719 lines
44 KiB
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719 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
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Underground eXperts United
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Presents...
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[ The Midnight Dance At Noon ] [ By Simon Moleke-Njie ]
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____________________________________________________________________
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____________________________________________________________________
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THE MIDNIGHT DANCE AT NOON
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a short story, with a parapsychological introduction
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by Simon Mol
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When your eyes are closed - you are the Absolute...
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There's no distance
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Between the north and south poles...
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There's no me or you... only a stupendous Totality
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That manifests as an Incomprehensible darkness...
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When your eyes are closed
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You dissolve into an equation, in which one plus one is infinite.
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INTRODUCTION
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Saturday January 13th 2001
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It is 3:30 AM. I am travelling at a tremendous speed in the inner planes.
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I come face to face with the image of my mum. This unexpected encounter
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jolts me in a pitiless impact that leaves no time to figure things out. She
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is shouting an instruction at me. She is telling me not to focus my
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attention on other people - relatives and friends.
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I tell her I have a right to do as I please and deal with whomever I
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feel like. She says I shouldn't defy her or else I will have to contest with
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her wrath. I tell her there is no point in getting angry over the issue
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because it makes no sense.
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At this, she gets really mad at me! Her face takes an unnatural
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prolongation with her neck stretching like that of a giraffe - "I will kill
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you if you fail to obey me!" she yells at me at the top of her voice. My
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totality is at this point concentrated on my forehead as I look her in the
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eyes and tell her "this is impossible!" I say this with my 'will' rather
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than with my voice as I haven't any at this point.
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It is a carefully calculated and masterly executed act of 'Liemba', a
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deadly manoeuvre which has penetrated my fortress and is frightfully
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close... in inner facts, too close to inflict injury. I remind myself that
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in this particular world, blood relation doesn't count. I advice myself to
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stay an inch no longer. Urging with a psychic monster makes sense only in a
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computer play station. I admit defeat and flee, fast too. It takes less than
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the speed of thought by the velocity of inner time to return to this side of
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reality in which you are reading this.
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Yes! I fled from 'that world'... a world governed by the principle of
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self-judgement. It is only now that I ponder over the episode and wonder for
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the first time if it really is the projection of my mum who is thousands of
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kilometres away according to the human lore of time and space. I arrive at
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an inconclusive hypothesis that perhaps it could be a first degree
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impersonation.
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Sunday January 14th 2001
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I had two visitors today from a religious congregation that has been trying
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for over a year now to convert me. I allow them to come whenever they ask
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for my audience, as listening doesn't hurt. I often gather useful
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information on other areas as they come bringing along with them their
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experiences and personal philosophies about life.
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I was born and raised in a catholic home, and attended a catholic primary
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school. Even though now I believe a more practical religion is Poetry, I
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still don't intend to be converted from my traditional religious roots.
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Every religion has the seed of truth buried in, and if man would allow these
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to flourish in true spiritual democracy, any religion would satiate man's
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spiritual cravings.
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As Max Muller said, "there is no false religion, nor has there ever
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really been a false religion, unless you want to call a man a false human
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being." Culture and tradition embody a religious dimension in their
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totality. To disregard or undermine a people's tradition, is tantamount to
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an insult on creation.
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When a person is forced against his will to change his religion or
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tradition, it might even result in mental instability as any change affects
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our total perception of the world around us. Imagine being forced to abandon
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your pattern of breathing and adopt a new one after, say, twenty years. In
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its manifold manifestations, Nature has a reason and room for everything.
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There is a right to have as many religions as man is capable of creating.
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It is the same as the variety of dishes that every country or people have.
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Food is food, and every single dish can arrest the pangs of hunger. If we
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don't like the taste of a particular one, we switch to another. Sometimes we
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get fed up with an excess of a particular type. We abandon it and come back
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to it later when we feel like. It would be wrong and foolish for a Chinese
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to claim that only by eating fried rice with sticks that hunger can be
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stopped. So too an African would be wrong in asserting that only by
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swallowing fufu with palm-oil soup. It goes for everyone, and religion is
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no exception.
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Certain plants flourish in particular areas because of the climate. Try
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hard as you would, it wouldn't do well elsewhere. So too with spiritual
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theories and practices. Certain ideas flourish in particular places because
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of natural squeaks - or this is how I see it. Perhaps I am wrong. But at
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this stage of my ignorance, I like this theory.
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To open our religious discussing, one of my visitors told me that before
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coming to me, they had been earlier to one of their targets for conversion
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- a Vietnamese; "He lost his mother recently and we tried to console him,
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reminding him of the promise of resurrection," she told me adding, "it was
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difficult to make him believe in this, and he asked me several times if am
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sure of this. He wasn't sure of himself and told me that in their tradition
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they believed that after forty nine days a deceased faces judgement, after
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which he or she goes to heaven or hell or whatever realm of punishment or
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reward their believe system stipulates. After burial and while pending the
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forty nine-day judgement, relatives are expected to offer prayers and
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sacrifices on behalf of the deceased. I noticed that there was a table in
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his room which was littered with fruits, candles and incense on behalf of
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his deceased mother.
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I assured him not to worry and invited him to join us in prayers. He told
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me that he cannot stop worrying because since he got news of her death, she
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has been visiting him in dreams and saying that she is angry because he did
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not attend her funeral. 'This happens every night, and now I am damned
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scared! She frightens me!' he told us. I told him that it wasn't his mother
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but a trick played by the Devil. 'Don't believe in this nonsense', I assure
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him," my visitor narrated.
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I didn't say anything. I remembered my dream of last night and realised
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then that my visitor is standing between myself and the Vietnamese. Though I
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didn't know him, there is a binding factor between us. His world is
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strikingly similar to mine with the only difference that he didn't believe
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in himself. In reminding myself that there exists space and time only when
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our eyes are open, I perceived a silent cultural war that threatened the
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Vietnamese's psychological stability. My visitor, I released, had tried to
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bring down a world that was mounted by the Vietnamese's totality, a world...
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his world that was assembled from the day he was born, and she had tried to
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bring it down with her religious arguments. "This is a ridiculous dimension
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of moral and spiritual aggression." I said to myself silently but showed no
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visible sign of disagreement. It wasn't necessary.
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Never, never license
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the eyes of a chanting man
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to pierce your soul...
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the gods are charmed
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by his lyrics,
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and...
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are bound to fulfil his intentions -
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and if these be evil
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then... you are a thing of the past.
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Warsaw, 3:53 AM, January 17th 2001
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THE MIDNIGHT DANCE AT NOON
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by Simon Mol
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The Trans-African express bus from Accra finally reached the city of Douala
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at exactly 7:45 PM. A tall, slim young man of twenty seven highlighted,
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making for the bus station along with other passengers. He was fair in
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complexion, with a broad and serious looking face that endowed his
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character with the features of absolute self-discipline, as a psychologist
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would interpret his protruding cheek bones, large chine, wide and white eyes
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that always carried a straightforward stare and a broad forehead.
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He had a black briefcase in his left hand and was pulling a large
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travelling back with his right. He was dressed in a blue/black trouser under
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a blue checked long sleeve shirt, with a blue/black coat hanging loosely
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over his left shoulder. He had on a black shoe of Italian design. He looked
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elegant and walked with the springy strides of a successful criminal defence
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lawyer, but he wasn't one. He looked too elegant for the part of the
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continent where he was returning from, and where he was heading for - his
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home. He belonged to a different world in appearance, and his mind(?)
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Nganje got briefly swallowed by the crowd. Some of the people he rubbed
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shoulders with looked at him... others looked like him or he looked like
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them... and looked at them. Of all in the crowd he seemed to be the only one
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pressed for time. This was what he thought and had to restrain himself out
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of self-discipline from shouting or pushing at them. It is written that
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"journeys end in lovers meeting."
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He was rushing to reunite with the woman of his life. He was rushing to
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be assimilated by her desire set ablaze by three years of tormenting
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craving. He had resolved to offer no resistance to her fire and had decided
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to allow himself be overpowered by her emotions that had reached a volcanic
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crescendo after three years of absence when he left to continue his studies
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on social sciences in the neighbouring country of Ghana. He finished after
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two years and spent one year there working.
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All the while in Ghana he was dreaming of Eposi. The dream of his life
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and reason for being alive. It was impossible for her to visit him during
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the interval, as it wasn't generally safe for a young lady to travel alone
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by road out of the country. Incidents of rape and murder often happened and
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so they reluctantly decided to bare the brunt of absence and keep their love
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aflame through frequent letter exchanges.
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Nganje scanned the waiting crowd until his eyes fell on her. His face
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glowed with a broad smile and he waved excitedly. As their eyes met... this
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opened a world which immediately swallowed him... and her as well.
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It was their world, a secret world for just the two of them which was
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created and sustained by their combined dream... a powerful dream that
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defied physical laws, bridged distances and reduced three years to a simple
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rainy day that interrupted their game... a game for just the two of them in
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which victory was just as sweet as defeat. Nganje uttered a suppressed groan
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typical of a man who's been emotionally starved. He felt the animal in him
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coming back to alive and he encouraged it. An invisible energy cut across
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the distance between them and settled on his generative organ, he felt a
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light tingling along his spine to the top of his head.
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He rushed through the arrival formalities and quickly joined Eposi beside
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the waiting car. In respect of this sacred moment it is better to skip the
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scene of their first meeting, for how would the imagination capture it? How
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can words describe what transpired then? In the height of their folly, a
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folly that when set on course, rushes like a moving stream, only they knew
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and felt the speed at which they were travelling, without moving an inch
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from where they met for the first time after those three years of
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separation. Time stood still for them, and in their kissing they travelled
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with such speed that blinded them to the watching crowd as kissing and
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hugging in public is as rare as the falling of snow in their village. It is
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considered a moral aggression against public order and treated as a taboo.
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After a long interval in which they virtually melted into each other
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without uttering a single word except for the audible rapture of their
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kisses, they finally came around and got into the waiting old, battered mini
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wagon - a Peugeot 404 with a range of inharmonious colours resulting from
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countless repair works with a shy, shabbily dressed young country boy as its
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driver.
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Nganje had arranged for only Eposi to meet him upon arrival to express the
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esteem he held her in. The occasion was also aimed at providing enough
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special time for their first meeting. But another reason also was that
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coming from such a trip could easily provoke the evil-eye back in the
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village from witches and those of malicious intentions. And so he wanted to
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give his arrival a low-profile as much as he possibly could.
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"Beti darling!" Nganje managed at last, addressing her by her last name,
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which he was fond of.
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"Naoa!" she replied using his grandfather's name, whom Nganje loved
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dearly. 'Naoa' in their native tongue means rock. He smiled and clutched her
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with both hands, and tenderly too, like a child would hold a precious lump
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of ice-cream. His mouth found hers, and for a brief moment they were lost in
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ecstasy, completely oblivious to the driver's embarrassment.
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"Beti darling separation is the worst ailment that can befall lovers,"
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adding, "I promise you it will never happen again."
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"Oh! Naoa!" she muttered and starting weeping.
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"Come on Beti, stop it... I tell you this won't happen again, it's over
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now forever believe me." He said, wrapping her in his arms. When he spoke,
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she noticed that his accent had taken on a Ghanaian touch.
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"Naoa darl, it is your people again! They don't want us to wed. Your
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senior sister says our wedding can only happen over her dead body. She meant
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it. We had a quarrel over it as I couldn't stand it anymore. She said your
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family is prepared to go the extra mile to prevent it. She went further to
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say 'our ancestors shall perform 'the night dance at midday' if this wedding
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comes to pass'... a very serious thing to say Naoa, it is a threat, and I am
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scared!"
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Beti starting weeping uncontrollably at this point. She sobbed and wailed
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aloud. This startled the driver and he stopped.
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"Come on Beti, don't dramatise the situation, you are making a storm out
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of a teacup. A here now to take care of everything," he paused for a while
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and continued, "by the way driver, stop at the very next motel, I want a
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place were we won't be recognised. Get a room for yourself and one for us
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and meet us at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow morning."
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Naoa then turned to Beti, "did you tell your mum about this development?"
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"No I didn't," Beti said, adding "If she knows about it, it won't be good
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for us, you know she is very principled.
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She had managed to bring her bubbling emotion under control aided by the
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persuasive and confident touch of Naoa.
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He led her from the car. All his fatigue immediately left him when he
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felt her so close. He scanned the environment, drinking in the splendour of
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the village air, which was very, very purifying. It was the second best
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thing that happened to him in one day. It had been so long. He surveyed the'
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area as far as his eyes would see and the fast falling darkness would
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permit. Thatched houses formed a zigzag along the twisting lane that cut
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across the little village, with fruit trees on both sides.
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The motel itself was a splendid display of local craftsmanship - wooden
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sculptures standing tall and proud, proclaiming the creativity of masked
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talents. He summed their worth mentally and figured that the products would
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fetch a chunk of money in Europe. He selected a bamboo chair and sat down
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with Beti on his lap. He ordered a cup of matu-tu- from the waitress who was
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dressed in tiger skin with her breast pointing at a provocative angle; a
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strategy aimed at attracting and distracting local clients and tourists who
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usually stopped there for a rest.
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Naoa sipped from the cup - a traditional treasure made from the horn of a
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cow revered by elders. His imagination fled to his days in the village
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before he travelled and settled there for a while before returning to the
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present, which was dedicated to. She was drinking water and her head rested
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on his knee.
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"Beti, if you believe in me as your man, then stop worrying." Naoa said
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and went on, "I acknowledge the enormous responsibility and crucial decision
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that rests on me, for it is either you or my family. I know that I can't
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have it both ways. But know that your love to me is very serious. I have
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never loved before, and don't intend to love another if you give me the
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chance. When I look into your eyes I see nothing but love. My greatest
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satisfaction stems from knowing that you care for me. I will Beti, give you
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marriage... the ultimate token of love from time immemorial."
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Naoa said these words sincerely, succinctly, and with such gentleness
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that only the soul knows of. It had such a hypnotic influence on her that
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she melted like a lump of ice-cream exposed under summer heat. She could
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only weep to tell him that she believed absolutely in him.
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"Oh! Tateh..." She used the informal name for daddy, "you have changed so
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much... so much!" she whispered.
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"Yes! Ndolo la mi," he said in their native tongue, which meant 'my
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love', and added, "conditions change, but not convictions... the conviction
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of my love for you is like the sound of the river behind our village that
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never changes." He replied taking her in his arms. He looked into her eyes
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and added, "Now let's see if I have changed on the bed too!"
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Carrying her like a baby, he entered the little room made of clay and
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laid her gently on the bamboo bed. He proceeded to undress her. Drinking in
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the splendour of her real identity, he trembled visibly as his senses
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reacted swiftly to the charm of her nakedness. His imagination was
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temporarily clouded by a wild passion that bordered on frenzy. She saw his
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reaction and remained silent. She closed her eyes, hoping that he would get
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into her rather than standing there in stupor. It was too much for both of
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them.
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"This is my day," he managed at last as he struggled off his dress,
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"please don't stop me until am through!"
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His mouth found hers, descended over her breast and finally unto her
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pubic area.
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"Oh! darl," she wailed joyfully, "please no!....no! nooooh! Now!"
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His tongue descended into her. This drove her into a frenzy.
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"You are killing me! Do it now!" she quivered.
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And Naoa, like a tired carpenter hitting on a stubborn nail, descended
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into her... gradually. She fainted in ecstasy as they simultaneously crossed
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the winning line, yet both were blind to the price of the race... the sowing
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of the life-giving seed for their first baby. An unmonitored phenomenon
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which time wouldn't allow them to unravel.
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Oh! fate!
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How hard you strike! -
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How fast your darkness descends
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When the sun is seemingly far from the horizon!
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Naoa and Beti didn't know when sleep stole over them. It was the driver's
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knock that got them up.
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Beti nursed a fear. She wondered if Naoa will stand by her in spite of
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all his assurances. Matters of tradition were treated with fanaticism in his
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clan, and his tradition decreed that the father should select a wife for the
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son. She loved him fervently and couldn't imagine a life without him. Naoa
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severed her virginity and was her social mentor as well. He taught her vital
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lessons necessary for a woman's maturity- an essential weapon in tackling
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the difficult world of male dominance. These things have left an indelible
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mark in her mind, and made living without him impossible.
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And now this! What will she tell her mother if the wedding failed to come
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off? she asked herself.
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What will people and her friends think of her? While Naoa was away, some
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where teased her, while others provoked her. Others even told her she was a
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fool to wait for him, as he will meet a more beautify woman where he was and
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get married to her. She had turned down the proposal of many, especially of
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Luma - a wealthy and successful banker, to the dismay of her family.
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She spent almost a year in Naoa's family home against the wish of her
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mum, and some friends and neighbours address her as Mrs. Nganje. She had
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clearly defied her tradition in this case as a girl isn't suppose to live in
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the home of her fiancee without the first stage of the traditional rites
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been performed. Will Naoa do the same for her? Will he defy his tradition
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for her sake? His father was against their marriage for the simple reason
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that she wasn't a full member of his tribe, as her mother belonged to
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another tribe. Her father who could have solved the issue as a member of
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Naoa's tribe was of late, having died two years earlier. She wept when she
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thought of her father.
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Naoa's self-confidence since his return, created fears in her as it made
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it difficult to read his mind. She knew their fear was based on selfish
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grounds, that she will prevent Naoa from helping them. "How naive" she said
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to herself aloud, "how cruel after all what I have done for them! Can't they
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think of my situation?" She resumed her crying at this point while waiting
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for Naoa who had gone out with friends.
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Naoa craved to be alone. It was a crucial period in his life as he had to
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make a choice. It was a difficult decision to make and his position was
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tricky.
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"Still... I must stand up as a man and dance to the tune of my destiny. I
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must face what is coming to me," he said to himself.
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It was a week since his arrival and he was suppose to start his new job,
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but had asked for time to resolve the marriage equation first. He was given
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three weeks and time was running out. Last night he had a talk with his
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father over the issue of his proposed marriage to Eposi. His father was
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inflexible in his decision, which ruled out any marriage to her. He was
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running out of time and patience.
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He was sitting on a little hill under a tree at a lonely spot behind the
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village quite close to the stream where villagers came to fetch water. He
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wanted to think, and resolve to leave there only after settling the issue
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for once in his mind. He had categorically decided to marry her, and was
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hoping that with time he would convince his father to play along, but the
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old man was bent on having his way. Already elders in the village were
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pointing fingers at him as a recalcitrant who was trying to sabotage
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ancestral principles. "How dare he choose a wife for himself instead of his
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father," they said within their circle.
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"They stubbornly refuse to consider the girl's position in the whole
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matter," he reasoned with himself. He disagreed with their conclusion that
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he should consult the 'Nganga' (shaman), to predict if Eposi was good for
|
|
him. He had been informed by his cousin and best friend that the family had
|
|
been to the Nganga, and his finding was that she wasn't the woman for him.
|
|
"The Nganga was emphatic about it, saying over and over again that Eposi
|
|
belonged to a different world which was fast approaching to claim her!" he
|
|
was told.
|
|
"Nonsense!" he had replied. He did not believe in rituals, and attended
|
|
traditional rendezvous more out of obligation than faith. But the revelation
|
|
temporarily clouded his reasoning. "I wouldn't have my fate decided by the
|
|
casting of cowries for divination! Impossible!" he said aloud, startling
|
|
some birds that were perched on the tree where he was sitting.
|
|
"This girl inspired me in the past. I owe my success to her. She helped
|
|
me when I was down, traditional principles didn't!... no!" he murmured, "to
|
|
let her down is inhuman. I am ready to help my family whenever possible,
|
|
even Eposi can't stop me. But when it comes to my private life, I remain the
|
|
sole architect of my future.. I will marry her," he said silently, "time is
|
|
my witness, and all those things that shall come to pass, which at this
|
|
point are shrouded by the unknown... even that which I cannot change."
|
|
He felt satisfied with this decision and slowly rose from under the tree,
|
|
heading for home. He met Eposi lying on her stomach. She had cried herself
|
|
to sleep. She was feeling irritated for no apparent reason, and had been to
|
|
the toilet twice to vomit. The first stage of pregnancy was already having
|
|
its effect on her. Nganje who had no experience in such matters was alarmed,
|
|
but she assured him it wasn't anything strange. News of her pregnancy only
|
|
added to his resolution to marry her at any cost. They went to sleep clasped
|
|
in each other's arms.
|
|
|
|
The calling of "Eposi!, Eposi!" got them up from sleep. It was an early
|
|
Saturday morning. Nganje looked at the time, it was 6:30 a.m. 'Who could be
|
|
such an early morning caller?' he wondered.
|
|
"See who it is darling," he told Eposi.
|
|
She got up lazily. She wasn't in a very good mood, as she had a troubling
|
|
dream. "It is your aunt," she told him.
|
|
Nganje dressed and went out. Under the large 'Beke-ku tree' were family
|
|
meetings often held, sat his family notables. He had not been informed of
|
|
such an impromptu meeting he thought. The children who usually played
|
|
'tabala' early in the morning were absent, his youngest Uncle was passing a
|
|
round of 'Matu-tu' (a local wine made from raffia palm) with 'Njakatu' (a
|
|
tropical fruit) and alligator pepper. Eposi went and greeted them, and
|
|
joined Nganje at the veranda.
|
|
"Wait for me inside," he told her slowly, with a light pad on her back
|
|
and went to join the meeting.
|
|
"I salute you all."
|
|
He greeted with a light bow of his head in a sign of respect to elders.
|
|
"We accept your greetings," came a chorus response.
|
|
He realised that none looked him in the face. He knew why without being
|
|
told. He sat down and regretted the absence of his maternal grandpa who was
|
|
dead, and his mother who wasn't present, as women were not allowed to take
|
|
part in such meetings reserved for men. He accepted the Njakatu, but turned
|
|
down the matu-tu, thinking it was too early. There was an interval of
|
|
general conversation on the weather and the farming season. His most senior
|
|
paternal uncle said; "Mola Ngeka has predicted that the rain would come very
|
|
late this season because people are abusing the land."
|
|
"Oh! that's serious," replied his paternal uncle who is a court clerk,
|
|
"I don't treat Mola Ngeka's statements lightly. I remember before the
|
|
earthquake he said 'Efas' a moto would proclaim his anger shortly', and in
|
|
less than a week, there was the earthquake!" he said seriously. Efas' a moto
|
|
is their tribal god believed to be made of stone and flesh and living on
|
|
the mountain.
|
|
At this point, Nganje's father cleared his throat thereby signalling
|
|
silence.
|
|
"I called this meeting," he started, "in order to settle the issue of
|
|
Nganje's marriage for once," his eyes went round, but avoided Nganje.
|
|
He continued, "before I ask his opinion, I would like Mbamba Mbua to
|
|
address the issue as tradition demands."
|
|
Mbamba Mbua was the oldest family member alive, with one hundred and
|
|
fourteen years, yet he was still strong and walked upright.
|
|
"I know," he began, "that young people today think they know everything,
|
|
even more than those who brought them to life. But only a foolish person
|
|
would even attempt to race with beings he cannot see, or dream of breaking a
|
|
golden chain of tradition from our ancestors. Some try to defy this
|
|
doctrine, and even succeed, but for how long? When man thinks he has
|
|
reached the end of the race against the ancestors, it is at this point that
|
|
the ancestors even start to race. In the beginning they allow him to shoot
|
|
ahead... at human pace, for they are spirits, and their speed is something
|
|
human time cannot measure." He stopped for breath, "this is all I have to
|
|
say." He concluded and took a long drink from his matu-tu cup - the horn of
|
|
a male cow that had been cleaned with a piece of broken bottle to an extend
|
|
that it shone like a mirror. There was silence.
|
|
Nganje's father pulled out his snuff box, hit it thrice with his left
|
|
thumb and inserted a lump of snuff into his large nostrils. Nobody spoke.
|
|
Finally one of his uncles, a retired police constable injected, "Yes Nganje,
|
|
we are waiting to hear from you."
|
|
Nganje looked round at them, he was alone and their presence was too
|
|
strong for him, but he remembered Eposi and his promise. This seemed to add
|
|
to his strength. Mbamba Mbua bowed his head, with his walking stick held in
|
|
both hands. Everyone was looking at Nganje, and he started speaking slowly.
|
|
"The situation is quite difficult, and I can't at this point disappoint
|
|
her. To do this would mean an unforgivable betrayal. No parents... I humbly
|
|
wish to execute my promise to her."
|
|
He did not tell them that she was pregnant. In spite of his scepticism
|
|
concerning traditional rituals, he wasn't taking chances. It had to be kept
|
|
a secret for now. Beside such a news would spark an uproar.
|
|
"Nganje listen to us, we are your blood and we have a right to decide
|
|
which or what blood comes into this family," said the retired constable.
|
|
"But then you should consider the position of the subjects concerned,
|
|
myself and Eposi," he answered.
|
|
"Are you trying to be an advocate of modernism?" asked his uncle the
|
|
court clerk. "Perhaps and advocate of individualism," he replied coldly as
|
|
he was getting at the edge of his nerves, "let's try to be reasonable in
|
|
this matter, you are pushing me to the edge of the cliff. I wouldn't be able
|
|
to live with my conscience for the rest of my live if I frustrate Eposi...
|
|
and you are asking me to frustrate her!"
|
|
"It is not frustrating her. She and her family will understand... they
|
|
are not strangers to our tradition," interrupted Ilongo - a most senior
|
|
cousin of his - who is a professional palm-wine taper and traditional
|
|
hard-liner. He belonged to the famous and feared 'elephant cult' and
|
|
everyone was afraid of him... including Nganje who in the past didn't want
|
|
to have anything to do with him. But now he had outgrown his fears and was
|
|
ready to challenge whoever challenged his decision.
|
|
"You should know that I wasn't the only suitor, Eposi turned down others
|
|
for my sake. It would be cruel to let her down on my part. It would be
|
|
suicidal. I respect our tradition, but tradition I think, has a limit when
|
|
it comes to matters of the heart, for I feel the pain, when you aim blows at
|
|
her even in her absence," Nganje said firmly.
|
|
"How dare you!" shouted his father, "out of my sperm!"
|
|
"Slow down papa," cautioned Nganje, "lets try to be fair. We blame our
|
|
leaders for tyranny, and denounce inflexible capitalism. But this is an
|
|
instant of sadistic tyranny and crude capitalism buried behind
|
|
uncompromising traditional laws. But as it is my future we are talking
|
|
about, I think I have the final word here. Tradition has its place in a
|
|
community, it does influence a society, but not a conscious individual... at
|
|
least not me," he said with an Olympian calmness.
|
|
"This is simply incredible! I!... Ngolo Lifafa!... a child that sprouted
|
|
from a drop of my sperm!... dares to break this golden chain from the
|
|
ancestors! May I live not to see the outcome of it! May I be deaf and dumb
|
|
when the Ancestors shall descend to ask for the defaulter to be pointed out!
|
|
May I have no fingers left to point my own son!" shouted his father.
|
|
A silence followed. Everyone including Nganje knew his father had reached
|
|
the threshold of opening the judgement door... a serious dimension at the
|
|
way things were going. Mbamba Mbua clutched his walking stick in both hands,
|
|
he was visibly under psychological tension. As the oldest family member
|
|
responsible for the protection of the family when it comes to matters of the
|
|
gods and ancestors, he knew this particular situation was out of his
|
|
control.
|
|
"No! Ngolo!" retorted Mbamba Mbua, "please! stop it before the 'midnight
|
|
dance is performed at midday! The consequences would be out of my control
|
|
then... or yours!"
|
|
"It is already out of our control" replied his father.
|
|
"Nganje!... please apologise before it becomes too late," advised one of
|
|
his brothers in-law.
|
|
"For what?" he asked, "well, perhaps for being born! I see no wrong done
|
|
on my part that warrants an apology. This is my life remember, and I will
|
|
not allow any foreign opinion to decide my future!" he was at the end of his
|
|
patience and was already angry.
|
|
"Nganje! you call our tradition 'foreign opinion? Generation after
|
|
generation and you become the first to break this chain of ritualistic
|
|
order!" responded Ilongo, adding, "If you think you are strong enough, then
|
|
I ask you to swear by the family shrine and go your own way... alone!"
|
|
"You don't have to invoke the gods in this," Nganje replied, " I am not
|
|
against native customs. I am simply considering the stakes. I, Nganje!...
|
|
have to live with a woman all my life,... not your life,... not a god's
|
|
life! My life!" he almost shouted, then brought himself under control and
|
|
continued, "can you tell me why two people who love each other cannot live
|
|
together because a traditional custom says so?" he finished, looking around
|
|
slowly.
|
|
"Okay," said Ilongo, "we shall see where this love will lead you to. You
|
|
are showing us your ability to speak big grammar not so? After all the
|
|
efforts to educate you, now you rise against the family!"
|
|
"I believe now that my relationship with this family isn't founded on
|
|
love, for when there is love there is kindness, and a willingness to make a
|
|
sacrifice. But I see no love here... only a lore and its unbending laws. I
|
|
see my people rising against me because I dare to be myself. I am sorry but
|
|
I have crossed the rubicon... and there is no turning back.... I will marry
|
|
her!" he replied.
|
|
There ensued a long silence... nobody moved or said anything. Nganje
|
|
remained standing. Five full minutes elapsed. His father reached for his
|
|
snuff box, hit it thrice with his left thumb and opened it. Mbamba Mbua
|
|
reached for his tobacco pipe, which he succeeded to light after shoving
|
|
little dry leaves that he removed from a corner in his hat. After pulling at
|
|
it twice, he started: "Nganje my grandson, the soil is trembling under my
|
|
feet," he paused, "and under yours," he added. When he said 'and under
|
|
yours', he lifted his eyes and looked at him adding slowly, "the love of a
|
|
'man', is never expressed in words... but it is often expressed with a gift,
|
|
which sometimes is not seen with the eyes. I loved you from birth... I loved
|
|
you even before you were born. If I had my way, I would allow you to marry
|
|
Esposi. But in this case my way isn't important,... only that of the
|
|
ancestors. It is difficult not only for you, but for all of us. For some
|
|
time now your grandma has been calling me from 'the other side' and I am
|
|
getting set to meet her. It is only there that one has absolute freedom...
|
|
that is, when we too become Ancestors. I feel what you feel. I am like you,
|
|
but only time stands between us. I have heard your final word but because I
|
|
love you, I will not say anything... I must go home now." he concluded,
|
|
getting unsteadily to his feet and started walking to the wooden gate and
|
|
out of the compound to his home, a few yards away.
|
|
A dead silence descended. Other relatives started getting up as well,
|
|
going into the house for breakfast, which was been prepared by the women who
|
|
had stayed inside the house. Nganje slowly walked back to his room and met
|
|
Eposi crying. He took her in his arms.
|
|
|
|
The issue of his marriage to Eposi was left hanging between him and his
|
|
family. However a tension developed between him and his father at home. A
|
|
week later he moved into his new flat provided by the firm he was to work
|
|
for. Exactly seventeen days after the Family meeting, Mbamba Mbua passed
|
|
away. Nganje wept miserably when a relative came to inform him. He knew then
|
|
that the old man loved him indeed. They left immediately with Esposi for the
|
|
funeral in his new Renault car.
|
|
He took charge of the funeral and provided his grandfather a decent
|
|
burial. It was the first time he met his family after the meeting.
|
|
Throughout the three day event, Eposi kept a low profile in the company of
|
|
her best friend - Enjema, who knew about her situation and was giving her
|
|
moral support. However the issue of their marriage was temporarily clouded
|
|
by the passing away of grandpa.
|
|
|
|
Two weeks after the funeral, Nganje started making plans for their wedding.
|
|
As it was clear that most of his family members especially the older ones
|
|
were not in agreement of it, they decided to perform the traditional rites
|
|
of meeting Eposi's family in a low-profile, and planned to highlight instead
|
|
the court and church marriage rites shortly after by throwing a stupendous
|
|
'Bachelors' eve' and a grandiose party the day after. This was to be two
|
|
weeks after the 'forty day death celebration' of Nganje's grandfather. As it
|
|
is an important celebration in respect of the dead and since Nganje loved
|
|
the old man, they decided to be patient.
|
|
Eposi's pregnancy was already visible, and the joy of expecting a new
|
|
baby gave them hope and helped to reduce the tension provoked by the issue
|
|
of their marriage. And now living in the little administrative town where
|
|
Nganje had his office, and away from their families, helped to rebuilt their
|
|
happiness. They were living in their world once again. Thirty five days
|
|
after the dead of Mbamba Mbua and five days away from the 'forty day dead
|
|
celebration, Nganje sat with Eposi in their dining room to plan the next
|
|
day, in which they hoped to visit a famous market in another town a few
|
|
kilometres away to organise a wedding rob, and visit Eposi's mother on their
|
|
way back.
|
|
"Well darl, so that's it," Nganje said and continued, "we shall get a rob
|
|
that befits your beauty, for a wedding should happen only once in the life
|
|
of any two serious people. What do you think?" he asked Eposi.
|
|
"What can I say Naoa? I cannot wait for it to happen, and the baby too is
|
|
happy!" she answered.
|
|
"Hummm!... the baby!" Nganje murmured taking her in his arms and
|
|
caressing her stomach lightly, "lets go to bed now and hear what the baby
|
|
has to tell us, agree?" he asked carrying her into the bedroom.
|
|
"As if I have the will to say no!" she said laughing as they rolled on
|
|
the double bed, rushing off their dresses and making for under the
|
|
bedcovers. They talked late into the night, before falling asleep
|
|
simultaneously. They clutched unto each other, but when they reached the
|
|
multiple junction of the dream world, each went a separate way.
|
|
|
|
Mola Ngeka closed the door of his little hut and walked unsteadily to the
|
|
front. He stood for a while gazing at the sky. It was a sunny afternoon, and
|
|
he knew that he had to get to the motor road about two kilometres away
|
|
before the dove sang its midday hymn in respect of nature, which will signal
|
|
3:00 p.m. He had already fed the dove its afternoon meal. Since his arrival
|
|
in the forest where he lived as a hermit now, a friendship had developed
|
|
between himself and the white dove.
|
|
Whenever he sat outside his hut to have the warmth of the sun, the dove
|
|
would often perch on the arm of his chair. Mola Ngeka communicated with the
|
|
dove in a language understood only by the elements of nature. He had decided
|
|
to move away from the main village because he couldn't stand any longer the
|
|
growing noise, which destabilised his inner harmony. He went there now only
|
|
when he had to see a sick family member, or during funerals.... he had all
|
|
he needed in the forest to live peacefully and travel whenever he felt
|
|
like... without moving an inch.
|
|
Yesterday as he sat gazing into the glowing flame of the little fire in
|
|
his hut, he was about to engage in a long journey when his attention was
|
|
caught by an unfolding drama, which would transpire the following day. He
|
|
knew he had to be at the site not to prevent anything, as he couldn't, but
|
|
as a witness. He had to be by the side of the motor road at the precise
|
|
spot, at the point called 'the bend of Boana'.
|
|
He got there exactly fifteen minutes before it happened. As he stood
|
|
there waiting, he fixed his stare at the sky. Nobody paid him any attention
|
|
as they were used to his unprecedented and strange behaviour, which some
|
|
described as madness.
|
|
|
|
Eposi was standing by the car waiting for Nganje who had returned into the
|
|
house to collect the documents of the vehicle. If he had not forgotten it,
|
|
perhaps it would have been a different story all together. But fate has a
|
|
way of fixing things to meet its appointment.
|
|
They got into the car and when Nganje sparked the engine it failed to
|
|
respond... it happened thrice before igniting. He wondered why as the car
|
|
was new and had never given such trouble. It was the first time. As he drove
|
|
on, he stopped a hundred metres away to give an old lady a lift.
|
|
"Ah! my son, thank you very much ooh!" the old lady said, "my bones are
|
|
cracking already, and I was just wondering how to make it to the store to
|
|
buy kerosene for my lantern."
|
|
"You don't need to worry ma," he replied.
|
|
"How is my wife Eposi, when are we coming to eat plantain?" the old lady
|
|
asked, meaning when will she put to birth.
|
|
"Not too long from now I hope, by the will of the Lord," she answered as
|
|
Nganje stopped the car to drop the old lady off. They had left the house in
|
|
high spirits, but it seemed as if the old lady left with their happiness,
|
|
for when they took off after dropping her, a silence descended in the car.
|
|
They drove in silence. Eposi released a deep sigh. Nganje didn't say
|
|
anything. He wanted to speak, but couldn't. He took in a deep breath and
|
|
unconsciously reduced speed, though he was driving within the speed limit.
|
|
"Nganje?" Eposi called.
|
|
"Yes?" he answered her, but she never continued what she intended to say.
|
|
He didn't know what it was and never knew, for it was swallowed by the
|
|
mystery of the present. They where just about to negotiate the 'Boana bend',
|
|
when Eposi saw what mortals are not suppose to see.... she uttered a loud
|
|
scream and jumped from her seat. Nganje under the influence of the surprise
|
|
shout, lost control of the wheel. The car infiltrated on the opposite track
|
|
reserved for coming vehicles and collided solidly with a timber lorry that
|
|
was coming from the opposite direction.
|
|
The crash was absolute... and final in its fatality. The sound of its
|
|
impact travelled far too, was heard miles away, and merged with the sound of
|
|
the drums of the ancestors who were performing 'the night dance at noon'.
|
|
Their passing was swift and painless.
|
|
Birds flew away in fright. As the echo of the crash faded, the sound of
|
|
mourning replaced it, and people started gathering, peeping at the remains
|
|
of the little car and its unfortunate occupants. Mola Ngeka wasn't looking
|
|
at the direction of the scene, his attention was focused at the other side
|
|
of the road where a drama was unfolding, which he was its sole witness. It
|
|
was Eposi who came around first. She looked around her and shook Nganje.
|
|
They were speechless in realising themselves by the roadside, sitting on the
|
|
grass and in their spirit bodies.
|
|
They looked in horror at their crumpled bodies in the twisted car. For a
|
|
while they watched speechlessly as people started to gather at the site of
|
|
the accident. When the police arrived and proceeded to pull their bodies
|
|
from the car, Eposi could stand it no longer and yelled, but no sound came
|
|
out, or a sound only she and Nganje heard. There followed a second scream
|
|
emitted above them, they looked up simultaneously and saw a little spirit
|
|
baby hovering above; it was their baby that was to be. Eposi burst out in
|
|
tears and reached out for her. This made her to defy gravity and she floated
|
|
off. She then pulled Nganje by the arm and to her amazement they floated
|
|
together. She wasn't sure of herself, but soon adjusted to the new
|
|
phenomenon. She soon lost interest in matters of the fast decaying flesh
|
|
that was been bundled away in an ambulance and concentrated on their
|
|
newly found freedom. It struck her for the first time, and with the baby in
|
|
her left arm and Nganje by her right, she headed for the sea a few miles
|
|
away. They all flew in this direction, knowing instinctively that it was
|
|
where they belonged.
|
|
An endless journey had just begun for them.
|
|
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---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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uXu #588 Underground eXperts United 2001 uXu #588
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http://www.uXu.org/
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