I would love to tell you the story of the
house help everyone had come to call Aunty. I would love to tell you about how
the entire house smelled like her skin bleaching lotion at seventeen hours and
how she only bleached her face. Her hands were black and calloused from hard
labour. Her face was yellow and had the strange supple texture of an overripe
mango. This gave all her facial expressions an extra dash of drama. She spoke
very little English and only knew swear words. When she was listening to a shocking
story she would shout “SHIT!” When she broke a glass she would yell, “BASTARD!”
Nobody knows who taught her those words, but she used them often.
I would love to tell you the story of Aunty
but this is not about her. This is about the man who parked his dusty car at
the gate and dropped off Lily. Aunty was the first to notice that Lily no
longer complained about bus rides and long walks. Aunty was the first to notice
Lily’s long phone conversations on the veranda after dark. Aunty kept the
secret, she knew that at the right time everything would come out and then fall
into place.
The man who drove the dusty car never
called Lily by her name, he called her Beautiful One. He called her that from
the first time they met. Then it was just a compliment; an appreciation of her
white eyes and full thighs. The more he saw her, the more he knew her and the
more beauty he saw in her. She laughed too loud, cared too much and scrutinised
the details so much that she missed the big picture. It was all so beautiful to
him. Beautiful One was a mouthful, they drew closer to each other and her
nickname became Beautiful. All the friends he introduced her to called her
that. Even when they argued he would say it, “Beautiful, I don’t understand why
your phone was busy when I called you at midnight!” Around him she was no
longer Lily, she was Beautiful.
Lily was originally bored by the man who
drove a dusty car. He wasn’t like anyone she had known. He wasn’t exactly
quiet, he spoke quite often but only to say serious things. He laughed at dirty
jokes like they were a secret shameful treasure or as if Jehovah’s Witnesses
were watching him. She was bored by how simple he was. He worked hard, he
saved, he kept his promises and he was a terrible liar. It wasn’t long however
that she began to see that nobody was simple anymore and that his simplicity
was attractive. The rest of the emotions poured in after she started to miss
him.
“You are so pretty,” He said. Lily
remembered the words because he stopped thrusting, looked down at her and
kissed her forehead. He had never used the word pretty. He called her beautiful
so often she had forgotten how to be pretty, being pretty made her feel
attractive. He sealed the deal with the kiss to her forehead.
Lily was no longer bored by the man who
drove the dusty car. Instead of quiet she saw him as insightful. Instead of
scatter brained she saw him as multi-talented. Every day she covered his short
comings with reason. She looked forward to conversations in his dusty car and
longed for the way he said the name he had given her. “Beautiful.”
Like I said, this is a story about the man
who drove a dusty car and parked it outside Lily’s gate after dark. When he
knew what Lily was like when she was naked and vulnerable some of her beauty
was shed. He couldn’t explain it. Lily was no longer entrancing and
captivating. Instead she was needy and too soft. Instead of sensual she was
horny and possibly slutty. He called her Beautiful still but this time with
less meaning, with less passion. He slept with her still but this time with
less hunger. The less attention he gave the more she pined after him.
The house help everyone called Aunty
noticed first that the man who drove a dusty car no longer parked it outside
Lily’s gate after dark. She noticed first that Lily no longer made secret phone
calls in whispers on the veranda. She noticed first that Lily no longer glowed
and now walked home. Aunty noticed first that Lily was broken hearted. Every
girl gets her heart broken before she is 25; then she becomes a woman.
Lily started to eat, she woke up craving
chicken gravy every morning and at night she chewed on ice. She hadn’t seen the
man who drove the dusty car in six weeks. Her heart was used to being sore. She
chewed the ice loud and the sound of her cracking the cubes between her molars
had become a regular one in the house. Aunty was the first one to suggest it.
“Lily, you are gaining weight. Are you
sleeping with men?”
Lily shook her head and made the
instinctive insulted facial expression she practiced for elders who pried into
her sex life. Sex was a taboo. She denied hard and fast but the thought haunted
her. She had trouble fitting her tight dresses but she thought that was normal.
On her walk back home, she bought one home testing kit.
It was Aunty who said “SHIT!!” when Lily
announced to her mother that she was six weeks pregnant. It was aunty who
finally used the word bastard correctly for the first time in her life.
“THAT BASTARD!!” She said.
Lily was in tears, the man who drove a
dusty car was gone, probably parking in another girl’s drive way; a girl he
would call Beautiful too.
captivating...wow
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