KWEE Liberian Literary Magazine Jan. Iss. Vol. 0115 May Issue Vol. 0515 | Page 13

Liberian Literary Magazine Liberian Classic Murder in the Cassava Patch III Bai. T Moore Old man Joma still preferred sitting in his tattered hammock, wearing a weather-beaten, short grey country cloth gown and smoking a clay pipe which he boasted was older than Kema. I felt unable to turn my back on the old folks. With the little money I brought, I begged and dashed friends to help me collect building materials to repair the house and put the back yard gardens back into production. When the girls were moving back into their room in the big house, Tene cried pitifully, “Gortokai, your God is catching me, I swear.” I don't know, rumors soon started spreading that Tene would be given me as a wife. This made me happy, as well as the news that Kema would be moving to her man in Firestone. Tene soon got the little child attached to me. I took Bubu as my own child. Every time I returned from the field, she expected fruits from me. In fact she knew me simply as Papa or father. By the time I settled back in Bendabli, the farming season was too far gone to make a cassava farm. To support the family I did odd jobs here and there. With Promoting Liberian literature, Arts and Culture plenty free time on my hand I devoted more time to repairing the big house and kitchen. I enlarged the vegetable garden and built a new bath fence to keep the old folks from using those of our neighbors. Four months passed. Kema had not been heard from. After my meal one evening, I felt like drinking a little cane juice. I visited Meine, my littler hunchback friend who operated the shop in Amina. Mene told me something which gave me the creaps. He told me confidentially, that he had heard from a reliable source that Kema was considering moving in the old folks and Tene to Firestone. “Meine, for true you mean what you are telling me?” “Kai, I am not telling you any fairy tales.” “Dammit, Meine, this is a helluva world isn't it. I had planned just taking me a schnapps bottle, but give me a Tallah instead. News like this is enough to make a man feel like getting drunk. “I gulped the hot liquor hurriedly and left the shop. Meine warned me not to expose him under any circumstances. Dot especially since he was planted in an advantageous position to be for further assistance to me. Where there is smoke, there must be fire. I soon began to detect a secret line of communication between Kema and her sister, which caused me to believe what Meine told me. Tene was receiving 13 expensive gifts from her sister which she kept with a friend in Amina. Whether the old folks were aware of this or not I do not know. To satisfy my curiosity, I approached them one evening after meal. Tene was not around. I began with the old lady. “Mba,” I addressed her, “what is this I hear, that Kema intends moving the whole family to Firestone.” The old lady turned pale at once. The old man who was hard of hearing pulled his stool closter to listen to the conversation. “Kai,” old man Joma called, “what is that you are aaking?” “No Joma!” The old lady interrupted. “Kai said he heard that Kema is sending for all of us to live with her in Firestone!” “What,” the old man frowned. “She must be going out of her mind. If the Kaiser and Hitler wars did not move me from Bendabli, I don't see what else will. Tene too, if that is what she is up to, the government down in Monrovia will have to tell me, whether or not if you born a child you control her, or she controls you. I just dare Tene to make a move to leave this village. It will be over my dead body, I swear on my mother's breast milk.” Old man Joma was so furious, he commenced trembling. “Never mind Joma, keep quiet, before you go into one of your fits.” The old lady pleaded. “Who Kema thinks I am! He-e! He-e! Tell me!”