ROWANI
My mother told me trouble doesn’t know when to choose, so she chooses the wrong time; not because she hates us but because she doesn’t know when to choose.
“You are pregnant,” Aunty Misiu had told me.
I was afraid, I
thought only mothers got pregnant, “why am I pregnant?”
“Because you father has been having sex with you,” she
replied.
Sex. Was that it? That’s one word I have only heard in
hushed voices, but today Aunty Misiu had said it to me like it was the only
word worth mentioning.
But why did it make her cry? Aunty Misiu never cried, she
was strong and every child in Dandata feared her.
My name is Rowani, I will soon be thirteen years old. I am
about to have my father’s baby.
My aunt Doro suggested I’d be married off to Donkali, the
shoemaker, but Aunty Misiu had objected. Aunty Misiu said I was too young to be
anyone’s wife. My mother said it would kill her to tell the world what my
father did to me, but Aunty Misiu said my mother looks dead already.
She wants the baby uprooted from me, she told Aunty Misiu
but Aunty Misiu said the baby is four months old and she doesn’t want me dead.
My mother doesn’t want me dead too.
I don’t want to be married to Donkali, I don’t want to stay
here – I just want to die. I don’t know what death feels like but I have seen
dead antelopes my father brought home, and I know they had no idea they were
being burnt. They surely didn’t know what soup their meat ended up in.
If I were dead I wouldn’t know what sad things people said
about me or my family, I wouldn’t have to see my mother melt away like a
candle. That’s what Aunty Misiu said – my mother is melting away like a candle.
I wouldn’t have to know I am pregnant.
Aunty Misiu is my mother’s best friend; she is the only
nurse we’ve got in Dadanta. She found out I was four months pregnant when my
morning fever go too frequent and the herbs concoction couldn’t hold it back
anymore.
I told her all the things
my father did with me.
I never thought my father was a bad man, no one warned me about
the bad things he was making me to do, no one told me what we did was called
sex, though I was told sex was a bad thing to do with boys. I thought my father
liked me a lot, he kept away from everyone.
Few girls go to school in Dadanta, so I don’t. My father
said I would turn into a bad girl if I went to school. He and my mother would
argue over it and he would beat my mother. He told me I don’t have a brother or
a sister because my mother wouldn’t give them, so I thought my mother was
stingy with children. She knew where to get them from and wouldn’t just do it.
Now I know my father lied, he lied to me. He lied to my
mother.
I see my mother lying on her back, gazing into the sky all
day and I think I have done something terribly wrong. She wouldn’t talk to
anyone, not even me. She had fought my father and brought him down like dodo, our
dog, pulls down other dogs in a fight, though my father had regained his
balance and beaten her up like child. When I tried to stop him, he pushed me
into a corner of the room and I fainted.
She had cursed him for three days. All the people who came
have left cursing my father and then looking down at me like a pile of shit,
except Aunty Misiu. Wherever I go people would start to leave as if something
rotten has filled the air. Aunty Misiu, she still treats me like her child, but
I want things to go back the way they used to be without my father anywhere
around.
Before my father left, he had come to talk to me, but I told
him I hated him. He said he was sorry, but he was drunk and smelt bad.
I know so many people who have babies in my village. I told
my mother I loved to play with their children and if I had one…
She screamed at me. When she sobered, she said I wouldn’t
understand. She said my life would never be the same again – that I would never
be happy again. Now I think I believe her.
I feel sick when I think of my father though it hadn’t
always been so. I used to think he was a strong warrior who protected my mother
and me.
Aunty Misiu had asked when it all started – I mean the sex. My
mother said she didn’t want to know any more than she’d already known, that
knowing it did happen at all was sad enough for her.
I don’t know when it started either; I have always known
that strange feeling with my father since I could remember. As I grew, I began
to like it. When I grew bigger, he stopped using his fingers and would lie over
me.
I had thought that’s what fathers are supposed to do to their
daughters until Aunty Misiu found out the pregnancy.
My father had warned me never to speak to anyone about it or
he’d never be my father anymore that those children without fathers suffered in
this world.
I asked him if that was why they had only me; he said my
mother wouldn’t give us more.
In my mind’s eye I see a dead antelope burning in the fireplace
without knowing it and I wish I could just take its place.
©Jude Ifeme
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here's one of my originals.
ReplyDeletehope you like it enough to publish..
arthur c. ford,sr.,poet/editor
"THE BOAT"
(FOOD FOR THOUGHT)
Man has argued and killed over land,ever since
the beginning of time. I believe that we can not
take claim to anything that was here before us-
just thank its creator.
As a matter of fact, I believe that everything and
everybody would be where it and they should be, now,
if some genius hadn’t sculpt the boat.
BY: Arthur C. Ford,Sr.,poet/lyricist
www.thepoetbandcompany.yolasite.com
wewuvpoetry@hotmail.com
I really like this, Arthur; the last three lines say it all.
ReplyDeletethanks jude, sometimes words profoundly and mellifluously come out!
ReplyDeletearthur