Jowhor Ile - And After Many Days

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And After Many Days: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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An unforgettable debut novel about a boy who goes missing, a family that is torn apart, and a nation on the brink. During the rainy season of 1995, in the bustling town of Port Harcourt, Nigeria, one family's life is disrupted by the sudden disappearance of seventeen-year-old Paul Utu, beloved brother and son. As they grapple with the sudden loss of their darling boy, they embark on a painful and moving journey of immense power which changes their lives forever and shatters the fragile ecosystem of their once ordered family. Ajie, the youngest sibling, is burdened with the guilt of having seen Paul last and convinced that his vanished brother was betrayed long ago. But his search for the truth uncovers hidden family secrets and reawakens old, long forgotten ghosts as rumours of police brutality, oil shortages, and frenzied student protests serve as a backdrop to his pursuit.
In a tale that moves seamlessly back and forth through time, Ajie relives a trip to the family's ancestral village where, together, he and his family listen to the myths of how their people settled there, while the villagers argue over the mysterious Company, who found oil on their land and will do anything to guarantee support. As the story builds towards its stunning conclusion, it becomes clear that only once past and present come to a crossroads will Ajie and his family finally find the answers they have been searching for.
And After Many Days

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“Atinuke, my best friend. She lives in New Bussau,” Bibi said, shifting the writing pad away

“Where is that?”

“Niger State. It’s where you have the Kainji Dam. I think her father works in NEPA.”

“Hmm, okay.”

“I just received her letter today. I wanted to reply at once,” Bibi said. Everyone in the parlor was listening to the two of them, and their chat took on an air of play rehearsal.

“You live at number seventeen, right?” Paul asked.

“Oh, yes.” Wendy turned to face him, looking a little surprised that Paul was there at all.

“We know your brother Wobo,” Paul said.

“Oh, no, my brothers.” Wendy rolled her eyes toward the ceiling. “They frustrate me. Why do you think I left to come here?”

“What did they do?” Bibi asked.

“I don’t know. They are all much older than me, and they are just mean and boring. Jesus.” She sighed and then looked at Paul. “What class are you in?”

Two weeks later, on a moderately warm Friday evening at about five-thirty, Wendy went berserk with rage and called Paul a “stupendous ignoramus” and Paul yelled, “You nematode!” in her face.

“Take this fake rubbish away.” Bibi shoved the BMX bicycle back at Wendy.

Wendy held on to her bike with one hand and stepped in front of Bibi, stared her down, moving her eyes up and down, up and down, and then hissed, “We shouldn’t even be breathing the same air. You scruffy thing.”

“That’s enough, now. Take your bike and go.” Paul put himself between the two girls.

“Ask your father to buy you your own bicycle,” Wendy shouted as she rolled off.

“Ask your father to stop picking you things off the dump,” Bibi shot back. At which point Ajie thought she deserved a round of applause, but his knee was scraped and still hurting from the altercation that had preceded the ongoing fallout.

An hour before, they were all laughter, shrieks, and shouts as Paul gave Wendy a crossbar down the street with Bibi and Ajie running behind them. Bibi then asked to have a go and pedaled up and down the street while Ajie, who couldn’t ride properly, was counting on Paul to give him a hand. When Bibi got off the bike, Ajie assumed it was his turn next and asked Wendy if he could ride, but she refused: “I can’t let you practice with my bike, you will spoil it and my father will be angry.” She pedaled off.

Paul told Ajie to relax, he would ask her himself, but Ajie went and stood by the dogonyaro trees, watching them, keeping a decided distance so as to feel lonely enough, and imagining how one day the girl would be knocked down by a bigger, faster bicycle or an okada and how he would not care when she returned from hospital on crutches, in bandages and casts.

“Don’t worry, Ajie, come.” Bibi beckoned to him in high spirits. “I’m sure she was just joking.”

When Wendy cycled back to where they stood, Paul asked if she could let Ajie learn to ride, and Wendy pursed her lips and reluctantly stepped aside. Twilight had descended in an instant and clothed the trees in shadows. “Steady,” Paul said to Ajie as he got on the bike gingerly. Paul touched gently on the handlebars to keep them steady.

“Don’t pedal too fast,” Bibi admonished, “just take it slow.” Then she turned to Wendy. “I think he’ll be fine, he won’t spoil your bike.” Bibi failed to notice the unyielding look on her friend’s face. She couldn’t see beyond her own excitement that her friend wasn’t with her, so she just rubbed sand off her face and kicked her bathroom slippers to the curb and walked behind the bike as Ajie stepped, ever so gently, on his first pedals, Paul’s hand still on the handlebar, Bibi following right behind. They were soon doing a quick walk, a jog, and then a sprint. Ajie was pedaling along all by himself. “Yeah!” Bibi threw her hands in the air. “We did it!” Ajie looked back and realized they weren’t holding on to the bike anymore; he kept his feet working on the pedals — if he stopped stepping, he would fall, so he looked ahead and kept his frame steady. When he saw the pothole, he swerved and tried to return his hands to a straight position, but everything became wobbly and crazy and he saw himself going down in slow motion. Kraap! The bike scraped the tarmac. He tumbled off and fell flat on the road. His knee burned with pain. In a second, Paul was there, pulling him off the ground. “Ajie, Ajie, are you okay?” Bibi was looking at Ajie’s bruised knee now, blowing air to soothe it, saying, “Sorry, it’s only a scratch,” and then looking at Ajie’s face to confirm if she was right: It’s only a scratch, isn’t it? Nothing is broken… That was when Wendy walked up to where they were huddled together on the ground. She picked up her bike from the ground and checked to see if anything was damaged.

Paul was looking at her. “Sorry,” he said, then looking back at Ajie, “he has wounded himself.”

That was when the roaring came out of her: “I don’t care! It’s all your fault! Stupendous ignoramus!” Paul leaped to his feet, quivering with rage, and for a whole second there was no sound from him, then he screamed, “You nematode! Horrible creature, and you can go to hell with your bike.”

Ajie got up and tried his leg out in a few steps, as if checking for damage. The security lights of the nearby compounds began to come on as Wendy walked toward her gate.

“Let’s go home, don’t mind her,” Paul said, “she is a very stupid girl.”

“No wonder her brothers hate her,” Bibi added, but Ajie couldn’t help feeling the heaviness that somehow he had ruined everything.

Bibi wrote a letter that night, under candlelight. She made several drafts and threw the old ones in the bin, crumpled up in a ball. She covered up the letter when anyone got close, as if shielding class exercises from a seatmate. “State secret,” Ma said, and clicked her tongue. “Mind your eyes, Bibi, that letter can wait till daybreak.”

Bibi bent over it, perfecting all four pages of the final draft in her most careful handwriting.

She had no reason to suspect that anyone would salvage her discarded pages from the bin.

I think Paul has a girlfriend in school, she wrote. I suspect it. I don’t even know if she’s fine since I haven’t seen a picture, and my younger brother, Ajie, is being stingy with details. All I know is that she’s a Hausa girl.

You know our neighbor I wrote to you about in my last letter? Wendy. Hmm. Story is beginning to come out. She really liked Paul. I think they went to the abandoned trailer park not too far from the house to hang out and they kissed. I’m not too sure, but it’s very likely.

Now, here is the gist. Paul took Ajie with him the next time he was supposed to meet her. I think he was feeling guilty because he kissed someone else when he has a girlfriend. Not sure…but you know me, my instincts are always right. I overheard something! I think Paul wanted Ajie to learn how to kiss from Wendy. My brothers are so weird. Anyway, the whole thing backfired. The girl got so upset she wouldn’t let Ajie anywhere near her bicycle. She was just enduring Paul and me for half of one afternoon, and then she couldn’t take it any longer and she exploded like a grenade.

What’s happening with that Obinna boy? Is he still begging you?

My father and mother are going to America in two months’ time. We are going to stay with Uncle Tam, who is not really our uncle but that is what we call him .

CHAPTER TEN

Ajie followed Paul into the yard. Abandoned tractors were afield, overgrown by elephant grass and shrubs of awolowo . Two or three earth tillers gathered rust, their flattened tires sinking into the loam. A woman with a child braced on her hip came out of a house on the far corner of the compound and emptied a basin of wash water in front before disappearing into the darkened passage. The windows of the unplastered house were boarded up with planks.

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