow while her left palm supported her head. She
was crying laud now; not for her father’s uncertain condition, but for the food
she saw spilled on the ground. The stream of hot tears raining from her eyes
could not allow her see clearly when some fowls came picking the food. She felt
like shooing them off but held back herself.
Etee Kalu was very heavy on Igbeneche’s back. She stopped
and transferred him on Nwunyediya’s back. His bulgy belly quivered like a bag
of sachet water as Nwunyediya trotted on with increased agility like a wounded
horse. Etee Kalu discharged his last breath with his eyes open as they stepped
on the hospital pavement. The three women lowered the heavy body gently on the
pavement and started wailing uncontrollably. Neighbours trickled out one by one
like termites after a chilly rain; in a twinkle of an eye the hospital premises
was full of onlookers and sympathizers.
Igbeneche was astonished. She never knew anything could kill a man this
fast without symptoms; without ailment. She wasn’t sure if these were happening
in a dream or in real life. It was like what she used to see on the Nollywood
movies she had always criticized. Tears ran down the corners of her eyes. She
didn’t know how to start crying like the other women.
The three women made arrangement to deposit their husband’s
corpse in the morgue but the doctor, a tall dark man with uneven white beards
refused and said a man has to be around. “No women, this should be done by a
man no matter how old or young. Is there no man in the family?” the doctor had
asked removing his glasses to look into the women’s faces one after the other.
It was then that Akudiya, the last wife realized what was about to happen to
them. She broke out again in a high pitched wail and threw herself on the
grown, kicking generously in the air like a cyclist. Her only son was just
three years old. He can’t be brought to represent the family in the morgue. She
jerked up from the ground and started running home. Somebody made to stop her
but she pushed the person away and tore through the crowd into the street. The
other wives knew what she was going to do.
They too dashed out running after her. The big tree had fallen and the
birds had to scatter. On her way home Igbeneche dashed into an electronics
mechanic shop. The electrician a tall dark young man with hideous scar across
his forehead was soldering something on an open radio. He was the man that
always came to look for Igbeneche at her fruit shop along Ngwa road. The man
Nwanne had learned to call uncle whenever her father was not in town. He was
the Uncle that bought Nwanne the t-shirt that had the inscription: Aba noo ji. Igbeneche
greeted him amid sobs and ran the back of her left hand across her nostrils to
clear the nose that had started running. She bent low to the electrician’s ears
and whispered something. Immediately he dropped his soldering iron, unplugged
it from the wall socket, carried an old nonfunctional black and white
television and followed Igbeneche.
It was bedlam at home as everybody wailed from one corner
of the house to the other. Igbeneche led the electrician to the sitting room
where he laid down the old damaged television and stealthily carried the new
coloured TV away through the back yard. Nwanne could not understand what was
going on. She sat there on the floor hugging her knees to her chin and rocking
childishly to and fro as she cried like the other kids. She saw Akudiya surreptitiously
moving a box through the back yard. Most of the valuables in the house left
just the same way within a space of minutes. Some disappeared totally without a
replacement while some others where swapped with either rickety irreparable one
or an inferior good-for-nothing equivalent. The women removed whatever they
valued most; their jewelries, wrappers, clothes and electronics. These they
would have done in a better way only if the death had given a little sign; if
it had not come this sudden. None of the women wanted to put a call through to
Etee Kalu’s people with their phones. They wanted to take care of things first.
Words had been sent to Etee Kalu’s people through a little kid and they were
expected to arrive soon.
“Nda ife obu? What is it?” Etee Mba asked directly to
nobody as he dashed into the yard filed with the noise of the wailing women.
Etee Ndukwo the deaf and dumb was with him. They were the first among the
relatives to arrive. They made straight into the sitting room where the three
women performed different wailing patterns. Akudiya’s voice was the loudest.
She could not rest on a place. She threw herself on the floor and landed with
her buttocks with her two hands on her head. She stood up and flung herself
into the upholstery and lay limply there. Her wrapper was undone and she didn’t
seem to notice that. She was wearing a white pant with every other part of her
body left bare. Mama Ada, the fat woman that sold Akara in the neighbourhood was trying to hold her still. To the left, beside the
entrance door leaned Nwunyediya sobbing in a loud voice and stamping her feet
on the ground in a matching fashion. Igbeneche lay on the floor sobbing gently.
Mama obi her friend was attending to her. “Please stop doing this to yourselves
biko nu” Mama Obi said aloud tapping Igbenche gently at the back. As the three
women saw Etee Mba and Etee Ndukwo, they raised their voices the more. It was
like a crying competition. Etee Mba whispered something into Mama Ada’s ears
and she stood up and picked the wrapper on the floor and help Akudiya cover
herself.
“iya, come and show me, come and show me” Etee Mba said to Igbeneche
as if in a hurry and made some signs to Etee Ndukwo. As the oldest wife Igbeneche
had to go with the men. Mama Obi helped her up and she wiped the tears on her
face with the back of her palms and readjusted her wrapper. She raised the tail
end of her wrapper and blew her nose into it. She didn’t care that the men were
watching as the raised wrapper exposed the “V” end of her fleshy thighs. She
readjusted her wrapper once again. She untied her hair scarf and tied it to her
waist to hold her wrapper firm and followed the men out of the room leaning on
Mama Obi’s shoulder. Outside’ the children had resumed playing once again. They
didn’t know what was going on. Nwanne did not play. She sat alone beside the
door to the sitting room still hugging her knees to her chin and rocking back
and forth. As Igbeneche came out from the sitting room, she saw Nwanne and
their eyes met and Nwanne looked away without a word as if she just saw an
enemy. There were whitish sketches of dried tears on her chins. Igbeneche
thought something about telling Nwanne to go and play with other children but
held back her tongue. She also wondered if Nwanne was suspecting anything but
jettisoned the thought and moved on. At the gate, they met three other
relatives and together they all walked down the street to the hospital
******
The other women were still crying when Igbeneche and other
members of the extended family returned from the mortuary. Their voices had
gone so hoarse and their throats sore that only people in the sitting room
could know they were crying. It was getting dark now. Many people sit at
different corners with faces ashen. The milieu was now calm when Igbeneche stepped
in through the gate that led into the yard. The children were now playing as
they normally did. In the middle of the yard, they sat in a circle playing okoso under a fluorescent light. Igbeneche wondered something
about why Nwanne could not play with her fellow girls and looked up the three
girls playing alancho close to the kitchen and said nothing. Many more neighbour
had came around to condole them.
“Nwanne will you sit like a woman!” Etee Mba barked. Nwanne
jerked and adjusted her dress and crossed her legs slowly without looking up.
In the sitting room the other women lay sprawl on the floor sobbing gently.
They must be tired of wailing now.
“Women we have to lock up this room now” Etee Mba announced.
They were expecting it. One by one they stood up and worked out slowly into
their various rooms without saying a word and Etee Ndukwo used a big padlock to
lock the door. Beside the sitting room window was packed Etee Kalu’s old
stainless white horse bicycle. Etee Ndukwo mounted it and unlocked the chain fastening
the wheels to the window protector. No one could say where he got the key to
the padlock; maybe they were too encumbered with thoughts of the day to think
about the key to a mare bicycle. Yet nobody could stop him. His hands were
quaking now as they did whenever he was angry and his eyes were red. He must be
crying inside of him. Men don’t cry. Nobody wanted to get close to him. Nobody
wanted a deaf man’s palaver. Etee Mba made a sign to him and he responded with
another clumsy sign and rode out of the gate. Igbeneche bit her lower lips and
shook her head in pains as she watched the deaf man riding away with the
bicycle. She would have planned and sold the bicycle and even the house; only
if the sickness was protracted a little. She felt like a failure. Then Etee Mba
was left to read the riot act to the women. He went into their rooms one after
the other.
“That is our custom and you can’t change it” Etee Mba’s croaky
voice echoed from Nwunyediya’s room.
“Hmm I don’t think that is going to be possible o, because
I have to go and carry my goods from Nwanyi-Ngwa,
and I still have to sell them before they spoil. They are perishable. How would
u expect me to stay indoors for six months because my husband died? As if I
killed him; as if that would raise him from the dead.” Nwunyediya complained
still sobbing. She sniffed in her running nose and continued; “ok, who is going
to be taking care of my children? Who will be feeding us? What about our
clothing?”
“There’s nothing to worry about clothing woman!” Etee Mba barked
“you have to wear your akwa-mkpe
throughout the mourning period.”
“Me, in black? A single cloth for six months?” Nwunyediya
retorted with a question meant for nobody. Stressing on the “me”, she beat her
chest and shook her head slowly to disagreement. She blew her nose with the end
of her wrapper and murmured something no human could understand.
“Woman just wait let me tell you all of the customs before
you start” Etee Mba continued saying things she was no longer interested in.
the words were to her like water on the back of a duck. She was now thinking of
what else to do. If she ran away people would conclude that she killed her
husband. After all it was her food he ate before he died.
“Ngwa kpairim, Etee Mba tell me; what rights will you
perform during the mourning period? Or are you not going to mourn your blood
brother? After all you are going to inherit his things. Look there that deaf
that calls himself Ndukwo has already inherited the bicycle. Who knows what and
what you are going to be interested in. You will soon for this house and who
knows what more. What are you men going to do?” She wanted to add “good for
nothing men” but held back and clicked her tongue and clapped and continued; “You
are going to throw us out with nothing, yet you want us to suffer mourning as
if we caused his death” Nwunyediya made her points weeping louder now. She was
no longer weeping for the death of her husband but for the impending
customarily imposed punishment and suffering and humiliation. She couldn’t
imagine herself in that disgusting black mourning cloth like Mama Ebuka her neighbour; she couldn’t imagine herself staying indoors doing
nothing and begging for food from friends and neighbours; after all Etee Kalu
had never been the one feeding or providing for her. All he did was coming home
to impregnate his wives as if they were baby making machines and have them
compete for his attention, cook his food, wash his cloths and even pay his
bills at times. “Oh God, had I known, I wouldn’t have allowed him to go to that
palm wine bar with Etee Onwuso, that wicked man. He must have poisoned him.”
she thought inside her and sniffed in her running nose.
“I didn’t formulate the customs you know and I won’t be the
one to change it. I‘ve just told you how it is going to be.” Etee Mba dropped brazenly
in a finality tone after some minutes pause. He dusted his buttocks and made
for the door without looking back at the depressed widow. He had told the other
wives the same thing. Igbeneche was not listening while he spoke to her. His
voice sounded so faint and sick as if he spoke from a far. She was brooding
over her mistakes. She had injected an over dose of the potion in the soup. She
would have been a little more careful if not for the little Otisi, Akudiya’s
son that budged in to the kitchen and she over turned the bottle into the soup.
She had quickly tiptoed into the kitchen when Nwunyediya went out to fetch some
water. She had planned it very well. Nwunyediya had called Nwanne severally to
send her for the water but Igbeneche had hidden Nwanne in her room and ordered
her neither to answer nor to go outside. Her plans had been to make Etee Kalu
go through serious pains in a protracted illness so that she would have ample
time to sell most of his properties before his brothers would come to inherit
them at his death. The prophet had told her to give him the potion in three
installments.
“I want something that would make
him go through pains” she demonstrated with her hands in a fist; “that man is a
wicked man. He just married us to be producing children for him. He doesn’t
provide us with anything. Instead we fight each other for his attention.”
“Just make it easy for him” the
dirty bearded prophet in a long white gown said as he mixed the concoction.
“I don’t want to show any sympathy
here lord. You can only see sympathy in the dictionary and check it there; it
is found in-between shit and syphilis. I don’t want to make any mistake.
The prophet had smiled at her analysis
of sympathy and handed her the potion.
Now she was crying as she pictured
the wicked grin on the face of the prophet as he said: “this is your with
madam. I have nothing to do with it”. Igbeneche just cried and cried and slept
off. Her weeping was not for her dead husband but for her mistakes. She didn’t
hear anything Etee Mba had said. Akudiya did the same but Nwunyediya could not
take it; maybe because of the way the death came as if she killed her husband.
She suspected Etee Onwuso poisoned her husband but she couldn’t say it out
because she would have no prove to that. She wondered what his co-wives could
be thinking about the death or it cause.
“Eew! Eew! They have killed him!”
she screamed with stress on the “they” as if she was letting her co-wives know
she didn’t kill their husband and tears gushed continuously from the ends of
her oval eyes like water from a leaking tank.
******
The six months mourning period passed as if it never came
and life went on like it would never end. The co-wives parted too like they
never met. The string holding them had broken. It’s been six years now and
things had changed a lot. Nwanne stood in front of their new home. She couldn’t
see Onu and Otisi again to play with. “They must be big boys now like these ash
boys here”, she thought. She was watching some boys playing football in the
rain. She had marked this set of boys for their always being dusty. She had
called them ash boys because their bodies were always ash with the patches of
dust on them. Even while it rained the dust on their bodies seemed not to be
washing off. She stood at the window holding the burglary proof and watching
the ash boys from the hole of missing louvers on the window as they played
naked in the rain. She felt like jumping into the rain to play football with
the boys though her mother had warned her against playing with boys. She would
have liked to be born a boy if it were to be her choice to make. One of the boys
shot the ball towards the stone goal post but the ball rolled close to the goal
post and stopped locked in a water log. The goal keeper dashed towards the ball
to kick it off but the ball drifted a little to the left and he missed it,
kicked the air in a rapid swoosh and landed with his back on the dirty muddy
ground. The other boys sniggered freely and threw themselves on the ground.
Nwanne joined with laud laughter and clapped too. One of the boys turned and
made a face at her, sticking out his tongue and she opened her fingers at the
boy still laughing. “shege JB”, she cursed playfully. If it were to be some
years before now, she would have pulled off her cloth and run into the rain to
play football. She was sure she could play better than some of the boys but she
can’t play now that some little balls are growing on her chest. The kind of
balls she can’t see on the chest of the boys of her age. She had thought they
were boils because of the little pains she felt in them. Her mother said they
were not boils when she complained and said they were called breasts; that they
would soon grow bigger like those on her own chest; and that they would be
producing milk and that her babies would have to suck and feed on them. She had
felt so embarrassed the day she tried playing with boys of her age and they
left the football and focused on watching the balls on her chest. Some of them
tried to touch the balls but she didn’t allow them, not for anything but the
pains she would feel at the touch.
Now she felt bad. She wanted to feel free and play naked in
the rain. Even if she should ran into the rain with her dress on, the football
might hit her chest and the balls will start aching her. She can’t risk increasing
the pains of the balls now. She drew up the upper part of her cloth and looked
down into it to her chest. The area of the balls looked lighter than every
other part of her abdomen. The balls were still there growing by the day, just
as her mother had said. She felt them with her left hand and sighed. She wondered
what might be inside the balls. They felt strong like unripe tomato balls. As
her fingers shoved across the edge of the tender breasts, she felt some pains
and sighed again, and looked up straight into the rain. She was looking at
nothing in particular. With her eyes on the droplets of the fading rain as they
trickled down from the roof she could see the serenity in them. She felt like
going into the world in the droplets to know how it felt in there. Then the
voice came.
“Nwanne!” It was her mother calling and she jumped out of
her imagination and scurried to the kitchen where Igbeneche was wrapping asusu with plantain leaves. She knew why
she was being called. “Mma, let me get the trey pan ready” she said as she
walked in and out of the kitchen. Igbeneche looked up watching her back as she
sauntered like a tomboy towards the wall on which the tray leaned. She could
notice the increase in the size of her back side and the curvy sides of her
hips and her dark skin that shined oilier by the day. Her daughter was
gradually developing into womanhood. She thought something about telling her to
walk like a woman but just saying it had not worked. Igbeneche was worried that
her daughter was acting masculine. She recalled her own days as a growing
teenage girl in the village. She tried to compare herself with her daughter yet
she couldn’t fix any similarity but the knock knees and the shrill voice they
shared. Igbeneche was still watching Nwanne till she picked the tray and
turned. She could now see that her breasts are getting bigger despite the many
cloths Nwanne wore to hide them.
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