Asking her where my friend had gone, I was met with a
silent smile beaming out from a pair of pottery-glazed brown eyes. Puzzled and slightly disillusioned I reclined
wearily in a rickety chair and swallowed down a few cool beers. I was disheartened – knowing that Rachel was
dependent upon this income to realize her unpretentious ambition.
The next day I got news that she was seen in the village
and straightway set out to locate her. I
found chatting quietly with her friends
- a pasttime which I am sure she abhorred - not because she didn’t relish the
conversation but she could do that while working and earning some recompense.
Greeting her with a traditional Lotse hand clap, I immediately asked her why she was no longer
working in the Shabeen.
“John”, she said, looking a little incensed, “Working in
that place from morning to night is bad enough without being threatened as
well.”
She went on to explain to me that the son of the owner, a
youngster not long left school, had arrived at the shabeen one afternoon drunk out of his mind. In the hours that followed he had come and
gone on several occasions hurling verbal abuse – demanding she give him more
beer. Not being an alcohol drinker
herself and seeing how it had stolen his sanity - Rachel had kept refusing him.
Finally, that evening he had become
increasingly violent and held a knife to her throat before seizing all the
money she had stored behind the bar. Since
the time of the incident, some three weeks earlier, he had vanished, but was
rumored to be skulking in a remote village on the eastern bank.
“What will you do now?” I enquired, feeling concerned for
her welfare as there was no employment here in the village nor near at hand. Without any income it would be very hard for
her to make ends meet, never mind setting up a small trading venture.
Then as if knowing what I was thinking, she calmly
announced,
“I will have to wait until the cattle are fully grown and
sell them so that I have some money and I will try again.”
What determination! She was not going to give up that easy
– someway, somehow, she would reach for her stars even if some dark clouds did
stand in her way.
“Where will you be tomorrow morning, Rachel?” I continued.
“Why, what’s happening?” she responded in an enquiring manner.
“I must get back to Lusaka
in a hurry and I would like to say goodbye before I go,” I replied, wondering how I could somehow help
this mild-mannered girl.
“I will be sitting with my friends in the street – there’s
nothing else to do!” she returned, in
her usual soft tone but finishing with a sigh which spoke volumes.
.. more....