Where Women are Kings (31 page)

Read Where Women are Kings Online

Authors: Christie Watson

Elijah closed his eyes. The wizard’s voice was real. He heard it all the time.

‘Mum and Dad need to read something very difficult with you today. It might not make sense at first, but we will talk it through afterwards.’ Ricardo nodded at Mum and Dad, who came over to the sofa where Elijah was sitting and sat next to him on either side. Mum lowered herself carefully, keeping
her back straight and bending at her knees. They put their hands on top of his as Ricardo read.

Deborah states, ‘There is a wizard living in my son and I need to drive it out.’ She is also suffering from auditory and visual hallucinations and paranoia that a ‘red car is constantly following me and they want to steal my son and use his body parts for magic.’

Elijah was removed from her care after an alleged accident that resulted in Elijah being admitted to Lewisham Emergency department with a head injury and subsequently transferred to King’s College Hospital for emergency neurosurgery. The mechanism of injury was never fully explained but on skeletal survey Elijah was discovered to have old fractures and be severely malnourished. He was placed on the child-protection register under the categories of neglect, physical and emotional abuse, and Deborah was transferred to the Bethlem Psychiatric Hospital for assessment and treatment.

The room started spinning around. Elijah started to remember something. They were in the flat and it was cold. The moonlight burnt a patch on to the threadbare carpet. Mama was getting something from the drawer. He saw it coming and he heard her voice. Her face was above him but it looked different: hard.

‘Get out of my son!’ she screamed. ‘Get out of my son!’ Her voice was so different from the voice he heard inside him.

She was pressing on to his head with something so very sharp and hard that he almost couldn’t speak.

But he somehow managed: ‘It’s me, Mama. It’s Elijah. I’m not a wizard,’ he said. ‘I’m not a wizard.’

Suddenly, time changed and Mama walked up and down beside him like a leopard in a zoo. She wore stiff fabric that made a creaking sound when she moved. Her hair was not combed, and she was carrying an empty bottle of Coca-Cola, which she kept putting to her mouth as if she’d forgotten it was empty. The hospital was like a space ship: all buzzing, beeping white machines and men in masks. A television screen showed waves in different colours, a pattern, numbers. He was above the bed, looking down at his six-year-old body. Needles the size of earthworms were being pushed into his middle, his neck.

‘Put the albumin through the intraosseous line. Syringe it in quickly.’

‘Get the cooling mat – pack ice around his head.’

‘His pupils have blown – push through some mannitol and furosemide.’

‘Get neurosurgery down here quick.’

‘Somebody speak to his mother.’

He could see everything. In the next bed, a baby was asleep with a tube in his nose, like Elijah’s. He had squiggles on his machine that were the same size every time. His numbers stayed exactly the same. His mama was there, holding his hand, watching the squiggles and waves. The baby was not floating in the air above his bed at all.

Mama knocked over the tray of drugs by her side and, when the tiny glass bottles crashed on to the floor, she just walked over them, crunching them like they were fresh snow. A nurse lowered her mask, took Mama’s arm and moved her towards the door; she led her out and told her in the corridor that the doctors were doing their best, and they were a good team, but it was important for her to stay calm – out of the way, and calm. The nurse didn’t ask her about what
happened, about how they got there. It was only later, after the X-rays had been done, and Elijah had been examined all over, that they began to look at Mama with a stare. He could see everything from above, on the ceiling and through the wide-open curtains in his head.

He watched the doctors working and the nurses drawing up drugs and attaching plastic tubes and sticking down lines. He hurt all over and the hurt was bigger than the world.

‘What appears to be the problem with this chap?’

The doctors were more interested in what he looked like on the inside than the outside, and spent a long time looking at scan pictures of what they called blood flow and nerve bundles before waving Mama back into the room. He remembered a rash that spread across his body like the sun setting and brought all the doctors running, putting in more drips and wires and tubes, getting medicine that made him float on the waves on the small screens.

‘We want you to look in the mirror, so that you can see the hurt, Elijah. But if you don’t feel ready, that’s fine.’ That nurse was called Florence. She had a smiley face drawn on her badge and her breath smelt like coffee. He nodded. She gave him a small plastic mirror and he held it up. Slowly, slowly, Florence unwound the bandage from his head. Underneath, there was a red line that looked like the zip of his Sunday trousers. Around the edges of the zip, bits of Elijah were bright pink. He moved the mirror around and around until he could see outside the room to the corridor where doctors were walking past, and a cleaner. He looked for ages. But, by then, Mama wasn’t there. She was completely gone.

*

Elijah opened his eyes. He could hear far away shouting. ‘Elijah! Elijah, son, are you OK?’

‘It’s just a faint and nothing to worry about, but we’d better call a doctor, just in case. There’s a first-aider in the office, Nikki; will you go?’

Elijah heard Mum’s voice loudly. ‘No. No, I’m not leaving. Call an ambulance. Elijah, can you hear me? Elijah! God, what’s wrong with him? What’s wrong with my son?’

And then suddenly the loudest scream in all the world cut through the voices and Mum’s questions and Ricardo’s rushing around and Dad’s calm. It was his voice.

Elijah screamed and screamed and screamed. He kicked and punched until his knees and knuckles were bleeding and he had no more energy, so that all he could do was fall flat and simply breathe, fast breathing, like a trapped mouse.

Mum and Dad held him so tightly for what seemed like hours and hours, Mum’s bump pressed hard against him, but it wasn’t long before Elijah’s voice stopped screaming and he opened his eyes. He looked at Mum and Dad. ‘Mama hurt me, didn’t she? Does Mama love me?’

*

Dad came to his room that evening to tuck him in. He smiled, but Elijah didn’t smile back. He couldn’t. ‘Come on, now,’ said Dad, rubbing his hand on top of Elijah’s head. ‘We can get through this.’

Elijah opened his eyes as widely as they would allow. ‘You don’t believe in wizards,’ he whispered.

‘No, Elijah, I don’t. Wizards don’t exist. Wizards are not real and I won’t have any more talk about it.’ Dad’s face changed. Became harder.

Elijah hugged his knees to his chest.

‘I am telling you,’ said Dad, leaning down until his face was directly opposite Elijah’s face, ‘that you’re perfectly safe. There is no such thing as wizards. I am telling you a fact. Your
birth mother was mentally ill. One of her persistent delusions was that you were possessed, and she tried to physically force the wizard out of you in the most unforgivable way. But wizards are myth.’

He pressed his face against Elijah’s cheek, then kissed him, but Elijah tried to pull his head away.

‘Wizards are real,’ he said. ‘I can prove it.’

Dad sat up and pulled the blanket up around Elijah. ‘Wizards are not real and you are not proving anything. Now, it’s been a long day, Elijah. You’re safe and sound now and I want you to have sweet dreams tonight. Goodnight. Tomorrow we’ll play football.’

Dad smiled again before leaving the room. Elijah lay looking at the darkness. He dreamt about Mama and heard her voice in his heart.
We invented the meaning of love, you and I, little son
.

It was real. It was true.

*

That night, Elijah dreamt. Mama was above, looking at him, and her face was flat. He could smell her: burning plantain. Her eyelids had dropped and her cheek skin was hanging from her bones. ‘Give me back my little baby,’ she whispered.

He reached up and said, ‘It’s me! It’s me!’ but she didn’t hear.

‘Little Nigeria,’ she whispered, ‘when you come back to me, I’ll take you home. We’ll save the money and leave this place. An aeroplane ride: in no time at all we will be back with our family, who will help us and save us. Uncle Pastor will protect you there from any other wizards entering you. We will build up your strength with Mummy’s cooking and, before you know, you will be a round and running boy with straight legs and a straight back, and my balance will be
returned. I will be restored and the spinning will stop. There will be no more insects crawling around inside my head. Times will be different – better. How I love you, little son of mine.’

She stopped whispering and leant down. Her words sounded so clear. When she touched Elijah’s back, her hand was soft. He looked at her next to him; she was sitting down. Her other arm was behind her back. She rubbed him and he felt every movement on his spine through the T-shirt he was wearing. He wished she’d lie down next to him and they could both close their eyes and go to sleep together and never wake up. Leave the wizard to do whatever it wanted. It was pushed all the way down inside Elijah now that Mama was near. Mama’s love was so strong, it might be enough. Elijah let her rub his back and he looked at her face. She looked straight back at him. He felt the corners of his mouth turn upwards.

‘Mama,’ he whispered. ‘It’s me. Elijah.’

Suddenly she leant forward and there was hardness in her face. She thought it was the wizard talking.

‘Get out of my son!’ she said and she pulled her other hand in front of her. A screwdriver was there, the one she sometimes ran up and down the back of her leg, pressing herself so the hurt on her outside was more than the hurt on her inside. He wondered if she was going to press herself. She looked at his eyes and leant close. Closer than before.

‘Mama,’ he whispered. ‘It’s me. Elijah.’ His voice sounded strange coming out – a quiet breath. His throat was still dry from burns a few weeks before. Maybe his throat would always be dry.

‘Get out of my son.’ Her hand was pushing his body down into the carpet. ‘Get out of my son!’ she screamed,
and he couldn’t see her face at all. All he could see was the screwdriver above his eyes. It came slowly and pressed. The screwdriver hurt was stronger, biting. The pain filled every corner of him. He wanted it. Elijah wanted it to carry on, him and Mama and the pain pushing the hurt out, there on the carpet. Just them. She positioned her body above the screwdriver and began leaning onto it. She was praying. He thought of crying, but with Mama there next to him, there was no reason to. Whatever happened, she was there next to him.

THIRTY-EIGHT

Little one,

There are places in this world that are stranger than dreams. When I first arrived, I remembered the Centre for Mentally Ill Destitutes in Lagos, where you could hear the patients screaming from the end of the road. I felt such a sense of panic that it was as though my face belonged to another person. The Greenfields Women’s Psychiatric Hospital was a long set of rooms, each filled with wild-eyed women who had stories to tell but would never tell them. I shared a room with three such women. The first, Nicola, a depressive, had a smile on her lips that appeared to be glued there. Even asleep (I crept out of bed one night and peered over her face), her smile remained, as if she was not real and only the smile was. The second shared a name with my sister, Miriam, and was Yoruba but she’d never been to her own country. Imagine that. She liked to ask me questions all day and got me to teach her the odd words of our language.

‘E’karbo,’ she said, as I entered the room. It was getting annoying hearing back the words I’d taught her, in her thick English accent. She sat on my bed. I was having a day when I didn’t feel like talking. They had reduced the tablets they were giving me twice a day: a small plastic cup full of pills that made me think less about you being full with wizard, and
imagine you healthy and running after a football. I gobbled them up like sweets. They said I was becoming addicted. But the tablets were the only thing that numbed my stomach until the twisting knife stopped turning and the picture of your face covered in blood became softer.

‘When I get out of here,’ Miriam sang in her voice like a thick English coat, ‘I’m going to get totally fucked up. My boyfriend will sort me out. You should come with me; I mean, we can get some good shit where I live. Best medicine in the world!’ She put her face next to my ear. ‘Anything you want. Crack, crystal meth: that is some good shit.’

I closed my eyes. Miriam told me about the place she went to for drugs, but I already knew where it was: the door, a few doors down from ours, with comings and goings and sweet burning smells. I tried not to think of you growing up in a country where Nigerian children could end up like Miriam, on drugs and cursing with every breath. Not my son. Nigeria does not produce such caricatures. Not even for rich oyinbos. Thank God that she’d never made it to Nigeria – she would have been beaten black and blue for such language. The market women would have dragged her weave straight out of her hair. But then, if she’d been in Nigeria, she would never have ended that way, Elijah. Of that I’m certain.

The third woman was not a woman at all, but a young girl who was quiet and had eyes that moved too suddenly. Her body was so thin I could see her insides and she had a layer of soft hair on her face like down on a newborn chick. Every night, the nurses came in and held her down and put a tube into her nose while her body twisted and turned, trying to get away from it. ‘Come on, now, dear,’ they said. ‘Jody, dear, we need to get this into you and the sooner you lie still,
the sooner it will be over. Really, if you didn’t keep pulling out your N.G. tubes, we wouldn’t be in this situation.’

After she’d writhed around for at least half an hour, her body usually gave up and she lay flat – too flat, like she was made of cardboard. And they’d put the tube down and then hang a bottle of sour-smelling milk above her all night. Instead of sleeping, I watched it drip, imagined you.

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