Tuesday 31 March 2015

The Mistakes I Made With Girls: A Chapter from my Autobiography - Of Mrs. Manga and how I once Coveted Her...



Mrs. Manga was not my next door neighbor. She was my next house neighbor. Her house and the house at which I had rented a room were separated by a foot path which was wide enough to let vehicles go through. As most of the paths in Shelly Beach - Timbwani, it was rocky, perhaps as a symbol of the rocky lives we led, and perhaps, more specifically for Mrs. Manga as I will soon narrate to you.

I don't know when exactly I started talking to Mrs. Manga or when she started talking to me. What I know is, when we started communicating with one another, the communication immediately developed into a strong bond. At least inside me. 

Mrs. Manga was short and plump. And should that description fail to hit the mark let me then add of her that as a product she was well packed. 

Had she been a yam growing in a farm in the land of the Ibo of Nigeria, she would only have been grown in the farm of one Okonkwo, the master yam planter, he who would die, not, out of starvation for he had the strength to feed not only his family but his entire village with the sweat of his brow, but, out of the conflict between modernity and tradition - his refusal to reconcile the two and to conform to the changing ways. He who as Chinua Achebe may have wanted us to pick from Things Fall Apart, refused to follow the example of Eneke the bird who learnt to  fly without perching when man learnt to shoot without missing.

Now, to say that Mrs. Manga was beautiful is an understatement. She was beauty itself, a perfect piece of artifact from the finest of all wood carvers in the land of my maternal ancestors, Wamunyu. 

She was not light skinned. She was reddish, and I think my penchant for yellow yellows started with her out of the sight she always carved in the dresses she wore or the kangas she always adorned herself. 

In a way every piece of clothing she picked for herself seemed perfect. It was also her tradition to always apply a striking layer of lip stick that combining with her milky eyes and sparkling teeth made her an earthly goddess. 

One day, one of my friends, having spotted her exclaimed, "she looks like she usually spends her days in the skies with the gods only to drop down here in the evening after this coastal sun has chickened out." Tole, the friend, was wondering how her face was ever spotless, and she seemed not to be struggling to keep it so, when most of our other women in Timbwani had their faces eaten up by sun burns and made rough by the slightest spike of the stench of dead sea turtles that would sweep our village from that part of the Indian ocean.

With all this description I should hope that you have understood by now, why, when Mrs. Manga decided I should be helping her with a 'small' household chore I would have been such a big joke of a 'man' to say no.
If anything I considered it a favor, the fact she would want to keep cordial relations with me, and me, being in good books with her, even for that simple wave of a hand that she would extend to me (when she deemed it necessary) every time I passed by her house. I was thus her's for the asking. 

"I want you to take my battery for charging," that was the golden request that brought me close to Mrs. Manga one day as I passed by the calcium-bricked structure, of I don't know how may rooms that was her home and which she also rented to some people including my departed uncle, Martin. She would use the battery, of exide make, to power her music system.

I had a bicycle. I always rode a bicycle. It belonged to Consolata House and I would always use it to come to the village to buy groceries, and bread, and cigarettes - either for one of the missionaries with whom we worked at the house or for one of the cooks whose daughter I also felt was good fodder for a girlfriend. 

Or I would use it  (the bicycle) having picked some letters from the post office in Likoni, three kilometers away from Timbwani, to rush to the village to drop other letters that belonged to some elderly girlfriends that I had who would have been communicated to by their boyfriends from the United Kingdom. As it is they would have met with the boyfriends at the shores of Shelly Beach or at Shirloni, a night club that operated in the midst of our village and which was brought down in 1997 during the Kaya Bombo ethnic cleansing massacre, never to rise again to its feet.

Such girlfriends were fond of calling me Father, meaning Priest either to turn me off should I develop some interest in them, or to tell me, indirectly, that they saw the face of Priesthood in me. Or perhaps they wanted to tell me that the letters I picked for them from the post office was none of my business.

In some instances, I would find them high, and suggestively dressed and seated on the expensive couches that were rare in our village but only in their houses, and having received that post card saying they have been send some money, via money gram, they would get so excited they would almost fart with cheer, and even imagine me a real Priest. 

"Bless me Father," they would tell me, bowing down their heads. 

Well...what I am telling you is that, Mrs. Manga was familiar of that resume of mine, and even her husband would not question my being close to her had she even chose to visit me at my thingira

In fact they had a girl, one of their three children, who was sprouting up just like her mother, but who unfortunately would never talk to me, partly because she was young at that time I was getting acquainted with her mother. It was this girl, that Mrs. Manga would promise me, when she felt elated of my service, once in a while, and when she was not calling me a Priest, like the girlfriends I have just told you about.
What I don't know is whether Mrs. Manga had the same feelings for me, and whether specifically, she coveted me, as I did her.

But perhaps as I continue with her story I should tell you of this girl I found at one of the houses of my elderly girlfriends and who was the one who ever wrote me a love letter, the most sincere one that a man can ever receive and the only one I have ever received from a girl in my entire life. 

Latifah - the girl, was from Nairobi. Those days, and I am talking of the period between mid 2000 and August 2001 just before I joined University, Nairobi was a mystery among boys of my age in Timbwani. We always heard about it in the radio. And for that we looked with awe every Nairobian who came visiting in our small village. 

We loved these visitors and we were attracted to them by their uncomely Sheng language of unakaanga wapi..., ni mgani huyo..., sipendi odijo wa mao kama vile napenda wa ingo...

So then Just like I would say of being talked to by Mrs. Manga so was it to be talked to by Latifah, who struck up a thing with me even though she was expectant when I met her. In fact she had run away from Nairobi, perhaps, to escape scorn form her peers or perhaps to come and have a recollection of her next move in life. As it is, the man who had made her heavy, was a student at the college I was to join and who I would later meet through the introduction by Latifah.

As a girl Latifah was reserved and too young to have been put in the family way at that time. She just seemed to like me for reasons best known to her and had I suggested to be the foster father of her would be child, I have no doubt that she would have accepted. 

But again I was also too young. Too young to tell the difference between the cry of a child who wants me to nestle her, from that of its mother wanting similar services from me. So it was she, who would later on trace my whereabouts, even after we had lost touch and I had progressed with my undergraduate studies. It was she who later wrote me a letter I received as a resident of Ruwensori hostels at the Njoro campus of Egerton University, the hostels that some girls we flirted with at the campus would call slums when they were disinterested in us and when they wanted to indirectly put us off in an offensive manner. 

The only part of that letter that I would want to stress as I tell you of how I used to covet Mrs. Manga was the fact that she was in love with me. 

"I have a crush on you," the deadening sentence read. 

Yet, I did not know what it meant for a girl to say she has a crush on you and I had to ask one of my roommates who seemed familiar with these issues. He first laughed at me then explained the whole thing. 

Well, I think it ended there, for I have never heard from Latifah since. What I can't recall, unfortunately, is whether I replied her letter in the first place, although I often mimed a song by a certain Tanzanian popular artist that was a hit at the time every time I wanted to remember her.

"Maneno mengi wanasema juu yako eti kuna kitu ambacho umenifanyia...mganga sio sababu mi nikuje kwako, ila mi mwenyewe moyoni nimekuchagua...nakutamani...nione sura yako...ooh...nakutamani...niwekaribu yako..." The song is titled Latifah. 

So then, you can see the parameters within which I was operating even with Mrs. Manga. I coveted her, yes, but it stopped at that. Just the simple weird...crazy...imaginations of an adolescent boy who had opted out of joining the Senior Seminary to study at the University. 

Of course there were times my imaginations with Mrs. Manga went as far as wishing that I had been born before her, that I had grown with her in the same village as a child and that I had spotted her earlier way before Manga imagined of her. 

Because of this I killed Manga many times in my dreams and having emerged both victor and villain in the murders I would run away with her to the dusty dog kennel that my room was. 

Such a murder happened one night a few months before Mrs. Manga collapsed and died.

Earlier in the day, Mrs. Manga had sent me to Likoni, as usual, to charge her battery. It happened that as I picked it, she had forgotten to properly tighten the nuts that close the partitions in a car battery in which sulphuric acid is usually filled. For her mistake, the acid, unknowingly to me, had eaten my pair of shorts as I took it to Likoni for charging from the back of the bicycle where I had tied it with a rubber band.

The acid had also eaten my inner wear, also from behind. Luckily it did not eat my sitting supplements and I don't even recall feeling an itch. Or maybe I felt it but the thought of serving Mrs. Manga was too heavily sweet on me it etherized my pains. So then even when I was handing over the fully charged battery to Mrs. Manga, and I felt my pants go something like...prrrrr...and I felt some air hit my behind directly on its skin, I knew something awful had happened but I would not tell Mrs. Manga. 

That was actually the incident that ate the pair of the second hand yellow pair of shorts that I had bought at Kongowea market and that had become my Sunday best of late. And symbolically, unknown to me at the time, its untimely death under the poison of sulphuric acid signaled the death of Mrs. Manga.

It was in the middle of the night and Timbwani, save for a streak of the do you really believe in life after love track that was stealing its way from the Shelly Beach Hotel discotheque, was all quiet.

It was one of those nights when even the stray dogs in the village would go silent and decide not to stir us with their sickening growls as they decided which bitch would be picked by whom. One of those nights when even the owls from the then thickly Waitiki farm would wait for a signal before they started their sirens of death.

I was asleep. Then I heard an eerie scream of some girlish voice cut the night as the circumciser cuts the foreskins of would be men among the Abukusu of Western Kenya.

It was Mrs. Manga, heaving under the thunder of her husband and pleading with him not to kill her. 

"Why do you keep on talking to men behind my back?" Manga questioned at the top of his voice, and for once I felt guilty of 'falling in love' with Mrs. Manga. 

"They are only our customers at the grocery," she pleaded followed with a thud, and another and another, all falling on her as I could hear with the continuing fall and further fall of her voice perhaps as she learnt to keep up with the pain that they brought, this happening in some scary slow motion until Mrs. Manga was all but faint.

I knew it was wrong to covet Mrs. Manga and the Bible is clear about it and I told myself I should repent and I later repented...sincerely. I repent even now and God knows I would never go for anyone's wife just as I wouldn't want anyone to come for mine.  

"You can...can...can...kill...me...if you want...for all I care..."she struggled moments before the scuffle stopped.

Those were the last words I heard of her that night and those were the last of the words I would hear of her.
That night, I struggled to sleep. I honestly cried in my bed, shedding tears uncontrollably for my love, Mrs. Manga. I promised to hate Manga and said if he were to send me to charge the battery in Likoni as he was picking of late from his wife, I would refuse. 

Then I got out of my room and went to nurse Mrs. Manga. I broke the padlock to their house and getting in found her bleeding from the nose. She said she was feeling some sharp pain inside her cranium. I called an ambulance and I took her to the nearest health center, all by myself. By the time we got there she was gasping for breath and I started shouting. But even in that last moment she was calling my name thanking me for how I had been helpful to her in her life.

I was also gasping for breath, when I woke up to hear someone knocking at my door asking why I had not gone to work and whether I was okay. What a nightmare had this last part of Mrs. Manga's beating turned out to be.

Some months passed. Mrs. Manga would never be the same again  - health wise. I never saw her by the balcony of their house anymore so she was not sending me to charge her battery. And one day while I was at the Consolata House, watering the grape fruits that we grew there, word came that she had gone to be with the Lord. 

The messenger who had come to inform the priest in charge had also come to book a requiem mass saying she had died of a cerebral kind of attack, that many whispered may have come with the earlier thrashing from Manga.

On the day of her the requiem mass, I accompanied the priest who said the mass for her and who preached about good families. I was responsible for translating his English homily into Kiswahili and I got the challenge of translating the word 'matrimony' which came in a sentence explaining  the sacrament of matrimony that the priest was keen about.

Anyway with the lifeless body of Mrs. Manga lying before me that day, I confirmed the death of one of the girls I had been stupidly in love with yet one to whom I had never said anything to that effect, just like I never did to many other girls I would later meet in life.

Yet in the case of Mrs. Manga, I had no permission to try such a thing, whether on earth or in heaven, for, as a girl, Mrs. Manga was already taken.

Still Though I pray that she may rest in peace.

Dear Mrs. Manga, to you I say, "I loved you but God loved you the most...till we meet again...huruka thayu..."