He arrived with the spicy purple of
the sunset, at the end of a long, hot, dusty day. They sat on the cool veranda
and watched him walk up the side of the road into town.
“Where’s he from?” asked Mma Boago the owner of Mable’s
Takeaway, a takeaway that had never known a woman by the name of Mable.
“Don’t know. What’s that he’s carrying?”
Johnny-Boy, Mma Boago’s perpetual customer and occasional bed-mate, asked,
squinting his eyes to get a better look.
“Looks like a guitar. Dirty
long dreadlocks and a guitar. He’s not bringing anything we need around here,
that’s for damn sure.” Mma Boago turned and went back inside; she had magwinya in the deep fryer and
couldn’t waste time keeping track of unwanted strangers.
Warona was dragging her
daughter, Kelapile, to the clinic when she spotted him. She wasn’t one to
believe in love at first sight and fairy tales with happy endings, having
witnessed Kelapile’s father’s profession of undying love just before he slipped
into bed with the neighbour. It was more than being heart sore: Warona’s heart
had been pulled out, knocked around for twelve rounds, then placed back into
her chest to perform only the bare minimum required to keep her moving. Some
days she wished it would give up on that, too.
“Hurry!
They’ll fire me if I’m not back in an hour.”
Kelapile’s legs could only go so fast, decided by their three-year-old
length. Warona bent down and pulled the child up onto her back. When she looked
up again, there he was.
“Do you know where I can find the guest
house?”
Practical Warona didn’t
mention to anyone the way that her eyes went a bit funny the first time she saw
him. She didn’t mention the golden light
that surrounded this odd stranger. It made her feel warm, and a barely held
memory flooded over her, a remembered feeling, one that she had flung away deep
into the folds and creases of the grey matter of her brain to be forgotten
forever. It was joy; she felt a warm, orange joy.
“Are you okay?” he asked.
His full lips and kind dark eyes twisted with concern.
“I’m fine, thanks. The guest house? Come with
me, I’ll show you. It’s near the clinic where I’m going.”
As Kelapile fell asleep on
her back, Warona, with each step, fell in love with this stranger. It was
reckless and without sense, but irresistible. It was a curious, spooky magic,
but she welcomed it.
“I’m Silas,” he said.
“I’m Warona.”
That was the beginning. The village
looked on with jealous eyes as the pair flew high up to the clouds floating
lazily in the silky blue sky, while the villagers stayed stuck to earth with
their leaded minds and chained hearts. Resentment built against the couple and
leaked out in words whispered in hidden corners and small actions made in
public.
“Nothing good can come of
that,” Mma Boago cautioned.
Johnny-Boy nodded in
agreement. They knew only that love defined by the limits of a stingy life.
Status gaining love. Money grubbing love. Security seeking love. It had been so
long since pure love had moved among them all they could see was an outsider,
an enemy.
Days
passed. Silas played music while Warona hung bits of forest-green glass in the
sunny window to create emerald patches of light that flicked around the
one-roomed house. Kelapile danced. It was like that every day as they tried to
circumnavigate the tricky path they’d set out on.
Silas
was happy where they were, but he spoke of other places where he’d travelled,
of the world out there where every step brought a new surprise and a new way to
think about things. Aquamarine seas with whip cream waves. Brown and gold
beaches. Magenta mountains. Warona would lie in his arms and listen about those
magical places and Silas would rub her head opening her mind to make space for
all of the pictures he created.
But it wasn’t all smooth sailing.
The hovering gossip filtered through their shell of private dreams, and Warona
was affected. She wondered if the rumours were true. When she slipped into the
villagers’ way of thinking, she fought against Silas.
“Stop it!” she’d
shout. “What do you want from me? Go back where you came from; you know you
will one day!” Tears flowed and she
pushed her mind to make her heart a block of cold white ice.
Silas was not troubled by this. He knew words
backed down when you faced up to them and told it like it was. He would slowly
reel Warona back in, pour warm love over her ice heart, and set her back on the
course they were travelling.
Then one grey day, they
disappeared. All three of them. Mma Boago was cutting off chicken heads when
Johnny-Boy came rushing in. He ran this way and that, his eyes wild with
excitement. “I saw it myself.”
“Saw what?” Mma Boago said
as the cleaver came down with a thud, separating surprised body from instantly
dead head.
“They’re gone.”
“Who’s gone?”
“Warona, the baby, and the stranger. They
walked down the road, back into the sun from where he came. Walked and then
just … they were suddenly gone.”
“Better. People were getting
ideas. We don’t need that kind of thing around here.” MmaBoago raised the
cleaver and slammed it down hard into the wood of the chopping block.
Johnny-Boy pulled out a beer
from the under-counter fridge took a big gulp and nodded his head. Like always,
Mma Boago was right.
____________________________________________
(This story is included in the collection of stories set in Botswana: In the Spirit of McPhineas Lata and Other Stories)
3 comments:
lovely,now i want to read more :)
Thanks Wada! When you're in Gabs the book this is from is now at UB Bookstore and Exclusives-Riverwalk.
Oooh. Just wonderful! Thanks. xoxo
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