Read Everything Good Will Come Online
Authors: Sefi Atta
“So. What you did for your father, that was right. But you were wrong not to consult your husband first. He is the head of the house. He has a right to know. Now. What happened later, I think Niyi was wrong. To ignore your wife because she made a mistake like that. That was wrong, I told him, âYou cannot, cannot treat your wife that way. Say your piece to her, as a man and let it go.'”
“Yes, ma.”
“You yourself, you must learn that a woman makes sacrifices in life. It shouldn't take anything out of you to indulge your husband for the sake of peace in your house.”
“Yes, ma.”
“So, let this be the end of it. You hear me? I don't want to lose another daughter.”
She hugged me and I held my breath. I did not want to be that close. She drained me the way soft-hearted people did. Somehow I ended up deferring to her, as if to do otherwise would be taking advantage of her. She was fasting for Lent, she said, for the new baby.
“Thank you, ma,” I said.
Niyi and I escorted her to her car. After she drove out of our home, we faced each other in our small driveway. “I'm sorry,” he said. “I couldn't let you take a risk like that. I prefer that you hate me.”
He twisted his soles on the gravel and stood up with his hands in his pockets. Four months separated us as if I'd licked my forefinger and drawn an indelible line in the air. Where would I begin?
“I don't hate you,” I said.
I dreamed that night, in the spare room, clear as a prophesy. I was holding a newborn baby. “He's dead,” my mother was saying. I tried to console her, but the more I did, the more her sorrow. I realized the baby was mine. I woke up in such pain. I waddled into our bedroom and switched on the bedside lamp.
“What's wrong?' Niyi asked.
“The baby,” I said. “It's kicking.”
He patted my side of the bed and I slid in. I moved close to him, to calm my heartbeat. He placed his arm over my belly.
“What's going on in here?”
My eyes were wide. “Is it normal?”
He patted my belly. “Yes, it is. Whoever you are, let your mother rest.”
On Good Friday I made
frajon
with my mother-in-law. She invited family members and I invited Sheri. Sheri and I sat at the kitchen table as Pierre washed dishes. Stacks of dirty plates surrounded him. We were surrounded by empty bottles of Star beer and Coca-Cola. We were tired. Sheri had brought her cousin's children, Wura and Sikiru. Sikiru, we banished to the living room. He sat there rocking himself in a persecuted manner. A more falling-down four-year-old I had not seen, with a head so long he could pass for Nefertiti. Outside, he'd collided with pots, grazed his knees, bumped his head on a washing line pole. “Sikiru! Sikiru!” we cried out every time we heard his yelps. After a while, we sounded like pigeons, or one of those old aunts we thought we'd never become. His sister, Wura, sat with us, a five-year-old with her hair pulled back like a rabbit's tail. She eyed my stomach until I got nervous and asked what she wanted.
“Coca-Cola,” she said.
“I was not allowed to drink Coca-Cola at your age,” I said.
“My mummy lets me. From when I had chicken pops.”
“Chicken?”
“Yes. And my froat was paining me, that's why.”
She held her neck.
“Throat,” Sheri said.
“Troath,” she said. “And my body was pops, pops, pops.”
She pinched her forearm and wagged her forefinger. “But no scratching. No scratching, because that is the rules. And if you scratch, your pops will only grow bigger, like a balloon.”
She stretched her arms wide and mistook my amazement for sympathy.
“It was terrible,” she said, in a husky voice. “Now, can I have my Coca-Cola?”
I started breathing as if I'd gone into labor. When I served Wura
frajon
, it was, “Ee-yack, I don't like this Free John thing.” “
Fray
-John,” I corrected her. “Can I have fish?” she asked. I gave her some of the stew I made from Mrs. Williams's fish. “Ee-yack. Too much pepper in this fish,” she said. “Aunty, do you have biscuits?”
I handed her a Coca-Cola. She drank it clean, burped, and went in search of her brother with caffeinated eyes. Dear Wura. “May I be askewed?” she asked. When I said yes, she said, “Fenks.” I immediately forgave her.
“Are all children like this?” I asked Sheri.
“Be prepared,” she said.
Pierre dropped cutlery in the sink. I placed my bowl aside. I had already had two helpings of
frajon
and some of her stewed crabs, so tasty I'd hidden them from everyone.
“I will be a terrible mother,” I said.
Sheri stretched. “You're not looking forward to it?”
“I am. But I have not had time to think about it.”
I did not feel comfortable discussing motherhood with her, but I was aware of a presence within me, as infinite as God. I did worry that I might spoil my child rotten.
“It's hard work,” she said.
“I can see.”
Niyi came through the door. “Pierre, water to drink. Quick.”
He placed his hand on my shoulder and Sheri watched him the way she watched men, arching her brows and keeping her eyes on his midriff. Niyi rubbed my shoulder and left.
“Is he talking to you now?” Sheri asked.
“He is.”
“You're not still angry with him.”
“I need time.”
Time really wasn't enough, I thought. Forgetting would be enough.
Sheri sat back in her chair. “It is good that you met your brother.”
“I can get to like him.”
“I hope so,” she said.
“I don't have to like him, Sheri.”
“I didn't say you did.”
“But I know what you're thinking. In your family, everyone sticks together... ”
“I never said we were perfect. We just happen to like each other, and thank God we do, because I don't know what would happen in the little village my father left.”
“You're confessing something?”
“If they keep to one woman our lives would be simpler.”
“Ah.”
“But we, too, are just as guilty for what we do to each other. I've never met a man who had an affair with himself.”
“No.”
“So. The blame is on two sides then. I keep telling my sisters. Stop letting these boys treat you badly. They tell me, âBut we're not strong like you.' Strong. I don't even know what that word means. But look at the way we were raised, two women in one house, one man. Mama Kudi's turn to cook for Daddy. Mama Gani's turn to sleep with Daddy. A young girl shouldn't grow up seeing such things. But that is my family. I've accepted it.”
We accepted the world we were born into, though we knew what felt right and wrong from the start. The protesting and detesting could come afterward with confirmation that our lives could have been better, but the acceptance was always there.
Pierre left the kitchen with a bottle of water and I dared to cross a line.
“Are you curious about your mother?”
“Hm.” Her lips were thin.
“Enough to look for her?”
“Not like that.”
“Why not?”
“What if she doesn't want to know me?”
“What if she's thinking what you're thinking?”
“I'm not ready. I'm not.”
“I'll be behind you when you are.”
I couldn't imagine being that estranged from my own mother. We listened to the Francos' chatter in the living room for a moment.
“Can you see yourself married?” I asked.
She shrugged. “If I meet someone with sense. But what I've seen so far: rich man wants to own your future, poor man wants to own your past. Some are just plain untidy, and you know me, I can't stand the mess. Some must have children, and, well... ”
“Aren't you sometimes angry?”
“Why?”
“Looking back.”
“I'm a today-tomorrow woman. I can't look back. I have my business, plenty of children around me. Someone will always chase me. I still have a pretty face.
Abi?
” She sucked her cheeks in. “It's other people who worry about me. Me, I have no worries, except when I die.”
“Why then?”
“Because who will bury me?”
“I will,” I said, poking my chest.
“What if you die before me?”
“Then my child will bury you,” I said.
Sheri had two mothers. Why couldn't my child?
“What I really want,” she said. “Really, really,
sha
, is to work for children. You know I practiced saying that for Miss World? I memorized a whole speech even, children are our future, all that. I didn't care about one word. I was annoyed the judges eliminated me before I had a chance to use it. Then one day I was thinking about the speech. Children beg on the streets here and people drive past them. Everyone is fed up. You open the papers and someone is asking for their child to get treatment abroad. Why not raise money for them? I started thinking... ”
“About?”
“A charity. I'm good at asking for money, I know people and these photographers are always snapping me somewhere. Why not use them? The one thing that has stopped me is that I can't stand people knowing where I am and what I'm doing. But I think I can get used to that. It's a small price.”
The work suited Sheri more than she thought. A charity. Her unfriendliness was an asset. People were intrigued by her. Those she approached would feel privileged. She would thrive.
“You have to do it,” I said. “You will be so good and you'll be surprised how much you've missed being around. You're not a background person. What, you want to hide for the rest of your life because people talk? Let them talk. One day they will ask themselves what they're doing with their own lives. Any social event in this place, people will come whether or not they care about your cause. They will buy tickets, give money, so long as they're recognized. You have to do it, Sheri. If you had told me this before I would have sat on your back.”
“I've been thinking seriously, end of this year hopefully. I need to find a name and trustees... ”
“Put me. We will arrange the paper work for you at the office. You'll be the best charity in Lagos.”
Her birth mother and motherhood taken away from her, and she wasn't thinking of tearing her clothes off and walking naked on the streets. She was stronger than any strong person I knew. The word strong usually meant that a person was being short-changed emotionally and physically and had to live with it. I had always been motivated by fear, of lowliness, of pessimism, of failure. I was not strong.
Sheri was planning to make the next pilgrimage to Mecca. I couldn't imagine her becoming an Alhaja. She would have to get a gold tooth, at least, to fit my image of a Lagos Alhaja. More guests arrived and she decided it was time for her to leave. I saw her to her car and when I returned to the kitchen, my mother-in-law was serving more
frajon
for them.
“I'll do that, ma,” I said, reaching for the bowl.
“No no,” she said. “You've done enough.”
She tugged at the same time I did, and we found ourselves fighting over the bowl. I stood back as she bent over the pot. I thought she was searching for her life, the unborn child, who had given birth to everyone but herself. She too was strong; strong enough to live with a man who wouldn't even look at her when she spoke to him. She was a human shock-absorber.
Pierre walked in with more dirty plates and jiggled cutlery around in the sink.
I headed for the living room. Niyi was sitting on the floor by his Uncle Jacinto's feet. Uncle Jacinto was leaning over him, talking hush-hush as the Francos did. I imagined it was like sticking my nose into a petrol pump. Uncle Jacinto was a retired law professor and the reigning king of Latin phrases:
de jure, de facto, ex parte, ex post facto
. He enjoyed his spirits, though the word “drunk” had never been mentioned in relation to him.
Niyi nodded politely. If our friends were here, this was about the time he would be stirring up trouble, either on his own or in support of me, telling someone or the other I was the boss in the house. As soon as they left, it was Enitancanyou? With his family Enitancanyou began while they were around and I couldn't challenge him, because they would hate me for controlling him, he said. Watching him, I felt sorry. It was no lie, he was protecting me. I was protecting him too. I didn't want anyone to call him a weak man, even though I thought the sooner his family hated me the better. From then on I could do exactly as I pleased.
There were about twenty of them present and any family as large as that was bound to have the usual array of people: Uncle Funsho, who rubbed my bra straps whenever he hugged me; Aunty Doyin, the pretty one who locked herself in a room. She still wore wigs and pale pink lipstick of the early seventies. She wasn't so pretty anymore, because the man she had locked herself up for ended up punching her face whenever another man looked at her. There was Simi, her daughter, braids down to her butt, sassy as Brazilian Samba. Too cool to smile or be pleasant. What was it about this new generation? I loved their bad attitude. Simi walked around with a T-shirt and exposed her navel. After she pierced her nose the Francos said she would get pregnant, but she didn't. She was studying to be an accountant, though her university was closed after a student protest. There was Kola, her brother, who always looked weighed down because his family had called him a dullard for so long. “Won't learn a thing, keeps taking photographs and thinks that will suffice,” they said. I knew he was dyslexic. And Rotimi his first cousin. Rotimi, whose voice was high. Niyi and his brothers tried to slap his manhood into his back, punch it into his skinny ribs. “Speak like a man! Speak like a man!” I warned them, “You'll kill this boy before he discovers his sexual preference.” Now he had a girlfriend, and his voice was still high.