You stagger
home in the middle of the night. As the Uber you and your friend chartered
pulls off you try to find your balance. The analogy of one step ahead and two
steps backward is no longer an imagination to you. You are living it. You
gather what’s left of your center of gravity and trot slowly to the front door.
You call your brother to open up but he walks up behind you and in astomishment
whispers ‘nilidhani wewe ulikuwa home? Hata nilikuwa nakupigia’. You call your
sister but she is also mteja. You dare not call the owner of the house. Your
brother starts telling you about the crazy night he has had, of the ladies he
danced with, the binging he has had, to the cops he has evaded. Everything
suddenly becomes funny. You try to contain the laughter, even try to force your
mouth shut with your hands…you try to breathe out, then in again but the bugger
is far too elusive, he escapes without notice. You find yourself rolling on the
floor probably laughing your ass off…but the skinny jeans keeps it in place.
Your brother weirdly enough does a good job at keeping his laughter at bay
whilst trying so very hard to whisper ‘shhhhh!utaamsha watu!’ His ‘whispers’
finally get the job done. A light in the first floor turns on. Your eyes see
the light, your ears hear the door opening, your heart senses the tension, but
the brain…the brain is still at 1824, maybe. The door opens and the laughter
bails on you. Probably knew that things were now out of hand. With a stern face
the older gent standing at the door says, ‘I want you to move out of this house
next week’ and walks off.
That was not
funny anymore. An exuberant grin turns to a frown, a drunk mind turns sober,
the legs? The legs were still trying to find their center of gravity. You want
to claim you know your rights but you realize that no primary school playing
ground was being grabbed, you are 27 years old and the old gent is your father!
You are bent
on showing this old man that you no longer need him, you pick up your phone and
google, ‘bedsitters in Nairobi West’ because your friends live there, it’s
closer to town…in case of njaanuary you can walk to town, you can stumble into
bed at any time of day or night and greatly because it’s very close to 1824.
You stumble upon a lot of offers. You are in awe at the photos. The prices?
Drop your jaw even further. So you decide to make a call. The receiver is a
lady. You are happy because ladies are usually genuine. She tells you the house
is still vacant. But she tells you that she has just shown it to someone who is
rushing to the bank to pay as you speak. So you panic, your body turns cold and
limp for a second. Your fantasies of binging to 3am in the morning and stumbling
into your own at 3.30am with a catch are slowly fading away. Not the
fantasies…anything but the fantasies. Just before all hope is lost she offers
you a glimmer of hope, ‘If you can pay before they pay then I can send my
driver with the key to you.’-they all have drivers. A glimmer of hope, however
slight, proves sufficient. You are not about to bid farewell to your 1824
fantasies in 2017. You have the money, she is a lady, she speaks so well, she
has a driver, she must be genuine….did I mention she has a driver? Anyone with
a driver is legit.
So you take a leap of faith, and hope to God that someone catches you. MPESA CONFIRMED. You can now take a breath. You have a place to call yours. You inform the lady that you have indeed completed the transaction awaiting the key from the driver. The lady promises to send the driver. You hold your position. An hour passes, the lady says the driver is still coming. Two hours, three hours, four hours pass by, by the fifth hour you cannot get through to her and the driver is still not here. Maybe she is in a receptionless place and the driver is stuck in traffic…but you realize that it is a Sunday and you are in Nairobi.So you pin a donkey tail on your back and you stagger again back to Syokimau with your legs still wobbly. And you? You are still homeless, still 27.
So you take a leap of faith, and hope to God that someone catches you. MPESA CONFIRMED. You can now take a breath. You have a place to call yours. You inform the lady that you have indeed completed the transaction awaiting the key from the driver. The lady promises to send the driver. You hold your position. An hour passes, the lady says the driver is still coming. Two hours, three hours, four hours pass by, by the fifth hour you cannot get through to her and the driver is still not here. Maybe she is in a receptionless place and the driver is stuck in traffic…but you realize that it is a Sunday and you are in Nairobi.So you pin a donkey tail on your back and you stagger again back to Syokimau with your legs still wobbly. And you? You are still homeless, still 27.