Read Uhuru Street Online

Authors: M. G. Vassanji

Tags: #General, #Literary, #Fiction, #Short Stories (Single Author)

Uhuru Street (6 page)

BOOK: Uhuru Street
6.35Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
For a Shilling

She gives a loud masculine howl as the smouldering matchstick head disappears into the shadow and makes its shaky contact there.

‘For one shilling you can give her the burn,’ he had said. The burn. That mysterious infliction referred to by adults in brief parenthetical statements that ended with dark suggestive silences, leaving the mind to grope at its further reaches. I had not yet reached the refinement my friend Ahmed knew about. What kind of burn? I had often wondered, never having seen one given. A match? A nice brass spatula fresh from flipping a hot chappati? On the shins? The thighs? I was getting closer.

‘Do you know what happens to girls who pee in bed?’ he asked me one day.

I looked back squarely at him, without a word. Perhaps even with a challenge in my eyes. The trick in these instances is to appear knowledgeable. But inside I felt a tingle, a luxurious thrill run down me. Here was another of those deliciously dirty secrets he hoarded, which he shared with the adult world and let drop one after another in our outings.

‘They get the burn,’ he said. I maintained my calm. ‘You know where?’ Now his smug, derisive look told me something had been let out for me to catch.

‘Don’t tell me,’ I said, unable to contain myself any longer, ‘you mean there, in the –’ Then he made the proposition.

From a bully who had laid ambushes for me at the bottom of the dark staircase of our building he became a friend and a mentor. And he laid down his guns and converted for that simplest of reasons: money. He taught me expensive tricks, at a shilling each, and I paid up. My price into the fantastic – and all too real – world he conjured up for me. A price for knowledge not easy to come by. Starting with simple revelations, and explications of what I knew only by hearsay and mouthed without understanding about our boys’ world. The crazy world of our daily associations – of Arabs, Africans, Asians and assorted half-castes – in which the arse was king.

In our moments of rage, it was your arse this or your arse that. It was on the arse that the big boys patted you if you let them get too friendly, and Lord forbid you sit on a willing lap in a crowded car returning from school. Starting with the arse then and culminating in the burn, a weird introduction to that other, that hidden world. Of girls.

One day when our relationship was new and still uncertain, he said to me, ‘You know, Amin sells.’

Amin was a cheeky, spoilt, rich kid, whose father Mzee Pipa owned the only motor car for a block. I looked silly.

‘Heh? What does he sell?’

‘His arse, stupid!’

I confess I still looked dumb. He was so much beyond me in such matters, and what he said so teased the imagination, that I was often, as they say, a ‘tube light’: blinking uncertainly.

‘You don’t believe me?’ he said, excited and intimidating, as if ready to fight. ‘Nizar and Ramesh – them. They have a hideout … and – I swear it, upon my mother!’

The recollection was too much for him and he doubled up in a fit of such loud laughter, snortles and backslapping that it brought tears to his eyes.

‘They’ve got big fat ones you know,’ he added, making a fat circle with thumb and forefinger.

I was aghast. He had bowled me over by the very concreteness of his disclosure, its closeness to our lives. Could
that
actually happen among people we knew? But that was Ahmed. With him things happened. He gave life to words. There was now a drumming in my ears and I would have given anything to find out more.

‘You will see,’ he said. ‘Pipa’s driver caught them at it yesterday – but they might also be there today. One shilling,’ he added.

We got up from our hideout under the staircase, dusted our backsides and walked up to Pipa’s courtyard across the street. There we sat behind an old rotting cupboard and waited, well concealed from the traffic of people that went up and down the stairs to the flats above. We would wait, he said, until we heard sounds from behind the wall. Then we would place the bricks and boxes against it, stand on top of them and look down on the action. We waited one hour and nothing happened. I thought I’d been had. With a story like that and no proof – well … I stood up and started walking.

‘Give me my shilling,’ he said. I refused.

‘I told you about it, didn’t I? I’ve shown you the hideout, haven’t I?’

Still I refused. Whereupon he threw me to the ground and prised away the shilling from my now yielding fingers.

It was a rough world. There were only a few tough boys on the block, but you had to tame them or be terrorised. They could get you on the dark staircases or in the streets at night, or they could wait for you after school and harrass you on the long way back home. He was not any bigger than I: but there are some who are born fighters and others who just aren’t. A big brother could help but I was the eldest boy in my family. I chose the old and time-tested
method of paying off. As the proverb goes, when trouble arrives, send it home with a penny.

My family had moved into the second floor of the most recent of the two-storey buildings that were giving a new, modern look to our side of Kichwele Street. Ahmed and his brother and sisters were on the first floor. Their grandfather was the landlord.

They were a brood of five orphans, three of whom could not speak but could let out loud horrifying yowls during quarrels. But in their saner moments they used gestures and made soft sounds that were almost a pleasure to hear. Then you could almost make out the words they struggled to dislodge so painfully from their mouths. To call them you hooted: ‘Hoo!’ as everyone did, and they responded. Their disability gave them ugly faces. The youngest was a boy of about seven, with a long face and a mouth he moved into a sort of twist when he tried to talk. Then came a sister, of about the same age, also dumb. Followed by Ahmed, and then the terror: Varaa. She was heavy and strong, with a large mouth and a wild look, frequently barefoot, and in a loose frock that was always too short. She was a terror for what she could do with that mouth: let out howls of anger – or sorrow, for she also cried – that sounded varaa, varaa, varaa! Hence her name. Just to avoid hearing this babel you would keep your distance.

The eldest was also a girl, of about sixteen, the most normal. She dressed neatly, went to school regularly and talked to neighbours – mainly to hear complaints about her brothers and sisters or to defend them. She defended them vigorously but could not manage them herself, and was often very much a part of the screaming and yelling that went on inside that flat. Sometimes she simply left them and went to live with relatives.

This was a family of howlers that periodically went berserk. They lived on the floor below us and we trod it with special care, gingerly, when a fight was in progress. It would not have taken
much provocation, so it seemed then, for the whole lot of them to stop fighting among themselves and to fall on you like a pack of hyenas. Accompanying the howls would be the sounds of objects getting thrown: chairs, spoons, pots and pans.

Periodically too – for better or worse it was always hard to say – the grandfather came to mete out punishment. He was a small thin man in a crumpled white drill suit and a black fez. He brought with him a cricket stump, held firmly at the spike with what seemed a certain urgency. When the door closed behind him the howls became ferocious, interspersed with the sounds of the old man’s oaths. Downstairs in the street people would look up and pause, some knowingly, others in alarm.

I remember the first day we moved into that building. I had taken my two younger brothers up to the roof terrace to keep them from getting under people’s feet. There we were, myself looking down on the traffic below, and these two youngsters making hopscotch markings with charcoal, and what happens but we get our first treat to the howling chorus: varaa, varaa, varaa.

She swept in through the doorway, trailed by her two youngest siblings, making emphatic gestures with her fat arms, thumping along from wall to wall, glaring at us. Then she came and stood in front of me, arms akimbo, eyes fiery. The message was clear: this was her territory. My youngest brother had started to cry, and my own hair stood on end. It was my first sight of her – let alone of a dumb threesome – and she looked wild. Slowly I walked past her and down the stairs with my two charges and this foretaste of things to come. What a way to move into a new home.

It was us and them. There were no other kids in the building, and they had Ahmed. Vocal, strong, a bully, a fighter; a loafer. The staircase was his domain. He would sit sideways on a step near the bottom, his feet stretched across it, daring you to jump over. Sliding down a balustrade he would call out names. At night the staircase was dark and menacing. When threatening sounds – hoots
and chortles and moans – issued forth from its shadows there was no doubt who lurked behind them.

He roamed the streets with a gang of boys, and he made threats about what they could do. He loved a fight. It would be nothing for him to take you into a hold from behind and make you fight or trip you. The school had given up on him, he came and went as he pleased. And like many bullies, he was an expert at marbles. It was sheer folly to play with him, however much he persuaded you, for he could make you ‘serve plays’ for a lifetime if he wanted.

We might have moved from that unholy place if some sort of unstable truce had not been declared between our families. And I take no small credit for that.

It started the following way. I had finished buying a cut-up chutneyed mango from the roadside on my way home from school and was putting back my five-cent change when he walked up to me. After school a row of hawkers squatted behind a display of wild or unripe fruit normally forbidden at home. Those who had the money bought, others borrowed, begged slices or bites, or hung around unfulfilled and drooling.

‘Can I borrow five cents,’ he said. ‘I’ll return it tomorrow.’

I then did one of the wisest things I’ve ever done; I said ‘Goodbye, copper.’

He bought a mango with it and we walked back together. Thus began our dubious friendship, held together delicately with a reasonable supply of cash. For me began a period of revelations – of grisly little bits of information that shocked yet sent tingling sensations down my spine and left me yearning for more; of guilty knowledge: forbidden fruit. My bought prestige was duly recognised on the block – and became a cause for concern at home. I must confess that my life at home was one tedious drone. I was ruled by a triad of females – my mother and two older sisters – and I had, besides, one drip-nosed and another smart-arsed brother, both younger than I. My lot there was a series of long,
drawn-out sermons and sob stories of family misfortune handed down in the evenings after dinner. And a call for more work and help. Nothing exciting happened, life was a small cooperative.

That day, our first day of association, Ahmed invited me to join him and other boys in their nocturnal revelry. So in the evening on the way home from mosque, somewhat warily I passed by the street corner he had indicated and watched them from a distance. That gang of boys, I decided, I was not ready to join as yet. They were a desperate lot, whose families – if they had any – had even given up on them. I am cautious by nature. I decided I would have my excitement in small, controlled doses. After all, I was going to pay for it.

They sat on the steps of a store in darkness, visible collectively as a dense shadow occasionally changing shape, emitting a murmur or two, a cracking of fingers, a chuckle, and so on. Occasionally too a match would strike then go off and a cigarette glow travel from end to end. Then, when a pretty young thing passed by, clop-clopping on the pavement and framed splendidly by the light from the corner lamp post, they would begin with calls and whistles. ‘Sweet arse!’ would go the cry, ‘Oh my! Milky-milk-white!’ It took some nerve.

I related this one evening to my sisters, the two tyrants at home, Mother’s viziers. There was no end to surprises. I thought I was saying something offensive, which would put Ahmed in a horrible light (we’d had a fight), making him appear as the very devil incarnate. Perhaps I hoped the old grandfather would hear about this and bring his cricket stump to bear on that fat rump. But no. They loved it! They made me repeat that incantation syllable by syllable, to the very tones in which it had been chanted. ‘Oh my! Sweet arse! Milky-milk-white!’ Talk about lack of excitement at home.

To come back to the proposition. For a shilling I could give her the burn, he said. I paid up. I obtained the shilling as I’d always
done; in the thick of end-of-month rush in the store, pretending to help and looking as busy as a bee, stationed behind the cashbox, I slipped the coin quietly into a pocket. I’d never been caught before, but this time brother Smartarse saw me and when I was outside the store, threatened to report.

There is one way to teach such kids a lesson. They trail behind you in school and all over town, expect you to protect them from other kids, and then play you off against your elders. I landed one resounding smacker across his cheek and off he went howling to report: but only the lesser crime. This obstacle overcome, I went off to where Ahmed awaited me at the staircase and placed the shilling in his sticky palm.

We went up and I followed him into the cave that was their flat. I had never been behind those doors before and I did so then with some trepidation. I looked behind me nervously as I entered. Inside, it was strangely quiet, and dark. The windows there, except for one or two of them, were always kept closed. Some of them were boarded up with boxtops and plywood. The curtains were drawn that afternoon and light was barely visible through them. I walked behind him without looking right or left in what I knew, from the plan of our own home above, to be the dining room. We turned right into a bedroom. There were three beds in it each alongside a wall. He made for the one to our right. I followed. In it was Varaa.

He started making signs with his hands, and the soft clucking half-words that only they understood. It seemed that she was in on the deal. She gave a grunt of annoyance and drew back her legs, bending them at the knees. He let her dress slip back and parted her legs further. Then he lighted a match and handed it to me. Shadows moved on the walls as he did so and our three silent figures emerged sharply in the dim orange glow of the fluttering light. I moved in with the flame. The darkness between her legs had disappeared to reveal fleshy brown thighs and a panty-less
crotch covered lightly with a black fuzz. On her face was an anxious look – wild eyed, open-mouthed.

BOOK: Uhuru Street
6.35Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Microcosmic God by Theodore Sturgeon
Embattled Hearts 1 by J.M. Madden
I, Row-Boat by Cory Doctorow
The Day the Siren Stopped by Colette Cabot
Firebrand by Antony John
Three Little Words by Harvey Sarah N.
Alpha by Regan Ure
The One Tree of Luna by Todd McCaffrey
Second Hope Cowboy by Rhonda Lee Carver