Thursday, September 27, 2018


        The marketplace was crowded.  It had been this way since we arrived two weeks ago;  perhaps because Zomba market was renowned as the best in the country...but no, today was different, the air was agitated, pulsing, almost suffocating.  Becce and I crossed through the gate and at once were overwhelmed by the cloying stench of long dead fish drying in the sun.  Someone had just brought in a new load from the lake and the men were busy throwing them into piles:  chambo, kampango, tiny bite size ones and split flat fish we didn’t know the names of yet.  One of the fish sellers called out to us, “Ma-dam, please come buy my beautiful fish, a bargain, beautiful fish ma-dam.”  He picked them up, turning them over and over, slapping them on their creamy bellies so the scales flew off in silvery showers; as they sifted down along the spindly brown legs of the seller, the sun caught their somersaulting in flashes of tiny light before they settled with the rest of the dirt swirling around countless barefeet.  We retreated, to try to find what we had come here for, but as we squeezed through the crowd other sellers slipped their wares in front of our faces - mangoes nearly dripping sticky juice as they dropped into our hands, fat shiny cucumbers, tear-drop ripe papayas, avocados the size of  hand grenades, and pineapples that we smelled from yards away.  Women were laughing, their pink tongues flying between cracked lips, while the babies wrapped tightly to their backs were sleeping peacefully, oblivious to the wild gesticulations of their mothers, and the din of the market around them.
            A surge of people pushed in on us and I got separated from Becce.  I stood still, trying to relax until the crush subsided.  I realized then too that the banging of the tinsmith was ringing in my ears.  He was smashing his hammer onto the side of a half-finished bucket trying to smooth out the kinks; beads of sweat gathered on his forehead until a few dropped onto the bucket, dulling for a moment the screech of the two metals grinding together.  I was getting claustrophobic.  I thought I saw Becce across the market, by the bottle seller, so I moved to make my way to her, but something caught my eye.  I turned to see a woman walking towards me.  She was unruffled by the commotion, walking resolutely, in a straight line towards me.  Her eyes were so clear, but empty.  No, not empty, just far away, very far away.  I stared at her, at the landscape approaching me in her eyes, but she brushed right by me without stopping.  I followed her, but stopped by the edge of the maize stand as she approached the other “tomato ladies.”  She moved a little beyond the group and laid her basket down slowly, almost reluctantly, as if setting down this burden was like relinquishing a part of herself.  This basket of tomatoes was a part of herself, the many hours and days spent tending and weeding and waiting for the rain to come.  Now, the red blush of these fruits must certainly attract buyers to her, like lovers drawn to the freshly painted full lips of the one they desire.
            She stayed bent over her treasures for a long time, just staring at them, gripping tightly to the sides of the basket.  Then suddenly she snatched one from the bunch, turning it over and over again - then another one, and another one until satisfied that they were still ripe and plump, she let go of her panic.  Her blouse clung to her back, the tiny flowers of the pattern drowned in the salty sweat.  As she stood up she pulled the cotton from her skin to let the cool air pass through.  She paused, leaning back over the hand resting on her waist; her head slipped back so I could see her eyes flutter then close for a moment, her lips moved imperceptibly forming words unrecognizable, unheard.  But then as if this reverie would trap her somehow, she shuddered and straightened.  She gave a furtive glance around to see if any of the other women had seen her, lost in this indulgence, but they hadn’t.  She tugged the folds of her chitenje loose to tighten them again around her waist.  She wrapped it once, but it wasn't tight enough.  She kept wrestling with it, not quite getting it the way she wanted it; each time the birds on the material quivered on their branches as she swirled it around, waiting for their chance to finally alight in peace.
            I left her there.  I left my sister there, and walked up toward Zomba Mountain.  I walked past the Indian stores where tailors sat on the khondes pumping rivers of lush material through their machines, past the Gymkhana Club and the perfect white stripes on the tennis court, past the women laying out a colored puzzle of dripping clothes on the rocks, past the sprawling colonial mansions that were once Britain’s glory, until I came to the tall grass;  the tall green grass, that had finally come with the rain.  I didn’t look for the path, I had no patience left.  I walked into it, into the smell of it, into the length of it, into the silence of the swishing blades.

1 comment:

  1. The details in your story are extremely captivating. I can almost see and smell the scenes, the palpable aliveness of the senses must have been so invigorating, and at times even overwhelming. Look forwarded to reading more. Thank you for sharing your experiences.

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