I
was dreaming of laughing clear blue eyes under sunny skies and the sounds of
laughter echoing in the mountains. I was running behind, following the sound of
the laughter, hypnotised by the blue eyes. I kept running, looking up, and the
sunlight in my face and I did not see what tripped me only to find myself on
the ground. My hands instinctively shot to my belly, cupping it as a sharp pain
cut through. The pain woke me up. It was already morning and light seeped into
the room through the cracks in the door. My pain felt like period pain, but it
couldn’t be, would it? I was pregnant for Jemu
wasn’t I? My period was late, I had had dizzy spells that night I told Jemu about the pregnancy.
I curled into
a fetal position when the second sharp pain shot through from the pelvis and
when the pain subsided, I stealthily got out of the room, with a bucket of
water and toiletries and eased myself into the latrine. With the panties pulled
down to my knees, the raw crimson stain seemed to stare back at me
accusatory, signifying my loss, my emptiness.
I
mechanically cleaned up and on lead feet, walked back to our sleeping hut. Jemu was still in bed and from his
steady breathing, I could tell that he was still sleeping. I took down the
leather bag I kept my sanitary wear so I could return the pack of cotton wool I
had taken out and that was when I felt him move behind me.
“What
is that?” he asked as I tried to stuff the cotton wool away quickly, resulting
in the bag falling to the floor, scattering everything.
I
stood there like a child caught with their hand in the honey jar whilst my
insides felt like someone was pulling a barbed wire in my belly. James pushed
back the blankets and strode to where I
stood. He picked the plastic with the cotton wool and turned to me.
“Why
do you need these now?”
It
felt like my tongue had stuck to the palate and I was being forced to deal with
James’ emotions first before dealing with mine.
“Speak!”
he roared in the morning stillness, “Are you even pregnant Mara?”
When
I did not respond, he roughly took me by hand and pushed me onto the blankets.
He pushed my skirts up with one hand whilst the other hand pinned me down and
then yanked my panties off. A slap across my face followed, then a punch in my
gut. Instinctively my hand went to my belly again to cup it but when I received
another slap across my face, I covered my face with my palms. I did not know if
it was his sweat or spit that was falling on me as blows rained all over my
body whilst he mumbled incoherently. I turned to my survival mode and shut
down.
When
I came to, James had left the room, leaving the door ajar. Two of the road
runner chickens had found their way in and where perking at the sack of maize
meal that rested against the walls. I lacked the strength to even shoo them
out.
****
My
neighbor found me on the floor of the sleeping hut, zoning in and out.
“Mai Jemu, you haven’t swept the yard up
to this time?” she shouted laughingly, standing outside.
I
kept quiet. I wanted her to go away, I was ashamed of having people see me
battered and embarrassed. Not that people did not know that James beat me up
every now and then, but it felt embarrassing for me to come out in the open and
prove it, with my words and my bruises.
“Mai Jemu!” she shouted again and I
closed my eyes, willing her to go away.
Then
she saw the chickens in my hut and she walked close to the door to get them out.
When she poked her head in, she saw me, lying there, clothes askew, numb with
pain.
“Mai Jemu!” she gasped and ran in,
crouching next to me.
“Again?”
she asked, helping me sit up despite my groans.
I
shook my head to say no and tried to come up with a lie about walking into a
wall or something but I found out that my lips had swelled and I could not
speak properly.
“Please
do not tell anyone Yeukai,” I begged my neighbor as she left after helping me
clean my cuts with warm salty water and she had hugged me and walked out.
*****
I
could hear James’ voice a distance away. He was singing, loudly. He seemed drunk.
And in a good mood. I scrambled to my feet to get his dinner served before he
threw another of his tantrums he had been indulging in lately. The fire was
dying but the food was still hot and the water to wash his hands was now warm,
to his liking.
The
singing grew closer and in the next minute he stood in the doorway, bringing
with him the strong stench of beer. He scanned the room with unseeing eyes then
stumbled inside, hiccupping. When he threw himself in a sitting position on the
slab close to the door, I went towards him, on my knees, with a plastic dish
and a water pitcher in my hands, to wash his hands. He dismissed me with the
wave of his hand, hiccupped and said,
“I
am not hungry, let me be.”
I
slowly retreated, still on my knees, unsure of what to do.
“I
ate the most delicious meal today,” he spoke again, “and received the best news
too.”
I
placed the pitcher and the dish on the floor and started busying myself with
putting away dishes and killing the fire. James grew quiet and I was even convinced
that he had fallen asleep. Then he spoke, startling me.
“I
am going to be a father. Snodia has made me happy, I should have married her
not this broiler who is just here to eat and get fat.”
I
froze to my spot, in the dark, a loud ringing in my ears. He rose, shuffled in
the dark, fumbled with the door handle then left the hut. I sat in the dark for
a long time, stunned, hurt and failing to process all that I had heard. I
eventually rose and on lead legs, walked to the bedroom to try and rest. James
was fast asleep, snoring loudly and reeking of beer. I stared at the roof for
the longest time, my mind too stunned to work and it was only morning when I
eventually drifted off to sleep.
The
house was quiet when I woke up, shaking remnants of last night’s nightmare off
my mind. James’ words kept ringing in my mind, “I should have married her not
this broiler who is just here to eat and get fat.”
*****
I
gingerly got out of bed; I had to leave this place. I could stand the verbal
and physical abuse but the humiliation of him impregnating someone else cut me
to the core. What were people going to say about me when it all came out? I
needed to go to my father’s house and breathe.
The
sun was directly overhead by the time I walked into my father’s compound, my
bag on my head. I found my stepmother taking off dry laundry from her washing
line. She looked at me, surprised and asked “I everything okay?” with a peg
stuck in her mouth.
I
wanted to break down then, run into her arms, tell her my story, show my
humiliation and hear her tell me that everything was going to be okay. But I
did not. I held everything in and with my head held high, I told her that I
needed to talk to my father and I also needed to rest here a few days whilst I
worked through my issues. She shrugged and breathed out an “Okay,” then
proceeded to her bedroom, carrying her laundry. I proceeded, with my bag still
on my head, to the kitchen where I found my step brother, Ishe, eating sadza and fermented milk. He pulled the sadza plate closer to him when I sat
next to him and I could not help but laugh.
“I
am not here for your sadza Ishe,
relax.”
“But
you are here to stay right?” he asked nodding towards my bag.
My
father walked in before I had responded to Ishe’s question. As usual, he was wearing
a suit and his black shoes were polished shiny. He took off his fedora which he
placed on his knee when he sat, turning to me. I could smell the beer on his
breath before he even talked.
“Mara,
your mother just told me that you came here with a huge bag, what is going on?”
he begun.
“But
baba,” Ishe quipped when I did not
respond, “mother says she is not sisi
Mara’s mother, hers died a long time ago.”
I
looked to the floor, hurt and embarrassed for my father. I knew Ishe was simply
repeating what he had been told; he was but just a child. I knew my stepmother
despised me and I had made peace with that.
“Isheanesu,”
my father hissed and I saw my stepbrother shrink into the corner, terrified
that he had angered his father.
My
stepmother walked just in time and Ishe ran to her breaking into tears.
“Baba Ishe, what have you done to him?”
she demanded, rocking Ishe in her arms.
“Tell
her to stop interfering in adults’ issues,” father snapped.
My
stepmother opened her mouth to say something but when she saw the look on
father’s face, she stopped.
“So
Mara,” father turned to me, “what is your story?”
“Father,”
I began, a lump in my throat, “Jemu
got someone else pregnant.”
“So?
Has the lady come to stay in your house? Has Jemu thrown you out?
“No,”
I sighed.
“Then
what are you doing here with a huge bag?” he asked, sounding annoyed.
“Father,
how can I stay when he has openly humiliated me like this?” I asked, my voice
thick with tears that I did not want to shed.
“Mara!”
he laughed a mirthless laughter, “so you mean to tell me this is the reason why
your mother had to send someone to call me back from Ndari?
“But
baba,” I heard my stepmother
protesting, “she would not tell me what the issue was.”
Father
ignored my stepmother and resumed talking to me.
“Mara,
I will not be humiliated by having you come back here and stay with me. Your
place is in your own house with your husband, whatever he does, it is you duty
to keep your home intact. What Jemu is doing is normal, he is just trying to
let his family name live on. Respect him Mara, he paid a lot of cows for you.”
I
listened to father with a sinking heart and saw Ishe make faces at me. I had no
place in my father’s house; my husband’s house had also become unbearable.
“I’m
going back to drink with my friends,” he said rising, “so carry you bag and I
will walk you to the main road.”
***
I
walked on, legs heavy, my bag weighing me down in the stifling heat. My father
had gone back to drink with his friends, retired teachers and drivers, who had
a lot of time on their hands. I was alone in the wide gravel road and I was
free to let my tears flow without a care.
The
white Toyota Land Cruiser was by my side before I had time to wipe my tears or
straighten my skirt. The blue eyes of Dr. Kleinmann made me feel like I should
have been standing anywhere else other than on this dirty road, in blistering
heat, weighed down by a battered Monarch traveling bag.
“Please
do not run away again,” he said above the roar of the idling engine, “I just
need to help you.”
I
did not know what it is that made me give in but in a minute, I was in the car,
my back straight against the car seat. The car smelled of leather and some
delicious scent that might have been his cologne. The scent heightened my
senses and his presence made me so self-conscious, especially his eyes, and I
avoided them.
“Are
you alright?” he asked as he started the car and I nodded, looking out the
window in an unseeing gaze.
“You
look sad,” I heard him say but I did not respond and he did not pursue the
subject.
In
no time, we were close to the borehole and I asked him to drop me off where
people would not see me or else I would be in trouble with my husband.
“If
you ever need anything ma’am, just come to the hospital and I will help you,”
he said.
“Thank
you,” I said quietly, grabbed my bag and left before anyone saw me.
James
was not home when I got there, which was a relief because he was not going to
know that I had left. I walked into the sleeping hut with a heavy heart and
slowly started putting my clothes back then I went into the kitchen to start
the fire and begin cooking.
I
was falling asleep on the kitchen floor when I heard the noise outside; someone
was banging at the bedroom door and calling out my name. I scrambled to my
feet, searched for the lamp in the dark then ran outside where I found a couple
of men from the village with James, lying in a cart. I could not see much in
the dark and had to ask what was going on.
“Jemu is badly hurt, get some money and a
book, we need to rush to the hospital,” said one of the men whom I was not sure
I had met before or not.
“How
did he get hurt?” I asked, getting closer to the cart.
“Damn
it woman!” snapped James from the cart, “get some money in my bag, look for a
book and let us go.”
I
ran into the house, fumbled in James’ bag and got a five dollar note. I failed
to get a new book and people outside where screaming at me to hurry,
accompanied by James’ groans. I found one book I had used at the hospital when
I had suffered migraines and I tore off the written pages and ran out into the
dark.
*****
Stumbling
into the out patients’ room from the pitch black outside, it took my eyes
minutes to adjust to the bright light. This was when I also managed to see how
hurt James was. He had a gash across his forehead, raw and angry with the blood
that had clotted and dried around it having already grown dark. Some of the
blood had fallen onto his white shirt, creating rusty stains, and had also
caked in his hands, which he had probably used to try and staunch the bleeding.
No one would tell me how James got hurt and I stopped asking.
The
nurses on duty busied themselves with him whilst the rest of the party that had
accompanied us was told to wait in the waiting room. I was about to join the
party in the waiting room but I was told to fill in James’ details.
The
student nurse was having problems stemming the bleeding and also having a
visibly drunk James to co-operate that by the time the doctor was called in,
she was exasperated.
I
felt him walk in before I even saw him. I smelt that scent familiar with the
interior of his car as he got closer, the soles of his shoes tapping the floor.
I straightened my skirt and patted my hair, feeling drab. Then I checked myself
quickly; why was I preening for this man like my husband was not lying on the
bed across the room, hurt? A part of me though relished seeing James in pain.
He had inflicted it upon me over and over again, physically and emotionally and
now someone or something had got him.
I
slinked into the shadows to let the doctor go past me but when he got to where
I stood, he hesitated briefly, sought me out in the dark with his blue eyes
then walked to the bed where James lay. I exhaled in shudders and watched him
talk to James and the nurses then sewing started. I was mesmerised by the
calmness he exuded as he went about his work, managing the drunken man well. I
was lost in how he moved and talked and even laughed softly once in a while.
“Mara!”
James’ voice broke into my thoughts.
Everyone’s
eyes turned to where I was hiding in the shadows.
“Mara!”
he shouted again sounding agitated and I walked out into the light, slowly
towards the bed.
I
kept my eyes down but I could feel blue eyes boring into me. Or was I imagining
it. I must have been imagining it because when I looked up, the doctor was
washing his hands at the small sink and when he was done, he left the room. The
room felt like it had lost its warmth, its vibrancy, with his departure.
I
felt a sharp slap on my arm and I looked down at James glaring at me.
“What
woman, have you never seen a white man before? Why are you following him with
your eyes like that?”
I
reddened. I had no idea that I had been openly staring after him like that. I
mumbled an apology and the nurses looked away, embarrassed for me.
“Get
my medicine and tablets for me,” said James roughly, “can’t you see that I am
badly hurt and I might even die but you are not even paying attention to me?
Women, urgh.”
“No
Jemu,” laughed the elderly nurse, “it is not a deep wound. You just got a few
stitches; you will be up and about in a day or two.”
He
grunted in annoyance and put his big hand in mine so that I could help him up.
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