Olanna touched Master’s shoulder. ‘She will be all right. The federal troops won’t stay in Abba if they pass through.’
‘Yes,’ Master said. He leaned over and kissed her lips, and Ugwu felt a buoyant relief that they were speaking normally again. The stream of refugees filing past was thinning.
‘Professor Achara has found us a house in Umuahia,’ Master said, his voice too loud, too cheerful. ‘Some old friends are already there, and everything will soon be back to normal. Everything will be perfectly normal!’
Because Olanna remained silent, Ugwu said, ‘Yes, sah.’
There was nothing normal about the house. The thatch roof and cracked, unpainted walls bothered Ugwu, but not as much as the cavernous pit latrine in the outhouse with a rusting zinc sheet drawn across it to keep flies out. It terrified Baby. The first time she used it, Ugwu held her steady while Olanna cajoled her. Baby cried and cried. She cried often the following days, as if she too realized that the house was unworthy of Master, that the compound was ugly with its stubby grass and cement blocks piled in corners, that the neighbours’ houses were too close, so close one smelt their greasy cooking and heard their crying children. Ugwu was certain that Professor Achara had fooled Master into renting the house; there was something wily in the man’s bulging eyes. Besides, his own house down the road was large and painted a dazzling white.
‘This is not a good house, mah,’ Ugwu said.
Olanna laughed. ‘Look at you. Don’t you know many people are sharing houses now? The scarcity is serious. And here we are with two bedrooms and a kitchen and living room and dining room. We are lucky to know an indigene of Umuahia.’
Ugwu said nothing else. He wished she would not be so complacent about it.
‘We have decided to have the wedding next month,’ Olanna told him a few days later. ‘It will be very small, and the reception will be here.’
Ugwu was aghast. For their wedding, he had imagined perfection, the house in Nsukka festively decorated, the crisp, white tablecloth laden with dishes. It was better they wait for the war to end, rather than have their wedding in this house with its sullen rooms and mouldy kitchen.
Even Master didn’t seem to mind the house. He returned from the directorate in the evenings and sat outside, contentedly listening to Radio Biafra and the BBC, as if the veranda did not have mud-encrusted floors, as if the stark wood bench there was like the cushioned sofa back in Nsukka. His friends began to stop by as the weeks passed. Sometimes Master went with them to the Rising Sun Bar down the road. Other times he sat with them on the veranda and talked. Their visits made Ugwu overlook the indignities of the house. He no longer served pepper soup or drinks, but he could listen to the regular rise and fall of their voices, the laughter, the singing, Master’s shouting. Life came close to being as it was in Nsukka just after the secession; hope swirled around once again.
Ugwu liked Special Julius, who wore sequined, knee-length tunics and was an army contractor and brought cartons of Golden Guinea beer and bottles of White Horse whisky and sometimes petrol in a black jerry can; it was Special Julius, too, who suggested that Master pile palm fronds on top of his car as camouflage and paint over his headlights with coal tar.
‘Very unlikely that we will have air raids, but vigilance must be our watchword!’ Master said, as he held the brush in his hand. Some tar had oozed down the fenders, marring the blue colour, and later, after Master went indoors, Ugwu carefully wiped it off, until the black glob covered only the headlights.
Ugwu’s favourite guest, though, was Professor Ekwenugo. He was a member of the Science Group. The nail on his index finger was so long and tapering that it looked like a slender dagger, and he smoothed it as he spoke about what he and his colleagues were making: high-impact landmines called ogbunigwe, brake fluid from coconut oil, car engines from scrap metal, armoured cars, grenades. The others cheered whenever he made an announcement and Ugwu cheered too, from his stool in the kitchen. Professor Ekwenugo’s announcement of the first Biafran rocket caused the loudest round of clapping.
‘We launched it this afternoon, this very afternoon,’ he said, caressing his nail. ‘Our own home-made rocket. My people, we are on our way.’
‘We are a country of geniuses!’ Special Julius said to nobody in particular. ‘Biafra is the land of genius!’
‘The land of genius,’ Olanna repeated, her face in that delicate phase between smiling and laughing.
The clapping soon gave way to singing.
So-lidarity forever!
So-lidarity forever!
Our republic shall vanquish!
Ugwu sang along and wished, again, that he could join the Civil Defence League or the militia, who went combing for Nigerians hiding in the bush. The war reports had become the highlights of his day, the fast-paced drumming, the magnificent voice saying,
Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty! This is Radio Biafra
Enugu! Here is the daily war report!
After the glowing news – Biafran troops were flushing out the last remnants of the enemy, Nigerian casualties were high, mopping-up operations were concluding – he would fantasize about joining the army. He would be like those recruits who went into training camp – while their relatives and well-wishers stood by the sidelines and cheered – and who emerged bright-eyed, in brave uniforms stiff with starch, half of a yellow sun gleaming on their sleeves.
He longed to play a role, to act. Win the war. So when the news that Biafra had captured the midwest and Biafran troops were marching to Lagos came over the radio, he felt a strange mix of relief and disappointment. Victory was theirs and he was eager to go back to the house on Odim Street, to be close to his family, to see Nnesinachi. Yet it seemed that the war had ended too soon and he had not contributed. Special Julius brought a bottle of whisky, and the guests sang and shouted drunkenly about the might of Biafra, the stupidity of the Nigerians, the foolishness of those newscasters on BBC radio.
‘Look at their dirty English mouths. “Astonishing move by Biafra”, indeed!’
‘They are surprised because the arms Harold Wilson gave those Muslim cattle rearers have not killed us off as quickly as they had hoped!’
‘It is Russia you should blame, not Britain.’
‘Definitely Britain. Our boys brought us some Nigerian shell cases from the Nsukka sector for analysis. Every single one had UK WAR DEPARTMENT on it.’
‘We keep intercepting British accents on their radio messages too.’
‘Britain and Russia, then. That unholy alliance will not succeed.’
The voices rose higher and higher, and Ugwu stopped listening. He got up and went out through the back and sat on the mound of cement blocks beside the house. Some little boys in the Biafran Boys Brigade were practising on the street, with sticks shaped like guns, doing frog jumps, calling one another captain! and adjutant! in high voices.
A hawker with a tray balanced on her head ambled past. ‘Buy garri! Buy garri!’
She stopped when a young woman from the opposite house called out to her. They bargained for a while and then the young woman shouted, ‘If you want to rob people, then do so. Don’t say you are selling garri for that price.’
The hawker hissed and walked off.
Ugwu knew the young woman. He had first noticed her because of how