Thirty
Mrs Boniface Mbamalu was the most beautiful wife
that money could buy. Each of her facial features was perfectly
sculptured. Every item on her lithe, six-foot frame could be
considered a fortune. From the flaxen hair extensions, to the
chunks of metal around her throat and wrists, to the lace fabric of
her buba and iro. And her skin shone with a glorious luminosity
that had nothing at all to do with nature; it could only have come
from inside an expensive cosmetic jar.
‘Good afternoon, madam,’ I said.
She ignored me and swished past. Red-hot fumes were
smoking out of her ears and nostrils.
Instinctively, I retraced my steps. Protocol
Officer was frozen to the spot, as if he had just spied a
three-headed python while taking a stroll in the garden behind his
house. Mrs Mbamalu had swept into Cash Daddy’s office, and from
where we stood, we could hear the sparking of her wrath and the
thundering of her rage. Glass was smashing, wood was crashing, and
her voice was at topmost volume. Everybody else in the building
must have heard. Yet not even the tough-looking otimkpu dared to
intervene.
‘Useless idiot!’
Crash! Smash! Bang!
‘What sort of rubbish is that?!’
Bang! Smash! Crash!
‘Whatever you do with your private life is none of
my business, but I will never have you flaunt it in my face. Are
you hearing me?!’
Smash! Crash! Bang!
‘If you know what’s good for you . . . better
relocate that stupid girl . . . my next trip!’
Slap! Slap! Slap!
Within minutes, she had finished delivering her
message and vamoosed. From what I could gather, she apparently had
discovered that Cash Daddy was renting a flat for one of his
girlfriends on the same street in London, Belgrave Square, where
she, his wife, had her own private apartments. From all
indications, this woman had flown all the way from Lagos to Port
Harcourt, taken a taxi to Aba, stopped at her husband’s office, and
afterwards headed directly back to Lagos. The straightforward
purpose of the trip had been to communicate some slaps.
After she left, I went into Cash Daddy’s office
with Protocol Officer. The place looked as if a tornado had dropped
by to say hello. The exotic vases were smashed to smithereens on
the floor, the wall cabinet was lying facedown like an Islamic
worshipper, every single item on his executive desk had been
transferred to the ground. Interestingly, the only thing in the
room that seemed untouched was the photograph of him in a
traditional chieftaincy outfit. The image looked down on the
dishevelled room from its position high up on the wall.
Cash Daddy was sitting on his swivel chair, with
head bent and hands folded on the executive desk. That desk, I
noticed, was now in a slanting position. Protocol Officer started
picking things up off the floor with the morbid efficiency of one
who had seen it all before. I stood, marvelling at the effects of
this ironic sort of rage that immoral single women suddenly develop
against immorality as soon as they get married. Was this not the
same woman who they said had been a professional mistress in her
time?
Abruptly, Cash Daddy looked up. A drop of blood
escaped a cut on his lower lip. He licked it, like a reptile
capturing its dinner.
‘Kings, do you believe in love?’
‘Yes, I do,’ I answered slowly. I knew for sure
that I had once loved a certain woman.
He laughed.
‘Let me tell you something. Women are like babies.
Just give them whatever they want and they’ll keep quiet. Don’t
mind all their shakara. The only time a woman becomes dangerous is
when there’s nothing else she wants from you.’
I said nothing.
‘Did you know that?’
‘No, I didn’t,’ I lied.
He laughed and shook his head.
‘Kissing may be the language of love, but it’s
money that does the talking.’ He paused. ‘By the way, when are you
planning to get married?’
I had not thought about marriage since Ola.
‘I’m waiting for the right woman to come along,’ I
replied.
‘Stay there and continue waiting. If that’s the
case, you’ll never get married. All you need to do is fix a date
for the wedding, book the venue, pay for the catering . . . just
plan everything. As soon as you’ve done that, you’ll see that the
woman will just appear on time and fill in the slot.’
I knew that he meant every word of what he was
saying.
‘What about your current girlfriends? Is there none
of them that you can marry?’
‘I’m not in any relationship right now.’
‘Do you mean you don’t have any relationship with
any girls you want to marry or that you don’t have any girlfriends
at all?’
He often referred to the female gender in plural
form, as if they did not exist except in batches.
‘No, I don’t have any girlfriend.’
‘Kings, stop trying to make me laugh. I have a cut
on my lip.’
‘Cash Daddy, I’m not joking. I don’t have a
girlfriend.’
It took a while for the disbelief to cover the
whole region of his vast face. Then he uttered a scream that
rattled the pieces of glass on the floor.
‘Are you serious?! Are you really serious?!’
I smiled. What was all the fuss was about?
‘Come to think of it,’ he said meditatively, ‘I’ve
never seen you with any women. I thought there might be some you
left behind in Umuahia who were taking care of you from time to
time. So what’s the problem? What’s wrong with you?’
Now it was my turn to laugh.
‘I’m serious. Tell me the problem. What’s wrong
with you?’
‘Nothing is wrong with me.’
He turned his voice into a whisper.
‘Are you having some problems with your
machete?’
‘Cash Daddy, I’m fine. Nothing is wrong with
me.’
‘Or are you a homo?’
Accusing another man of such a thing could easily
lead to a mouthful of broken teeth. I let the insult pass.
‘Cash Daddy, I’m not.’
‘Kings, I beg you in the name of God. I know that
relatives are the cause of hip disease, but right now, I have
enough problems on my hands. I don’t want to add the one of having
a homo brother.’
‘Cash Daddy, I’m certainly not gay.’
‘So what’s the problem?’ He had turned the volume
of his voice up again. ‘If a man is denying that he has a swollen
scrotum, the place for him to prove it’s a lie is by the riverside.
Why don’t you have any women?’
‘I was in a relationship that ended a long time
ago. Since then, I’ve not really—’
‘A relationship!’ He screamed louder than ever.
‘Your head is not correct! Are you trying to tell me that you don’t
have regular servicing from women? Are you normal at all?’
‘Cash Daddy, it doesn’t really matter to me. I
believe that true love is more important than sex in a
relationship. After all, sex isn’t one of the basic
physiological—’
‘Come on will you shut up your mouth! I don’t
believe it. How can I have somebody on my staff who is not being
taken care of? Please leave off that your big grammar and just shut
up. Your head is not correct.’
He paused thoughtfully. Then looked up with face
aglow, as if he had just discovered fire.
‘Kings, when is your birthday?’
What had that got to do with the price of
fish?
‘Am I not talking to you? I said, when is your
birthday?’
‘It’s on the sixth of November.’
‘Good. I know what to do. I’m going to give you an
early birthday present.’
He brought out his phone and ordered someone at the
other end to meet us in the VIP section of his hotel bar later that
night. I marvelled at this man who had just been smashed by his
wife, and who was now trying to vivify my sex life.

The Bon Bonny Hotel was a popular hangout for
people in our line of business. The car park was jammed with all
manner of exotic cars and the lobby was equally jammed. Men in dark
glasses and dark suits waited as their masters dined or womanised.
There were also yellow-skinned, scantily clad ladies who had
probably come to see if they could get their hands on some of the
International Cake.
On my way to the bar, I spied Azuka disappearing
into the elevator with a luscious lady entwined around his arms.
Her bright yellow back was bare. Clearly, his newfound good luck
was still a-flowing.
The writer of an opinion editorial I read recently
in This Day had blamed the proliferation of bleached skin amongst
young ladies on the average 419er’s preference for yellow women who
went hand-in-hand with his flashy lifestyle. Another editorial,
written by a Roman Catholic priest, blamed the 419ers and their
‘promiscuous lifestyles’ on the recent ‘rise in materialism’
amongst young girls and their tendency to dress in ‘Babylonian
apparel’. Yet another writer blamed the 419ers for importing the
AIDS virus to Nigeria.
Blaming problems on 419ers had turned into a
national pastime, but then, it all depended on which part of the
elephant you could feel.
I knew, for example, that Cash Daddy was personally
responsible for the upkeep of the 221 orphans in the Daughters of
St Jacinta Orphanage, Aba. He tarred all the roads in my mother’s
local community. He dug boreholes, installed streetlights, built a
primary health care centre. Just two days ago, I received a letter
from the Old Boys’ Association of my secondary school requesting my
contribution towards a new classroom block. I replied immediately
to say I would fund the whole project. I knew what it felt like to
endure classrooms that had no windows, no doors, and no tiles on
the floors, just because the complete funds pledged towards the
project had not yet been collected.
So, no matter what the media proclaimed, we were
not villains, and the good people of Eastern Nigeria knew it.
In the bar, I sat at an inconspicuous table and
waited. Cash Daddy was the Patron Saint of ‘African Time’; he would
be at least an hour late as usual.
A waitress strutted over with a priceless
smile.
‘Good evening, Oga,’ she beamed, and jiggled her
waist to one side.
‘Good eve—’
‘What of Oga Cash Daddy?’ she beamed, and jiggled
her waist to the other side.
‘He’s coming later,’ I replied.
I asked for a bottle of Coke and tipped her enough
to compensate for the beaming and jiggling. As I sipped, I peered
around the room.
There was Kanu Sterling. Both he and Cash Daddy had
worked under Money Magnet. I had heard that Kanu lit his cigarettes
with one-dollar bills.
There was Smooth. A chromosomal criminal, unlike
some of us. Well educated, extremely cultured, he had been familiar
with the good things of life since birth. But while he was
schooling in Stanford, USA, the sweet lure of illegal money had
been like a siren to him.
There was Amarachamiheuwa. He was personally
responsible for the death-by-cardiac-arrest of one of the most
prominent businessmen in Brazil, after duping the man out of 115
polo horses.
Cash Daddy arrived exactly two and a half hours
after the time he had given me - without Protocol Officer, which
meant that he probably had a high-maintenance adulteress waiting in
one of the rooms and would spend the night at the hotel. He went
from table to table, slapping hands and exchanging wild laughter.
These men were not necessarily his friends, but they were all
united in the brotherhood of cool cash.
‘Pound Sterling!’ Cash Daddy said to Kanu. ‘The
only currency with a surname! I haven’t seen you in a long time. I
was wondering if the white people had carried you away.’
‘Me?’ the man replied and beat his chest
repeatedly. ‘Cash Daddy, me? How? They no afraid to carried me
away? O bu na ujo adighi atu fa? Does they knows who I am?’
Amarachamiheuwa’s subsequent phone conversation
eclipsed every other sound in the building.
‘Go to my house right now!’ he screamed. ‘No, not
the one on Azikiwe Road! Go to the one on Michael Opara Crescent!
Ask my gateman to show you where I parked my Mazda! It’s inside my
garage, the one that’s very close to my swimming pool! Between my
Volvo and my Navigator! Inside the boot, you’ll find three
briefcases! One contains pounds! One contains dollars! One contains
naira! Bring the briefcase with naira for me! Hurry up and come
back now!’
Finally, Cash Daddy finished his rounds, sat at a
table of his choice and beckoned me to join.
‘The usual,’ he said to the waitress who sauntered
across. She was different from the one who had attended to me
earlier.
I ordered oxtail pepper soup to go with another
bottle of Coke. Our orders arrived in a jiffy.
‘Kings,’ Cash Daddy said after jawing the first
chunk from a piece of fried meat in his saucer, ‘have you noticed
that I never fall sick? Even if I go to a place where mosquitoes
drink blood with straws, I can never catch malaria.’
He leaned closer and whispered.
‘Have you also noticed that my women are always
coming back for more? No matter how many times they’re with me,
they still want more. It’s because there’s nobody who satisfies
them the way I do.’
He laughed.
‘This is my secret.’ He pointed at the meat he was
chomping on. ‘404 works wonders in the body. You see all those
funny diseases that women carry around in their bodies? With 404
you won’t catch anything.’
I was aghast. 404 was dog meat. I had heard of
certain parts of Nigeria where dog meat was a delicacy, but this
was my first time watching someone eating it.
‘And another thing . . .’ he continued, ‘404
protects you from your enemies. No one of them can touch me if I
keep eating it regularly.’
He took a sip from the wine in his glass.
‘Should I tell them to bring some for you?’ He
grinned. ‘You’ll need it against tonight. You know you have to
sharpen your machete very well before you set off for the
farm.’
‘No, thank you,’ I replied quickly.
Recently, I had done several things of which I had
never thought myself capable, but eating the body parts of a dog
was way beyond my league.
‘OK, don’t say I didn’t warn you,’ Cash Daddy said.
‘Camille is a very dangerous girl.’
While we were eating, an enchantress stiletto-ed
over to our table in a short red dress that clung dangerously to
her derriere. Her knees and knuckles were black where the bleaching
cream had refused to work. Her hair extensions went all the way
down to her waist and curled at the tips. Cash Daddy patted her
behind and introduced us.
‘This is Camille,’ he said. ‘My jewel of
inestimable value. She’s a law student at Abia State University.’
He grabbed my shoulder and shook. ‘This is Kings. The latest
millionaire in town. After all, our elders say that a dirty hand
will eventually lead to an oily mouth.’
I realised too late that the misapplication of this
popular Igbo proverb was supposed to be a joke. My laughter joined
in when theirs was already at an anticlimax.
Camille bubbled with goodwill to all mankind. She
gazed attentively at Cash Daddy, and winked at me from time to
time. She wiped some grease from his upper lip, and straightened my
shirt collar. Eventually, she reached over and kissed me briefly on
the lips. I worried that some of her rouge might have stayed
behind, but resisted the urge to wipe my lips with my hands. Then
she transferred herself to my lap and smiled like someone used to
turning scrawny sonnies into world heavyweight boxing champions. I
was not sure where to keep my hands; I left them dangling awkwardly
by my side.
Camille’s instructions from Cash Daddy were
simple.
‘Collect the key to room 671,’ he said. ‘Take him
inside and deal with him. It doesn’t matter how much it costs. By
the time you’re through, I don’t even want him to remember his
father’s name.’
•
It was not until about noon the following day that
I was finally able to lift myself out of bed and answer my phone.
It was my mother.
‘Kingsley!’ she said with fire in her voice.
‘Mummy.’
‘You’re still sleeping?’
‘I’m a bit tired,’ I mumbled.
‘Kings, are you well?’ she asked with
concern.
‘I’m fine.’
‘What’s the matter? Are you sure—’
‘Mummy, I’m fine.’
She paused. She remembered why she had called. Her
voice resumed its initial fire.
‘Kingsley, why didn’t you tell me?’
‘Why didn’t I tell you what?’
‘I saw on the news last night that Boniface is
contesting for governor. Is it true?’
Agreed, the Nigerian media were experts at
conjuring headline news out of incidents that never happened, but
surely my mother must have seen Cash Daddy declaring his good
intentions to the world with his very own mouth.
‘Yes, he’s contesting.’
‘Why didn’t you tell me in advance?’
‘I didn’t? I thought I did.’
‘No, you didn’t.’
‘Oh.’
There was a pause.
‘Kings, have you started looking for another
job?’
‘I’m working on it.’
‘That’s what you told me the last time.’
‘Mummy, I’m working on it.’
‘Where and where have you applied to?’
‘Different places.’
‘Does it mean not one of them has called you in for
an interview yet?’
‘Mummy, you know how Nigeria is.’
‘Kings, please, please, please. Find a proper job.
I don’t understand this so-called work you say you’re doing for
Boniface. You know Nigerian politics is very dangerous.’
‘Mummy, I’m not in any way involved in his
campaign. Stop worrying yourself unnecessarily.’
‘There’s no way you can be working with him and
not—’
‘Mummy, I need to go now. I’ll talk to you some
other time.’
‘Remember you promised your fa—’
It was only a matter of time before she would come
round. I returned to Camille. In a short while, I forgot everything
about my dead father and my worried mother. I was transported to
another galaxy.