Abel's breathing was heavy and his expression a scowl. Once again in his mind he was absolving himself from guilt, from accepting the fact that he was the motive force behind the death of forty-five young people. This is what can happen when invaders from up north come down to steal pieces of the sacred homeland. So the Rossi man went too far, but that was not his fault. And still these white bastards would not give the land back.
He must suffer the ordeal again. These people, this family from hell ⦠but he would think about that later. The storm was passing. This stubborn farmer was staring at him. He must not lose face. Thank God he had left Reuben in the car. The boy would not have understood what was going on. And now he must create a smooth departure for himself. He signalled to Obi to turn the car around.
Abel masked his anger with a smile, a hint of a nod.
âBwana McCall, I am here with the best of intentions. You are in deep distress and I came to offer you a way out - the full value of the land and the buildings before these misfortunes struck. The offer will stand for a year from today.'
Alex was staring blankly over Rubai's shoulder at the shiny black car being skillfully manoevred until its nose was pointing up the driveway towards the main road. Under his breath he whispered a single word.
âSurreal!'
Everyone in that bare garden saw the meeting of the two men but could hear none of the words exchanged. Maura and Rafaella moved close together as they watched a shocked and weary Alex plodding towards them. Maura broke the silence.
âCoffee time, everyone. I'll get the kettle going.'
One mug of sweet coffee and two Mcvitie's chocolate biscuits later and Alex ended the wait.
âMaura, if you hadn't been so quick off the mark with the kettle, I would have been into a large straight whisky by now.'
âWhat did he want, Dad?'
âTom, that generous man wanted to save us all the bother of working ourselves silly making Londiani an even better place than it was before he tried to wipe us out with his murderous ways.
âYeah, I know that's putting it a bit strong for our first day back on the job. Perhaps I should pretend that we had no visitor out there, just a nasty stench of a bad memory.'
Stephen Kamau, Alex's good friend, still on full pay for being chief foreman at a nonexistent flower farm, broke in gently.
âNo, Bwana, no use hiding away from trouble. Look Mister Danger straight in the eye. If you bury your head, you can't even see who's kicking your backside.'
âLike some silly old ostrich.'
âWell, Rollo, perhaps someone hasn't been telling us the truth about those creatures. One time I took some of the older village boys on a cycle ride âround to the other side of the lake. There's an ostrich farm over there and we had our picnic on some rocks close by. Young Stanley, he was only eight at the time, sat up close to the fence. He was there for an hour or more. Never took his eyes off those big birds.
âStanley, time to turn back now, unless you want to spend the night out in the bush. I heard that there's a couple of old leopards got a place around here.'
âBwana Kamau, I don't think that these birds are real ostriches. No, never saw one of them try to dig a hole and hide his head down inside. Ostriches? I do not think so!'
âStephen, your grandchildren are going to love having you come across to the house to tell them bedtime stories.'
âYes, bedtime stories. Perhaps I was wrong to speak like that. These kids are so clever and it wasn't anything made up out of my head. Next day Stanley came up to me. “Bwana, if we had stayed longer. Maybe they only do it at night when nobody sees.” Coasties like me never grow up. Just can't help ourselves sometimes. Anyway I don't think Stanley will find any ostriches around Londiani.'
Maria was sitting next to Stephen on the veranda wall. She reached out to grasp his hand.
âStephen, you're the most grown-up person I've ever met. And if Stanley had been here a few minutes ago he would have seen an ostrich going off in that big car.'
âHang on, Maria, why would he need to bury his head? He's got nothing to be scared of.'
âWrong, Rollo. Men like him scent danger when it's still a long way off. But be careful when the rat is cornered. And you know the best thing we can do? Plant this garden. Create the work so that there will be flowers and vegetables to look after in the fields over there. Start building the hospital. It will make him even more crazy.'
âSo he will send his thugs to get rid of a few more enemies, burn more kids he's never heard of.'
âHe might do just that. But Stanley is right. We must not pretend. Hide and hope, hope that he will be blown away like any other bad stench. Of course, he is a monster, a murderer. I do not forget a single one of those young persons whose bodies were lying in this very place, burned to death. But Abel Rubai is also a coward. He has money and he has men ready to do his dirty work.'
Eddie was as distraught as his brother. He had just seen the man who had tried to wipe out his whole family arrogantly invade their farm and pretend to be a potential benefactor.
This man feared nothing.
âMaria, there is only one sure way for us to be rid of him. We could have done that when he was here. Put one between the eyes.'
âSolve one problem and create ten more. Listen. We are all country people here. Think of the story of the tall, strong tree, perhaps the biggest in the forest. One morning, a farmer comes along and finds the giant flat on the ground. When he saws across the trunk, he finds the inside is rotten. The preparation for that fall was going on long before it happened.'
Maria held the little audience spellbound. The beautiful Luo woman was on fire with passion. Her brothers, Paul and Barnabas, were both successful lawyers, but they would have been hard put to outshine her in the dynamic presentation of an argument. Like any competent lawyer, she had arguments to back up her case.
âIn a moment of weakness our rulers, two months ago, appointed Andrew Rafiki to investigate corruption and graft in the government. Unfortunately, Andrew, an honest man, took the job very seriously. Some of the power men discovered that he was wanting to look into their books. Last week, we read in
The Nation
that Andrew has fled the country. His life was in danger. But the evidence he collected is not lost, and when the time comes ⦠The rot is inside the tree.'
âMaria, what happened?'
âWhat do you mean, Maura?'
âWhy aren't you a lawyer, or an MP, or running some big thing in this country?'
âWhat could be more important than helping to plant this new garden? And later I will be going to join Rebecca and Lydia over where the new hospital will be. And, Eddie, there is much rot gathering unnoticed in the heart of the big tree. Many, many policemen want to be part of the change ⦠when the time comes. Ask Inspector Caroline.'
âYeah, but when?'
Maria smiled. Rollo and Eddie had known Maria for less time than the others having their extraordinarily long coffee break on that open veranda, and they still found her smile comforting and at the same time disturbing. When those dark eyes were focused on them, it was as if she was able to read their minds or at least work out in which direction their thoughts were moving.
âThe tree will fall sooner than we think. And it will not topple over in the darkness of the night. The axemen are sharpening their blades. They are in danger, more even than any of us.'
âSo there!' Rollo nodded towards his mother and grandmother with an amused grin.
hen the Mercedes reached the junction at the end of South Lake Road, Obi asked for instructions. âHigh or low, Boss?'
Abel considered the matter before surprising Reuben with his answer.
âMmn, go back through the town and up the Escarpment.'
âBut, Dad, that's so much slower!'
âYeah, I know it, but today it suits me to go that way.'
Abel wanted to avoid the unpleasantness of passing the Italian church and close to the place where Patrick Uchome and his wife were killed. He could not know it, but taking the longer route was simply avoiding one distasteful experience to move into another before he even left the town.
âHell and damnation! Look over there. Obi, turn right, yes, in through that gate!'
âInto this field with the big piles of earth?'
âIn case you haven't noticed there are people there, too.'
âYes, I saw them when we drove in. You and the boy were talking.'
Bertie had driven Rebecca and Lydia across town to the site of the new hospital. The first plans had arrived from Debbie Miller in Boston and they wanted to make rough measurements on the site. Lydia and Bertie worked with the tape measure while Rebecca called out the numbers and made notes.
For the second time that morning Abel had the advantage of surprise on his side. Obi had parked just inside the gate and it was the crunch of feet on the gravelly surface that alerted the three busy surveyors to the presence of company.
A shocked Bertie dropped his end of the tape. The unexpected confrontation had him trembling. He was angry but desperate to hang on to his self-control. Abel smiled blandly, delighted to see his nemesis caught out and in a panic. Each one of this trio had caused him a lot of trouble in their different ways. And now this wild idea about a hospital could be a source of more embarrassment to him personally and politically. No such building would be put up on this site or any other in the town without his say-so.
The stand-off was prolonged. For a few moments, isolated from each other in their reaction, Rebecca, Bertie and Lydia stared incredulous at the intruders. The melting feeling in the pit of their stomachs took away the will and the energy to speak out.
For Reuben, standing a step behind his father, this was a demonstration of the power of his father's personality. His unexpected arrival was making these people rigid with fear. They were like naughty children caught out by their father in a prank and now scared of the consequences. He was wrong in his assumption.
Bertie made the first move. He picked up his end of the tape measure and wound it in slowly, all the while focusing his eyes on the smiling Abel. When the tape was all in, he walked resolutely towards his car that was parked twenty metres behind where the Rubais stood. He chose to pass much closer to the father and son than was necessary. Reuben thought that this mad white man was about to attack his father and Abel hoped that he would. The physical pain involved would be nothing compared to the benefits it would bring. Before nightfall Briggs would be back in a prison cell, this time in a Nairobi jail.
But Bertie passed on and climbed into his car.
Abel broke the silence with a stab of sarcasm.
âLadies, I think that building is over for the day. Your friend has taken the toys away.'
âMister Rubai, this is private property.'
This was the best reply that Rebecca could think of in her confused state.
To the accompaniment of Reuben's guffaws, his father went on.
âA house girl and a street girl playing at being civil engineers. And your friend there hiding from visitors in his car.'
âHe is not hiding from you. He is not afraid of you. He is afraid of himself.'
âVery clever. I said that building is over for the day â¦'
âBut we are not building. The farmers say that the soil here is very rich, just right for growing macadamias. We are measuring out the beds.'
Abel did not try to hide his mounting anger. As he spoke, he prodded the air with his finger. For the second time within an hour an attempt was being made to belittle him.
âThat's enough. Do not waste your money and your time. There will be no hospital built here. There is a perfectly good hospital here already.'
âMister Rubai, I know that your own wife is soon to have a child. Would you like him to be born in the maternity ward up there?'
Reuben saw his father's head jerk backwards. For a few seconds Abel said nothing and when he spoke the tone was calm but tense.
âI preferred it when you were the shy wash girl. Money has made you arrogant and foul-mouthed with it.'
âNo, sir. That is unfair. Mrs Rubai has always treated me with kindness and I love her dearly. Is it wrong to want the women of this town to have a place where they, too, can be properly looked after when a new child comes?'
âYou don't understand, do you? Do you think that you are the first one to come along believing you can solve with your amateur ways problems that the government wrestle with every single day?'
âSo there is a problem?'
âOf course, you fool! But Kenya is a poor country. Things take time to put right.'
âYes, but if in one small place we can solve one problem.'
âAnd make other small places first jealous and then angry.'
âNo, give other small places hope, Mister Rubai, hope. And hope makes all the difference. You were a village boy once. Have you forgotten so quickly?'