THE WHITE
MAN'S GRAVEYARD
chapter 4 (1)
Alex had to go into
Maiduguri, at least to go to the bank, straighten up his pay sheet and that
included a little holiday. He went straight to the motorpark and climbed into a
flying coffin, one of the six passenger Peugeot taxis which cost more than the
Toyota vans that stopped at every village. It took half the time, but was twice as dangerous.
He'd walked to town early Friday morning and should arrive by
noon. Once the hair-raising trip was
over without incident, except one road block which the driver bribed their way
through, he got off on the road at the round-a-bout and walked to the Lake Chad
Hotel where he washed to get the road dust off and sit in air-conditioned
comfort and ordered a club sandwich and a coffee. The hotel bar outside and the
pool were often frequented by expatriates, but it was too expensive to stay
there unless a company was footing the bill.
After lunch, when Alex got himself together, he walked down to
the Bank of the North, withdrew some money, a transaction which took over an
hour and a half to complete, and cut through to the Ministry of Education where
he figured on spending a couple of hours pursuing paperwork, trying to get
files moved onto a desk or from one office to another. He'd naively assumed, on first arrival, they
opened letters at the Ministry, and had written polite letters to get things
done. It didn't work that way. No piece of paper moved of its own
accord. It was exasperating and his
patience and energy would be drained if he accomplished one or two things at
all.
After he had given up on his files as a dead-end for now, he
went back to the hotel for another air-conditioned coffee in the dining room,
back to re-charge his batteries from the chaos outside. The other time he'd been there, there had
been water in the pool. Expats had
drinks and swam in the afternoons, relaxed, read books and lounged by the pool
as if they were in paradise. Two African
girls of fourteen or so, bare from the waist up, had been swimming there as
natural as could be, their firming breasts and laughter, their freedom, an
image he couldn't forget. Now, there was
some problem with the filters and they couldn't get the part. Several people had gotten ear infections and
they'd let the water drain out. By late afternoon though, teachers at the
Polytechnic or those from out of town might filter into the patio bar and he
could find out all the news, see what was happening. There was no telephone -- expatriate news
would spread by word of mouth, verbally and efficiently.
But no one showed up, so at six o'clock, Alex walked down to the
road and hissed a passing beat-up green and yellow Datsun taxi to take him out
to Wulari. Norm and Debbie, CUSO friends
he'd met when he first arrived, instructors at Ramat Polytechnic, were given a
school-rented house out there as there had been no spare staff houses on the
campus compound. He knew he was welcome
to stay there, along with Steve if he came in from Biu and even Jeannie if she
came down. If Norm and Debbie weren't
around, he would walk to the Mai Deribe Hotel from there, see if he bumped into
anyone, or get a taxi over to the University Staff House area and look for the American
Professor there who he met at the hotel the first time he'd been down.
The important thing was to get set up somewhere before dark,
stash his gym bag, wash, change his clothes and then maybe go out somewhere
else. If he was lucky, the Italians or
the British would be hosting some gathering at their compound. Otherwise, there was the late-night
restaurant dance-bar the Lebanese had set-up, but it was in an out of the way
area on the other side of town and you really needed a car to get there. Soon, Alex thought, walking over the railway
tracks in Wulari, I'll have enough saved to get myself a machine, Honda or
Kawasaki, be able to get around here easily. A car was too expensive, out of the question totally.
The path over the tracks was a short-cut. Alex wouldn't have dared to walk it at
night. In the daytime, the big ditch on
both sides was used as a toilet. Someone
was squatting there, his babariga hiked up over his knees. Alex quickened his step. He had to catch them before they went
out. The sun was starting to set, but
two hundred yards away he could see Norm's blue Volkswagen parked inside the
low wall which ringed the house.
This was an unsafe area. Squatters lived in unfinished houses throughout Wulari and Norm's house
had been broken into twice. They'd
had to hire a m'guardie with his family to live in the boy's quarters. Now they were on their second one. It had turned out the first had different
tribal marks from the others staying in the quarters and Norm and Debbie had
finally figured out the m'guardie had been renting part of the quarters, even
had the others lugging 5 gallon tins of water to the nearby galvanized shacks
and selling it. There were plenty of
break-ins and expats just never knew if the m'guardies were in on it. Alex was glad he lived in a safe house, right
on the school compound. Life, with all
the facilities in Maiduguri, also had its disadvantages to offset the isolation
of Ngami.
The m'guardie, a Tuareg, lay with his bow and poison arrows, a
dagger on his arm, Agadez cross around his neck, on a mat just inside the
gate. "Sannu Mala," Alex
said. Somehow the m'guardie must have remembered him,
and half asleep, let him open the steel gate and walk up to the door. Alex knew, Bature or not, if they didn't know
you they wouldn't let you in. The last
time he'd been down, Norm had wanted to drop off some books at a co-workers in
Bellarum. It had already been really
late and they'd been coming from the hotel bar but there had been a light on in
the house inside the compound. The
m'guardie, a Hausa, had been sleeping on a mat by the front door and had a
woman there and had not wanted to get up and open the gate. Norm had gotten pissed off and rattled the
locked gate until the m'guardie came to yell at them. "Shit, let me mace this guy," Norm
had said and sprayed the m'guardie's face. The m'guardie had gone nuts, ran for his bow and arrow and they'd jumped
in the Volkswagen and high-tailed it out of there without the lights on.
It had been crazy. Norm
was like that when his patience ran thin. Once, Norm even put a guy in a headlock when he'd butted in front of
them at a petrol station. They'd been
lucky to get out of there alive. Norm
was acculturalized now and he'd argue back with them, equally as volatile and
hot-tempered. Norm had been there a long
time and was just as aggressive as everyone else. Alex thought it sad how they hardened you,
wore away your politeness, had you jumping cues, pushing in front of people at
the bank, scrambling for petrol and hoarding provisions, fighting to get things
done -- for survival -- like animals. There
were just too many people, too much chaos and disorganization. He wished he could not give a damn any more like
Norm.
He tapped on the glass door and Debbie was there, smiling and
friendly as usual. It was she who
stabilized Norm, kept him on track so he didn't blow completely. Consequently, Norm just got mad and laughed
about it after. He was half-Nigerian
now. Maybe it was just his way of
coping.
"Don't stand there, come in Alex," Debbie invited. Her hair was wet. She was drying it under the overhead
fans. She looked refreshed, had only a
wrapper on, which accentuated the curves of her body. She was very pretty -- Norm was lucky. Some marriages had dissolved here. There were few unmarried women and you got to
know the people too well. There was
pressure, strain on relationships. "In off the road, Alex? Down
for your paperwork, eh? You must be
tired..."
"Hey Alex," Norm called from the kitchen. "Come
in and grab a Guilder."
Alex walked into the kitchen where Norm stood sauteeing rice
with tomato paste sauce on the stove. "Grab a cold one. Got some
chop on here... Hey, you can get a
shower. Picked up a tobacco tin of loco
weed for two naira today. Excellent
stuff. We'll have a couple of hits
after. Plenty of water. Shower, we're going over to catch the movie
at the Lake Chad Club in the GRA if you want to come over with us. Starts around eight o'clock. Probably be a few people there... "
"Thanks. Sounds O.K.
to me." Alex was glad to get into Maiduguri for these
events, even if they sometimes mixed the reels up or the projector went on the
blink. They showed films outside, had
chairs set up behind a hedge on one side of the compound. Otherwise, there was chicken, tables on the
patio and a tennis court and a ping-pong table. The dues were high and he wasn't a member and no taxis were allowed in
the GRA so he'd only been there twice.
Norm and Debbie would sign him in. It was a treat to spend a Friday night at the Club, have a few beer,
socialize with the educated government people, feel half-civilized. The city had things to offer, things he
needed to handle it all, to maintain his sanity.
There could also be women there. VSO's posted around the state. You never know who'd you'd meet. Alex took a shower and put on a clean T-shirt, one that looked like
something Arnold Palmer would wear.
There would stories and tips from expats who'd been old hands there for
years, maybe even a party somewhere after.
He felt good now.
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