water

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Gone by Kenneth Nwabuisi

James sits by the river bank and listens. He hears the seagulls cawing. The birds, whistling. The waters dancing to the surface of the seashores. He shuts his eyes so his soul can know peace, his upper eyelids tight against his lower eyelids. His chest is vibrating, trembling. He wants to listen to the water, to the gurgling sound it makes. He wants to hear, once more, the cacophony of Ify’s laughter, but he is troubled by the shuffling sounds the water makes. Ify was his younger sister, and it annoys him that he’s remembering his one and only sister in this way — in a sordid, past tense. He opens his his eyes again and watches as the water trundles, pushing against a huge white stone. This white stone is familiar to him. He can remember it vividly now. The memory of that beautiful, sunny day comes to him like an uninvited guest. It is the surface of this stone that once bore traces of lines from Ify’s tiny fingers. Now, with his eyes closed, he hears from a distance, amid the caterwauling of the waves, a loud scream; that extended piece of cry that had made him bolt from the seashore where he crouched. They visited the water in that morning. Their father, Mr. David, a tall man with bulgy eyes had driven them from their tall bungalow in independence layout Enugu to Akwuke beach. It was supposed to be a fun-filled day. Mr. David had bought the idea of driving them to the water park so he could take the kids away from the boredom and melancholy that was bequeathed on them by the sudden demise of his wife. It was a holiday, and the vacation was a relief from the children’s overwhelming curricular activities. On that afternoon, Ify and James were seated in the back seat, Mr. David riding ahead. It was a slow, bumpy ride. There were moments when James would shout heavily after Mr. David’s car hit a hard surface of the ruddy, tarred road, or when a trailer glided past them. James would close his eyes and clutch his father’s headrest. “Daddy!” he would shout, his head slanted to his father’s bosom. The sun was a ball in the sky as they wallowed into the water. Shadows of strangers who were also on tour trickled around as the scene bustled. Crickets chirped from far and near. At first, the water was tranquil. Mr David pulled down his long trousers to his feet. James did the same. Ify dragged her gown above her head so that what remained of her chest were her pair of brown breasts like mould clay. “Ify, don’t enter inside the water o. You’re not strong enough for it yet,” Mr. David warned. Ify tightened her jaw. James regarded Ify with supercilious eyes before he stretched his hands and took a dive inside the water. Mr. David climbed a huge tree a few feet away, plucking some dogonyaro leaves for some herbal medicine. Soon, the water was crowded with many people that James never knew. Their figure perched around the surface of the water like fireflies. Ify, out of defiance, dived into the water. She swam and swam until the water carried her, pulling her slender body. Water was Ify’s enemy. Mr. David’s early warning was owing to the fact that Ify was sickler. A sick child who came to the world with a body filled with sickness. Mr. David and James knew she could die at any moment. They both carried the awareness of that fact like a heavy sack. Even Ify, herself, bore the same fear. Two years before, Ify had slumped by the staircase leading to Mr. David’s living room. James had screamed loudly. As usual, Mr. David gathered her into his Toyota Camry and drove them to the hospital. On the way, James told his father how Ify had complained that her hands were burning. Later at the hospital ward that reeked heavily of antiseptics, the doctor, a tall, bald man, confirmed that Ify had been swarmed with many activities and that her sickly condition was approaching its terminal stage. Ify lay on the bed, tears dripping from the corners of her eyes. She fought the tears by dabbing them with the hem of folded sheets. “Ify, did you hear what the doctor said? He said you’re going to die soon. You’ll leave your brother and me, the way your mother did.” Mr. David let his fears echo, his words falling like shattered glassware on the tiled floor, moving in circles until they encompassed Ify’s fears. Since that incident, Ify had often been left out in every activity at home. Many times, she had bemoaned her burgeoning feeling of worthlessness. One morning, after Mr. David had disembarked them at their school gate. Mr. Okafor, their school principal, stopped them both and inquired why they came late. And, knowing she was sick, he punished James alone and ordered Ify inside the classroom. “But, I can help my brother. We both came late, didn’t we?” Ify cried. Diving into the water was a getaway for all the numbness Ify had often felt. Even though she had feared her death, she also knew that that single act of letting herself be carried by water would forever bring her peace. At least, in all her feelings of worthlessness and inconsequential, she was glad to find solace in something so free and cold, like water, like the kind of life she was impelled to live — cold and silent. In school, James was her mouth, her hand, her legs. James fought for her when her bones were too frail to move. James spoke for her when silence was all that her gagged lips produced. Even in her inability to walk, James lent her his shoulder. James didn’t believe his eyes when he looked at the exact point Ify stood and saw emptiness. He didn’t scream. He thought a wayfarer might have carted away with

Blog, Creative Essays

Blood Is Thicker Than Water

“I have put the books on the table Ma” “Okay, thanks. Please get me that marker on the table too.” “Here it is Ma. I’ll be on my way to the class now…” “Hold on a minute Sandra…I asked you to come with me to the office with the books, not because I needed the books here but because I wanted to talk with you away from the prying eyes of your classmates. Can I speak with you for a few minutes?” “Ma…?” “Do you have a few minutes to spare before your free period is over?” “Y…Yes Ma.” “Please bring that chair close and have your seat.” “O…Oka…Okay Ma.” “Don’t be nervous Sandra. I just want to have a heartfelt conversation with you. Like an older sister to a younger sister and like a mother to a daughter.” “All right Ma.” “Do you remember the first time you came into this school?” “Yes, I do. I guess I was in …uhm…” “JSS 2?” “Yes Ma, I started in JSS 2.” “Exactly. You were a bit nervous on that day, you stuck closely to your uncle. With beaming eyes albeit displaying uncertainty did you look around the school premises, surveying the new environment around you. You were dressed in a white flowery top and a blue jeans with cute ponytailed hair on your head.” “How do you remember all that even after three years have passed Ma?” “Of course, I do remember because I take special interest in every student here. This is my 13th year in this school and my 10th as the principal. Do you remember the first person who came to say hello to you and your uncle when you both arrived the school premises?” “You…?” “You sure remembered. Yes, you’re right. At the office, on that day, your uncle explained to me that you lost your mom when you were very young – as a baby…” “She actually died while giving birth to me.” “And your dad, the month before you were brought to this school.” “Yes, his was in an accident on his way to work.” “I am so sorry about that. My heart really goes out to you. At such a tender age life had been cruel to you. I can only imagine what you have been through.” “Thank you Ma. Most times I have had to deal with disquieting thoughts, blaming myself for my situations; maybe mom would have been alive if she wasn’t pregnant with me and maybe dad would still be alive if he hadn’t set out for work on that day because of me.” “Oh, my dear. You have definitely been through a lot. Despite everything that had happened to you, you still display courage and strength especially in your academics which is very commendable…I am sorry if my initial statement brought painful memories back to your mind… I never really meant it that way…” “It’s okay Ma. Thanks. I have learnt over the years to accept what I cannot change from the past but instead to try to do the best I can in the present.” “That’s a nice resolve Sandra. But you might be wondering what it is that I wanted to discuss with you, isn’t it?” “Yes.” “I have watched you closely over the years, Sandra. I could easily tell when you’re happy and when you’re not. Since the past two terms, there have been drastic changes in you, both in your personality and in your academics – please move your seat closer to me. I can’t see that young angel with a beautiful smile always humming on her way to the school library every day. That lass who always waves at me from the windows when returning from the science lab. That girl who would always come on top of the class no matter what happens. What I see now, Sandra, is a girl who is in self isolation, a girl who has gone hiding into her shell, a girl who barely passes her examination. Tell me, my dear, what is going on?” “It’s nothing Ma, I think I’m fine.” “You might say that, but I can clearly see that you are not fine…” “I said that I am fine! I…I am… f-ine.” “Oh my child, what’s going on? Please talk to me. My heart aches seeing you cry like this.” “I want to end it all Ma… I can’t bear this anymore. Why is this world so cruel to me? Why? Why? Why?” “I might not know exactly what you’re going through but I can feel your pain, Sandra. Rest assured, I am here for you. I really want to know what you’re going through in order to help.” “I am a broken vessel that can no longer hold water, a pretty rose flower trampled on by caravans, a gray-haired eagle flying with just a wing; how far will it go before giving up?” “Sandra, you are speaking in parables, can you please help me to understand what you’re saying?” “I don’t know what else to do Ma, I don’t know who else to turn to. I had wanted to bear this burden but for every second that passes, the burden becomes heavier, I am at the point of giving up Ma.” “No Sandra, don’t give up. There is nothing falling from the sky that the ground cannot accommodate. I will make sure to stand by you Sandra, but you still need to let me into your mind. Please remove the scales from my eyes, help me to understand what you’re going through.” “Can… Can I trust you Ma?” “Of course, you can.” “Please help and protect me.” “I promise to do all I can to help you Sandra, I promise.” “It’s… It’s my uncle.” “Your uncle? What about him?” “My once loving uncle has turned into a ravaging beast, a blood sucking animal with scary eyes and sharp claws.” “Okay…?” “Oh, how I curse the day he and his wife came to live

Blog, Essays

IN DEFENCE OF KAIKAI (LOCAL GIN)

  THERE IS NOTHING ILLICIT ABOUT KAIKAI. GET OFF YOUR COLONIAL AND TEMPERANCE INDUCED IGNORANCE ABOUT THIS GREAT ANCESTRAL SPIRIT OF THE AFRICAN RAIN FOREST OF SOUTHERN NIGERIA! But the humour apart and all the claim of god’s gift to one side: It is instructive to understand the historic and colonialist dimension of the bad reputation foisted on kaikai. Just like colonial legislation targeted palm wine tapping to check its impact on palm produce exportation and exploitation to the benefit of Britain. Similarly, kaikai was made illicit by a concoction of British colonial mercantile buccaneering as well as certain Caucasian puritanism infused temperance assumptions that saw the so-called African native as a sub-human baby that needs to be cared for so. If whiskey, vodka, bourbon, tequila, rum etc (alcoholic drinks that are traditional to specific cultures of the world) are produced and bottled and appreciated by drinkers and connoisseurs around the world, why should we continue to look down on our own homegrown, traditional drink? Is it not a very colonialist mentality that we indulge in self-glorification-status-symbolising of drinking single malt whiskey, VSOP, Brown Label and Purple Label while viewing drinking and drinkers of kaikai with negativity. Just in case you didn’t know, exactly the same way kaikai/ogogoro intoxicates, similarly so all those your expensive and foreign spirits you think elevates your status. Just the same way you can appreciate fine whiskey, brandy or gin and differentiate it from a poorly distilled one; so also we can appreciate beautifully distilled kaikai/ogogoro and we know too, to avoid the fake distillers who do not have the true inspiration of the ancient art of the master distillers of this great and natural and organic and ancestral spirit of our hallowed rain forests. The foreign spirits that have been elevated by the sprinkles and spangles of branding and subliminal mind editing do not hold a monopoly of evolutionary improvement. Our kaikai in all its genealogical pristine progression is profoundly eugenic in its die-hard survival and continual thriving in the face of historic and continuing: give a spirit a bad name to extinguish it. Our kaikai can never die. It survived colonialism and it will survive this haughty disdain of this generational ignorance. Those who know and chose to know more, know. But for the ‘religionised’ and ‘oyibonised’ pretenders of a non-existent posh mongrel illumination…The continuation of casting aspersion on kaikai as illicit and dangerous is a colonialist induced inferiority complex that you need to unshackle yourself from. Sharp sharp. In the meantime, to hell with schnapps (it is not the true spirit of the Elders of the Rain Forest), let the libation we pour to our ancestors remain the unending mythical seven rivers of unending spirit that continually flows down to us from the illustrious heights of the palm and raffia trees…of our deep rain forests. Chiemeka Ozumba #kaikai #ogogoro #akpuruachia #sapelewater #AncestralSpiritsFlowEndlessly

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