Monday, December 31, 2012

Miss Lizzie


"But she's beautiful," Miss Lizzie says as the baby squirms away.
 
Esther is here too -- a grown-up Esther in a purple dress with sequins on. Not so long ago, Esther was eagerly taking my twice-read magazines (because I got them secondhand already) to cut up and use for her Fabrics O-level coursework. Then her mother put her into a private academy (which isn't the same as private school. It's a lot cheaper, for one. And less regulated. The only thing the authorities seem to do is to close lots of academies down for "not being licensed." But often the exam results are better, partly because the teachers don't strike).
 
Esther wants to be a teacher, or at least, her mother wants her to. Miss Lizzie has dreams of a better future for her only child. She has enrolled her at the local teaching college.
 
"Look at me," she says. "No exams, no house. Nothing."
 
Esther suddenly seems downcast. We exchange pleasantries. How my elder child is growing. How Christmas was. How it's good the rain came.
 
"She has a husband now," Miss Lizzie says. "She's having a baby, you know. In March. I was not angry. But now - "

Monday, December 3, 2012

in the bank


"They should do e-banking here," the woman behind me says loudly. "It's dangerous to be moving round with large sums of money this time of year."
 
I look down at my fistful of dollars: an advance payment on next term's school fees. Inside the crowded banking hall, I feel safe.
 
"It's getting like Jo'burg," she tells me. She is youngish, bespectacled, well-dressed. Spends six months of every year in the UK "where my parents are. Wandsworth. Do you know it?"
 
The night before last, she tells me, she found a taxi idling on Herbert Chitepo, the main street. It's a busy street, lined with flamboyant trees in full bloom this time of year, dotted with phone card vendors. It wasn't late. Glancing inside, she realised something wasn't right.
 
"The driver was dead. He had a bag on his head. His wallet was open on the seat. They'd taken everything."
 
She called the police, who confirmed the man had been murdered for his takings. It was a Saturday. Somebody -- some people -- must have reckoned that by the end of the day, he'd have made a pretty penny.
 
"The worse thing was, he was old. And from Malawi. His family are all there. There's no-one to bury him here."