(CONT'D)
Mama Ali’s moniker also varies due to the flexibility of her ever changing trade. Mama Ali being the most popular, to the less popular ones like; Iya Gbenga (No one ever called her Iya Aishat, firstborns and lastborn are the main children, second-borns are almost invisible.), Iya Alata, Mama Melo; while the kids mostly called her “Mama Boda Ali” (simply put, uncle Ali’s mother). This is Nigeria and respect is a thing that flows even in the bloodstream of unborn babies.
Mama Ali’s shop was one of the shops that occupied the ground floor of the two storied building; other shops includes: a barber’s shop, a boutique, a bet shop/game house, and a shop that housed an office desk, two blue plastic chairs, a bench, typewriter, desktop computer, and a whole lot of files. A placard was pasted on the door with washed off writing: “ESTATE AGENT. To Let, 2 & 3 Bedroom flats for lease.” The shop was perpetually empty.
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Baba Ali owned a mechanic shop. A school certificate holder, but he somehow managed to speak Queen’s English (I am sure you’ve met people like that). He served as a cook to a British couple at a tender age of twelve, and went on to live with them for twenty four years.
“Tunde boy,” as he was fondly called by his master went on to learn all he could from the Briton who was a qualified mechanical engineer that worked with Volkswagen at the time, until his untimely death alongside his wife in a motor accident.
Baba Ali was the best mechanic there was in the busy city of Yaba. Ali however wasn’t interested in his father’s trade, and upon his father’s death, the shop was relinquished to a stranger.
Baba Ali was a generous easy-going man who worked for free most of the time, and that invariably left him broke and at the ire of his wife. He didn’t care less notwithstanding; as long as he could provide for feeding, and his children’s education and shelter, he was satisfied. The issue however was the occasional luxuries his wife wanted to enjoy.
“We must be frugal in spending,” he’d say to her whenever she came crying for money. He’ll then give her the money, and ask that she used it to buy whatever she wanted; or to buy food and also stock her shop. Yea, you guessed right.
************
“Ahan? Ali what’s wrong? Why is your shirt torn?” Uncle Kamal asked, surprised as he opened the door for his nephew.
“Uncle it’s the bus I entered o!” Ali lamented. “As I was about to drop, I had no idea that my shirt was being held back by a knocked out screw…” he paused, took a brief look at his once lovely shirt and continued, “…all I heard was the sound of the tear and people telling me ‘sorry o’. I was embarrassed.” He hissed.
“Eeyah… thank your stars it wasn’t your trousers, that would have been the peak of your embarrassment, and hope your boxers are clean? ‘Coz you never know, the next bus you hop on might chew your pants.” uncle Kamal laughed at his just concluded hilarious joke, but Ali didn’t find it near funny, he only managed a grin.
He had spotted a beautiful girl on his way to his uncle’s place and had hoped to get her mobile number only for her to embarrass him.
“Why must it be today of all days that I now see someone attractive? My God!” He said to himself as he watched the girl and her friend stop a bike and disappear into the noisy chatter of Lagos. He stood for almost twenty minutes, speechless and defeated at the bus stop.
“Check my wardrobe and see if you can get something that fits,” his uncle finally said amidst laughter as he picked the channel changer and buried himself in his couch. Ali let out a wry sigh of relief and gratefully dashed to his uncle’s room.
Uncle Kamal lived alone in a 3-bedroom flat located in Ogba, in the city of Lagos. His two wives and five children lived in Boston. He was a promiscuous man, so it was no surprise when Ali saw the silhouettes and backs of two ladies --who he guessed should be in their late teens or early twenties-- stroll from the kitchen to the other room in bum shorts and tank tops.
Some minutes later, Ali joined uncle Kamal in the living room dressed in a brightly coloured, flowery blue shirt. He announced his presence with both hands wide apart like a peacock showboating, “Uncle Kamal how do I look?”
(To be continued)
©Angel MESSI
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