thighs, she looks like a rotten pear.
âYour grampa must be asleep,â Granny says. âYour Auntie Lizbetâs taking a break, bless her heart.â Bless her heart? When I came to find Mama, sainted Auntie Lizbet swung that cane to crack my head open. Mama had been left alone, dying, at the abandoned ruin on the cattle post. Auntie Lizbet said she deserved it. She said it was godâs will, and the will of the ancestors.
By the time we pull up, everyoneâs come to bid welcome. Uncle Chisulo lifts Granny out of the cart like she was a feather pillow, while Uncle Enoch wrestles our bags over the side of the cart by pushing off with his belly. Their wives, Auntie Ontibile and Auntie Agnes, are right behind, wiping their hands on their aprons. Theyâre identical twins. I tell them apart by the dent in Auntie Ontibileâs forehead, from where she got kicked by a goat when she was little.
Last to join us is Auntie Lizbet. I shoot her a look that says: Remember what you did to Mama? What you said to me? Her head drops. She turns away.
Iâm all in knots. Arenât I here to heal old wounds? Isnâtthat what Mama would do? Why canât I forget? Why donât I forgive? Whatâs wrong with me?
âThanks for the ride,â Granny says to Nelson. He nods. I smile awkwardly. A chorus of gânights, and he leads his mules home.
âYou three will be staying in my room,â Auntie Lizbet says. âIâll be in with your granny and grampa.â
âWe thought thatâd be best,â Granny adds. âYouâll have some privacy, and your auntie will be handy if Grampaâs legs cramp up in the middle of the night.â
âGood, yes, thank you,â I say. All I want to do is put the kids to bed, flop on my mat, and sleep till Judgment Day. But everyoneâs planned a welcome party, so after we drop our bags inside, we come back out to sit around the firepit.
I open Mrs. Tafaâs wicker baskets and give them all their presents. Mrs. Tafa chose well. My uncles are pleased with their socks. My aunties admire the stitch work on their pot holders. And Granny cradles the preserves.
âIâll bring out the biscuits,â Auntie Lizbet says. âJust the thing to put that marmalade to the test.â She hobbles to get them. Iris follows, staring in bug-eyed wonder at her foot.
âIris! No!â I cry.
Auntie Lizbet whirls around, catching Iris in the act. âWhat are you gawking at?â
âYour hoof,â says Iris.
The world stops breathing.
âMyâ¦what?â Auntie glares.
âYour hoof!â Iris exclaims again. âItâs soâ¦soâ¦clumpy.â
Auntie Lizbet grips her cane. âWho taught you your manners, girl?â
âNobody,â Iris says brightly.
âNobody?â Auntie Lizbet pounds her cane. âNobody???â She suddenly bursts out laughing. âCan you beat the nerve of the little thing!â She peers at Iris over her spectacles. âSo, nobody taught you manners?â
âNo, Auntie,â Iris says, innocent as you please. âNot a blessèd soul.â
Auntie puts on a stern look. âWell, weâll have to see about that, wonât we?â
âOh yes,â Iris says.
Auntie beams. âWhat a little sweetness.â
Iris bats her eyes at me. I could smack her.
11
A S SOON AS the partyâs over, I put the kids in bed, roll onto my mat, and fall asleep.
Mama is sitting beside the termite mound. âThereâs going to be a storm.â
My head is thick, but I know one thing for sure: âThis isnât real, Mama. Itâs just my old dream.â
âAll the same, thereâs going to be a storm.â
I close my eyes and kick myself. âWake up, wake up.â
When I open my eyes, the mound is gone. But Iâm not on the mat in Auntie Lizbetâs room either. Iâm back on the flatbed to Tiro. Itâs night. Did I
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