Friday, September 24, 2010

ULIVYOKUWA MGOMO ULE


(Mgomo wa Chuo Kikuu Moi, 2009)
Mlipuko. Rabsha. Watu kukimbizana, kukanyagana. Majibwa. Jekejeke. Kulikoni? Hapakuwa na wakumjibu mwengine. Kila mmoja akaiswafia nia kauli ya mguu niponye. Naam, mguu uliponya wengine; ila wengine waso kismati waliyaona machungu uso kwa macho. Polisi, polisi, polisi. Kama waliotumwa na malaika Izraili, walitaka kulipasua fuvu lolote walilolipata. Kukawa ni tandabelua isiyoelezeka kwa maneno. Kweli, baada ya kisa mkasa.

Seng’enge zikawa pingamizi kubwa. Mwenzangu, unapofukuzwa na askari aliyebeba kigongo kilicho ngangari kuliko cha mvule, inabidi ujinusuru. Wasemao husema mbwa hafi maji akiona ufuko. Basi iweje: ufuko upo, ila seng’enge zimeukinga. Nazo hazitaki kubanduka ng’o! Ni hali ya kutamausha. Majibwa ya polisi nayo yalikuwa na ari ya kumng’ata yeyote bila simile. Kukanyagana ndiko huko. Kusahauliana. Kutweta. Kutokwa na jasho. Kifo. Naam, kifo.

Wengine wakaamua kuingia kwenye shamba la ngano. Kujinusuru eti. Laiti wangelijua. Askari waliwafuata kenyekenye na wengi wao walipata kulionja rungu lile. Ni rungu ambalo dhoruba lake li chungu kuliko mikuki yote ya nguruwe duniani. Hata mmoja kaonekana kwenye ukurasa wa mbele wa gazeti la Nation. Akipokea gongo. Mabinti walizirai; si mmoja si wawili—mabinti lukuki. Na wengi walipokea marungu pasi huruma. Vilio. Yupo mmoja aliyezimia, akaamka usiku wa manane; akajipata asikokujua. Mtume! Pengine wapo waliobakwa. Pengine.

Wengine haooo, kwenye mashamba ya mahindi. Na mashamba ya janibu hizi si vishambavishama; ni mashamba maddal-basari. Vitoamachozi viliwaandama huku wakienda matiti. Dafrau! majibwa yaliwabwaga chini wengine, na bila shaka walioshikwa kwa njia hiyo walikiona kilichomfanya sangara kuchomwa moto. Na usidhani waliotoroka walikuwa wakijua waendako. Ilibidi kuzihepa tariki kwani askari walikuwa wakipita kule na magari yao, marungu mikononi. Basi, wengi wakatorokea wasikokujua wala kukufahamu. Na ilikuwa mbali na chuo. Mbali. Hebu tafakari: mtu yuakimbia kuelekea asikokujua, akiruka seng’enge, akikumbana na mifugo, akiruka mashimo. Ilikuwa ni hali ambayo mtu lazima kibuhuti kimpande. Wanakijiji wakawa ndio waauni.

Kutembea walikotembea wanafunzi mosi hiyo hakuwezi kumithilishwa na chochote. Ikawabidi wengi kupita mbali; hadi Kesses Dam. Wakakifuata kijito kitokacho huko hadi kuitwako Falls. Ndipo wakafuata vichochoro wakarudi chuoni, hoi bin tiki punda wa dobi kando. Yakhe, angurumapo simba, mcheza ni nani?

Ndipo katika msukosuko ule, kundi moja likaona upenyu. Upi? Gari lililokuweko barabarani kule. Halambe-halumbe, wakamtoa dereva ndani kwa nguvu. Mwanafunzi mmoja akaushika usukani. Wengine wakaliabiri gari. Kwa fujo. Wakakaa kotekote, motemote, potepote. Gari likazidiwa ila halikulalama. Lilisalimu amri kwa muda. Likaendeshwa mbiooo, kuelekea hapa chuoni. Faya kun faya, polisi wakatia nari gari lao pia. Wakaanza kuwafukuza wale walioliabiri gari. Kasi. Ndipo maji yalipolizidia unga gari lile na bingiri! likabingiria. Yaliyofuata mauko. Nadhani mwayamaizi fika.


PILLOW TALK (SHORT STORY)



Y
ou say I’m too wet? That I have a wet dream too many? Sorry for that, dear pillow. I believe that is not the meaning of being slippery, is it? Is it, good pillow? Is it? You see, I sometimes can’t help having my mouth agape when in my dreams; not that I leak. Apologies for the streams of saliva that find themselves drawing maps on your pink, fluffy casing. Come on, I wash it as often as possible, don’t I? I’m that considerate, dear. Am I not always a good girl to you?

Now, dear pillow, let’s talk; talk like true confidantes. You are my dearest companion; my most trustworthy friend. You also host the stadium that is my head every night, what with its ceaseless activities and thoughts ad infinitum. So I believe you know me to the finest detail. Before you I have no secrets, nothing to hide. The wise ones advise us not to let the day end with any of the day’s problems unsolved. You are the one who helps me work out my puzzles before you see me off to Wonderland with daily greetings for Alice. 

Tonight, I have a lot in my head, dear pillow – sooo much stuff I don’t know where to start from. Talking of start, do you think I should start getting romantic with that guy Fred? Sweet pillow, I know you know how many times I have shed tears on you over heartbreaks (the one I have given and the several I have received). Guy after guy has taken advantage of me and my heart can’t possibly break any more. Should I swallow the hook, the chain and the sinker, this is going to be my fourth relationship in six years and – I don’t know what this is – I have a feeling that it is going to work. No, I mean I want it to work out this time. Fred isn’t a bad guy, is he? Day after day, he keeps getting better. See, he doesn’t drink or smoke; he doesn’t look like a smooth operator: I have gone to his room several times and he hasn’t tried anything silly. And I must admit I like his physique.

Dear pillow, should I bank on this dude? Of course I swore I would never give my heart en masse to anyone anymore. With vividness, I remember that night I kept asking you, amid sobs, why I happen to love too much. I couldn’t help hating myself for getting myself too attached to callous men. For a whole night and half a day, I asked myself why I couldn’t be a carefree girl like most others and love without any seriousness—even date several guys at a go. I drained all my tear pots on your pillowcase, lamenting and being spiteful. I am wiser now; trust me. I feel my heart has fallen for this guy. And today he made his intentions clear. He wants me. He asked for a hug and, poor me, I couldn’t resist, lest I sent mixed signals.  Anyway, what’s wrong with just hugging?

Not only that. Jo is back. He wants me back. At around 4 p.m. today as I was in Fred’s room, surfing the net in search of a job, he texted me. Luckily, or unluckily, Fred had gone out. He had been called him for some errand or other. He said (in his usual flowery language) that he was sorry for what he did to me and that he has found it hard to move on. Most memorable is the way he concluded the message: “Miss u swits. XOXO.” Before I knew it, I had I deleted the message. 

So, sweet pillow, Jo wants me back. Jo of all people. After almost a year of roaming wherever he was roaming, he has now come back to roost, like the proverbial chicken. Tell me, do people take so long to move on? A year? Mustn’t he have been in a relationship with someone else and has now had his fill and is coming to exhaust whatever he left of me? Is he really sincere?

Yet I never knew Jo to be a dishonest man. The college days usually flow back to me whenever I remember him. He was a classmate. Never did I like him at first—I hated his flashy, voluminous clothes and irritating unsuccessful attempts to make people laugh. In fact, I remember telling Mariana, another classmate, that I would not be found dead hugging Jo. How wrong I was. 

It happened in so weird a manner that I sometimes regard myself silly when I remember the course of events. While I was a second year, with just a year remaining to complete my studies and get a diploma in Chemical Analysis, I was placed in the same class group as Jo’s. The tutor, a no-nonsense grey-haired fellow, said we were to work in those groups for the entire academic year. 

Dear pillow, I had never subscribed to the gospel of one thing leading to another. But that is precisely what happened. Let me remind you that that guy Jo is the most gifted schemer south of Sahara and north of Limpopo. Slowly, schematically, tactfully, he slithered into my heart, what with the compliments he gave me each time we met for a discussion, either for being well dressed or for giving a strong point; the subtle texts he sent me every other night (texts which got more and more explicit as time went by, till they became what we sometimes call ‘sexts’); the bars of chocolate he bought me . . . till that day I had the guts to ask, “What do you really want from me? I have a boyfie, mark you.”

“I want you to be my friend,” he said, winking bewitchingly. Then I realized that he could be having some rumour of handsomeness after all. I had something of regret about having hated him with such verve.

“You mean we haven’t been friends?” I asked, feigning the look of Margarita asking Alejandro something of life and death in a Mexican soap opera.

“We have, but not to the level I’d prefer,” he said, moving an inch closer. I looked at him move and gave a ‘don’t do it again. OK?’ look. He neglected. Rude boy. Tactful. I secretly liked his daredevilry.

“You guys, sometimes you get too nuts. Too nuts for even monkeys to salivate over.”
He laughed, and said for the umpteenth time that I had a wild sense of humour which he happened to like.
“Haven’t we been interacting since first year? Haven’t you known me all this while?” I asked, neglecting the compliment, though I felt something of pride deep inside.
“You see, Maggy. . .” he moved even closer. And, my, it was getting late. Almost everybody had left the institute library premises.
“ . . . I have always admired you. I have been observing you all this while. I have been seeing your every other movement, interaction with other guys and all. And I think you are quite different from other girls.”
I did not reply.
“Maggy, let me ask you one question.”
Silence.
“Maggy please.”
Silence.
“Maggy, do you like me?”
I felt the urge to tell him how much I hated him. But I thought of the chocolates he had been buying and all, and I decided to tell a white lie.
“Yes. Why?”
“I have a feeling you don’t.”
“Proof?”
“What did you tell Mariana?”
I was lost for words. At that instant I felt like getting hold of that loudmouth Mariana and extract her brain, in the process asking her why the silly and anticlockwise-rotating grey matter can’t demarcate between mere gossip and serious talk; teach her something about the repercussions of verbal diarrhoea; reduce her tendency to be a good conductor of rumours.
“Didn’t you tell her you hate me to death?”
“No. She must have made that story up, maybe for reasons known best for her,” I stated, with a most serious tone. I had never known myself to be such a good actress.
“Alright,” came the answer.
He never knew how much relieved I was. I said it was time we left the library premises for it was getting late. He preached something about moonlit nights and romance but I couldn’t give him more audience. I had to preserve my pride; to show him that he couldn’t sway my decisions all too easily. Men need such treatment, if the memory of what Mum once told me serves me right.

Then the gospel of one thing leading to another unfolded with full force. Before I could say Alejandro, Jo was my boyfriend. I couldn’t love two guys so I dumped Trufee, that village bloke. Dear pillow, I must admit I was a bit insensitive but, OK, I was acting on impulse. Remember that text I sent him? He had asked why I had gone silent so suddenly. What I texted back needed no Einstein to decode what I intended to put across: Some advice, Mr. Shamba Boy: Shut your a** lest the sh** you’v just shat diffuses back, sucker. And it was over for me.

When I think of what I did to Trufee, I shudder. OMG, what did I just do? He had been my soulmate for seven dog months and I liked the fact that he was a stress-free guy; the sort of person who can be trusted to be meaning every word of it when he says, “I see no other girl but you.” Trufee is perhaps the reason why I have not wished to go back to the countryside. I better stay at the city, looking for a job. Since January I have been here. Six months and counting. 

I am told he got so depressed after my rash SMS that he almost turned suicidal. My sister tells me she met a highly charged Trufee the morning after my text; a Trufee who was cursing, swearing, breathing fire. It was a tall order calming him down.  When she called me asking what the heck I had done, I replied bluntly that Trufee had outlived his usefulness, that he had better shown his true colours and turned grey like the early man ape he was. She told me I was losing it. I said I was dead serious. Afterwards, I heard, Trufee became a drunk. He quit his job as an untrained teacher and said he might not join university even if his letter came carried in a silver platter. But he did go after recovering. He is now a first year in Egerton University,  Njoro Campus. 

I think the way I dumped Trufee was a bridge too far. But that is now water under the bridge. 

Then I was head over heels in love with Jo. He showered me with gifts, restaurant food, trips, snacks, luxurious magazines, sanitary pads, top-of-the-range clothes, cards, lollipops, chocolate, love, love, love. My girlfriends envied me for being the apple of his eye, for being the most prized possession of the wealthiest man in Rift Valley Training Institute. I couldn’t help feeling a little spoilt. Those are the times, dear pillow, that I could drench you the most. Every night I was in Fantasy World, where only Jo and I existed. We could do all that people in love do in Mexican soaps plus more: We could chase each other, splash beach water on each other, tease each other, chase again to some accommodating rocks and make love, wild love. 

Such was my infatuation till that Wednesday morning I realized I was pregnant. To be pregnant while in college? No way. I had three months to complete my course. I called Jo. Asked my roommate to accord us some privacy, which she did without demur. Told Jo everything. He didn’t appear worried. Said I had to flush the goddamn thing, that he wanted no babies yet. But couldn’t he marry me then? He said no. Not yet time. I had to flush. He gave me five thousand. Told me to do it. 

And I did it.

That Saturday when I did it, he came at around 7 p.m. to check my progress. We talked in euphemisms, codes and circumlocutions. He made me vow never to tell anybody about the it business. He was surprised, just like I was, that one could do it and come back fit as a fiddle. I told him I had sought a professional’s help. Then he gave me a card, neatly enveloped. By then, he had given me around a thousand and one cards, so I was in no hurry to read it. We had supper, lay in bed and had a lengthy pillow talk (do you remember what we discussed, pillow?), exchanged sweet nothings and he left for his room.
I don’t know how to put this, put let me simply state that it is over. That thing wasn’t mine. Reliable sources tell me that you have been visiting some fellow at the countryside; your home area. So, from this moment, let it end there. I won’t ask anything back. Keep all my gifts. And learn how to get pregnant in future.
As I read that letter, which had been tucked amid the card, thoughts whizzed in my head. That is when I decided to look at the card. I usually started with the inside message before getting carried away by the cover aesthetics. It was a funeral card. A funeral card. The big title on its cover read: “CONDOLENCES”. I sighed. Strange things happen when a guy you have trusted that much becomes so uncaring and dumps you in such a blunt manner. Strange things happen when, after you have been duped to go against your principles, you are forced to pay the price. Condolences? Condolences for what? O my pillow, I cried. Cried like a baby. I regretted having degraded Trufee so unfeelingly. It was my turn to show my true colours and display a pale, wrinkled skin of a used, dilapidated post-menopause woman. 

Till the next Sunday afternoon, I was crying, shedding tears, mucus and all on your pink pillowcase. Didn’t sleep a wink. My roommate could do nothing to help. Then I vowed I would never love again then pulled a Cinderella—slept till the next Monday evening. Getting over the relationship was an uphill task but I somehow managed; but not without a severe hangover.

Dear pillow, the three months elapsed. I finished college. Went home at the countryside feeling guilty for having abused Trufee; having trampled on his feelings and demeaned him. Many people in the countryside knew of it. And they thought I had acted in a rather unorthodox manner, as my sister Suzy duly informed me. Almost a year had elapsed but my careless act had not faded from the people’s collective memory. I was so ashamed I couldn’t stand it. 

Thus I came to the city. To look for a job. My pillow, you were among the few possessions I carried with me that Monday morning as I left for the city. Dad told me to look for Uncle Ongeri for guidance. Mum advised me to be careful. A first born has to act like a first born, she instructed. Sister Katy was not so happy for I had stayed home for just a week after finishing studies from ‘the land of the Kalenjin’. Brother Sam was as expressionless as ever. That boy amazes me.  Suzy just told me not to treat any other guy like I had treated Trufee.

In the city, I decided to be independent. They had given me enough money to look after myself. I rented a room in one of the middle-class estates. 

Looking for a job is not one of the rosiest things, especially for someone like me fresh from college. Six months down the line and nothings seems forthcoming. But I haven’t despaired yet. Hope is my abode. 

During the six months, lots of men have expressed interest in me, especially company bosses. Go to look for a job in some institution and all you encounter is a horny boss (without any job at hand but willing to listen to you, because you are female) ready to use you then dispose of you. But that is the one thing I, Margaret Nyasani, cannot and will not do. Climbing the ladder horizontally is not one of my definitions of being a go-getter. It pays when one isn’t ready to bend over backwards every other time. 

In the course of my job seeking, I met Fred about two months ago. He is one subtle guy who appears principled and disciplined. It is damn hard to find such guys in an urban setting. They live few plots away from the place I reside. He is 26; I am 24. Their family is one of the well-to-do ones. He has a whole room to himself, with several gizmos to boot. Like me, he is also looking for a job—he just graduated from Inoorero University. And, going by the connections his father has, he will soon be in a payroll. 

I go to his room regularly to check my mail; to see whether some institution or other has expressed interest in my CV. We are great friends. But today he expressed his intentions quite clearly: he wants me. Plain and simple. And I can’t help but think of the quandary, the quagmire, the catch-22, the dilemma I am in. 

Should I give him my heart, sweet pillow?

O my, it is 11 p.m.! And I haven’t slept yet! And tomorrow I have an interview at Haco Industries? Dear pillow, forgive me once more if the clipboard I have placed over you as I wrote these musings has hurt you. I won’t do it again, OK? Now let me do what I usually do with such things. They are too personal to be read by anybody else, aren’t they? No one should know that I have ever done it

So, allow me to shred these papers like this . . . soak them in water like this . . . make paste like this . . . throw them off the window like this . . . switch of the lights like this . . . sleep on you, pillow,  like this . . .

IN MEMORY OF DENNIS



(He is that guy who died during the 2009 Moi University demonstration)

And when you let out your first scream whilst the nurse proclaimed it is a boy, no one knew that you were letting out a symbolic scream. No one knew that you, like everybody else, had set foot in the world to look for your death—and look for it you did. Then, as you had a taste of the bittersweet worldly air and cried, no one was aware that you would one day join Moi University, Main Campus as a Language and Literary Studies student.

So it came to pass that JAB jabbed you into this prestigious institution, and you chose to specialize in linguistics, to consummate your love affair with words. Boy, you had a way with words! I remember that morning you made a presentation in an Art and Communication class. The things you said about Immanuel Kant encoded themselves with indelible ink in my memory, and it is for that presentation that your memories are most fond. “To effectively judge a work of art,” you lectured, “the perceiver has to look at it with disinterestedness.”

 The presentation got so embedded into me that I nicknamed you ‘Disinterestedness’. Friends as we were, I would call you by the word, and you would reply back with it—and we could laugh. And ‘Disinterested’ you were to me till that fateful day when death came knocking at your door, disinterested of the vista of a future that lay ahead of you.

Well, death has always been a sadist but there are times it does whatever it does with contempt of biblical magnitudes. And it had the audacity, like a stalker, to trail you from wherever you had been to the Kesses junction. That is the place ‘Mr. He Who Kills When Life is Most Prime’ called you for a tete-a-tete. We don’t know whatever he told you, because he made the pick-up overturn and dent your head in the process. Funny how paradoxical fate can be. See, you were trying to escape death dressed in police uniforms but met it ennobled in metallic bluntness. Talk of final destination.

In a matter of seconds, a student who had marched with others to air his displeasure about a shamba that had patches of tarmac on it was no more. Then hell broke loose in a manner I can’t state here.

It has been a year since. Time flies, huh?

The next time I will pass by that junction, I will observe a minute of breathlessness and think deep; think of a colleague who perished in a way outsiders termed stupid if not reckless; think of the ridicule students collectively received for ‘demonstrating for the right to go and take beer in town’. I will think of the police, those bite-happy dogs, the teargas, those rungus, the barbed wire. As the bus will be moving smoooooothly (because the road is better now) I will remind myself that you are among the ones who aroused peoples’ conscience to sort out the mess that was—and in a most special way. Then I will visualize how it feels to be some sort of a sacrificial lamb. It’s not an easy task, I reckon. I will then sigh, shed a tear or two before handing my 50 bob note as fare to the Da Shuttle conductor.

Now, as you finish a year under the sod; as the memories of what you were fighting for become wan and cobwebbed; as vehicles vroom on that route unmindful of the price comrades paid for it, and as water passes under the Lelmolok bridge and the Cheptiret one, I have a word for you: IT WAS WORTH THE WHILE, COMRADE.

Let me see whether the song Seasons in the Sun can play again on this computer. It might be the millionth time I will be listening to it today.



OUR DICTIONARY, OUR STORY



(Written for Flashpoint pullout, Moi University. IT'S JUST ART!)

ARRESTING is what you looked that first moment I beheld your sight; and I couldn’t help saying “Ameiva”. I bit my ‘F’ finger over somebody for the first time in eons.

BREATHLESS is what I said you were leaving me, for you are always dressed to kill, I think even when you are in your birthday suit. 

CHIVALRY is the strategy I decided to use; for fear I might lose you before I even got you. I shed my bad boy cocoon and reincarnated into a most gentlemanly fellow. Your hostel might never see a more chivalrous me again.

DON’T! is the harsh word you threw at me that first day I tried to hug you – and, my, it hurt. I learnt the hard way that your no means no. Principled lady. But I stayed on, a hustler as I am.

EXPECTANT is what I became, as I waited for you to ‘digest my proposal’ and be my one and only.

FOGGY were my days before you accepted me; and you don’t know how many prayers I made at the Chaplaincy, asking for divine intervention.

GLOOMY were my nights as I waited; I daydreamt in lecture rooms . . .

HURT would sure be my other name if you rejected me. ‘Usinikatae utaniumiza’ became my most listened to track. 

INFORM me please, why did you make my frail heart suffer so?

JEEZ, I had never kowtowed so submissively before a lady.

KNEAD my emotions you did: when you couldn’t SMS me back, when you couldn’t pick my calls, when you couldn’t accept my Facebook friend request . . . 

LITTLE did I know that you were gauging my resilience. For four long weeks.

MA’AM, why did you test my patience so painstakingly? Why such a tough exam?

NOUGHTS upon noughts are what I think I scored. Did I pass really?

OSTENSIBLY, as you usually say, I passed. No sup. My transcript! My transcript! Give me my transcript!

PAP! Then came the evening you called me to your room. Need I say I was taken aback, wowed, confused?

QUIETLY, I came, expecting anything. Pussy footing. The Thursday had after all been harassing during the day.

RICH was the food you had cooked (I again say you are a superb cook), and warm were your smiles; which made the dish a feast, then . . . 

SHRED not my heart is what I remember you saying, as you threw yourself in my arms. I melted.

TATTOO is the only word that can describe how my heart beat then: it was beating a tattoo. I couldn’t believe I was the one hugging such a Miss Kenya.

UNMATCHED was my happiness, as I asserted that I would always be faithful, gentle, caring, loving. Never mind I was half conscious.

VALENTINE’S DAY was just the following weekend, remember? I felt good, oh, so good.
WOW, I boasted to my boys later on, I have found the one!

XOXO, which stands for hugs and kisses, is our language; not just on SMS or Facebook inbox but also in practice. Btw, XJXJ ma luv.

YUMMY is your tender love, two years down the line and still counting.

ZEST is all I want to have; zest in our bond. Zest till the day we’ll walk down the aisle and explore the life beyond; and live happily thereafter like the soap opera stars you revere.