Twenty-one
This business of being a man of means had taken me
quite a while to get used to. Sometimes, I even forgot that my
circumstances had changed. I was about to pass out on the floor the
day my first cellular phone bill arrived, when I remembered that I
could afford to pay it. I was storming my way out of an Aba ‘Big
Boys’ shop in protest at the obese price tags, when I remembered
that I had nothing to quarrel about, went back in and bought my
Swatch wristwatch. My mother was also having a hard time getting
used to the better life.
She had been delighted the day I visited home with
the cooking gas and the wrappers and the rice, she told me how much
I reminded her of my father when I brought a variety of McVitie’s
biscuits and Just Juice for my siblings, but when I presented her
with a bundle of oven fresh notes, her feelings took on a different
shape.
‘Kings,’ she asked with fear, ‘how did you get all
this money?’
‘Mummy, I told you I’ve been doing some work for
Uncle Boniface. This is from my salary.’
‘What sort of work do you do?’
I had told her before.
‘I help out at his office. I take phone calls. I
run small errands. I help him organise his business meetings . .
.’
‘So how much is this salary he gives you for
running errands?’
‘Well, it varies,’ I shrugged. ‘It’s all done on a
commission basis.’
‘Commission - on errands?’
I fumbled with my shoelaces, pretending I had not
heard.
My mother continued staring at the bundle in her
lap without touching it, as if she expected the cash to rise up on
its two feet and bite. She was about to ask another question when I
laid firm hold of her Achilles’ heel and twisted.
‘Don’t worry, Mummy. I know how much you miss
having Daddy around, but I’m your opara and I’m really going to
take care of you. Very soon I’ll get my own house and all of you
can come and be spending time with me.’
My mother smiled. For the first time since the
money took up residence in her lap, she invited it into her fingers
for a proper welcome. My dear mother had probably never handled so
many notes at any one time in her entire life. Her smile grew very
fat.
‘But make sure you keep looking for a proper job,’
she said. ‘You know this work for Boniface is only
temporary.’
‘Mummy, don’t worry. I’ll keep looking.’
‘OK, come let me bless you.’
I knelt on the floor in front of her. She placed
her right palm on the centre of my head. Legend had it that her own
father had done the same thing when she brought him an envelope
containing half of her very first salary. The other half had paid
obeisance to her husband.
‘You will have good children who will take care of
you in your old age,’ she began.
‘Amen,’ I replied.
‘You will find a good wife.’
‘Amen.’
‘Evil men and evil women will never come near
you.’
‘Amen.’
‘You will continue to prosper.’
‘Amen.’
‘Wherever this money came from, more will continue
to come.’
‘Amen.’
My mother’s prayers worked. A few weeks later, I
made a $27,000 hit and moved from Cash Daddy’s mansion into a
rented four-bedroom duplex in Aba.
Shortly after, I travelled to Umuahia.
My family rushed out when I arrived. Eugene and
Charity hovered around my brand new Lexus. They stroked the body,
sat inside, took turns at pretending to steer the wheel. My mother
admired the car briefly and stood by the front door watching them.
Odinkemmelu and Chikaodinaka peeped from behind the living room
curtains. When my cellular phone rang, the excitement was just too
much for my siblings to contain. They squealed like toddlers being
tickled in their armpits and navel.
It was my Lufthansa airline pilot mugu whose
$27,000 had rented my new house and contributed towards my Lexus. I
asked my family’s patron saint to please ring back later. Under the
best of conditions, I required superhuman faculties to unravel his
guttural accent; with my mother standing beside me, I was certain
not to extricate a word. My mother was staring at the cellular
phone and then at the car. She looked slightly disturbed. There was
no need for me to worry too much about her mood. Wait until she saw
the surprise I had in store for her.
‘Are you people ready?’ I asked.
My mother and siblings threw their bags into the
car boot. They were spending the weekend with me.
‘Mummy, sit in the owner’s corner,’ I said.
‘Yes, sit in the owner’s corner,’ Eugene and
Charity chanted.
With a modest smile, my mother went round to the
back right of the car where people who could afford chauffeurs
usually sat. Eugene held the door open for her.
‘Mummy,’ I said, looking up at her image in the
rearview mirror as we sped off, ‘I forgot to tell you. Please can
you arrange for some relatives - at least two - to come and live
with me? It’s a big house and I’ll need help.’
‘OK. I’ll ask Chikaodinaka’s mother. I think she
has some younger ones.’
‘No, no, no. I don’t want people that are too
young. I’ll prefer people who’re older. Or people who’ve already
lived with someone before. I don’t have the time to start teaching
anybody how to flush the toilet and turn on the gas.’
Everybody laughed. Once, we had a help from the
village who mistook the china teapot as an exotic drinking cup. And
another one who blocked the toilet with sheets of my father’s
Statesman newspaper which she had ripped out to clean up herself.
These helps were as useful as oxen, but they came with their own
variety of headaches.
‘How big is the house?’ Charity asked.
‘You mean the one we’re going to or the one I’m
planning to build?’
‘The one we’re going to.’
‘Don’t worry. You’ll soon see it.’
She bounced about on her seat and beamed. Charity
was such a big baby. She leaned forward on the back of my headrest
and played with my ears. I felt like a real elder brother.
‘OK, how about the one you’re going to build?’
Eugene asked. ‘How big is it?’
‘It’s double the size of the one you’re going to
see now.’
‘Wow! I’m so glad my school hasn’t yet resumed,’
Eugene said. ‘I wrote to Godfrey to tell him that we were going to
your house this weekend. Once he gets the letter, I’m sure he’ll go
straight to Aba.’
Eugene was in his first semester at the University
of Ibadan. My mother had tried persuading him to choose a
university that was closer to home, but he remained adamant that
the medical department in Ibadan was the best. Nobody had any
argument with that; it was the distance that troubled us. Plus,
Ibadan was a favourite hotspot for trouble. As soon as the
elections gained momentum, the place would be boiling with bloody
riots. My father would never have allowed Eugene to go, but then,
there were so many other things my father would never have allowed
if he were alive.
My mother reminded me to drive carefully about five
hundred times before we finally arrived. When I honked, my gateman
opened. I parked in the middle of the compound, some distance from
the closed garage door.
‘Aboki, come and take these bags into the
house.’
The man rushed to the boot and started manoeuvring
the bags. I went ahead and unlocked the front door. After taking my
mother and siblings on a tour of the exquisitely furnished living
room, the ultramodern kitchen and the four en suite bedrooms, I led
them back outside.
‘I have a surprise for you,’ I announced.
I unlocked the garage. Inside was a brand new
Mercedes-Benz V-Boot.
‘Mummy, this is for you.’
Charity burst into tears. Eugene’s eyeballs popped
out of their sockets and bounced off the shiny, grey body of the
car. My mother used her two hands to cover her face. Gradually, she
dragged the hands down towards her mouth. I tucked the keys between
her fingers and hugged her.
‘Mummy, whatever it is you want, just let me know.
I’ll buy it for you.’
Charity and Eugene were jumping all over the
garage, but my mother just studied the car in silence. Eventually,
she hugged me back.
The rest of the day was almost like the good old
days. My mother cooked, we ate together on the dining table, we sat
in the living room and watched television. Back in Umuahia, the
only channels we received were NTA Aba and IBC Owerri. Both
commenced daily broadcasting at 4 p.m. and usually ended at about
10 p.m.. Their primetime serving largely consisted of
government-sponsored documentaries and repeats of locally produced
sitcoms. But now that I could afford the pricey satellite TV
subscription, I and my family laughed loudly to Fresh Prince of Bel
Air.
‘I’m going to bed,’ my mother announced during the
commercial break.
We tried persuading her to stay. But since my
father passed away, she hardly stayed up to watch television once
the seven o’clock news was over. Not long after she left, I heard
her voice from the top of the stairs.
‘Kingsley!’
‘Yes, Mummy!’
‘Please come.’
I ran upstairs with the television remote control
still in my hand. I did not want to miss what would happen to Will
Smith when his uncle found him performing in the strip club.
‘Yes, Mummy?’
‘Come and sit down,’ she said softly.
I was tempted to tell her that I would come back
later. Instead, I sat beside her on the wide, sleigh bed. First
class design, imported from Italy.
‘Dimma has been complaining that Ogechi doesn’t
read her books,’ my mother began. ‘She hasn’t been doing well in
school.’
‘Really?’ I said with false shock.
‘Please try and call her from time to time to
encourage her to read.’
That could never be the reason why my mother
summoned me to this closed-door session. I continued playing
along.
‘Tell Aunty Dimma not to worry. I’ll talk to
Ogechi.’
We chatted more about Aunty Dimma, but soon, that
bogus topic had certainly come to the end of its lifespan. My
mother adjusted her feet in her bathroom slippers and scratched the
back of her head.
‘By the way, Kingsley,’ she said as if it had just
popped into her mind for the first time when her fingers jogged
around her scalp, ‘what type of work is it you say you’re doing for
Boniface?’
‘I told you I help him run his office.’
‘What type of business exactly is it that . . .
that you help him out with?’
‘With contracts and investments.’
‘Contracts and investments? What type of contracts
and with whom?’
I fiddled with the remote control and laughed
without looking at her.
‘Mummy, why are you asking all these funny
questions?’
‘Kingsley, they’re not funny questions. I want to
know exactly what it is you do for a living . . . how you get all
this money.’
‘Mummy, I’ve told you what I do. And you know Uncle
Boniface is very generous. He gives me money from time to time.
Just relax and enjoy yourself. Let me spoil you.’
‘Kingsley, that’s another thing,’ she said quietly.
‘I don’t want the car.’
I felt as if I had noticed a trickling of blood
running down my leg right after giving her a hug. My mother saw my
face and withdrew her knife.
‘I don’t really think I need a car right now,’ she
said. ‘You know that at my age, I need exercise and the only
exercise I get is by walking about.’
‘Mummy, what does that mean?’
She took a deep breath.
‘Kings, I don’t want the car.’
‘But—’
‘Whatever work it is you say you’re doing for
Boniface, I think you should just get a proper job and leave that
place. Don’t forget you’re from a good home. Don’t forget where
you’re coming from. And you promised your daddy before he died that
any other job was just temporary. You promised him you would get a
Chemical Engineering job.’
That conversation with my father could certainly
not count for a deathbed promise.
‘All right, I’ve heard you,’ I finally said. ‘Come,
let’s go downstairs and watch TV.’
‘No it’s OK. I’m a bit tired. I want to
rest.’
The sound of my siblings’ merry laughter rose from
downstairs. At least, some of my efforts were not in vain.