The hours she spent behind the police station counter were
the worst in her entire life, the air was heavy with the scent of urine and
sweat and the noise from the holding cells caused her stomach to rumble in
fearful echo.
Disclaimer
The stories in this blog are first draft stories with minimal editing, sort of like a practice blog.
Tuesday, 13 September 2016
Sunday, 19 June 2016
Mugs
It was the mugs that did me in, the mugs that shattered the dam that held my tears, the caramel, long and
slender twin mugs that had Paris 1921 printed on them. They had belonged to my grandparents, my grandparents who have now departed this world. Those mugs were set on the table that looked like those hospital tables with the U-shaped legs.
They’d sit on the veranda and watch the people on their way to and from the
river, responding to the many greetings that were their due as old people while
they’d give scraps of bread to the many children that sat around their feet.
The mugs now sit on
my father’s bed side table, he used one of them to drink tea when we came back
yesterday. We got home at night even though we’d left Lagos before dawn, bad
roads and impatient drivers conspired to make the journey last almost twice as
long.
The compound was lit by our headlights as we drove in, it
was only the second time we’d seen the house in pitch darkness on our return
home. The first time it happened, my grandfather had been struggling for his
life in a Lagos hospital and my mother travelled with us to the village without
my father and my grandmother. This time is different, my grandmother died only
four months ago.
Going home for
Christmas is a ritual that Igbos all over the world are known for, we’d shut
down our homes and businesses and move eastward to our towns, villages and
homes. Some people travel every year no matter where in the world they stay, it
is unthinkable for them to miss the football matches, visits to friends and
relatives and the downing of vats of palm wine and other alcoholic drinks that
are hallmarks of the season.
We didn’t go home
every year, it was too much of a bother. The plotting, packing and the
stressful journey by road, besides we also liked Christmas in Lagos too with
its light-heartedness and the waking up at seven instead of five, the christmas lights that festooned on every corner, the carols that wafted to the ears from shop to shop. When we came
home to Mbaise, it was very different. We would wake up at six with the wind
whistling in our ears and to the rattling of our fragile bones, we’d shuffle
our bodies to the parlour for prayers and then try very hard to escape from the
little chores that our father liked to spring on us.
If we didn’t see steam rising from the bucket, we’d refuse
to bathe with the tepid water because it would almost certainly freeze over before we
finished bathing. We’d then apply thick layers of Blue seal Vaseline to our
feet and legs, a thin layer of Vaseline would evaporate before noon. Breakfast
would be waiting when we were finished, steaming cups of tea- except for mine,
because I can’t tolerate hot food or drinks; and jagged masses of soft bread or
thin slices (which was rare) of the same soft bread.
Then we’d go to the
veranda to watch my grandparents eat. When we were younger, they’d give us sips
of their tea and give us tiny pieces of bread to soak, they still offered us sips of tea but we'd shake our heads and point at the nearly naked children at their feet who monitored every movement of my grandparents cups. My grandfather would drink only half of his tea before calling them to take their sips of tea, my grandmother wasn't as generous with her tea but she too would give them scraps of bread.
My grandparents always had tea at breakfast regardless of whatever else was on offer, rice and tea, yam and tea, beans and tea but never eba/fufu and tea- a tradition my parents maintained. Unlike us, they had actual tea and not the chocolate and milk mixture that we called tea, Their brand of choice was lipton and even though we thought it a horrid drink, our grandparents' tea never tasted horrible when they called us by the names they had given us and
My grandparents always had tea at breakfast regardless of whatever else was on offer, rice and tea, yam and tea, beans and tea but never eba/fufu and tea- a tradition my parents maintained. Unlike us, they had actual tea and not the chocolate and milk mixture that we called tea, Their brand of choice was lipton and even though we thought it a horrid drink, our grandparents' tea never tasted horrible when they called us by the names they had given us and
My grandparents
didn’t leave much behind, my parents and uncle and aunties can have everything
if they like. I just want those mugs.
Sunday, 12 June 2016
Retroviral Chronicles 9- Give me the night
I probably updated this series last, four months ago. I don't expect you to still remember everything, I certainly didn't- I had to read from the top to remember where I was going with the series! I promise to update this series faithfully (once a week at least) and I hope that you'd follow it with enthusiasm. To catch up on all the action just click on Retroviral Chronicles on the left corner of the screen and if you are using mobile view (my opera mini people say uhuh uhuh!) Here's the link to the first post
Martha wore a dazzling smile when she walked into the office, the euphoria from her evening with Peter still sparkled as it flowed in her blood and thinking of him even now, widened her smile. She was still getting her files from the cabinet when Patricia burst into her office with a fierce expression on her face.
Martha wore a dazzling smile when she walked into the office, the euphoria from her evening with Peter still sparkled as it flowed in her blood and thinking of him even now, widened her smile. She was still getting her files from the cabinet when Patricia burst into her office with a fierce expression on her face.
Monday, 15 February 2016
Retroviral Chronicle part 8- Nightmares and Regrets
Shrill screams woke her up, she wasn’t surprised to realise
that she was the one screaming. She was still panting heavily as she wiped out
the beads of sweat on her neck and brow. The door opened and her mother rushed
into the room.
Monday, 1 February 2016
Retroviral Chronicles part 7- Martha's rage.
I'm rather excited about this series, it's taking a very different form than I'd planned but I'm so loving this new path and all the unexpected bonuses. You can catch up on the older stories in this series if you click on the HIV/AIDS label on the right. Let's start today's episode shall we?
Anytime she saw the girl and her mother waiting to see
Patricia and collect drugs from the pharmacy, she’d want to punch something or
kill something just to assuage the feelings of rage and helplessness that
coursed through her at the sight of them. She struggled to school her facial
features to reflect cordiality even though her heart burned now and had been
burning since Jesse called last night.
Saturday, 23 January 2016
Retroviral Chronicles part 6- The Drunk and the Confused.
“O boy why you fuck up like that na?”
“Bros why you dey talk like that?”
“Jesse, I say you eff up anyhow” Osato’s rising voice
attracted significant attention in the crowded bar.
Thursday, 21 January 2016
Retroviral Chronicles part 5- Guilty as charged.
His wife was not the kind of woman who forgave easily in the
best of times, she remembered the names and offenses of people who’d wronged
her even when she was three years old. As she grew older, she got better at it,
she’d remember the day, time, place and even the clothes that the offender had
worn.
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