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Wednesday, September 24

BY ANTONY MAINA

Screams of terror rendered our apartment’s air with calls of distress. A woman was screaming from one of the houses on the upper floor of our apartment. The first thought that launched into my mind was of a woman being assaulted by her husband. For the sake of gathering this content, I dashed out of my house without locking the door with a padlock. I had a high false sense of security which was inspired by the agency of the matter and the knowledge that my fellow tenants could not steal from one another.
At the door, I met my neighbor at his door. None of us was privy to what was happening, yet he asked me what was going on.
‘What is going on?’ He asked.
‘Jesus is blowing his trumpet to signal his second coming,’ I shouted on the way up. Seriously, how did he expect me to know what was happening at that time? He clicked, walked back into his door and, closed his door with a bang.
On the second floor, I met more tenants standing outside their houses, undecided, and asking each other what was happening. In some houses, women served my eyes to the finest lingerie and skimpiest of sleeping gowns. In one door, a woman stood naked behind her half-closed door to catch the wind of what was happening. The allure of getting mshene overrode her need to be decently dressed.
I hurtled quickly past them. Equally, at that time, my desire to gather this content to share on Social media in exchange for likes and comments overrode the allurement of stopping at the doors with skimpily dressed women for eye chitchat.
Finally, I got to the door. Two guys were standing outside the door of the scene of the crime. They were imploring the house’s occupants to open the door. One of them resorted to banging on it. Still, the occupants defied their request and bangs. The lady kept on screaming in anguish. Her affliction seemed to grow with each scream.
You see, I knew who this lady was. She was one of the tenants that I interacted with from time to time. I met her when she was moving into her house. She was exhausted from the hassles of moving into a new apartment in Nairobi. A boda-boda had just dropped her at our gate from the gas station. I offered to help carry her 13KG gas cylinder to her house on the 4th floor of our apartment.
In return, she tipped me gloriously. From then, we became friends. I became her go-to-guy who was readily available whenever she had a problem that needed a quick fixing. I worked from home. She didn’t work. These made readily available.
I was the one who mounted her 65-inch TV. A few weeks later, she bought a DSTV dish. I remember that night when I erected the DSTV dish on her balcony. As well, I climbed on the rooftop to tie her laundry line. When she bought a new bed, I was the one who screwed and hammered the bed’s part into a functional bed and still lay the mattress on it. I was the guy that she called whenever she needed her things mounted, screwed, or hammered.
But today, she was in agony. I had heard her scream before, but not in such an agonizing manner. Another man was beating her up. She needed another one of my help. I knew she had a man. He rarely stayed in Kenya. He was a Nigerian, Achike. He alternated between staying in Nigeria and Kenya.
Minutes passed, the lady’s screams became unbearable. We became desperate. A few more tenants had gathered outside their door. Even amid the commotion and the noise, their immediate neighbor was still locked in his house listening to loud music.
When all the methods employed by others failed, I stepped forward, cleared my voice, and shouted: If you don’t open this door, I shall call the police. You have a chance to allow us to solve this amicably’. The lady’s screams suddenly turned into whimpers.
Everyone stopped talking as footsteps were heard walking towards the door. No one knew what was on the other side of the door. What if the perpetrator was weaponized? At the door, a tall and bulky man appeared. He was dressed in basketball shorts, a green Nigerian National Team football jersey. He kept a medium-sized afro-hair. His face seemed intimidated already. His eyes coyed when he made contact with the crowd outside his house.
He made a few steps back into his house to allow us in. ‘What is happening here?’ One tenant asked.
‘Oga, I did nothing, oo,’ Achike said.
‘We have heard screams of distress. Is everything okay?’
‘Oga, I did nothing, oo,’ Achike repeated. He spread his hands to register his innocence. On his hands, there was a cut with blood. His face was deformed, and his left forearms had what seemed like teeth bite scratches.
Wanjiru’s whimpers turned into hard moans. She was sitting on her carpet, which I lay on the ground. One of her rested its elbow on the couch’s pillow while the other was wiping tears off her eyes.
‘He was strangling me,’ Wanjiru said in Swahili.
Achike tapped on my shoulders with desperation. I panicked. Had he identified me? My heartbeat throbbed beyond the normal rate. ‘What is she saying?’
‘She is accusing you of strangling her.’
Achike locked his hands above his head and made a few aimless steps inside their living area. He tried to confront Wanjiru. He was stopped. ‘Why are you lying? Why are you lying? Why are you lying?’ His tone and intonation reminded me of the famous ‘Why are you running?’ clip. ‘God go bear me witness, oo. I can’t beat a woman in her country. Abeg, she is lying. Oga, hear me out.’
‘I am not lying!’ Wanjiku cried. Her whimpers hardened.
‘Oga, look. Oga, look at my hand. She bit me oo, she scratched me, oo. I didn’t do anything. I swear by the gods of Enugu, she be lying oo. This Kenya girl be liar oo.’
‘Why was she screaming then?’ Another man asked.
‘Oga, this Kenyan girl be bringing men in my house whenever I am in Nigeria.’ My heart skipped a beat. ‘I wanted to leave with my things, but she doesn’t want me to leave. I tried unmounting my TV, she started screaming, oo.’
‘It is not his house,’ Wanjiru said. She pushed her hands below the coach’s pillow and produced what looked like rent receipts bearing her name. ‘The house is leased under my name, and these receipts show that I am the one who pays rent.’
After back and forth, it was established that Oga Achike used to give Wanjiru the money that she used to pay rent with. I also learned that our apartment had a policy that did not allow Nigerians to lease one of its houses owing to the Nigerians’ reputation of partying every day 24/7, causing an uncontrollable disturbance and acting in a disorderly manner when they were drunk, and staying in a group of more than 5 Nigerians in one house.
However, a Nigerian could live in the house only if he was being hosted by a Kenyan. This inspired Achike to procure the services of Wanjiru. Her role was to rent the house under her name. Achike paid the rent, ensured that Wanjiru had pocket money, clothes, food, as well as furnishing the house.
Trouble rocked their African union when Achike got wind of Wanjiru's sleazy decision to turn the house that he paid rent into an extension of Koinange Street. Their fight erupted when Achike called his compatriot from Kilimani late into the night and asked them to drive to Ruaka to move his belongings. They disagree on what Achike owned in the house. When he tried to unmount the TV that I had mounted, Wanjiru protested and screamed to alert the whole building.
On the table, she produced documents after document, receipt after receipt, that proved that she was the one who bought the furniture, electronics, and everything in the house. Adichie, on the other hand, claimed that she might have bought the things, but the money came from him. He claimed that Kenyan businesses treated him with suspension whenever he shopped for expensive things.
The two antagonizing parties were not willing to involve the police in the matter. Wanjiru did not have a reason to give why she did not want to involve the Police. Adichie cited harassment and favoritism from the police as his reason.
It was a delicate issue to solve. Although Wanjiru acknowledged that Achike financed the purchase of everything, she was not willing to lose any possession whose receipt of ownership bore her names. If burdened with the task of proving ownership, the law was on her side.
‘Ata ukitaka twende koti sai,’ Wanjiru announced with an arrogant tone, one that dared and mocked Achike.
A Nigerian who was potentially involved in their usual online mischief had walked into the jaws of our very own, that is what I thought.
‘She is saying that the courts can solve this case,’ I translated. Achike paced around the house. He was mumbling things in his mother’s dialect, probably invoking his gods to strike all of us with thunder.
‘Oga,’ he called me and placed his hands on my shoulders in a manner that was supposed to woe me into his side. ‘I picked this Kenyan girl in Rosambu. Offered her comfort, gave her everything she wanted. The only thing she was supposed to do was to pay rent on my behalf. Then she started shagging men in the house that I pay rent for. Oga, I know one of the men stay in this apartment. Thunder go strike him one day, oo. Oga, if it were you, what would you do?’
Why was he putting me in such a dilemma? My moral obligation commanded me to side with him, in the spirit of brotherhood, but my lascivious obligation commanded me to side with Wanjiru. What if I sided with Achike, angered her in the process, and then she revealed that I was the man who came to screw, mount, and climb Achike’s things? What if she got angered and stopped asking me to fix her things?
Her eyes were fixed on me, patiently waiting for my reply.
‘Personally…’ I stammered. ‘The best bet for you, bro, is to seek intervention from the police.’ The case was too complicated for most of us. Most of the tenants walked back into their houses, at least with a piece of mushene to share with their colleagues the following day.
The handful of us who remained were so invested in the story that we didn’t want to leave. Eventually, after failing to come to a consensus, Achike stormed out of the building. His friend picked him up. He relinquished ownership of everything.
We walked back into our houses after everything was resolved. It was only getting at my door that I realized that I had not closed my door. I pushed it in a rush. My phone and laptop were missing. The following day, I woke up to a Kamkunji outside the apartment. Most of those who had attended the quarrel longer walked back into their houses to find a lot of their valuables missing. Nairobi, Nairobi, Nairobi.
Anyway, I didn’t believe that someone could walk away from this 65’ TV, cooker, washing machine, leather couches, dining table, a king-size bed, home theater. Yesterday, Wanjiru said that Achike used Ksh. 70K to buy the laptop that I am using to write this story.


BY ANTONY MAINA
#newstory

Being a friend with a philanderous rich friend who takes advantage of his financial powers over you to blatantly break the boundaries of the brother code is depressing. This kind of friend takes advantage of your financial desperation and fear of being canceled from your rich-friends clique to wag his tail closer to your girlfriend. Maintaining a girlfriend next to such friends is almost impossible, as I experienced in 2017.
I felt that my friends deliberately flexed their financial muscles in the presence of my girlfriends to impress them or humiliate me or both. I was a member of a clique of very rich friends, in their mid-twenties. I wasn’t. I was a jobless university dropout, struggling with life on the outskirts of Ruaka town. They drove high-end cars, they dressed in fancier clothes, and they could afford everything they wanted in life. Benson was the richest, at 26. He owned a high-end car wash, car garage, a car bazaar, and other businesses. Whereas he could afford anything, he failed to maintain a girlfriend. He lost his girls because of his promiscuous nature.
Because of his haughty attitude, when lonely, sometimes he wagged his tail too close to his friend’s girlfriends.
More often, I was the victim of his blatant contempt for the brother code. Why? Because he was the guy I ran to when I had financial issues. He was as philanthropic with his money to his friends as was with his tail to his friend’s girlfriends.
One day, I tagged my new girlfriend to one of our friends’ wedding reception to flaunt her to my friends.
Ben was the first to make comments about her, lewd comments that made me uncomfortable. He pulled me away from the rest of the group during the wedding and wondered how I always managed to fish beautiful girls from time to time. It is always a proud moment when your friends acknowledge and approve of your girls’ beauty, but his comments were offbeat. ‘Bro, your new girl has the kind of bottom that I dream of. How do you manage to get them?’
On our way from the wedding reception, we drove in Benson’s SUV. Cyprian, a friend, was driving. Benson was sitting beside him. I was sitting in the rear seat alongside Kibet, another friend. My over a month-old girlfriend, Miriam, was sitting in the middle seats alongside Kibet’s girlfriends.
Whereas my friends were aware that I was struggling financially, we always kept such a discussion from our girls. But Benson was about to change that. Totally unprovoked, he pulled his stunt;
‘So, Sakwah, I have been thinking,’ he started. ‘Since that day when you borrowed money to settle your rent, I have been thinking, why don’t you move from the house to a hood where you can afford the rent easily?’ He said. Silence engulfed the car cabin. None of us hard anticipated such a talk. We always had such conversations without the presence of our girlfriends, but with girls around?
I was mortified beyond redemption. ‘It is something that I have been considering,’ I lied in a haste. I always believed that I had the situation figured out.
‘Yea that would be great. Plus, whatever you are doing at the moment is not able to sustain you. We were discussing amongst ourselves without you, and we feel that you need to get a new source of income, or probably also grind harder.’ This was perfectly written within the friendship books. When we were alone, the guys, more often we had such honest talks, and I understand if my friends thought that about my situation, but saying it in the presence of my girlfriend was unacceptable, embarrassing. It felt like someone calling a press conference to insult you before helping you.
Kibet and Cyprian were more than mortified. They did not contribute much to the topic. The damage had already been done, on my ego and pride as a man. My new girlfriend was not privy to my struggles, and I would not have loved her to learn about it in such a manner.
From then, I distanced myself from my friends. Although I keep our friendship, I stopped turning up to events that warranted the presence of our girlfriends and wives. My girlfriend did not shove the revelation on my face, but I noted she had changed since that day. Days moved on, as I struggled to recover financially.
Then came yet another day, if my memories serve me right. We were walking down the streets of Nairobi from attending Miriam’s brother’s graduation party in Utawala. From Utawala, we took a matatu through the CBD to Westlands. Our plans were to grab a few drinks in Westlands on our way home. We alighted from the matatu and while we were in the streets of CBD, Miriam spotted a pair of shoes that she had been converting for a while.
She had talked about the pair of shoes before we attended her brother’s graduation party. I ignored the talk because I still didn’t have money to buy her the shoes. She howled this in the air, ‘babe, do you remember the pair of shoes that I wanted to wear to my brother’s graduation party? See, there are on display. I wish I could afford the pair,’ I glanced at the price of the shoes and shuddered at their price. In my wildest dream, I could afford that pair of shoes at the moment. The high heels’ price almost rivaled my rent.
‘You can pick them, I will pay,’ Ben shocked the rest of us with his offer. Miriam jumped up and down like a happy toddler. She was too excited. Momentarily, she stared at me, with a wide beautiful smile on her face, as if seeking permission from me to thank Benson for his philanthropic prowess. I looked away, not buying her intentions to thank Benson inappropriately. Nonetheless, she hugged him anyway, tighter and longer than I would have been comfortable with. It actually took the intervention of my dry and uncomfortable cough to break them up.
‘Thank you, Benson. You are such a gentleman.’ My mind flashed back into my memory lane again. Never had she ever called me a gentleman. Why would she anyway? We were living in a world where gentlemen no longer pulled chairs, opened doors for their girls, held cars doors for their girls, and said ‘after you!’ We are living in a generation where gentlemen are men who spend more money on women, buy the most expensive alcohol in clubs, and drive the coolest car in the hood. For that reason, I was far from being one.
‘No. Don’t thank me. Thank him,’ Benson pointed at me, using his car keys. He did not travel in his car on that day yet her could not stop waging his car keys around. If you met him on the way, one would have imagined that his car keys did not fit in his pocket. ‘Were you not his girl, I wouldn’t have bought the shoe for you. You know, I would not have known you.’ My ego was violated beyond repair. Why didn’t he send the money to me privately so that I can buy my shortie the shoes later? Why didn’t he allow me to give my shortie a - I am waiting for some cash. Once I have the cash in my account, I will get you the shoe- lie, before he offered to buy her the shoes? My head played host to a plethora of disturbing questions.
I barely talked on our way to Westland. I had twisted my mind, upside down. To imagine that I had never bought my girlfriend anything worthy half of what Benson had forked out to buy her the shoes was unsettling.
And if I thought that I had seen the end of Ben’s antic, I was wrong. In the club in Westland, Ben constantly asked my girlfriend to put on the shoes so that the rest of us could review her. It was manipulation, I could tell it, mental manipulation oiled with money, influence, and entitlement. My girl wore the shoes. Ben cheered her on, as she balanced her beautiful body on the heels. He bombarded her with beautiful names, telling her how she was born to walk in heels all her life. Bro, that girl had never owned heels before. And I had never given her such compliments. I felt belittled, another man was commanding my woman, in my presence and asking her to do things I ought to have asked her to do.
At one point, Miriam and the girls walked into the washrooms. Ben leaned over me and commented, ‘Bro, your girl has beautiful, firm, perky avocados. The feeling of her hug has not left my body. I can still feel her pokes on my chest’ Bro, who says that about his boyfriend’s girl? I would never ever compliment my friend’s girlfriend’s rear or front goodies in his presence. He insisted on talking about her until I was visibly mad. I wanted to rant, I wanted to complain, but the Alcohol on the table, the roasted meat, and anything else on the table were on Benson’s bill. So, I shut up and allowed my friend to disrespect me, so long as I was drunk and full.
A point came when I stopped dating, entirely. Because it was increasingly becoming hard to maintain a girlfriend next to my friends. My previous girlfriend left me because she felt my rich friends’ girlfriends treated her unfairly. Because she was the girlfriend to the poorest guy in the cohort, more often, she was relegated to clearing the table whenever we met, did the utensils, while in most cases the other girlfriends sat in their comforts or in the sitting room with their friends. When in clubs, she was the one who was sent to make orders.
I could have left the clique, entirely, but the guys were my best friends, plus they always came to my rescue financially, especially at that time when I was struggling. What prompted me to stop dating entirely was a nauseating incident between me and my girl. I was snooping in her phone when I found a chat between her and her friend. Mariam had exchanged a text with one of her friends. In the text, she regretted why she met me or accepted my advance ahead of meeting my rich friends. ‘His friends are filthy rich,’ the text read, ‘I wish I met them earlier before I accepted to date Sakwah. I have a feeling one of them is interested in dating me. He even bought me the heels. I have been trying unsuccessfully to get his number.’
‘Why his number?’
‘I don’t know. To thank him or something?’
‘Why don’t you pick it from his phone?’
‘I can’t,’ Mariam replied.
‘Why? Don’t you guys go through each other’s phones?’
‘No. Like, I suggested that we should not be going through each other’s phones. He didn’t have a problem with it. I said that I will never go through his phone so that I deny him the chance to go through mine as well.’
‘Well, would you want his friend?’
‘So long as he gives me money which Sakwah does not have,’ Mariam replied. I read the texts and almost went mad. This text message disturbed me. I confronted Miriam over the same. Instead of offering an explanation or anything, she pulled out the victim card. She accused me of snooping into her phone without her permission and invading her privacy. I ended up apologizing for going through her phone when, ideally, I was the one who deserved an explanation.
In the end, I dumped my girlfriend at the expense of keeping the friendship with my friends. Because I feared being canceled. How then would I get free booze, and get to hang out in cool joints, if I got canceled from the clique because I complained that one of them was flirting with my girl? Men will always hit on one someone’s girlfriend or wife, but it's the mandate of the girl to say no to their advances. I thought, as a man, Benson had a right to hit on my girl, but it was her mandate as my girlfriend to turn him down. Therefore, I dumped her.
I remained single for the longest time during that period.

Sunday, September 21


BY TONY MAINA

ANDI WA KHARIA
When Sauti Sol sang, ‘bibi ya mwenyewe is a no-go zone,’ I should have listened, but I didn’t and my fingers burned. How could I have known she was someone’s spouse, or not who portrayed to be? Are there married women living around Joyland, Ruaka? There aren’t. At least that is what the person who introduced me to Ruaka told me.
‘You see Joyland, Ruaka, it is a haven for andy wa kharias and slay queens who are housed by the looters and grabbers of Kenya as their mpango wa kandos,' my tour guide said.
‘Like in Zimmerman?’
‘Yea, like Zimmerman. Joyland is a rich man’s Zimmerman,’ he said, alluding to the theory that Zimmerman is where poor sponsors rent bedsitters for their mpango wa kandos. ‘Joyland is where high-end sponsors who can afford the luxury of renting high-end one or two bedrooms for their slay queens keep those girls.’
Initially, I was searching for a house in a quiet suburb away from the bustle and noise of Kasarani. Given its village-esque status, Ruaka fit my bills, as was Kirigiti. I was to choose between living in Kirigiti and Ruaka, but when my tour guide mentioned the existence of a plethora of beautiful women in Ruaka, rich women at such, my decision was made. Ruaka it was.
Rent at Joyland, Ruaka was too expensive to afford. But I never gave up on the hope of living in the middle of the affluence of Joyland with the right auntie wa Harrier in my life. At the time, as I searched for an auntie wa Harrier, I settled for deeper Ruaka suburbs, where people still live on a section of their ancestral land while the rest of the land had been sold to real estate investors. In the end, creating an estate that half looks like Kiminani and half looks like Waikoronia village in Murang’a. The kind of hood where shopkeepers talk to you in Kikuyu, before quickly switching to Kiswahili after noting that the size of your nose is too big, too chubby to belong to their Kikuyus kinsmen.
The babes around Joyland, Ruaka are very beautiful, I must admit. I lived a few kilometers away from Joyland, but the desire to view the beauty that Joyland exhumed used to force me to walk past so many butcheries, mama bongas, and shops in my hood just to go to Joyland to buy pieces of households, and groceries. In the evenings, they all came out of their house to walk or walk their dogs.
It didn’t take me long before I landed in the hands of a shenje wa kharia. On that day, I walked into a Ruaka club to watch a Manchester United game. She was there sitting alone on a table sipping on her hard work while hamming to the live band mugithi music. I watched her watch me walk into the club, she watched me watch her watching me walking into the club. It was an instant connection, I thought, and I didn’t need further invitation to know she was the one. She was the auntie wa Harrier to pull me from the confines of my Nairobi’s miseries.
I ordered one bottle of Tusker. I am the poverty-stricken battalion that buys one beer of Tusker per 90 minutes of a football game until I am reminded by a waitress/waiter to buy another beer to be allowed to watch the second half or another game. I have been evicted from clubs before, after attempting to watch three football games after buying a 300 ML bottle of Sprite Soda.
Her space was awash with two brands of expensive wine, a bottle of water, two cans of Redbull, and a packet of passion juice. She took a turn sipping from each drink. Soft life, I swear.
This mama was very beautiful. She was dressed expensively, and a designer purse sat next to her seat. She fit all the descriptions of a shenje wa Kharia, a young one. My tour guide had mentioned an aunty wa Harrier description befitting her aura; ‘they throng clubs around Ruaka sipping expensive drinks while on the lookout for Ben tens to spoil with their husband’s money.’
I was sipping on my Tusker at the rate of one sip per goal scored by Manchester United. This, so that one beer can last me for the 2-hour football game. At the 30th Minute, Manchester United was already trailing by 2 goals to 1, meaning I had taken exactly 1 sip of my Tusker to celebrate Bruno Fernandes’ goal.
My eyes alternated between watching the game and perving at the mama’s cleavage. Her upper button was undone. She didn’t seem to be bothered by my lecherous eyes. At one moment, she smiled at me when our eyes locked. There and then, I knew nimekafunga. I was ready to be chips fungaad.
My attention was drawn from her when a few lousily raised Arsenal fans next table started celebrating Manchester United conceding the third goal. I lowered my head in sorrow that United had downed me into, but when I lifted my head, there were 5 more bottles of Tusker standing next to my beer.
The mama lifted her glass in the air in my direction and smiled. ‘Ohh, Waithera, aki stop it!’ My brain teased. ‘Enjoy,’ she mouthed.
I mouthed back a ‘thank-you’ and downed my sorrows deeper into imbibing the beers. It started with her asking for my name, the conversation, then grew into us lamenting how the cost of living was suddenly skyrocketing in Ruaka.
‘Two years ago, boda bodas were charging us 50 bobs from Joyland to QuickMart. They now charge 200 for a 5-minutes walking distance like the peeps in Kilimani. They are now selling us groceries at the same rate as the peeps staying in Runda and the diplomat wazungus in Gigiri. 5 years ago, the most expensive 2 bedroom in Ruaka was 15k, right now, you can’t even get a bedsitter with 12K,’ she lamented. I was wondering why a rich mama would lament about the cost of living. She seemed to have it all.
‘Ruaka is a rich man’s Kasarani with Kilimani’s cost of living,’ I whispered because the Ruaka people love their estate to be tagged, ‘the next Kilimani,’ or ‘lower Runda!’
The more she talked and shook her head to the mugithi tunes, the more the makeup peeled off her face, revealing darker lips. The kind of lips that had withered due to the overconsumption of a cocktail of muratina, chang’aa, and busaa in Githongoro Slums. That was a red flag enough, was it? But I ignored it.
I kept on laughing at her lame jokes, like the girl next table was doing to the old muzungu next to her. We exchanged numbers and parted ways on the stroke of curfew. I staggered home. The following few days, we exchanged a lot of sweet nothings, but in most cases, she was lamenting how her man was ever traveling, leaving her alone under the mercy of the revenging cold from Karura Forest.
She called me Sweetie, barely a day later. Andie wa Kharias don’t recognize bae, or sweetheart, or love. Sweetie is their ultimate romantic pet name. One evening, my hood experienced one of its common blackouts. I started lamenting how Kenya Power was unfair to those of us who worked from home.
‘Ohh, sweetie, I am sorry to learn that you can’t work because of the blackout. There is power huku Joyland.’
‘There is?’
‘Yes. We have power. Why don’t you carry your laptop and come and work from here?’
‘Overnight? It is already 7.’
‘Don’t worry, sweetie. My man traveled to Mombasa. Told you he is a top security officer to a high commissioner in one of those high commissioner officers along Limuru Road. He traveled with the high commissioner to Mombasa. And he will be away for at least a week. You can sneak in, and work as long as you want until power is restored.’
I knew that was an opportunity to prove to her why she needed to hire me as her flower garden gardener. I knew there was going to be an interview, a practical one, in her garden. I got myself a gardening apron, got my jembe, laptop and left for her house.
Her house was exquisite, spacious, fully furnished. I found her almost ready for the gardening interview. She was dressed in a floral see-me-through tunic, from which I could see laced, color-matched inner garments. She offered me a glass of wine after I set my laptop on her dining table.
After a minute of working, or pretending to, andie wa kharia walked to the table and placed her hands on my head. The aromatic smell emanating from the open flower petals of her flower garden excited me, they excited my jembe, I mean. After a few minutes of her inspecting my jembe and I inspecting her garden, she said that her garden was ready for gardening, for weeding, for plowing.
I was determined to plow the garden for long. I didn’t want to be the gardener that weeds for 3 minutes, stop to water the garden before resting with a broken jembe. I wanted to impress her, so that I get hired again, and again. I knew if I impressed her well, I would stand a chance to make demands. I would demand a servant’s house, a one-bedroom house in Joyland, a salary, and a yearly leave where I would ask her to take me to Malindi. I craved a holiday in Malindi, sipping a martini on a yacht while in a thong.
Barely a few minutes after plowing the garden, her garden became waterlogged. They say gardens next to the mountain are waterlogged, but I was determined to impress even when the garden was soaked, and the water splashed all over the place.
Then suddenly, the door opened. Whoever was on the door did not knock on it. He just opened it. I froze. My jembe broke. I started sweating. I stopped gardening. But before I could figure out how to escape or hide, a man, the owner of the garden, was in the bedroom.
‘Who are you, and why are you gardening my garden?’ Before I replied, he slapped me, viciously, with ill intentions.
He reached his jacked and I pulled out a gun, its muzzle pointing my face. I only came with a jembe, but why was this gardener carrying a gun to a garden fight?
I closed my eyes and for a moment envisioned myself on the DCI thread stories. How was the DCI admin going to report how I went to be with Jehover Wanyonyi? ‘A renowned thread storyteller is the subject of our thread. Ongoma Sakwah, who entertains his social media audience, was found entertaining an illegal audience. The owner of the audience, a gun-yielding sleuth, acting on jealousy and anger....’ Another heavy slap pulled me from those thoughts.
The gun-yielding sleuth lifted me in the air, ‘what are you doing in my garden?’ He asked again.
‘It is not what you think babe. He was not gardening...’
‘Am I a fool to you? What is that on his body? Isn’t that the gardening apron?’ He asked.
‘Before doing anything, babe, think about your job. If you kill him, you will lose your job and go to jail.’ Emotions were flying high. The madam begged for my life, and hers as well.
In the end, the sleuth confiscated my documents, my laptop, phone, and wallet and threatened to report the matter to the police the following day for trespassing through his garden. My wallet had half of my rent that I had intended to deposit in Equity Bank, Joyland, the following day. At that moment, asking for money was not as crucial as my life. He evicted his wife out of his house as well.
At midnight, the wife was crying, sobbing uncontrollably, telling me how all her friends were not receiving her calls. ‘Where will I go? My friends are not picking up my phone. They are probably asleep,’ she cried. She did not have anywhere to go at that time. I empathized with her and offered a night at my house. Just for a night. I didn’t need anything to do with her anymore. All along the walk to my bedsitter, she kept on narrating how she was sure that her husband was not going to come back until after a week and how he had never reported back home from his trips without informing her. I believed her.
In my house, I was too weak and too tired to garden her garden again. She offered the garden again. I offered to sleep right away. I was going to wake very early in the morning, board a Musamaria Mwema to Busia, cross into Uganda, change my name to something like Ombokole Kabaka, and start my life there as a different person. This, to hide away from the gun-yielding sleuth and his police.
Eventually, I slept, and slept, and woke up 36 hours later in an empty house. The little I had in my bedsitter was gone, wiped out, washed away, carried away, swept off, cleaned out. It dawned on me that I had been wash washed.
Angry, I left the house to the woman’s house to confront her. If I die, I die, If they kill me, they kill, but I must get my things back. I kept on singing to myself. She must have been the one who wash washed all my things. ‘Kwani anadhani sijui kwake?’ I kept on talking to myself, mad even. At the gate, I was barred from entering the apartment unless if I had the permit to show that I had booked an Airbnb room in the apartment.
‘Papa, this is an Airbnb,’ the security guard said.
‘Papa, I was here two days ago with a woman who lives here.’
‘Papa, as far as I know, no one has been in this Airbnb for more than 24 hours. Papa, wefwe, no one lives here permanently. Papa pole.’ I sat down and started wailing loudly.
‘Papa Nairopi imenishinda!’
‘Nikavosi, papa. Pole papa.

Saturday, September 20



BY ANTONY MAINA
🔞 adults language.
One evening, as I walked down River Road, I spotted one of the most beautiful girls I have ever seen in my life. She was parading herself outside the corner house on the Luthuli Street and River Road junction, the famous brothel.
I stopped walking in awe of the stupendous display of her beauty. Men and women alike cast their eyes admirably as they walked past her. I could feel her presence, and the attention bestowed upon her by passersby bothered other hookers.
I turned and stared at my image on the wall mirror of the house I was standing next to, and turned and faced the girl, stared at my image in the mirror again and concluded, ‘not in a million chances was I charming that woman. She was too beautiful for me.’ As I prepared to walk away, Satan whispered into my ears, ‘but she is selling her body. How much could she possibly ask from you during this hard COVID-19 times?’
For once in my life, I thought Satan had a point. Here was a chance for me to bed the most beautiful girl I have ever seen, albeit on the streets. Even after making that choice to buy sex, I still had the burden of walking to her to negotiate. The streets were full of people moving with urgent haste to their matatu stages to go home.
COVID had happened, the Covid curfew was in position, meaning people were expected to be out of the CBD by 10 PM. This forced street hookers to start trading even during the day, at a time when men whose wives starved them were still within CDB.
I made up my mind to approach her. I walked towards her, ignoring all the ‘heys’, ‘twende?’, and other attention-seeking words from other hookers. They were dressed skimpily, in short skirts, dresses, and with small pushed-up bras that squeezed their tea teas and pushed them up. I ignored them all because my arrow at that time was only pointing at the one I wanted to eat.
However, when I got closer to her, I lost the courage to talk to her because I was scared people might be watching me. A few meters away, I stopped and started deliberating again. I watched her from a distance again, smiling and chatting animatedly with her friends. She was curvaceous, both on her body and when she moved her lips to smile or talk. I decided to give it a second go.
I readjusted my face mask to ensure no one would be able to recognize me, in case someone would try to. Luckily, she walked through the brothel’s door into the brothel. That was bingo. That way, it would be easy to negotiate in the dark corridors of the brothel without people’s eyes spying on us. I hurried, half-walking-half-dashing, towards the brothel.
I entered the brothel after shoving off several hookers trying to get my attention again.
I walked a few steps into the brothel only to find another man chatting to her. I was stung with a pinch of anger, jealousy, and rues at the missed chance to negotiate with her sooner. I should have approached her the first time I had the chance to.
I stood, angry, and contemplated whether I should wait for her or walk away. The knowledge of witnessing another man take her to bed discouraged me. I knew she was a hooker, but seeing her in the hands of another man changed my mind.
While I was deep into my diabolic rueful thoughts, a heavy arm wound up around my shoulders. Then I heard, ‘si twende dzaddy’. Her voice was rough. She was chewing miraa louder and violently with her lips wide open and at the same time talking to me. The splatter from her mouth was disgusting. She was disgusting more because she was blocking the view of the girl’s behind as the man took her away.
I declined her initial offer, ‘nitakupea vizuri, sweetheart,’ she wooed me. Her breath smelled like a cocktail of cheap alcohol and fermented miraa chlorophyll. She was wearing a cheap perfume that smelled like someone’s toilet’s air freshener.
Unprovoked, she grabbed my hand and placed it on one of her breasts that haphazardly lay outside the caps of her bra. Her nipples were long, dark, and shriveled. She probably forgot to cap them back after servicing her previous customer. Still, I said no. No amount of persuading would change my mind.
My mind was still on the young beauty that was vanishing yonder, in the presence of a midlife man in a marital midlife crisis with his wife.
As if forcing me to touch her wasn’t assault enough, she pulled her short skirt up, squatted down, and spread her legs to show me her coochie. I took one or two or more looks at what she displayed on my face to woo me. I saw a white precipitate, literally trickle down her vagina. I felt nauseous. I have never seen another man’s cum. I didn’t know what other gay stunt she was going to pull to convince me to bed her for money. I said no, again, and turned to walk away.
‘Sweetheart, nitakufanyia nusu ya bei.’ I walked on, ignoring her. ‘Sweetie, si naona umesimanisha?’
‘Sijasimamishia wewe,’ I said.
‘Kwenda uko, unaringa na una sura mbaya. Huyo demu ni malaya lakini hangekukubali juu ya sura yako.’ Of all the languages in the world, she chose to speak violence. I ignored her and kept on walking away. She walked after me with a charged tone. ‘Kwani yake iko na gorofa, ama huwa anamwaga vanilla ama strawberry?”
‘Iko na kachumbari,’ I joked. This only infuriated her more. She kept on hurling unpalatable and uncouth words towards me. She followed me, until another man came into her vicinity, prompting her to change her tone, and try to sweet-talk him.
I walked out with regrets. The whole thing was regretful, I thought. I felt contrite. Guilt was choking me up. I risked a lot while pursuing bodily gratification. Standing at that door, my bulge had died, I started using my brain again and thought to myself, ‘she is not even more beautiful than my girlfriend.’
I felt like the entire Nairobi would be standing outside the door to drag me in shame with their judgmental eyes. Walking out of a brothel felt like a walk of shame. Still at the door, I looked left to ensure there were no muggers along River Road, I looked right to ensure there were no people who would force me to buy stolen or fake phones along Luthuli Streets.
When I was assured to come out, I landed straight into the long arm of the government. A man in a police uniform was standing there looking at me. I froze from the sight of a gun muzzle pointing at my heart. My heart raced and pounded faster.
As I wondered why the mean-looking sleuth was staring at me, he cuffed one of my hands while he held the other side of the handcuff. He did not say a word or even remind me that I had a right to remain silent. He dragged me across Luthuli Street towards Munyu Street.
‘Prostitution is illegal in Kenya,’ he announced my crimes eventually, slightly louder for everyone who cared to listen.
‘Me, No.’ I declined. You should have seen how I decline with vehement like I had never heard the word prostitution.
‘I watched you eye that hooker, size her up, exchange eye contact, and then walk after her into the brothel,’ his voice was louder. I wanted to ask him to tone down. People were staring at us.
‘Afande. I have barely been 2 minutes into that building,’ I argued.
‘2 minutes is all that some men like you need to finish their business, as brief as a roster on a hen.’ I saw some women who had heard that troll giggle. I was not in the business of discussing my sex timestamp with a fellow man. So I kept quiet.
After a few meters along Munyu Road, he asked me why I chose to do prostitution. I said nothing. There was no need to negotiate with a police officer who had already pronounced your crime.
‘I am talking to you, young man. Talk back.’
‘Afande, let us go back ata and asked the girl. Nothing happened.’
‘Are you saying that a police officer is wrong, young man?’
Scared, intimidated, and desperate, I replied, ‘I am not saying you are wrong, Afande, but…’
‘Well, that is all I wanted to hear. I am not wrong.’
‘But, Afande, we can go…’
‘Shut up, young man. Don’t talk to a police officer when he is talking to you. It is rude.’ He announced. ‘Are you rude?’ He asked. I didn’t reply to him immediately because, at that time, I was confused about whether I should talk back to him or not.
‘Do you know the Kenyan constitution very well? The punishment for prostitution is 4 years in jail or bail of over a million,’ he announced louder again for everyone to know that I had been caught doing prostitution. ‘Umalaya ni haramu.’ Until that time, everyone along Munyu Street was aware of the reason I was arrested. Thank God I had a mask on.
‘Tunaeza ongea afande?’ I asked. At that moment, there was no way I was getting out of his hook unless I negotiated for cash bail.
‘50K cash bail,’ he eventually reduced his tone. ‘Or you will spend the night in the cell and be arraigned in court tomorrow to face prostitution charges.’ He asked me what I did for a living. ‘An author,’ I said. I wish I lied about it. It placed me in a disadvantaged position when negotiating. We meet up with another group of people who had been arrested as well, around 4 of them. They were being manned by a female police officer.
The afande asked her to release them because he had arrested a big fish, an author. How I wish Satan would have told them that I was a struggling author who forced Kenyans to buy my books.
What followed was a long, tedious negotiation game. I tried to convince the afande that I was broke. He didn’t believe me. He requested me to show him my M-Pesa balance, M-swari, and Fuliza limit. I showed him all, and even the text from Safaricom that prohibited me from borrowing more credit airtime because I had failed to repay my 50 bob okoa jahazi on time.
He took me through the darker sides of Nairobi, places I had never known they exited in Nairobi. There were more hookers on those sides. They were rougher and sometimes tried to force passersby to buy what they were selling.
I wondered why the officers were not arresting the ladies and only the men. Weren’t they doing prostitution in the police officers’ glaring eyes? On those sides of Kamukunji, people were being mugged in dark alleys while the police officer and I walked by. We were too engrossed in our negotiation to help them. It was around 7:30 at that time.
At that point, I had convinced the police that I was poor. I even asked him if he had ever heard my name, as he had heard about Ngugi wa Thiong’o. ‘Ask anyone if they have ever heard an author named Ongoma Sakwah. People only buy books from authors that they know.’He asked me to ask for help from family and friends. He was now willing to take 8k as cash bail, down from 50k.
I scrolled down on my phonebook and called poor friends, whom I knew could not raise such an amount instantly. All these, to convince the officer that I was poor, and so were my friends, you know, show me your friends and I will tell you who you are. Most of them promised to manage only 300 or less, and they needed time to borrow the money elsewhere as well. It all played according to my plan.
Eventually, the officer gave up and said, ‘siezi fika chini ya 3000.’ At that point, we were inside the Kamukunji police station. He asked the madam on the counter not to book my name yet because I was raising bail. I still wanted more time to reduce it to at least 500 from 50,000. He was frustrated. He regretted releasing the others whom he had arrested. ‘You gave me the impression, based on how you were dressed and occupation, that you could raise more money, forcing me to release other criminals. Bwana, just borrow money, call everyone on your phone.’
He asked me to walk into a chamber between the reception and the cell, where people changed and left their valuables before being locked away. I was still negotiating with my poor friends. After 5 minutes, the officer walked into the chamber and asked me how much I had raised. ‘400,’ I said.
‘Jaribu ifike 1000,’ he said, almost giving up on me. I knew it was going down. While we were still negotiating, we heard an altercation coming from the door that led into the cell side. I cast my eyes on that location, and there and then, I saw a man escalate an argument with a police officer. The officer pushed the man, he turned and punch him. The officer stumbled back until the wall rescued him from hitting the ground.
The man had red eyes, dark large lips, and unkempt beards. He was wearing a loose torn vest. ‘Tuheshimiane bwana vile tumeheshimiana siku zote,’ he told the officer.
I have never seen something as horrifying as that. The afande saw the horror on my face and thought he could cash on it. ‘Mabusu tu kaa hao ndio wako huko ndani,’ he threatened. ‘Huku Kamukunji ni cell ya hardcore criminals from Nairobi downtown.’ I could not imagine spending a night in a police cell with a remandee with the audacity to fight a police officer. Other police officers come to the police officer’s aid. They manhandle the violent remandee and forced him into a cell.
‘The cash bail is now back to 8K or I will lock you in the same cells as the man who has fought police,’ the afande said. ‘He loves it when he has someone freshly arrested to spend the night with him.’
‘You can’t do that.’
‘Si you were looking for sex? There is plenty of it inside these cells.’ I wanted to scream and ask him not to say that. That is not the type of sex I was looking for.
‘Afande, book huyu anadhani tunacheza hapa.’ The scenes of the Nairobi Halflife movie played in my head.
‘Ngoja ngoja, one minute. Just give me one minute,’ I requested. The afande stopped and pulled a smile. It took me just one minute to call two able friends to raise 8k. The officer had the last laugh.
He walked me from the cell, offering me security along Kamukunji’s dark alleys back into the CDB. We became friends, albeit for a short while. Along the way, I asked him if he had a sister that I could date, jokingly. ‘You know, to avoid getting arrested for prostitution again.’ He gave me a number. I called the number when I got home. A lady received and said, ‘hello, hapa ni DCI headquarters fichua uhalifu offices. Would you like to report a crime?’
Ton's J Power
Good one, you never dissapoint

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