the ironed lines running down the front and back. He was voted neatest junior boy last year, and Papa had hugged him so tight that Jaja thought his back had snapped.
âFine.â He stood by my desk, flipped idly through the
Introductory Technology
textbook open before me. âWhat did you eat?â
â
Garri
.â
I wish we still had lunch together
, Jaja said with his eyes.
âMe, too,â I said, aloud.
Before, our driver, Kevin, would pick me up first at Daughters of the Immaculate Heart, and then we would drive over to get Jaja at St. Nicholas. Jaja and I would have lunch together when we got home. Now, because Jaja was in the new gifted student program at St. Nicholas, he attended after-school lessons. Papa had revised his schedule but not mine, and I couldnot wait to have lunch with him. I was to have had lunch, taken my siesta, and started studying by the time Jaja came home.
Still, Jaja knew what I ate for lunch every day. We had a menu on the kitchen wall that Mama changed twice a month. But he always asked me, anyway. We did that often, asking each other questions whose answers we already knew. Perhaps it was so that we would not ask the other questions, the ones whose answers we did not want to know.
âI have three assignments to do,â Jaja said, turning to leave.
âMama is pregnant,â I said. Jaja came back and sat down at the edge of my bed. âShe told you?â
âYes. Sheâs due in October.â
Jaja closed his eyes for a while and then opened them. âWe will take care of the baby; we will protect him.â
I knew that Jaja meant from Papa, but I did not say anything about protecting the baby. Instead, I asked, âHow do you know it will be a he?â
âI feel it. What do you think?â
âI donât know.â
Jaja sat on my bed for a while longer before he went downstairs to have lunch; I pushed my textbook aside, looked up, and stared at my daily schedule, pasted on the wall above me.
Kambili
was written in bold letters on top of the white sheet of paper, just as
Jaja
was written on the schedule above Jajaâs desk in his room. I wondered when Papa would draw up a schedule for the baby, my new brother, if he would do it right after the baby was born or wait until he was a toddler. Papa liked order. It showed even in the schedules themselves, the way his meticulously drawn lines, in black ink, cut across eachday, separating study from siesta, siesta from family time, family time from eating, eating from prayer, prayer from sleep. He revised them often. When we were in school, we had less siesta time and more study time, even on weekends. When we were on vacation, we had a little more family time, a little more time to read newspapers, play chess or monopoly, and listen to the radio.
It was during family time the next day, a Saturday, that the coup happened. Papa had just checkmated Jaja when we heard the martial music on the radio, the solemn strains making us stop to listen. A general with a strong Hausa accent came on and announced that there had been a coup and that we had a new government. We would be told shortly who our new head of state was.
Papa pushed the chessboard aside and excused himself to use the phone in his study. Jaja and Mama and I waited for him, silently. I knew he was calling his editor, Ade Coker, perhaps to tell him something about covering the coup. When he came back, we drank the mango juice, which Sisi served in tall glasses, while he talked about the coup. He looked sad; his rectangular lips seemed to sag. Coups begat coups, he said, telling us about the bloody coups of the sixties, which ended up in civil war just after he left Nigeria to study in England. A coup always began a vicious cycle. Military men would always overthrow one another, because they could, because they were all power drunk.
Of course, Papa told us, the politicians were corrupt, and the
Standard
had written many stories