Episode 29
Have you ever wondered what would have happened if Adam had called out to God after sinning in the garden of Eden? He waited until God sought him to realize that he had sinned. Am sure God would have forgiven him if he had taken responsibility over his sin.I feel that somehow he was blaming God for giving him Eve who later gave him the forbidden fruit. The power to rebuke sin was right in his hands yet he chose to do otherwise. Nxaa always shifting blame to others.
I looked at Peter in the eye and realised that I felt pity and sorrow for him.manâs fall is his own doing.
âplease babe let me explainâ what sort of explaination would have justified such action? I left him for such a short time,a month and some few weeks yet he had already gotten inside her skirts and worse made her pregnant . his faithfulness was questionable. I didnât have time to listen to his unreasonable reasons. I didnât feel pain,not yet. I walked away to my room and left him with his head between his arms.
I knelt down in a prayer.
âoh God I know I am not worthy to stand before your presence because of my inequities. if it pleased you for me to have no man who will stick with me till the end,so be it. help me to have the strength to pass through these trying moments. please keep me safe for the sake of my dearest kids who are the best gift that you gave me.I will always be thankful to you. In the name of Jesus Christ The Son of The Most High God I pray. â
I got out to face him again.there was no way I could have given the devil the satisfaction of seeing my pain.
âyou know what. get out of my house and never ever come back for me again. go ahead and marry Masozi am sure your mother will be happy. â
âdonât talk like that my love. you know its you I want.what happened was a mistake I never intended.please I beg you forgive meâ he was down on his knees. how I wish he was doing that but with a different purpose in proposal not forgiveness. tears were streaming down my eyes. I had given up, I didnât have any strength to fight for love anymore. he lamented about how after the night we urgued about his mother he had lost his mind and complete sense of reason. Masozi came to our bedroom after hearing him shouting. she comforted him and one thing lead to another. he had wanted a way to release and spend his frustrations so he claimed .
âam sorry Peter but I am not travelling that path again â I showed him the door and he walked to it defeated, dejected and lost. it wasnât my intention to let him go but sometimes the best thing in this life is to learn when to let go of somethings. for once I patted myself of the back for making a decision for the love of myself. I didnât want to be caught in the cobweb of STIs. her being a virgin wasnât a guarantee that he should sleep with her without protection. what a virgin without dignity who wouldnât wait till the wedding night to offer herself to her husband. oh I closed my eyes in pain watching all the dreams we had, the joy, the high expectations and the future down the drain. Amanda came and hugged me. still little but she understood the pain Mum was going through.
a week later Peter went back to Lilongwe. the news of Masoziâs pregnancy spread across the village like a bolt of lightning. one could hear the high ulutations and songs of Peterâs mother to the depth of the ocean . it was rumoured that she had already named the baby after her father if he would be a boy and her own name if it would be a girl.poor baby to be named after the monster. I hoped she wouldnât live to inherit her madness as well. she boasted about the success of her mission to get me out of the way.you can imagine the type of shame that I had to pass through. when I walked I could feel peopleâs penetrating stares mocking me.whenever people laughed I automatically thought they were laughing at me.I became socially isolated and withdrawn. God bless my mother for being such a comfort. the reason I still stayed in the village was because I needed to think what I had to do with my life.this man dependency syndrome was running out of luck.I needed to stand on my two feet and take responsibility. I started helping my mother at the field. being closer to my mum made me realise how much I had wasted by being away.
one day I received a call from Norah. She asked if I had forever dissappeared because she missed me big time. I told her that I would be there in just a matter of time. it was a lie but knowing Norah she could be a pain.
âgirl you have to come,am getting married in four months time â to say I was shocked is an understatement but I was taken overboard. she was the last person to think of settling down unless there was a catch to it.
âwho is the lucky guy or should u say the unlucky guy?â i was intrigued.
âdonât worry itâs not one of your cousins. the guy is a Mocambican who works for Mota Engil. you know they are constructing roads in the country. if I say he is loaded I mean I am swimming in money â. you see that was Norah for you in black and white. something pricked my mind.
âdid you tell him about your HIV status?â she went quite for a while in deep thoughts. am sorry I didnât tell you. Norah contracted the virus from her neighbours husband. remember that man who came with Norah to pick me up the time the fake Pastor wanted to rape me? he used to give her so much money she opened a Salon. some people can kill,neighbors are supposed to be oneâs source of comfort not sorrow and grief . since then,she had been out for vengeance. it was evident this guy was new in town and didnât know anything.
âwell I donât think that is necessary, who knows if he is the sameâ you could swear her heart was at ease.I never gave up in lecturing her about living positively. she was young and had her whole life before her there was no need to ruin it.I was the only one who knew and she kept the secret even from her mother as sweet as she was. I was the only one who panicked at any slight sign of sicknessâŠ
to be continuedâŠ(am sorry darlings I know its short but am so tired I had a hectic day.good nyt)
Episode 29âŠcontinuation
True to my words, I went to Lilongwe three weeks before Norahâs wedding. She was my best friend and I had to be there for her. She had been by my side through thick and thin and there was no way I couldnât have done the same for her, with her share of madness I still loved her. I left Amanda in the care of my mum and promised to be back right after the wedding. Amanda cried so much it broke my heart, she said she wanted to go and see her dad, in this case Peter. I hoped with time or perhaps with age she was going to realize that we were no longer together.
Norahâs mum was so happy to see me but she couldnât stop pointing out to my evident second mistake, Laurent. She said she had known that Ben would just pretend to be there for me then after getting me pregnant again, dump me. I didnât want this cruel reminder of my past. It was over and I had healed, there was no way I could allow the scars to be scathed in such a heartless manner. She didnât have to lecture me about morals. The reason that Norah was getting married still without a child didnât mean that she didnât have skeletons in the closet. She once confided in me that she had aborted the pregnancy of her neighborâs husband. Having two children to show for my wayward ways didnât mean that I was the mother of sinners. For the rest of my stay I avoided a one on one conversation with her.
The wedding was a marvel. I was so happy for her. The groomâs family members were not present save for a few friends and colleagues, I doubted if they even knew of his union in a foreign land. After a long time, it was nice seeing Emmah again. I was terrified how much she had grown in such a short time. I started to believe that if you get to a partner way too old for you, your young blood mix with his and you end up looking as aged as him lol. Her daughter was grown and she was expecting a second child. She had a new resentment towards me which I failed to register the source. Some people tend to push their bitterness towards others, was it my fault that she ended up with the Mbuya? For all my problems, I never tried to put the blame on others even when those so called best friends of mine, somehow pushed me into sleeping with Ben in the first place. If they had left me to do it my own way maybe none of all the problems in my life could have happened.
I couldnât say I wasnât tempted to go and see Peter, but I schooled my heart to save its last dignity. Seeing him again may raise some sleeping pain. I might even be tempted into taking him back but to think of all the baggage was impossible. I decided to call Joy so that we meet in town. I didnât want to go to her house to cause unnecessary tongue wagging. It hurt to think that we could have been sisters in marriage but it was never to be. I wanted to feed my curiosity with the latest gossip in Peterâs life. We met over a snack opposite crossroads at CafĂ© Delight next to Seven Eleven Supermarket. We ordered our food and started talking. I was horrified to learn that since Peter came back from Nkhatabay he had drowned into some sort of depression. He had been aggressive and kept to himself. Masozi was indeed pregnant but the few months she had lived in Lilongwe proved to be some sort of a character chokzsure to her true self. They always fought because she was always in the company of township women gabbling his money and property away. Just the previous week, Peter had paid off a debt amounting to MK100,000 when the debtors threatened to take the refrigerator away. She was never home to clean up and mostly when Peter came back from work he didnât find her. When his mother was told of this, she said he was only trying to find an excuse to get rid of her and there was no way she could allow that with her grandchild on the way. Nxaa that left him with no choice but to dine and wine with the devil himself. I thought Masozi was doing that deliberately because she knew she had the monsterâs backup. Women never ever try to put your sons into such compromising situation you might end up losing them. His transfer was just two months away. The following month he was supposed to go to Nkhotakota and arrange prior accommodation. Masozi had said there was no way she was leaving his sight; she would follow him to the ends of the world. Recently Peter had started going to church, which was the happiest news I had heard in a long time. I knew it was only in the presence of God where he could find the comfort he clamored when no man could afford it. A simple mistake had robbed us of our future together. If only I could reverse the hand of time to that day I had left him alone with Masozi am sure she had looked at him like a cat before a bowl of milk. Joy told me that if at all there was something that I could do to help him that was the moment. She said the way she knew us our love had survived a lot and would I give up then? I told her that my hands were tied; I couldnât do anything about it unless he had to help himself. My past was dark enough to further darken it.
We finished eating, just as we were about to leave, I heard a voice behind me âyou look more beautiful than I can remember.â I turned around and oh my goodness; there stood Peter with his brother Mike. My heart hammered inside my chest threatening to explode, not trusting myself to speak, I clenched my jaw and looked at Joy for an explanation. The look on her face gave her away that she had been the master minder of the whole thing.
âHoney why donât we excuse these two so that they can talk?â Mike said to Joy.
âSure loveâ they held hands, Mike gave Peter a reassuring pat and they left. Nothing could have prepared me for this, I was cornered and all my worst fears of knowing if I still felt anything for him were chokzsed, I was in love as ever as I had been. It was a battle I tell you, my mind telling my heart to stand up and go while my heart was telling me to hear the poor guy out for old timeâs sake. My mind won.
âI donât have anything to discuss with youâ I spoke while standing up to go. He didnât believe I just did that. I avoided looking in his eyes, afraid I would fall in them all over again.
âWangu you can run but I know you still love me. I miss us babe,â I stopped frozen in my tracks as he continued, âI miss waking up to your beautiful face every morning. I miss seeing you smile and knowing am the reason behind it. I miss the kids oh God, I miss your silly jokes and I miss holding and dancing with you every Saturday evening when the kids are tucked in bed, just the two of us in the garden under the stars and the moon sometimes rain would trek down our smiling faces. I donât mind doing that again with you.â That did it, I stormed out as fast as I could and went to board the first minibus I found at the bus stage. I was trembling inside and tears were coming fast and furiously, I didnât mind wiping them away in full view of everyone. I had to let them out; the emotions had been bottled down for some time. Peter should have changed his name to Romeo.
I arrived at Norahâs mothers place, I tried calling Norah but the number couldnât get through so I sent a text telling her that I would be leaving the following morning. She was still at honeymoon; I didnât want to give her wrong reasons to feel like something had happened but knowing her, she could smell it a thousand miles away. I sometimes came to think that there was a telepath between us, those who have âbestiesâ would agree with me. I told Norahâs mum of my instant departure she whined saying why was I leaving too soon, wasnât I enjoying it there? I told her that I needed to get back to my mother and kid. I told her that I would come again some time soon.
I left the following morning and it was terribly hot in the city bus. One thing I hated about travelling by public transport to Nkhatabay was the continuous chatter and noise of the Tongas. I am one myself but these people can make others feel like they are in the bus by accident or worse still in a foreign land. I have never seen people as proud of their language as the northerners (both Tumbuka and Tonga). Even among other tribes you can be assured of them to talk right there what others donât understand. I noted that Laurentâs body temperature was rising; I thought that maybe it was the excessive heat but it wasnât the case, he started crying and refused to breastfeed. I removed his shirt and changed his nappy but he couldnât calm down. People were starting to mumble and asking if I was truly the mother for failing to make him stop crying. I stood up from my seat and strapped him on my back. The passage way was full of standing passengers and I found it difficult to walk to and fro rocking him in an effort to make him sleep. After a hectic time, he fall asleep only to woke up again when we were close to home. This time his body was burning and I knew my baby was getting sick. I called my mother and told her about it. I arrived home and she prepared water for his bath. Amanda couldnât stop fussing over her little brother who was in no state to play and giggle as always.
I remember that night as being the longest of my life. I gave him pain killers but the moment it lost its effect, he would start crying again. I was so exhausted for being up all night, no matter how much my mum told me to go and lie down; I couldnât do it while hearing his loud cries in pain. The hospital was far away and it was not a journey to embark at night. At day break, we took him to the hospital with my mother. On the way he started violent convulsions. I was trembling in fear I thought he was going to die. We sat under a Mango tree until they subsided. She carried him as we almost run to the hospital. I was praying all the way asking God to send His words of healing to his soul and speak of good health again.
He was diagnosed with cerebral malaria and the doctor said if he had stayed any time longer without medical treatment, we could have lost him. The thought of losing one of my kids was unbearable. I couldnât think of living Amanda or Laurent. If I was alive, they were the centre of my world and they kept me going in this life of uncertainties. I was sure of their love for me and knew that be it in life or in death they would love me still unconditionally.
Maybe it was my fault for taking him on such a long journey and if anything had happened to him, I knew I couldnât have forgiven myself
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