Sixteen
‘Open my gate now!’ Cash Daddy bellowed.
Charity jolted like a firecracker. By now, I was
unperturbed by these outbursts, but as we walked into the mammoth
mansion, I worried about my sister’s tender sensibilities. Cash
Daddy’s environment was not really the place for a lady.
We sat in the living room, and the well-fed sentry
of the other day opened the refrigerator. I declined his offer
while Charity threw her mouth open in amazement. Expecting to hear
a response from her, the man left the cooling machine open.
‘No, thank you,’ I responded on her behalf. I knew
Cash Daddy was likely to offer us food when we went upstairs.
The man had just slammed the refrigerator door shut
when Protocol Officer came downstairs.
‘Kingsley, Cash Daddy is ready to see you,’ he
said.
I held Charity’s hand and stood.
Upstairs, Cash Daddy was lying spread-eagled on the
bed. Two striking ladies with dazzling light skin and ample mammary
glands were with him. One was sitting at his feet with her eyes
glued to the vast MTV screen, the other was pressing a pimple on
his face with her fingers. Thankfully, all three of them were fully
clothed. The girls were in short dresses. Their knees and knuckles
were black where the bleaching cream had refused to work. Cash
Daddy was wearing a white linen suit and a pair of oxblood shoes
that looked as if they had been crafted in the Garden of
Eden.
Cash Daddy saw Charity and sat up straight. He
pushed the pimple-presser away. A smile struggled through the mass
of fat on his face and finally shone through.
‘Ah! Is this not Charity?’ He beamed. ‘I didn’t
recognise her at first. Look at this little girl of yesterday.
You’ve already started growing breasts.’
Charity blushed. He reached out a chunky arm and
swept her close to his chest. Suddenly, the smile seeped back into
his face.
‘Be careful,’ he said seriously, wagging a chubby
finger at her. ‘Be very, very careful. Very soon, all these stupid
boys will start chasing you up and down. Make sure you don’t allow
them to deceive you. That’s all they know how to do - to deceive
small, small girls. Do you hear me?’
She turned her eyes to the floor and nodded coyly.
Actually, I had never had cause to worry about my sister going
astray. Charity had a good head on her shoulders.
Cash Daddy asked us to sit. He lifted the headset
by his bed and shouted for his cook. I asked the man for pounded
yam and egusi soup. Charity asked for fried rice and goat meat. The
food arrived just as Cash Daddy’s cellular phone rang. He lifted
the gadget and shouted into the mouthpiece.
‘Speak to me!’
After several minutes, he concluded his deafening
conversation with someone called Long John Dollars. Then he dialled
another number. The second phone call, about some money in his
Barclays Bank Docklands account, kept him occupied until we
finished our meals. Then he leaned over and opened the refrigerator
by his bed. He pulled out a packet of McVitie’s milk chocolate
biscuits and a tub of Ben & Jerry’s vanilla ice cream. He
dumped the items casually on the stool in front of Charity.
‘Stay here and demolish these goodies,’ he
commanded her.
My sister’s face lit up. When we were children, my
father usually returned from work with these sorts of imported
treats. Gradually, they had gone out of reach of the common man. I
could not remember the last time I had eaten any McVities
biscuits.
‘We’re going upstairs but we’re coming back now,’
Cash Daddy continued.
He headed out of the room.
‘Kingsley, follow me,’ he said without looking
back.
I obeyed.
We went on to the fourth floor. He removed a key
from his trouser pocket and opened a door. He stood aside to let me
pass, then locked it behind us. It was the first time I had seen
him open a door - or perform any other minor task, for that matter
- without assistance from his numerous attendants. It was a weird
sight, like seeing a United States president, say Bill Clinton,
leaning over the bathroom sink and washing his socks.
This room was similar to his office. It had a
mahogany desk with a budget of papers on top, and a worktop lined
with fax machines, computers, and telephones. I spied a Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation letterheaded sheet amongst the pile
on the table. There were several other letterheaded sheets that I
could not make out.
I sat in front of the desk. Cash Daddy dragged a
chair beside mine and sat with his knees massaging my own knees. He
looked serious, like a doctor about to inform me that I was in the
last stages of colon cancer.
‘I was at the hospital to see your daddy,’ he
began. ‘I’m happy that he’s getting better.’
‘Thank you very much, Uncle,’ I replied. ‘We’re
really happy, too. And we’re also very grateful for all your
financial support. Thank you very much.’
He scrunched up his face as if I had just looked
him up and down and called him a blob of fat.
‘Kings, what do you mean by thanking me? What do
you mean by that? There’s no need for you to thank me for anything.
When the eye weeps, the nose also weeps. After all, you’re my
brother. We’re family. Is that not so?’
There was a pause.
‘Is that not so?’
I nodded. There was a longer pause.
‘Kings,’ he said at last, ‘you must be wondering
why I asked you to come and see me, is that not so?’
I nodded again. He nodded as well.
‘You see all these boys here . . . all these boys
around me?’
I did.
‘They’re all working for me.’ He thumped his hand
on his chest. ‘I put food on their tables, I put clothes on their
backs, and I make sure that they’re well sexed. And guess what?
None of them, not one single one of them, is related to me in any
way. Kings, I’ve been thinking about it and I’ve decided to help
you.’
Wow. Perhaps he knew someone who was a top shot in
the Petroleum Corporation. Perhaps the person was his very close
friend. Perhaps the person had told him that he was looking for
suitable employees and had asked him for a personal recommendation.
Once again, ‘long-leg’ was about to work in my favour.
Cash Daddy leaned forward.
‘You see, there are two main things people like me
have used successfully in business. One is the love of money. The
other is a good brain. I can see that you’re the sort of person
that will do very well in business. You, you’re a smart young man.
I don’t know if you love money but I know . . . I can see . . .
that you need it. I want you to come and work for me.’
He paused and stared as if expecting me to say
something. I decided to tell the truth.
‘Cash Daddy, please, what do you mean? I’m not sure
I understand you.’
He threw back his head and laughed.
‘Kings, I know you’re a smart boy, I know you
understand me. Tell me, what do you think about what I just
said?’
‘What sort of work do you want me to do?’ I asked,
rephrasing my thoughts.
‘Oh . . . different things. At the beginning stage,
some minor errands. There are one or two basic things you’ll need
to learn. No matter how big some of us look today, all of us
started from somewhere. I don’t know if you’ve heard about Money
Magnet? He was my godfather in this business. I started by driving
him around in his cars before I hit it and decided to launch out on
my own.’
He leaned even closer and placed his hand on my
shoulder.
‘You see, I have other urgent things to focus on in
the near future and I need a smart person who can watch over things
for me. Kings, I need you. I’d like you to move into my house as
soon as possible and start.’
At that moment, a giant fly could have flown into
my mouth, laid her eggs on my tonsils, and I would still not have
noticed. The way he was talking so casually, you would have thought
that he was simply asking me to run down to the shops and buy a
packet of Nasco biscuits.
‘Uncle Boniface, are you actually asking me to join
you in 419?’
He laughed.
‘You’re saying it as if I asked you to kill
somebody.’ He slapped my thigh playfully. ‘Relax. One doesn’t
refuse the food being offered without first opening the pot. I’ve
been in this business for many years now and I can tell you there
are two things I will never do. I will never take another person’s
life and I will never follow another man’s wife. Those two things .
. . never. You can call it whatever name you want, all I’m saying
is that you should come and work for me.’
At times like this, I wished I was well versed in
the art of using swear words. I remembered my visit to the church -
the sermon and the way The Rich Man had spoken to Lazarus. I became
angrier. Did Uncle Boniface think that because he gave my family
crumbs from his massive fortune, he could think of me in such an
insulting manner?
‘Uncle Boniface, I’m sorry,’ I replied, bolder than
any man had the right to be in the presence of his benefactor. ‘I’m
not cut out for this sort of business. I’m a graduate, and I intend
to get a good job and later further my education. I’ve always
wanted to study as far as PhD level and that’s what I’m—’
I stopped talking when Cash Daddy upgraded his
laughter to a guffaw.
‘Kingsley,’ he asked, struggling to regain his
breath, ‘what was it you said you studied in school?’
‘I read Chemical Engineering.’
‘Very, very good. That means you must know a lot of
mathematics. ’
I did not dignify him with an answer.
‘Are you good with numbers?’
I continued saying nothing.
‘Go on, tell me. Are you good with numbers?’
‘Yes, I am,’ I answered as a matter of fact. ‘I’m
very good with calculations.’
‘Do you know how to write one million naira? Do you
know how many noughts it has at the end?’
‘It has six zeroes,’ I rattled off without even
thinking.
‘Apart from when you were using a calculator in
your classroom, have you ever written down one million naira in any
single transaction before? Have you ever calculated money you
wanted to spend and it came to a total of one million naira?’
He did not wait for me to respond.
‘So, after all this your education - the one you’ve
done so far - what have you gained from it? With all the big, big
calculations you did with your calculator in school, has it made
you to calculate those same amounts of money in your own pocket? Or
in your own bank account? Or in different currencies?’
He hissed. The sound was a fine blend of disdain
and amusement.
‘You know something? Me, I don’t have a problem
with poverty as far as it’s a choice somebody has made for himself.
But look at you. Very soon you’ll be standing by the street with a
tin cup in your hand - begging. Mind you, no one gets a mouthful of
food by picking in between another person’s teeth. All your book .
. . is that why you were wearing headmaster shoes the other day? Is
that why your sister looks like somebody who hasn’t eaten since
Christmas Day? Is that why your mother is wearing the cloth that
other women were wearing in the sixties?’
He hissed again.
‘Just look at my sister. Today at the hospital, she
was looking almost thirty years more than her age. Has all your
book put food on your table? How many people are you feeding every
month? How many people’s salaries do you pay every month? Eh? Tell
me.’ He sneered. ‘See your mouth. You say you don’t eat rats but
you just want to taste only the tail. Please don’t close my ears
with all this your rubbish talk about education. Me, I don’t
believe in film tricks. I believe in real, live action.’
The more he spoke, the more I found myself sitting
straighter in the chair. He sounded almost as convincing as the
multiplication table.
My father was learned and honest. Yet he could
neither feed his family nor clothe his children. My mother was also
learned, and her life had not been particularly improved much by
education. I thought about my father’s pals, most of whom were
riding rickety cars . . . about most of my university lecturers
with their boogiewoogie clothes and desperate attempts to fight off
hunger by selling overpriced handouts to students. Yet Uncle
Boniface - our saviour in this time of crisis - had not even
completed his secondary school education. However, my father’s
hallowed words of time past rose up and sounded a piercing siren in
my head.
‘Uncle Boniface, you can make all the fun you want,
but in the long run, even the Bible says that wisdom is better than
silver and gold.’
This time, he guffawed so long that it seemed as if
the fat on his face might melt and start dribbling onto the floor.
He started choking and struggled to catch his breath.
‘Ah, you think, me, I don’t know Bible myself? Or
haven’t you heard the story of the poor wise man?’
I had no idea what he was talking about. Was this
part of his infinite repertoire of Igbo proverbs, or was this a
story from the Bible? Did he mean the story about The Rich Man and
Lazarus? As far as I could remember, it never said anywhere that
Lazarus was wise.
He saw the confusion on my face.
‘Ah, ah? I thought you’re the one who went to
school. You’re the one who knows everything, including Bible? OK,
wait.’
Using my knees as leverage, he pushed himself up.
He strode confidently to the bookshelf and pulled out a
leather-bound Bible. He returned to his seat and dropped the holy
book in my lap.
‘Open Ecclesiastes,’ he instructed.
I did.
‘Turn to chapter nine.’
I did.
‘Read from verse fourteen to sixteen.’
I obeyed.
‘There—’
‘No, no, no. You don’t need to read it out. Read it
to yourself.
Me, I already know it. It’s you with all your book
that needs to hear it.’
I closed my mouth and read with my eyes only.
There was a little city, and few men within it;
and there came a great king against it, and besieged it, and built
great bulwarks against it: Now there was found in it a poor wise
man, and he by his wisdom delivered the city; yet no man remembered
that same poor man. Then said I, Wisdom is better than strength:
nevertheless the poor man’s wisdom is despised, and his words are
not heard.
Unimpressed, I finished at verse sixteen. Was it
not Shakespeare who said that even the devil can cite scripture for
his own purpose?
‘People like you can go to school and finish your
brains on book, but it’s still people like us who have the money
that feed your families.’
He laughed. His laughter was beginning to gnaw at
my nerves.
‘Uncle Boniface, please. My father would never
approve.’
‘Kings, we’re talking about money,’ he said with
irritation. ‘Let’s leave poor men out of this conversation.’
With that, Uncle Boniface had exceeded the speed
limit in his derogatory comments. He had no right to talk about my
father in that manner.
‘Uncle Boniface, my father might be poor,’ I said
with rising anger, ‘but at least he will always be remembered for
his honesty.’
‘Is honesty an achievement? Personality is one
thing, achievement is another thing altogether. So what has your
father achieved? How much money is he leaving for you when he dies?
Or is it his textbooks that you’ll collect and pass on to your own
children?’
I sat staring at this braggart in disbelief. My
father once said that people who did not go to school were
perpetually angry with those who did. This man was a barrel of
bile. An authentic devil in disguise. I decided to leave before a
thunderbolt would come and strike the building. I rose and tossed
the Bible on the executive desk.
‘Uncle Boniface, I’m sorry but if you’ve finished,
I’m going.’
He laughed gently, like an apostle who was under
persecution by people who understood very little about his
life-transforming message.
‘Take your time. Don’t be like the grass cutter who
likes eating palm nuts but doesn’t like climbing palm trees. I
might be a very rich man, but from time to time, I can also
exercise patience.’
I stomped out of the room and slammed the door
behind me. I rushed downstairs and into the bedroom where Charity
was still chomping on the chocolate biscuits. She had polished off
the ice cream.
‘Let’s go!’ I ordered.
Charity opened her eyes like an astonished kitten.
Then she must have seen the urgency in my face because she stood up
hurriedly, still clutching the remaining biscuits. The other two
girls did not remove their eyes from the MTV screen. I grabbed
Charity’s arm and fled.