Twenty-six
Despite the plush beddings of my five-star hotel
room, I had a turbulent night. My slumber was besieged with
nightmares about officers from Scotland Yard chasing me in and out
of dark alleys. Most of the officers were female. All of them knew
my name. One who had a striking resemblance to Margaret Thatcher
had just made a wild leap at me, when I woke and saw that it was
morning. My heart was throbbing like a drum warning a village
against danger. I sat up in bed and pondered.
What was the best way to break the news to Cash
Daddy that I had changed my mind? Should I tell him the truth or
just lie in bed, pretending that the airplane diet had turned my
digestive system upside down?
Slowly, I threw the bed covers aside and went to
the bathroom. After a cold shower, I dressed in the Armani suit and
Thomas Pink shirt that Wizard had accompanied me to purchase from
an Aba ‘Big Boys’ boutique. It would be idiotic and cowardly for me
to back out now. Plus, my uncle would be enraged.
When we stopped by his room, Cash Daddy swept his
eyes over every inch of my body.
‘Keep it up, keep it up,’ he said, nodding.
Walking with Protocol Officer towards the elevator,
I could not help but smile. Cash Daddy had actually given me
sartorial approval.
The hotel restaurant was quiet, with just a few
people sitting at the dainty tables. Sitting alone, sipping from a
teacup and darting his eyes about like a pickpocket, our mugu was
easy to identify. He waved his hand shyly and eagerly, like a man
who had just spotted his thirteen-year-old bride disembarking at
the bus station. He stood as we approached. A chubby, well-dressed
man with brown hair, Mr Winterbottom had glittering dollar signs
stamped all over him, even his smell.
‘Good morning, Mr Winterbottom,’ Protocol Officer
said.
‘Hello, Mr Akpiri-Ogologo,’ the mugu replied.
We shook hands. Protocol Officer introduced
me.
‘This is engineer Lomaji Ugorji,’ he said. ‘He’s
the liaison officer in charge of our international operations. He’s
our point man in all foreign transactions.’
‘It’s my pleasure to meet you,’ he said.
I wondered for how long the pleasure was going to
last. We sat and ordered tea. There was something about Mr
Winterbottom’s total comfort in our company that made my fear
flee.
After we had exhausted the topic of the London
weather and completed a comprehensive analysis of the climates in
Argentina and Nigeria - apparently, Argentina was at its winter
peak in July, while the sun came all out in December - Mr
Winterbottom asked us about the minister’s arrival.
‘Why don’t you give him a call to let him know
we’re waiting?’ I suggested to Protocol Officer.
‘Yes, why don’t you?’ Mr Winterbottom
seconded.
The minister had given us an 8 a.m. appointment. It
was 9 a.m. and he had still not appeared. Protocol Officer dialled,
spoke briefly and snapped the phone shut.
‘He said he’ll see us in five minutes.’
Mr Winterbottom nodded happily.
Half an hour later, the minister entered. In his
flowing, white, embroidered agbada and grey cap, Cash Daddy looked
like the man who was in charge of formulating key policies for some
major oil-producing economies of Africa. He smiled at us and sat at
a different table. We abandoned ours and hurried over to him, with
Protocol Officer leading the stampede.
‘Good morning, Alhaji,’ we all said in greeting. I
and Protocol Officer genuflected for emphasis.
‘Alhaji, this is Mr Winterbottom,’ Protocol Officer
said. ‘Mr Winterbottom, this is Alhaji Mahmud, the Minister of
Aviation of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.’
‘I don’t like that place you were sitting because
anybody passing can see me,’ Alhaji Mahmud said.
Arriving late, no apologies, it was typical. Ladies
and gentlemen, I present to you a bona fide Nigerian top government
official.
‘And once people know I’m in town,’ he continued,
‘they start disturbing me for one favour or the other. Government
is a heavy burden. Sometimes one needs to rest.’
When we were all seated, Cash Daddy looked at the
menu with disdain.
‘Rubbish,’ he declared.
‘Sorry?’ Mr Winterbottom queried.
‘Rubbish. You white people eat all sorts of
rubbish. There’s nothing like Nigerian food. Anywhere I am in the
world, I look for a Nigerian restaurant where I can go and eat real
food. It’s just because of you people that I agreed to eat
here.’
All three of us apologised.
‘It’s not everybody that I can make this sort of
sacrifice for,’ the minister said. ‘You know Mr Akpiri-Ogologo here
used to work under me in the ministry long ago, before I became
Minister of Aviation. He’s very close to me.’
Mr Winterbottom looked at Protocol Officer, his
eyes shining with a new kind of respect.
‘Thank you very much, sir,’ Protocol Officer said
humbly.
Cash Daddy proceeded to order almost everything on
the menu, and shocked me with the genteelness of his feeding
process. He took slow, small bites like a well-bred little girl and
chewed without enlarging his mouth.
Over breakfast, we chatted about the wind and the
waves and about life and times. Throughout, the minister was jolly
as a shoe brush. He told anecdotes and cracked jokes and laughed
with all his might. The white man consumed several cups of coffee
without touching his food. He kept hopping about on his seat and
giggling long before the minister’s punch lines. Clearly, he had
other things on his mind. At the end of the meal, the mugu offered
to pay the bill. Nobody tendered a word of argument.
‘So let’s get on with business, shall we?’ Alhaji
Mahmud began.
Protocol Officer got on.
‘Alhaji, like I was telling you, Mr Winterbottom is
very interested in the development of Africa. His company has
invested in several projects in South Africa and Uganda.’
He went on to elaborate on Mr Winterbottom’s sound
qualities, speaking humbly and sparingly like a man who knew that
he had limited time to make his case. He had started mentioning the
bid for the Akanu Ibiam International Airport project, when Cash
Daddy truncated his speech.
‘Where did you say you’re from again?’ Alhaji
Mahmud asked. ‘Czechoslovakia, was it?’
‘I’m Argentinian,’ Mr Winterbottom replied. ‘My
parents were originally English and then they lived in Uganda where
I was born. But I moved to Argentina in the seventies.’
‘Unbelievable!’ exclaimed Alhaji Mahmud. Three
diners and four waiters shot glances at our table. ‘I’m very
excited to hear this! A real international citizen! And you’re also
one of our African brothers. Unique. We don’t only have black
Americans, we also have White Africans.’
Mr Winterbottom giggled. We smiled.
‘With our young democracy,’ the minister continued,
‘Nigeria is ripe for huge foreign investors like you right now. And
we’re trying as much as possible to diversify. Most of the big
contracts my department has awarded recently have all been taken by
the Germans. I don’t want them to start thinking that Nigeria
belongs to them. If it took so long to chase out the British, who
knows how long it will take with the Germans?’
It sounded like a joke. I and Protocol Officer
laughed. Mr Winterbottom did as well, after looking round to make
sure that nobody was eavesdropping.
‘It’s time to open up our country to others,’ the
Minister continued. ‘What better place to start than with a white
man who is even our own African brother?’
Cash Daddy slapped Mr Winterbottom on the back. The
giggling and smiling resumed. Abruptly, the minister sobered
up.
‘Mr Winterbotom, let me tell you something. This
Akanu Ibiam Airport project is very close to my heart. The Igbos
have been advocating for their own international airport for a long
time, and I’m delighted that in my tenure as Minister of Aviation
of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, their dream is being
fulfilled.’ He turned to me and Protocol Officer. ‘You’re Igbo,
aren’t you?’
‘Yes, Alhaji,’ we said.
‘Ah.’ He shook his head with pity. He kept on
shaking his head. ‘Mr Winterbottom, do you know what a nigger
is?’
The white man recoiled, as if a viper had briefly
flicked its tongue out of Cash Daddy’s mouth. He shifted his eyes
to me and shifted them to Mr Akpiri-Ogologo, then back to the
minister again. He seemed unsure as to whether this was a trick
question, whether he was supposed to admit knowing what the dirty
word meant.
‘Do you?’ Cash Daddy insisted.
‘Oh, it’s a term that never finds its way into my
vocabulary,’ Mr Winterbottom replied.
‘But you know what it means?’
‘Errrrrrrrrrrrr . . . Yes.’
‘The Igbos are the niggers of Nigeria,’ Cash Daddy
declared, pointing at us. ‘They’ve been maltreated and
marginalised.’
He stopped and drew a valiant breath.
‘Ignored,’ Protocol Officer quietly added.
Cash Daddy glanced quickly at me.
‘Forgotten,’ I mumbled quietly, too.
‘Do you understand that they live in the only
geopolitical zone in Nigeria without an international airport?’
Alhaji Mahmud continued, still pointing. ‘This one is going to be
their first.’
‘Thank you very much, Alhaji,’ we said.
‘I’m not Igbo,’ Alhaji Mahmud lowered his voice
modestly, ‘but I feel so honoured to be part of this historical
event.’
The white man opened his mouth and swallowed the
noble proclamation like a seasoned ignoramus. How could anybody
look at Cash Daddy and imagine that his name could ever be anything
like Alhaji Mahmud - a name that was more likely to belong to a
Hausa person from the northern part of Nigeria? Cash Daddy had the
unmistakable thick head and chunky features of the Igbos. Plus, a
concrete Igbo accent. It did not matter whether it was a
three-letter word or a five-letter word, each came out with its
original number of syllables quadrupled, and with so much emphasis
on the consonants that it sounded as if he were banging on them
with a sledgehammer. The Hausas had more delicate and slender
facial features, and the phonetic structure of their mother tongue
gave them an accent that sounded almost Western.
Cash Daddy was right! The white people did not know
such things.
‘I might be a Hausa man,’ the minister continued,
‘but I have always believed in One Nigeria. That’s why I’m so glad
that Biafra didn’t succeed.’
He went on to narrate details of the Nigerian civil
war with tears filling his eyes. How, as a child growing up in
Kano, Northern Nigeria, he had watched a Hausa man slit open the
belly of a pregnant Igbo woman with a dagger. The woman had lain
there in a pool of blood while the baby wriggled about and gasped
for air.
‘Why?’ he asked with tears in his voice. ‘After
all, we are all one. One flesh, one blood.’ He sniffed.
‘Why?’
‘Oh dear,’ said the mugu.
‘They are our brothers and sisters. Why must we
treat our own people that way?’
I could hardly restrain my admiration for Cash
Daddy. His tongue must have been made of silver. If this was a
rehearsal for his live performance as politician and future
governor, my uncle was sure to win rave reviews. And there was
something about his voice. It had a certain irresistible attraction
like the smell of fried chicken. He could probably even talk a
spider into weaving silk socks for him. The same magic was in his
face. Under his gaze, you felt like the most important figure in
his life. From Mr Winterbottom’s face, I could see that his soul
was being thoroughly converted to mugu.
‘The time for unity has come,’ Cash Daddy
proclaimed. ‘Allah has given the call. Unity amongst Igbo and
Hausa, amongst Hausa and Yoruba, amongst Yoruba and Igbo. One
Nigeria! My dear friend, it’s at times like this that I understand
why America had to fight the Cold War. You understand what I
mean?’
I did not. The white man, on the other hand, was
several scales ahead of me in the evolutionary process. He
understood perfectly.
‘I’m with you,’ he replied.
Cash Daddy speechified some more. By the time he
stood up, ready to leave, even I was convinced that we had been
breakfasting with the minister of aviation of the Federal Republic
of Nigeria.
‘I have a meeting with the British transport
secretary later this morning,’ Cash Daddy said, ‘to finalise
discussions on the Nigerian-British Bilateral Air Services
agreement. I need to make some phone calls before then. Mr
Winterbottom, it’s been nice meeting you.’
The minister departed in a whirl of good humour. We
were left sitting around the table in silence.
‘Quite a remarkable man,’ Mr Winterbottom finally
said. ‘I like him. I like him very much. Very friendly and
down-to-earth.’
Mr Akpiri-Ogologo reminded Mr Winterbottom of
something.
‘Oh yes! I almost forgot.’
Mr Winterbottom leaned under his seat and brought
out a carrier bag. It contained the two Rolex watches, one Sony
camcorder, and two Nokia handsets Protocol Officer had told him
that the chairman of the Contracts Award Committee had specifically
requested as part of his bribes. Thanks to Wizard’s online search,
Protocol Officer knew the exact high-tech models to ask for.
‘I hope I got the right ones,’ Mr Winterbottom
said.
Protocol Officer dug his hands into the carrier bag
and inspected each item.
‘I won’t know for sure until the Chairman sees
them,’ he replied. It was always wise to make allowance for future
requests.
Back upstairs, Cash Daddy flung one of the Rolex
watches at me.
‘Throw away that toy on your wrist,’ he said.
I switched watches immediately. My new Rolex was as
fabulous as Aladdin’s ring. But instead of throwing the Swatch
away, I would pass it down to Godfrey.
That was one thing everybody liked about Cash
Daddy. He was not a cheat. Unlike some godfathers who reversed
tongues when good things came in, Cash Daddy always made sure that
each participant in a job received his fair share.
In his own special way, my uncle was an honest
man.