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A walk in the night
Valerie
Tagwira, Munyori Literary Journal
March / April 2009
http://www.munyori.com/valerietagwira.html
Nyasha
Nyasha walked reluctantly
behind her father's sister. There was tightness in her throat, and
her mouth felt strangely dry. She dragged her unwilling feet and
tried to hide behind Vatete Revai's imposing solidness.
Although there were only
a few people walking along the road, Nyasha was grateful for the
twilight and appreciative of the subtle privacy that it offered.
She wrapped her arms around herself, more aware of a pounding in
her chest as their destination became nearer.
Vatete Revai hurried
along, muttering something about how difficult it would be to find
Mai Solo's house, now that it was getting dark. Focused as she was,
Vatete Revai did not look back at Nyasha or urge her to walk faster.
Her fervour to get to their destination equalled Nyasha's own reluctance.
Once they were in Mai
Solo's neighbourhood, they stopped once to ask a little boy for
directions. He sat perched on the edge of a concrete block, enfolded
by the luminosity of a tower-light. In front of him were his wares:
four rows of small tomatoes, and a pile of wilting vegetables to
sell to people returning from work. The boy was sucking greedily
on a mango. Nyasha could just make out thick mango juice trickling
between his small, wet fingers. Her stomach heaved. She forced the
feeling down.
'Do you know the way
to Mai Solo's house, my child?' Vatete Revai asked softly, fidgeting
with her headscarf, her eyes darting.
The little boy stared
at them, and with an ostensibly practised swivel on his perch, he
pointed straight ahead. 'Over there . . . behind the gum trees
at the corner', he lisped.It was as if his little hand was accustomed
to directing the desperate to Mai Solo's house.
'Thank you my child'.
Vatete Revai's relief was evident in the tone of her voice. It was
a tone that Nyasha had recently ceased to associate with her aunt.
So much had changed, including Vatete Revai's voice. This constant
fidgeting with her headscarf was also something new.
Mai Solo's house was
concealed behind a row of tall gum trees. Broad trunks and thick
foliage created shadowy, mysterious surroundings. Like a camouflage,
Nyasha thought, her uneasiness growing.
Vatete Revai knocked
on the door and they waited. Nyasha could feel her heartbeat rising
from her chest; its cadence now a constricting pulsation in her
throat. Suddenly hot and dizzy, she leant against the wall and tried
to steady herself. Her aunt remained stiff-backed, waiting for the
door to open. It was almost as if she had resolved to ignore her
altogether. They didn't have to wait long. 'Come in!' a voice rang
out with a peculiar exuberance. Vatete Revai opened the door and,
leaving their shoes at the door, they entered.
'Come in, come in.' The
woman who welcomed them was young and strikingly beautiful. She
smiled at them and motioned to some armchairs. Vatete Revai and
Nyasha sat down.
Nyasha threw stealthy
glances towards an open connecting door, expecting a small, hunched
woman with a black headscarf and no teeth to hobble in from the
next room. No such woman entered. She wondered if they had come
to the right house.
'Good evening,' Vatete
Revai spoke softly, avoiding the younger woman's direct gaze and
adjusting her headscarf without need.
'Good evening to you,'
the young woman responded.
A tense, brief silence
followed. The woman smiled again and inclined her head, obviously
waiting for either Vatete Revai or Nyasha to say something. Nyasha
stared intently at a spot between her feet.
Vatete Revai stirred
and spoke. 'A close friend has advised us to come here. My niece . . . ,'
she laid a heavy hand on Nyasha' s thigh.
Without intending to,
Nyasha flinched, remembering yesterday.
Vatete Revai cleared
her throat and continued, 'My niece here, she needs . . . ....'
She hesitated again, and then asked, 'Is Mai Solo here?'
The young woman laughed,
showing prominent dimples.
'I am Mai Solo.' She
said, and then laughed again. Nyasha wondered how she could be so
full of life, and so full of laughter, especially if she was indeed
Mai Solo.
Her expectations visibly
challenged, Vatete Revai looked doubtful for a moment. But the enormity
of their circumstances must have struck her again, for she quickly
regained composure, saying in an apologetic voice, 'Aizve! I am
so sorry.' Mai Solo waved her hand in a frivolous gesture. 'Never
mind, I am used to that. People who've never met me always expect
somebody different. I can help your niece. But could you excuse
me just for a few minutes?'
'Yes of course,' Vatete
agreed readily. Nyasha remained mute, agonizing over how exactly
Mai Solo intended to help her. Vatete had been sparing with details,
and she'd been too petrified to ask for explanations. Not after
everything that had happened.
Mai Solo exited. After
a couple of minutes, her voice rose. Then a child's voice was heard,
intertwining with hers. Nyasha could not make out any distinct words.
She stole a furtive glance at Vatete Revai. Her hands were resting
on her lap, fingers interlocked, and she was staring at the floor.
Silent and rigid.
A door banged, followed
by a momentary silence. Metallic squeaking intruded into the stillness
and passed just outside the window. Like wheels, Nyasha thought.A
few minutes later, Mai Solo walked back in, looking somewhat flustered.
This time, her smile seemed somewhat contrived.
'Sorry about that. I
had to take Solo to Mai Rosie . . . ..my friend next door. He can't
be here. You understand?'
Nyasha did not understand.
However, her aunt nodded vigorously in agreement.
Mai Solo looked at Vatete
Revai and said, 'Let's go into the next room so we can talk first.'
Turning to Nyasha, she
laid a warm hand on her shoulder and asked, 'What's your name, my
dear?'
'Nyasha.'
'Lovely name for a lovely
girl. Stay here my dear, while I have a chat with your aunt. I will
come back for you.'
Nyasha nodded in silence,
not trusting herself to speak. She felt very far removed from the
lovely girl that Mai Solo had surmised she was.
Like co-conspirators,
they left her sitting there, struggling with her fear. She wanted
to spring from the armchair and escape into the obscurity of night.
But of course she couldn't. Where would she go? Vatete Revai was
all she had. In what seemed like no time, Mai Solo was back, gesturing
for her to follow. Her smile was gone. Nyasha wondered what Vatete
Revai had told her, and she was seized by an overwhelming need to
apologise. She was not sure though, what to apologise for. Her eyes
stung with imminent tears but she held them back. She got up slowly
and followed Mai Solo into the room where her aunt sat. She stood
near the door, inspecting the room warily. Her eyes were drawn to
one corner where a reed mat was spread out. Partly covering it at
the centre was a large white plastic sheet that had once carried
maize meal. She could just make out the words, 'Chibataura Roller
Meal' on one half of the plastic sheet. She pressed her hands on
her stomach.
Next to the mat were
two bowls from which steam rose like faint mist and dispersed into
the room. A third bowl contained metallic objects and a thin hose
partially covered by a red blanket.
With no further
preliminaries, Mai Solo took her arm and led her towards the mat.
Vatete Revai gave a subtle nod, showing her consent. Again Nyasha
was beset by a profound sense of exclusion. She surrendered herself
into the hands of the two older women.
'I am here to
help you. Just do what I tell you. I will take . . . it . . .
out within ten, twenty minutes, and after that you will be fine.'
Mai Solo said, looking intently into her eyes.
Doubtful, Nyasha turned
to look at Vatete Revai for some sign of encouragement, but her
aunt had averted her face. 'Take off your underwear and lie on the
mat with your legs spread open. Put your head over here'. Mai Solo's
voice was a curious blend of tenderness and authority.
Nyasha found herself
lifting her dress and stripping off her underwear. Her legs carried
her forwards as if on their own accord. She lay down on her back.
The plastic sheet was icy cold. Through it, the reed mat poked hard
into her back. She was thankful for the improvised pillow that Mai
Solo had patted into place.
She tried to part her
legs as instructed, but they were like dead weights. She recoiled
when she felt a hand on each knee. However, Mai Solo was unexpectedly
gentle as she parted her legs as far as they would go. She closed
her eyes, mortified by the intimacy of the woman's hands.
The hands shifted, and
something cold and hard shot up into her. There were spasms of excruciating
pain. She felt as if her insides were being ripped apart. Screaming,
she writhed in agony. Her aunt held her down in a vice-like grip,
while Mai Solo continued working silently between her legs.
Vatete Revai placed a
firm hand over her mouth, inadvertently covering her nose in the
process. Her voice was harsh with fury. 'Stop your stupid screaming.
Do you want the whole township to come and witness your disgrace?'
'No! No!' Nyasha struggled
even harder, desperate for air.
Vatete Revai moved her
hand and shoved a piece of wood between her lips. 'Bite it!'
The girl bit into the
piece of wood and tried not to scream. She felt the piece of wood
crumble as it mixed with her tears, mucus and sweat. She spat and
coughed.
The pain increased. Her
eyes flew open to see her aunt's face transforming... Vatete Revai's
face was his... panting and smothering her with slobbery kisses.
He was nibbling her ear playfully, then she heard his urgent whispers
explaining that it was all her fault. How can I resist you? You
are so tempting, so beautiful, so seductive? And he was pushing
himself harder and faster between her legs.
The face morphed
back into Vatete Revai's angry face, and Nyasha passed out.
Revai
Revai was panicking.
She could scarcely believe how things had spiralled out of control.
A gush of blood poured out of Nyasha, making a little puddle on
the Chibataura plastic sheet. A steady trickle continued. Nyasha
lay moaning and writhing. Mai Solo was astonishingly calm. She rubbed
Nyasha's stomach with one hand and pressed a small blanket between
her legs with the other hand. Sombre and unsmiling, she turned to
Revai, 'I'm sorry. I don't think it's going to stop. Something must
have gone wrong when she was struggling. She needs to go to hospital.'
Revai's heart sank. She
had no faith in the general hospital. Besides, something was bound
to be suspected if they took Nyasha there.
'But, will she be all
right at the hospital? And won't we get into trouble?' she wanted
to know. Her voice quivered and she hated herself for it. She had
resolved to see this through without baulking. For Nyasha's sake,
as much as for her own. But then, she had not bargained for this.
Mai Solo exhaled loudly,
worry lines appearing on her face. 'No, we won't. We just have to
be careful about what we tell them, and about what Nyasha tells
them. She will be fine.'
Although her voice was
firm, the look on her face was not convincing. Revai could only
nod dazedly, not comforted at all. Resentment against Mai Solo surged.
She cursed herself inwardly. How could I have been so foolish to
put all my trust in one so young?
'I have to go and call
for an ambulance. Please clean up and hide all these things under
the bed. We have to act quickly,' Mai Solo said.
Revai nodded, pulling
herself together. She sprang into action, spurred on by the urgency
in the other woman's voice. While Mai Solo hurried off to call for
an ambulance, she hid all of the paraphernalia under the bed. Cleaning
up Nyasha's blood threw the horror of what they had done right into
her face.The girl was still writhing and moaning.
'Just say you started
bleeding, Nyasha. Please. Just say you have heavy periods, and this
happened to be the worst.' Even as she said it, she knew that nobody
would believe such a story. The girl kept on whimpering and Revai
was not sure that she had heard her at all.
She persisted, 'Don't
tell anyone anything Nyasha . . . Are you listening? Please say
something.'
She gathered Nyasha's
limp form in her arms. The rage that she had felt against her during
the previous week had ebbed. She sobbed as she cradled the girl
in her arms. She tortured herself with questions that had no answers.
How could this have happened? How do such things happen to good
girls? To innocent, orphaned girls?
Nyasha stirred
and tried to say something, but the words were garbled and her voice
was barely above a whisper. Revai held her in a tighter embrace,
wondering what she would tell her husband, and the rest of her family.
As it was, she had made up a story about Nyasha accompanying her
to collect a debt from a friend. She had promised her husband that
they would be back by eight that same evening. And they would have
managed. Except for this. It was already after seven. She wept tears
of despair and bitterness.
When the ambulance
arrived, the staff did not take time asking too many questions.
A drip was attached to Nyasha's arm and she was whisked into the
waiting ambulance. Both Mai Solo and Revai got in with her.
They were silent on the
way to hospital. The strident siren filled Revai's head, drowning
her agitated thoughts.When they arrived, everything seemed to happen
in an accelerated blur. Casualty was swarming as usual but Nyasha
was rushed past queues of waiting patients. She was examined behind
some screens by a doctor who then came out and asked to speak to
the girl's relatives. He took Revai aside.
'Nyasha is bleeding heavily,
which is quite unusual for a young girl. I need to know exactly
what happened so that we can give her the best possible care.'
Revai hesitated, remembering
Mai Solo's warning.
'I found her bleeding
at home. About an hour ago . . . She has lost so much blood . . .
I don't know why. She does have heavy periods, doctor.' She spoke
slowly in measured tones.
The doctor frowned slightly
and scratched his head. He looked exhausted. Revai felt a twinge
of guilt for withholding important details and for wasting his time.
'Did you know that she
was pregnant?' His voice was grave.
Her eyes widened, and
her hand flew to her mouth, simulating surprise. 'Doctor, I just
don't see how Nyasha could be pregnant. It is not possible. She
is just a child,' she said, her voice rising with hysteria even
as she lied.
The doctor gave her a
perplexed look and snorted. 'Apparently not! The things that these
children do . . . .'
Despite herself, Revai
felt an urge to spring to Nyasha's defence. She had never been like
'these children'. Not in that sense. If only . . .
'We have to take her
to theatre to examine her and do whatever is necessary to stop the
bleeding. Please read this form and sign it,' he said, handing her
a document. Revai signed it hurriedly, without really seeing the
words because they had all merged into one wavy blur before her
eyes.
'Will she be all right?'
she asked, needing assurance that she was not misplacing her trust
for the second time in one night. 'I wish I could say I am certain
of that. But at this point, I really don't know. You can wait upstairs..... . . . there
are benches just outside the office next to theatre.'
Revai thanked him and
walked on heavy legs back to Mai Solo.
The two women made their
way past the queues and up the stairs. Just outside theatre, they
found a bench to sit on. 'What did he say? Will she be all right?'
Mai Solo asked. The confident, smiling young woman was gone. Her
face was pinched and crestfallen.
'I don't know yet.' Revai
replied slowly.
Mai Solo pulled a wad
of notes from her hand bag and held it out to her. Her hands were
trembling. 'Please take this back. I can't keep it. Not after this.
Please,' she pleaded.
Revai shook her head.
She did need money but she just couldn't bring herself to accept
the money in Mai Solo's hands. It was somehow tainted.
Mai Solo did not press
further. Her hands still shaky, she placed the bundle of notes back
into her bag and pulled the zip. Revai voiced thoughts that were
a muddle of anxiety. 'If anything should happen . . . how will
I live with myself? She is a very special girl. So obedient, so
intelligent. I can't imagine how this could have . . . .'
A muffled sob caught
in her throat.
Mai Solo remained silent.
She turned to Revai and hugged her. Revai cringed initially, and
then relaxed before gently prising herself out of the awkward embrace.
'My husband will be wondering
where I am. .....He loves that child like his own daughter. He wasn't
supposed to know about any of this, but now . . . ..' Her voice
weakened.
'Your husband might be
disappointed. But it will pass,' Mai Solo made a forceful declaration,
as if trying to convince herself as well. 'And the school doesn't
have to know about this either.'
She squeezed Revai's
hand, asking, 'Do you know who is responsible for the pregnancy?'
'She won't say. I have
begged her; I have shouted at her.....Nothing makes a difference.
It hurts me so much because we have always been very close, but
now....' She shook her head despondently, remembering how Nyasha's
lower lip had trembled, how unshed tears had glistened in her eyes.
The girl's dejection had stirred up unwelcome, long buried memories.
Revai had been there before. Survive she had, but something had
died within her.
'I just want her to be
all right,' she whispered and covered her face briefly, before looking
around in despair at their bleak hospital surroundings.
Mai Solo replied quietly,
'We have to hope. Sometimes these hospitals have medicines, drips,
motivated staff . . . Remember how quickly they attended to Nyasha.'
They sat in silence,
lost in thought. To distract her own thoughts from Nyasha, Revai
drew Mai Solo back to the present with a question. Even as she spoke,
she could hear how irrational her words sounded under the circumstances.
'Why do this? You are such a lovely woman....'
Momentarily incensed,
Mai Solo looked at her and countered, 'What is that supposed to
mean? Why did you bring your niece to me? Shouldn't you have supported
her through the pregnancy and let her have the baby?'
Revai cleared her throat.
It was a low, uncomfortable sound of embarrassment. She chewed on
her lower lip, adjusted her headscarf and did not answer. She thought
again of her own situation so many years before. The world was not
kind to girls who got pregnant at fourteen. Disclosure at this point
was out of the question.
Appearing to let go of
her annoyance, Mai Solo sighed and said to her, 'Look, I provide
a necessary service. If not me, then someone else would do it. At
least, I genuinely care about the girls and women that I help.'
There had to be more.
Revai remained silent and waited.
'And of course, it comes
down to money. I suppose you have a loving husband to look after
you. But life is different for me. You understand?'
Revai shook her head.
Mai Solo threw her a quizzical look and continued, her voice now
transformed into a low confiding murmur. 'I am a single mother to
a disabled boy. I earn enough from this job to ensure that Solo
always has a good wheelchair; that we have money for food and clothes..
...and money to pay for Solo's check-ups with private doctors. You
know what these government hospitals are like now . . . . . . '
Revai started, 'But can't
you do something ...?
Mai Solo's interrupted
with a quick retort,' What choices does someone like me have in
this country?' Revai stared.
'I was once a prostitute.
The money was good but I hated it....Don't look at me like that.
Or feel sorry for me. We are doing better than most. The special
needs school that Solo used to attend closed down because they no
longer had funds . . . .'
'But . . . .'
Mai Solo raised a hand,
obviously keen to have her point heard.
'No, let me finish. You
asked, didn't you? The government has nothing to offer the disabled
so I have to make sure my son has a life! A life with some dignity.
I am teaching him to read and write, following up on where the school
left off. In our little world, we are happy. We are secure. And
it's all down to this....this.. that you would dare to criticise
me for!' Just then, a nurse came out of the theatre office to call
Revai. She asked Mai Solo to come too. The doctor was standing by
the window and looking out into the night. He turned to face them,
a solemn expression on his face. He explained that Nyasha had lost
so much blood that she had collapsed on the operating table. They
had failed to resuscitate her.
Revai's journey was in
a shocked haze. On the combi home, her eyes hardly registered her
fellow passengers. Isolated in her grief and anxiety, she spoke
to no one. Her own screams in the doctor's office still rang in
her ears, interspersed with Mai Solo's fragmented apologies at the
hospital gate.
She buried her face in
her hands and wept silent tears. Her heart had been in the right
place. She had wanted to avert a scandal. She had wanted to secure
Nyasha's future. But now, she questioned her ideals and motives
to find them diminished by the horror of tragedy.
It was late at night
when she arrived at home. Jona was waiting for her. He was playing
a noisy game with Alex on a battery- powered toy. She collapsed
into his arms, sobbing.
'What's wrong? What's
wrong, Revai? Where is Nyasha?' he asked, supporting her in his
arms. Her sobs were muffled against his chest.
'Where is she my dear?
Please stop crying and talk to me,' he asked her, wiping her tears
with his hand.
Revai could not stop
crying. She felt little Alex tugging at her dress but she could
not will herself to pick him up. Jona gripped her upper arms, concern
lining his face. 'What happened? Tell me mudiwa.'
Revai tried to speak,
but all she managed to do was to stutter, 'Nyasha . . . she was
pregnant....she . . . she .. ..I took her for an abortion . . . .'
She stopped when she
felt his body stiffening, moving away, his arms dropping from the
embrace. She looked up at him, pleading silently for his forgiveness,
needing to be enfolded again in the shelter of his arms.
'What did she say to
you? We can fix this. Where is she? Nobody has to know about this!'
He hissed in a strained voice, a look of panic on his face.
Stunned, Revai stepped
backwards, searching his face, but he wouldn't look at her. She
sagged against the wall, shaking her head, holding her hands to
her chest.
'Please tell me you are
not saying what I think you are saying! Was it you? Was it you Jona?'
She screamed at him.
His silence and the expression
on his face became the confirmation she didn't want to hear. She
lunged and pummelled his chest with her fists. He seized her wrists
and they grappled. Alex started bawling.
'Nyasha is dead. The
abortion went wrong. She is dead Jona! Dead, dead! Do you hear me?'
she cried, intent that he should not only feel shame, but pain too.
Pain as deep as she was feeling.
The girl had been as
good as their daughter. Even he had constantly said that. So what
had changed? That she had grown hips and breasts? Blossomed into
an attractive adolescent? How could that be any excuse, when she
had always been there for him? Always?
Jona let go of her wrists
and groaned, covering his face with his hands. The small distance
between them became a yawning cavern. Revai wanted to hit him, to
throw things at him . . . to do anything that might release her
pain and anger. But in spite of herself, she also wanted to reach
out to him, to close the distance; to touch him and feel the warmth
of his embrace again. She wanted to hear him say that this was just
a bad dream and everything would be all right.
But he didn't make any
move to comfort her. Turning, he walked into the darkness of night
without looking back. He left the door wide open.
She remained slumped
against the wall, unable to summon any strength to follow him.
'Mama, mama', little
Alex cried and tugged at her dress. She gathered him into her arms,
eager to find some solace in his soft, chubby body.
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