Blog, Essays, Writers

Just Because They Lack Beards by Ebube Ezeadum.

My mum is the last born of four girls. Her father, as she narrated to me, was a very wealthy man. He had a growing business in Anambra; he imported cosmetic and beauty products. And his establishment extended to Lagos, Imo State, Enugu State and some parts of Kogi State. As a result, he had cars, lands and several buildings scattered around the East and the South-west of Nigeria like black hairs over the floor of a barbershop. Indeed, he was very influential and was even more popular for his philanthropic acts than his amassed wealth. But he wasn’t happy because of an unfulfilled want — a male child. In most of Anambra State where I come from, a male child was and is sometimes being considered more important than earning the best-wrestler title in the market square. In other words, so much emphasis is placed on having a male child in such a way that a man, no matter how accomplished he is, would not be regarded as a complete man if he doesn’t have one. And so, my mum’s father, Mr. Emmanuel, had to justify his completeness; he had to marry another wife (it was erroneously believed back then that the women were the determiner of the gender of an unborn child. Now we know, as science has proven, that it is the X or Y chromosomes of a man’s sperm cell that determines if the child would be a girl or a boy respectively. The ignorance of this back then, however, pushed the blame on the women and this was most likely his reason for remarrying a second wife even when his first wife, Cecilia, was still alive and his Christian faith did not permit that). Her name was Victoria and as though marrying her was the solution he was awaiting, she gave him his sons — at least Grandpa Emmanuel later became a complete man, right? A few years later, back in the late ’90s, my mum’s mother passed away. I wasn’t even born by then; my mama and papa had probably not even met on the altar of the thought of marriage. I could only see how beautiful my mum’s mother was through an old photo album of her burial ceremony that wrinkled and discoloured with dust and age. After that incident, according to my mother and her three elder sisters, the love which their dad had for them was like the rapid transition of a vigorously lit match stick into burnt ash that only emitted grey frameless smoke. All his love were channelled into the woman that made him a “complete man”, and her seed — the reason for his completeness. My mum and my three aunties had to struggle to pay the fees for their tertiary institution — they all went to UNIZIK (Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, Anambra State). The firstborn, my eldest, started a tutorial in the evening with a black chalkboard using a public primary school nearby. The second, according to her, became a salesgirl for a woman she stumbled upon by the “grace of God”. She went there after classes to not only make a stipend as her salary but to also learn the business of sales and marketing. The third-born went into sales as well. My mum sold clothes, pants, scarf and feminine perfume to sustain herself in school while she read Physics Education at UNIZIK. Later on, under the umbrella of her eldest sister, she started teaching as well. They did this not because they needed to, but because they had no other option — their dad, cared less about them because they weren’t male children. For years this went on until each of my aunties was being stolen into the sight and hands of their husbands one by one in the holy union of matrimony. My mum was the last to get married. When I was two years old, I heard, for I can’t recall things from then, that Grandpa later came to see his grandson. He said I was strong and agile like he was, and as my mum can testify, I was also as hairy as he had always been. I heard he loved me so much, just like he did for my cousins as well. He was getting old, but he could still carry himself like a man in his mid-thirties. Mama told me that we played football together one year when we travelled the East for Christmas. Many years after our last travel to the village in the East, my mum got the news that grandpapa had passed away — I was only eight years old then when I watched my mother lose a lot of water from her eyes. I saw the watery red eyeballs of my mum dart at me. She was supposed to beat me as usual for staining my cloth with soup after eating but she couldn’t even move a bit. It was a moment my own heart was crushed as well. That was probably the first time I would shed tears because someone else was crying. I sat on the floor in front of her and starting weeping silently. I didn’t even want her to notice me crying; as long as my mum, who I have always seen as the second man of the house, was crying, I was pained. She raised her head from the sofa when she heard me sniff in my catarrh; she quickly carried me up to her laps to pacify me. “Mummy,” I recall seeing my face reflecting from the brown pupils of her wet eyes, “who beat you?” She began to cackle even while weeping, she told me that nobody flogged her. She said her dad was gone. “Don’t worry,” my little right hand patted her head, “he would still come back.” Mama looked at the innocent me in the eye and amidst her wet face, she smiled. I didn’t understand what it meant to be gone. “He’s dead. He can’t