Forty-five
At first, nobody was sure how it happened. Early
on Sunday morning, the Indian girls had suddenly started screaming
and scampered out of the room. Nobody had understood what they were
saying. The security personnel had rushed in. Cash Daddy was lying
stark naked on his belly with white foam gathering at the corners
of his mouth and blood dripping from his rectum.
Protocol Officer was summoned. Cash Daddy was
rushed to a private hospital. Shortly after, the next
democratically elected executive governor of Abia State was
pronounced dead. Death by poisonous substance.
For starters, the Indian girls were arrested and
carted off to the police station. But after hours of questioning,
the officers of the Criminal Investigative Division were unable to
get any sensible information out of them. One of the smarter
policemen then came up with an idea. Mr Patel, the CEO of Aba
Calcutta Plastics Industry, was invited to interpret.
The girls said that everything had gone very well
till Saturday evening. But after his nightly snack of fried meat
and wine, curiously, Cash Daddy had declined all their offers of
amusement, stumbled into bed, and fallen asleep. In the morning,
they prepared themselves for his body rub - one of his favourite
daybreak pleasures. They tickled him. Cash Daddy did not stir. They
shook him. He still did no stir. Then, one of them climbed onto his
back. She noticed the foam at the corner of his lips and screamed.
The other two also saw it and joined in.
The police thanked Mr Patel for his services but
still held onto the girls.
Next, all the staff of the hotel restaurant - both
waiters and chefs - were rounded up and also taken to the police
station. Each of them proclaimed undying love for their dead
master; they all swore that their hands were clean. The police
tried different methods to get a confession, all without
success.
Eventually, Protocol Officer suggested
investigating all the staff’s bank accounts. An unexplainable two
hundred thousand naira was sitting snugly in the Diamond Bank
account of one chef. The Indian prostitutes were released, the
other staff were released, the chef kept swearing that he had
received the money from a 419 deal. But when a quarter of his back
had turned raw and red, the man finally confessed that someone had
paid him to poison Cash Daddy’s 404 meat. He insisted it was two
men whom he had met only once. He could not give any further
information about them, not even when the rest of his back was raw
and red.
If Cash Daddy had lived to see the drama in the
days following his death, he would have been very proud of
himself.
The Association of Pepper and Tomato Sellers, Aba
Branch, took to the streets in angry protest. Not wanting to be
left out, the street touts joined in. Their placard carrying,
‘Death to the murderers!’ chanting, and wanton looting lasted for
three whole days, grinding all commercial activity in Aba to a
halt. The mayhem made it into the nine o’clock news headlines. The
entire nation of Nigeria was forced to take note.
Newspaper and soft-sell headlines screamed in
anger. Politicians of timbre and calibre - Uwajimogwu included -
granted press briefings to publicly condemn the senseless killing
of yet another one of Nigeria’s great politicians. The president of
the Federal Republic of Nigeria was not left out of the
tirade.
‘Enough is enough!’ he declared. ‘It is time for
God to punish whoever these assassins are! They shall never cease
to entertain sorrow in their homes, they shall never know peace,
their grief shall be passed on from generation to generation of
their families.’
The inspector general of police went on national
television and made a golden pledge to the nation.
‘Whoever is behind this dastardly act will soon be
unmasked!’ he promised.
As proof that he meant it - this time - he had
invited the British Metropolitan Police into the
investigation.
‘Not because our police officers are not capable of
handling it,’ he explained, ‘but right now, we lack the required
forensic facilities for the successful investigation of these
assassination cases.’
Journalists and opinion-editorials immediately went
berserk.
‘Why not invite the whole British government to
come run the rest of Nigeria?’ some asked. ‘Then maybe we would
have electricity, running water, good hospitals, and our highways
would cease to be death traps.’
‘The rampant assassinations are the fault of the
electorate,’ some others said. ‘They are the ones who reward the
assassins by victory in the polls.’
Yet others cautioned the public about automatically
assuming that all assassinations were political; some could
actually have been in-house engineered.
Protocol Officer did not buy that talk. When he
turned up suddenly at my house a few days after the murder, he told
me exactly what was on his mind.
‘I’m sure it’s Uwajimogwu,’ he insisted. ‘Everybody
else loved Cash Daddy. There’s no one else it can be.’
That opinion was shared by the majority of people
in Abia State. The rioters had even razed Uwajimogu’s campaign
office headquarters in Aba. With Cash Daddy’s relocation to the
other world, he was the new flag bearer of the NAP gubernatorial
ticket, certain to become the next democratically elected governor
of Abia State.
Mrs Boniface Mbamalu had come all the way from
Lagos to take her position as widow in Cash Daddy’s living room.
Each morning, she appeared wearing a different black designer dress
and a different pair of designer shades. With his fresh complexion,
his gentlemanly clothes and English manners, her opara sat by her
side. So far, eleven condolence registers had been filled. Still,
the dignitaries continued pouring in.
‘I can’t believe Cash Daddy has gone like that,’
Protocol Officer continued. ‘Just like that. Every morning I wake
up and expect him to ring my phone. I spend the whole day waiting
for him to ring.’
I also was still finding it hard to believe. Cash
Daddy was one of those people who seemed as if they were born never
to die. Even after Protocol Officer’s phone call, I had to see for
myself. I jumped into my car and accelerated all the way to the
mortuary and saw him lying with his name - complete with nickname -
tagged to his big toe. His face was contorted and pallid. I
clutched my head, stumbled out of the cold room, and collapsed in
the hall.
To think that I had heard the last Igbo proverb and
that I would never again have to shield my ears from his thunderous
‘Speak to me!’ How could Cash Daddy be dead? The man who had taken
me under his wing. The man who had given me a new life. The man who
had given me an opportunity to prove myself when everybody else
kept turning me down. I had not just lost an uncle and a boss, I
had lost a father.
And Cash Daddy would have been good for Abia State.
After all was said and done, my uncle loved his people. He might
have pocketed a billion or two in the process, but in the long run,
our lot would have been better. We would have had better roads. We
would have had running water. We would have had a public officer
who could not bear to watch his brothers and sisters in distress.
Abia had just lost the best governor we could ever have had. I
wailed even louder.
Eventually, an elderly man who could have been a
morgue attendant or a fellow-mourner or a ghost, tapped my
shoulders firmly.
‘Be a man,’ he said sternly. ‘It’s enough. Be a man
and dry your tears.’
He waited beside me until I wiped my eyes and got
up. I realised that I was barefooted, in boxer shorts and
T-shirt.
I did not feel like going home. I drove to the
office and was startled. There were two giant black padlocks on the
main gates and on the front door.
Could it be the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission who had barricaded our office? Could it be the FBI? Had
our friends in the police abandoned us so quickly after Cash
Daddy’s death? With panic, I rang Protocol Officer.
‘I’m the one that locked it,’ he said, in a teary
but firm tone. ‘I don’t want anybody to tamper with any of Cash
Daddy’s things. Nobody should go inside. ’
Amazing that he could function so effectively even
at a time like this. He must have dashed out to lock the office
immediately after learning of his master’s death. But then, no one
could blame me for having been paranoid. First Azuka, then Cash
Daddy. Who knew where the lightning was planning to strike
next?
Perhaps, we were being punished for all the mugus.
I pushed away the thought. The only offences I had committed were
against the people I loved. I replayed my misbehaviour towards
Godfrey and my mother. I was consumed with shame. Truly, I was
becoming a devil.
Nay, I was a devil.
Back at home, I rang Merit.
‘Merit is busy,’ her brother said calmly.
She was still busy the fifth time I rang.
I got dressed, drove to her house and waited
outside, hoping to see someone whom I could send inside to call
her. To my relief, after about two hours, the gates opened and her
skinny brother appeared. He was dressed casually in singlet, jeans
and bathroom slippers, as if he was just taking a stroll.
‘Hello,’ I called out to him.
He froze when he saw me, then scurried back inside
like a mouse caught in full view on the kitchen floor when the
lights were turned on suddenly in the middle of the night. I waited
for another hour without anybody going in or coming out. Finally, I
left.
I changed my mind about driving to Umuahia to see
my mother. What would I even say to her? I locked myself in my
bedroom and stared at the ceiling till dark. With the assistance of
two tiny tablets, I had been managing about three hours of sleep
per night ever since Cash Daddy’s death.
But my deep sorrow could certainly be nothing
compared to whatever Protocol Officer was feeling. I had always
thought of him as the real McCoy Graveyard, but today, he talked
and talked and talked. In between, he sobbed. At some point, I
reached out and placed my hand on his shoulder. My own eyes had no
more tears left to shed.
He talked about how some wicked people were
spreading the rumour that Cash Daddy had expired in the throes of
orgasm. He talked about how the people that really mattered were
being left out of the planning for Cash Daddy’s funeral. The
National Advancement Party, in collaboration with the Abia State
government, had announced plans to honour ‘our great man of peace,
who has left a great example of politics without bitterness’ with a
befitting state burial. He talked about how poorly the crime scene
had been managed. Cash Daddy’s hotel room had not been cordoned off
for several hours after his body was discovered, and the British
police had gathered more than 5,000 fingerprints. He talked about
how Cash Daddy had been a peace-loving man; if not, he would have
got his opponents before they got him.
Finally he stopped. I removed my hand from his
shoulder. We were quiet, then I chortled. Protocol Officer looked
at me askance.
‘Knowing Cash Daddy,’ I smiled, ‘I won’t be
surprised if he rises up from the coffin while all of us are
gathered round during the funeral.’
He thought about it briefly. To my relief, he
giggled.
‘Cash Daddy, Cash Daddy,’ he said. ‘There are no
two like him in this world.’
We went back to quiet again. Suddenly, he dipped
his hand inside the inner pocket of his jacket, brought out a sheaf
of papers and placed them on my lap.
‘What is this?’ I asked.
At the same time, I looked at them and gasped.
Sheet after sheet of foreign bank account details. Cash Daddy’s
holiest of holies.
‘What is this?’ I asked again. This time, my
question meant something different.
‘Kings, Cash Daddy thought very highly of you.
You’re the only one who can take over the work.’
He also brought out two large, shiny keys from his
socks and stretched them towards me.
‘The keys to the Unity Road office,’ he said. ‘You
can reopen it whenever you want.’
I stared at the keys and at the documents.
‘Why did you bring them to me?’
‘Kings, if Cash Daddy knew that anything was going
to happen to him, he would have handed them over to you.’ He
paused. ‘I’m sure.’
I continued staring at the keys. A wave of emotions
flooded my heart. Unlike my natural father, who had left me nothing
but grand ideals and textbooks, Cash Daddy had left me a
flourishing business. I was touched. And proud.
I reached out for the keys in Protocol Officer’s
outstretched hand.
I remembered my mother. I remembered Merit.
My mind changed gear.
Perhaps this was my opportunity to gather my
takings and leave the CIA. Going cold turkey would certainly not be
easy, but with the millions I had stashed away in the bank, I could
gradually start my life afresh. My father had steered me to
engineeing, my uncle had persuaded me to 419. For a change, I would
decide what I wanted to do with my own life. I retrieved my hand
without touching the keys.
‘No,’ I said to Protocol Officer. I gathered up the
sheets and transferred them to his lap. ‘No, I don’t want
them.’
‘Kings?’ Protocol Officer gaped.
I continued shaking my head. He continued staring
with mouth agape. For the very first time in my life, I felt in
control. I was the master of my destiny.