Seventeen
At last, the doctor decided that my father could
go home. He said that his condition was stable, that he would
regain the use of his muscles and speech gradually, even though it
might take as long as two years for him to fully recover. Since we
could not afford additional physiotherapy, the hospital educated us
on the sort of exercises he could do at home. They also advised us
to get him a walking stick.
Two days before he was due back home, my mother
called me aside in the hospital.
‘Kings, I don’t think you should bother coming
tomorrow.’
I was surprised.
‘Why?’
‘I want you to stay home and make sure everything
is ready.’
She proceeded on a long list of microscopic
instructions, and the next day I ordered Odinkemmelu and
Chikaodinaka on a cleaning spree. They went about sweeping and
scrubbing, dusting and polishing. I gave Charity some money to go
to the market. She stocked up on unripe plantains, vegetables, and
some other low-carbohydrate foods. From our parents’ bedroom to the
living room, Eugene cleared the pathway of obstructing buckets and
dusty storage cartons; my father would need as much space as
possible to manoeuvre his faulty left limb. Godfrey changed the
sheet on their bed and plumped the cushion on my father’s chair. I
adjusted the television tripod stand so that it would be easier for
him to watch without straining his neck. Then I went to the
carpenter whose shop was close to my mother’s and collected the
walking stick I had ordered a few days before.
That night, I found it hard to sleep. For the
billionth time, I trembled for my life that no longer included Ola
in the picture. I felt as if, like my father, I would have to start
learning the basic skills of living all over again. But there was
still hope. Ola’s mother might allow her to take me back once I
moved to Port Harcourt and got a job.
I dug my head under my pillow and forced my mind to
be quiet. Tomorrow would be a busy day; I needed all the rest I
could get.
When sleep finally came, I dreamt about my
father.
I was standing directly in front of him while he
was sitting on his hospital bed.
‘Kingsley, do you want to be useful to yourself in
this world?’
I answered in the affirmative.
‘Do you want to make me and your mummy
proud?’
Again, my answer was the same.
‘Do you want people to know you and respect you
wherever you go?’
Yes, I did.
‘Do you want to end up selling pepper and tomatoes
in Nkwoegwu market?’
At that point, I woke up sweating.
Sometime in the early hours of that morning, my
father died.
When I walked into the hospital ward in the
morning, that strange instinct that tells a young man that he no
longer has a father took over. I knew what had happened without
being told. Right from the reception area, the nurses stared at me
in a strange way, as if I had strapped a bomb to my abdomen and
mistakenly left my shirt unbuttoned. Then I heard my mother.
‘Hewu o!’ she screamed. ‘You people should leave
me, let me die!’ The sound of her voice seemed to be coming from
her intestines instead of from her throat. She was engaged in
physical combat with some of the nurses. Whenever she managed to
break free from their hold, she flung herself to the floor or
bashed her head against the cement wall. She was writhing and
gnashing her teeth like someone burning in hell. I stood in silence
for a while, watching this apparition. Then I walked past them and
opened the door to my father’s room. Two male nurses walked in with
me and stood within arm’s length.
Someone had covered him from head to toe with a
white sheet that had a huge circle of ancient brown dirt right in
the middle. Interesting that they had sheets for the dead but none
for the living. I shifted the cloth aside. I lifted his hand and
squeezed his fingers in my palm. They felt cold and stiff. I placed
my ear against his chest and listened. I checked for a pulse.
Lastly, I lifted his eyelids and stared. My father stared
back.
When I finally understood that I would never again
hear the shuffling of my father’s feet as he came to the dining
table, I sat down heavily beside the bed. I gripped my head. The
two nurses came closer and stood beside me like sentinels. Then, as
with a person in the very last moments of death by drowning,
several scenes from my life flashed before me. They came one after
another, awakened from the dormitories of my mind like a parade of
supernatural characters in a Shakespearean drama.
In the first scene, I was sitting on my father’s
lap, while my mother was lighting a kerosene lamp. NEPA had taken
the light.
‘Kings,’ my father said suddenly, ‘do you know how
the tortoise broke his back?’
I had seen the tortoise several times on
television. His shell was in patches, as if several pieces had been
glued together to make the one. I shook my head. I did not
know.
‘Once upon a time,’ he began, ‘there was a famine
in the land of the animals.’
The animals decided that they would each kill their
mothers and share the meat. They started with Squirrel, and went on
to Fox, then Elephant, Antelope, Tiger . . . Finally, it got to
Tortoise’s turn.
‘But Tortoise was very tricky,’ my father
said.
He decided to hide his own mother. He made a very
long rope, used it to climb up into the sky with her, then came
back down and hid the rope. Afterwards, he started weeping and
wailing. When the animals asked what the matter was, Tortoise told
them that his mother had died.
My father mimicked each animal saying ‘sorry’ to
Tortoise.
Every day, Tortoise would bring out the rope from
where he had hidden it, and climb up to the sky to give his mother
some food to eat. One day, Fox noticed that Tortoise was always
going out with some food. He became suspicious and followed
sneakily behind him. He watched Tortoise climbing up to the
sky.
When Tortoise finished feeding his mother, on his
way down, he saw the other animals gathered at the bottom of the
rope, waiting for him. In panic, he started climbing back up. The
animals noticed that he was trying to escape and started pulling
the rope. They pulled so hard that the rope broke and Tortoise
crashed to the ground.
‘Tortoise landed on his back,’ my father concluded.
‘Till today, his shell is still cracked in several places.’
The scene faded. Another took its place.
I was having breakfast with my parents. My father
went to check who was thumping our front door so loudly on a
Saturday morning, like a landlord being owed a year’s rent. Five of
his sisters poured in, each of whom aspired to a higher standard of
obesity than the previous one. As soon as they were seated and all
the pleasantries over, the eldest sister began.
‘Pauly, we’re very unhappy with the way things are.
How can we come into our eldest brother’s house, and instead of the
noise of children running about the place, everywhere is so
quiet?’
My father did not respond. The second eldest sister
took over.
‘Like Ada was saying, we’re very worried. You’re
not getting any younger. You don’t have to wait until all your
hairs have turned grey and all your teeth have fallen out before
you decide to do something about the situation.’
She handed the baton back to Aunty Ada.
‘Pauly, we understand that you’re busy with your
job at the Ministry. You might not have the time to sort things out
for yourself, so we’ve decided to help. We’ve found two girls in
the village that you can choose from. They are chubby and have very
strong bodies. We want you to come down to the village with us and
have a look at them so that you can decide which one to
choose.’
My mother received the pronunciamento with silence.
A woman who could not produce children deserved whatever treatment
she received from her in-laws. So far, her only saving grace had
been that my father was standing firmly by her. My father, on the
other hand, reacted with ferocity. He slammed a fist on his knee,
sprang up from his chair, and clenched his teeth till the two white
rows almost merged into one thin, white line.
‘I’ve heard what you people have to say,’ he said.
‘Now would you please get up and leave my house.’
He spoke in a low voice that still managed to
startle everybody. But Aunty Ada recovered quickly. She jumped out
of her chair, stationed her hands on her waist, and poked her face
into his nose.
‘Paulinus!’ she barked. ‘It’s not today you started
allowing this, your education, to confuse you. No matter what,
every man needs children to carry his name. Every man! God forbid,
but what if something was to happen to Kingsley? That means your
name vanish forever. Is that what you want?’
My father roared like King Kong.
‘Leave my house right now! All of you . . . get up
and leave! Get up and leave! Now!’
Another scene.
I had accompanied my father to inspect the
work-in-progress on our village house. The workmen were laying the
foundation. Towards evening, he took me on a stroll down the dusty
village path. It was the same route he had trekked daily to the
mission primary school as a child - barefooted because, back then,
children were not allowed to wear shoes.
‘This tree is called Orji,’ he said, pointing at a
tall one with a mighty trunk. ‘That’s from where we get our kola
nuts. This one is Ahaba. It makes the best firewood. This one is
called Udara.’ He smiled. ‘Whenever it was udara season, I and my
friends used to wake up much earlier than usual so that we could
pick the ripe fruits that had fallen to the ground at night, on our
way to school. We always had to wait for the fruits to fall by
themselves because they are never sweet when you pluck them.’
Soon, it was time for us to go home. I was
disappointed.
‘Don’t worry,’ my father said. ‘When our house is
completed, we’ll come and spend a whole week here so that I can
show you the river and the farms and the forests.’
Several other images came and went.
My graduation day. My father was smiling and
watching me pose for a photograph. He raised his hand and asked the
cameraman to wait. Then he walked up to me and adjusted the tassel
on my cap.
‘This is a picture you’re going to show your
children and your grandchildren,’ he said. ‘You have to make sure
that everything looks perfect.’
How was I going to tell Godfrey and Eugene and
Charity that their father would never be coming home, that he would
never switch off the television abruptly and order them to study?
Their father would never witness their matriculation ceremonies
into university, tell them what courses to choose or what schools
to fill into their forms? I wished I had died instead.
My mother let out another sharp scream. Then I
remembered Ola, and that she was not there to hold me. I crumbled
into tiny pieces.