Read Who Will Catch Us As We Fall Online
Authors: Iman Verjee
Tags: #Fiction;Love;Affair;Epic;Kenya;Africa;Loss;BAME;Nairobi;Unrest;Corruption;Politics
The man halted, mid-step. His lips were drawn and white. âHow did you hear of him?' He descended the stairs toward her.
âEsther says she's waiting for him. She said something about a phone call that was coming to say he's dead.'
âHe is dead.' The man sagged against the wall, as if in telling her, he was hearing it for the first time as well. âDavid is dead.'
âWho was he?' Betty came closer to him. âPerhaps if I know, I can help your wife get better.'
âMy wife?' His eyebrows creased. âAh, yes. I'll tell you who David was.' He seemed to shake himself out of a stupor. His mannerisms became rude once again. âHe was my partner and friend. We worked together for two years in the police force.' A jaw stuck out, back teeth grinding together. âI helped him out â I pushed him forward in his career and let mine come second. I invited him into my home, he drank my whiskey and ate my food and one day, I came home to findâ' He chewed down hard on the inside of his lip. âI came home to find him in bed with my wife!' He yelped the first half of the sentence and then calmed himself to a whisper. âI told him to get out, that I never wanted to see him again. I said that I was going to ask for a transfer and take Esther far away from him.'
âWhat happened?' Betty didn't realize she was clutching her chest, feeling faint.
He looked so sad then, so vulnerable, and if he had been her brother or cousin, she would have reached out to comfort him. âThe next day we received a phone call in the morning. They told us that David had hanged himself at the front desk of the station.' The hat dropped from his hand, rolled across the floor. âI suppose he couldn't live with what he had done.' The policeman grabbed Betty's hands, clinging onto them. âEsther blames herself but really we both know it's my fault. It's all my fault and I don't know how I'm supposed to carry on, to be the same after all that.'
He drew her closer and his breath was aflame with alcohol and cigarettes. She tried not to flinch away.
He begged, âIf you can tell me how, perhaps I can go back. Perhaps I will rememberâ¦'
âI'm so sorry for the both of you.' She extracted her hands from his too-tight grasp. âI'll do whatever it is I can to help relieve you of this burden.'
Her words snapped him out of his trance. He wiped his face with his sleeve, composed himself, and when he spoke he sounded like the man she had first met. âYes, Esther is your burden now because you are family.' He thundered up the stairs. âYou tell her to stay away from me, you hear? I've had enough of that woman. All she does is carry around ghosts and I don't want to be reminded, is that clear? I don't want to be reminded of any of it.'
â
Eh-ma
!' Pooja clutched her head, digging her fingernails into the soft flesh of her temples. âNo, no, you stupid girl!'
Leena tugged at her hair, the short strands escaping her grasp easily. She looked down at her empty hand, momentarily surprised. âYou don't like it?'
âLike it?' screeched Pooja. âWhat makes you think I would want my daughter to look like a little boy?'
âYou're being overdramatic, Ma.' Leena went to the mirror, turned her head left and right. Slanted up her chin and cast her gaze downward, under wavering lids.
âThe first time you cut it, I said,
Okay, it's not so bad, it's liveable, not too short but no shorter
! And nowâ¦' Pooja gestured at her daughter with a scowl of disgust. â
Uh-ruh-ruh
. Who will marry you now, when you are looking like that?'
Leena's black hair, so enviously full, had been thinned down to wispy layers and grazed the bottom of her pointed chin, swept to the right in a long wave. Leena pushed up the bob and then, worried the continuous fussing would ruin it, patted it back down again.
âIt's fashionable, which is why you don't like it,' she told her mother. âBesides, when I go to Englandâ'
âJust because you're going abroad for studies doesn't mean you have to change yourself.'
Leena was in her last year of high school and, along with most of her classmates, was looking at universities in England to continue her education. On this, Pooja supported her whole-heartedly â had wanted Jai to do the same thing four years earlier but the boy had been adamant about staying in Nairobi.
âBut you're so clever!' Pooja had exclaimed in dismay. âNo one will know that. They'll think you weren't accepted into any schools in England, that you settled for second rate. No one goes to the universities here.'
âNo one
you
know goes to the universities here,' he had corrected her.
âExactly my point. Why attend Nairobi University when you have an opportunity to go abroad?'
âI don't want to waste three years of my life in a country I'll never return to after I'm done studying. I want to be here, to grow here. Besides, University of Nairobi is a reputable school.'
âI don't care what kind of school it is,' Pooja had protested. âIt'll never be as good as the schools in England. Here, all they do is go on strike for this thing or that, and all the classes are taught by
kharias
!' She drew the last word into a wail and grabbed her son's arm imploringly. âPlease, Jai. Now is not the time for your big ideas.'
âI've already received admission. If you aren't going to support me then I'll get a job and pay for it myself.'
âWhat has happened to you? To be so disobedient to the people who raised you, who feed and house you â where would you be without us?'
But of course, it would not have been right to turn her back on her son and so she had asked for what she always did in such situations with Jai: a compromise. âYou do your first degree here,
okay
,' she said. âBut then I want you to go and study in the UK for your Masters. You must do that, Jai. These things matter.'
âMatter when? When I'm looking for a wife?'
âAll my friends' children are getting such degrees.' Pooja ignored his jibe. âIn a few years time, it will be the normal thing.'
All she was able to think of was how people would whisper about her son, how differently they would perceive him now. He would be viewed as less than the other men in their community, less educated and desirable â too old-fashioned.
Leena, on the other hand, was itching to go. University of Birmingham, Cardiff University, LSE, Nottingham University â the brochures of these places littered her room and she would spend hours losing herself in their glossy dreams, examining with dim longing the spacious lecture halls and the promises of romances waiting to be had. Nairobi was already far behind her.
âI want to go to Manchester,' she had told her parents.
Pooja pulled a face. She knew that one.
âFull of racists,' a woman from the compound had told her; her son had just returned from his fresher year there and had asked her, the first day back, to buy him some bleaching cream.
âThey call me a curry muncher, Mum!' he had wailed. âIf I could just look more like them, things might be a bit easier for meâ¦' he went on, drowning in his homesickness and inadequacy, clinging to her like a child.
âForget that,' another woman had interjected. âDo you know what our children get up to in those cities? Nightclubs, bars, lining up in their
short-short
skirts and high heels. They drink and smoke, forget how to respect their elders, forget everything we have taught them!' Suddenly caught out, the woman hurried to add, âNot
my
Shivani, of course, but she knows girls like that.'
So Pooja had crossed Manchester University off her daughter's list. âDon't you trick me, young lady,' she warned, wagging her finger. âI've heard all the stories about Freshing Week.'
âIt's Fresher's Week, Ma.'
âFreshing, Fresher's, same, same. You'll go anywhere you want in London â LSE, King's College, City University â but you'll stay with your uncle and that's the only way you will go.' Pooja had been adamant and the girl relented, so unlike her fighting brother.
Pooja wanted to make sure that her daughter wouldn't get up to any silly mischief over there. No
gorah
boyfriends or back tattoos, coming home and sneaking cigarettes in the garden because she had gone wild over her freedom. Liberty was overrated, Pooja had decided long ago. Much better to live simply, in an orderly fashion, otherwise things became too messy, impossible to sort through, and it was easy to get lost and never find your way out.
Idly playing with the uneven edges of Leena's haircut, trying to capture the sleek strands, she said, âYou don't have to worry about this. It'll grow out in time. No harm done.'
Pooja settled back on the couch, watching her daughter fiddle and pout in the mirror. Such a lovely looking girl â petite and dramatically featured, the adolescent awkwardness almost completely faded out.
âKeep your shoulders down, stand up straight,' she reminded Leena and watched as the girl pulled herself up.
Pooja closed her eyes contentedly. It was silly to concern oneself with such things. Overall, she was extremely satisfied with how her daughter's life had turned out. It was exactly the way she had planned it.
Across town, in the petrol-filled atmosphere of an overcrowded garage, a
matatu
glistened with a fresh coat of fuchsia paint. Soon it would dry and Michael used these few moments to sit down â hold his heavy head between his hands.
He had been commissioned to do the artwork on the bus but he was distracted. He hadn't thought about her in many months, and even now it wasn't the image of the twelve-year-old girl who occupied the crevices of his mind but rather the strictly structured, filled-out version that had fallen out of Jai's school bag last week. Picking it up, Michael had wondered how seven years had passed since he had seen her.
He liked the way she looked in the photo. Unlike most of the Indian girls he came across on campus, her hair didn't fall into the dip of her back, or wasn't twisted around in a thick plait; it was much shorter, skimming her shoulders and making her seem too modern, as if she belonged someplace else. He grinned, remembering the day she had adamantly refused to come out and play after her mother had forced almond oil into her scalp.
In Jai's picture, she had been wearing a white T-shirt and it made her hair appear darker, gleaming almost blue in some parts. She had tucked it behind her ear so that whoever had taken the picture had captured the glint of a gold stud, the sudden protrusion of a cheekbone â a knifelike structure that had not been there when he had known her. Though she was different, he discovered within her expression the same hot-headedness and determination of the young girl so long ago and he missed her with such intensity, everything else dulled in comparison.
He had only a few seconds to trail his hand over the image before Jai had returned from the bathroom and he quickly stuck it back into the rucksack's front pocket. Michael had hidden his face in his textbook, a vain attempt to push her from his mind.
Yet her loveliness had carved a permanent home in his every thought so that whenever he shut his eyes, there she was â chin in palm, one shoulder bare and exposed.
A voice came up behind him. âDon't tell me you're still thinking about that bitch.'
Without moving, Michael said, âDon't talk about her that way, Jackie.'
âWhat shall I call her then? Racist? Cruel? A betrayer?' She had come to stand beside him.
âStop it,' he said, more seriously. âShe's none of those things and you don't even know her.'
âAnd you think you do?' Jackie retorted. âYou spent two months with her almost seven years ago.'
âYou're right â we were just children. I don't even think of those days any more.'
It was the truth. In the past seven years, though she had passed through his mind occasionally when he came across something to remind him of that perpetual summer, he hadn't been consumed by her memory. But after having seen that photo, being jolted by the reminder that she did in fact exist and had grown to be so exactly how he had pictured, she clung to him and he couldn't shake her.
âWhat do you want, Jackie?' he said, changing the subject.
âI need some
doh.
There's a concert at Carnivore and all my friends are going but I'm broke.'
âShouldn't you be studying for exams?'
âPlease, Mike.'
He slipped off the stool and went back to the bus, tested the pink paint. âWhat about your mother?'
âShe's been gone since Tuesday. It's the usual story. The guy is back in her life and, as always, she takes off running like no one else matters.'
âI'm sorry, Jackie,' he said, glad he had decided to stay in Nairobi despite his mother moving to Eldoret in the last year of his high school.
âYour grandmother's cousin, Mama Itanya, says she cannot look after the house any longer,' Angela had told him. âShe needs someone to come and work the shamba with her.' They had shared a look of understanding. âI'm tired of this place and I want to leave.' Being dismissed from the Kohlis house had hurt Angela more than she cared to share. âI'm tired of working every day of the week and I want something that's my own.'
âI got accepted into Nairobi University and I want to go.'
Angela had been overjoyed. âEldoret isn't that far,' she assured him. âWe can visit each other all the time. And someone needs to look after Jackie.'
With his cousin watching him eagerly, Michael pulled out five hundred shillings. It was difficult to part with the money, because paying school fees, and for food and more than his share of rent, was proving almost impossible. But she looked so eager that he couldn't refuse her.