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Echoes From A Distant Land Part 33

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Sam sat opposite him, reading the papers White had prepared for him.

'I think you'll find all the instruments of the trust are as you intended, Mr w.a.n.gira,' he said when he'd finished.

Sam nodded, returning the papers to the lawyer's desktop. 'Thank you, Mr White. It all appears to be so. I'll instruct my bank to transfer the funds as soon as I get back to Nairobi.'

'Excellent. Is there anything more we can do for you?'

'No. Thank you again.' He stood to leave.



'One more thing, Mr w.a.n.gira, if you don't mind. Not that I'm complaining, but I'm curious as to why you have chosen White and Webb rather than one of the Nairobi law firms. I should think they would be far more convenient for you.'

'Perhaps, but if you'll recall our first telephone conversation, I wanted to keep this matter strictly confidential.'

'I see. You believe the Legislative Council might think you a little, um -'

'I think the expression is uppity, Mr White.'

White smiled, a little embarra.s.sed. 'Well, I hope it all goes as you intend it, Mr w.a.n.gira,' he said, extending his hand.

Sam took it and wished him good morning.

Sam caught a taxi to the station, but since he had plenty of time, decided to detour via Kilindini. He'd been intrigued by the report of the riot and wanted to see for himself what the working conditions might be at the port.

The taxi waited outside the gate as Sam strolled onto the wharf to watch the last of the cargo being loaded onto a very rusty s.h.i.+p, the MV Mogadishu.

The name evoked strong memories of his visit almost exactly nineteen years earlier, when he was just a young man of thirty-four.

As if it were yesterday, he saw himself hurrying along this very wharf, in his last desperate bid to find Dana before she embarked for England.

He stood there letting the memories wash over him. In his desperation to find her, he had almost taken a dhow to the island of Lamu, where some demented old fool had said she'd gone. The world had seemed to stand between him and what he believed was his one great love back then.

For a long time after that, his life seemed to have no point. Even when he had the best intentions, fate turned against him as it had when he formed his rural bank. Of course there were other times when he had acted selfishly and caused others pain.

He felt bad even now when reflecting upon Sister Rosalba's love and affection. He always found reasons for not replying to her letters when he was in New York. He didn't appreciate how much they meant to him until they stopped; and even then, he didn't trouble himself to enquire why.

And Ira. He never properly thanked him for his generosity of spirit. Only when he died did Sam realise that Ira loved him in a special way. His defence was to ignore that love, when a simple acknowledgement of it would have meant so much to his dear friend.

And if he'd only recognised his feelings for Dana on that last day at m.u.t.h.aiga, or at least understood that he needed to consider them properly, his life might have turned in completely different circles.

He wondered about Dana and where she might be. He wondered too if she ever thought of him, and what her life had become.

CHAPTER 38.

The butler knocked once then entered the bedroom carrying a silver tray, a white china teapot and two cups. He placed the items on the little round table in the bay window beside Dana, and poured the tea while she gazed out over the sun-dappled garden. The gardener was tending the espaliered pear tree on the back wall. It was in full flower and would soon fruit. She remembered the day, shortly after she moved into the Mayfair house, when she'd planted it. It seemed a lifetime ago.

The memories weighed her down. She'd slept poorly, and when she looked into the mirror earlier that morning her puffy eyes confirmed it.

Oswald came in from his adjoining bedroom. His eyes were also puffy, but that was not so unusual for him. He was approaching seventy-five, and looked it. His belly protruded over the waistband of his pyjamas and his heavy jowls tumbled over the collar of his robe.

He took the napkin from his seat and sighed as he lowered himself to his chair.

'Sleep well, my dear?' he asked.

Dana took a sip of tea. 'Well enough, darling. And you?'

'Quite well.' He loudly cleared his throat. 'We should have a good crop of pears this year,' he said, admiring the tree on the back wall. 'Do you remember when we planted it? It must be eight or nine years ago.'

'Eleven,' she said. 'But yes, I agree. A good crop this year.'

They sat in silence. Oswald reached for the morning's edition of The Times.

Eleven years. They'd been tranquil if somewhat humdrum. She had known from the outset they would be, but it was for a good cause.

It was not always helpful, and she tried to avoid it, but her life with Edward in Kenya occasionally intruded. She could scarcely recall the person she'd been back then. As if she was watching a racy film of someone else's life, she'd see herself making love, sometimes with two men at once. There were t.i.tillating parlour games as the voices of Al Jolson and Bing Crosby sang the music of Oscar Hammerstein and Cole Porter.

Everyone in the Zephyrs knew it couldn't last - and perhaps it was that excuse, and the fact that they were all outcasts in the furthest corner of the Empire, that allowed them to act so outrageously.

During the years following her departure from Kenya in 1932, Dana had found it difficult to settle down in England. She missed her beautiful farm in the White Highlands. In those first days back home, while driving between London and Edward's country residence, she found herself idly scanning the fields for giraffe. Jersey cows were eland, and frolicking lambs were little Thommies. Even the best of days in the Midlands lacked the sparkle of the Kenyan highlands.

She lavished upon her daughter all the love and affection denied any other outlet and although she found great joy in seeing her child blossom and grow, it wasn't enough to overcome the tedium in other aspects of her life.

She turned once again to the thrill of extramarital s.e.x and found one man after another. Edward stormed and raged, but she didn't care. When he engaged a private detective, who ultimately found her in flagrante delicto with a young member of the golf club, he demanded a divorce.

Dana's main concern was for the life she and her daughter would lose if Edward carried through on his threat, and chided herself for not getting evidence on his philandering before he did. She felt she had endured enough during the marriage to justify a sizeable settlement. Edward held other views.

The court case was messy; the private detective's evidence graphic and d.a.m.ning. Dana pleaded for support for their daughter, which finally softened Edward's heart, although his lawyer made it impossible for Dana to have access to the trust account.

It was only when she divorced him that she realised her stupidity. She was alone and vulnerable again.

With the single-minded determination once devoted to finding s.e.xual pleasure, she set about finding another rich husband.

Oswald Middlebridge was an irascible bachelor, and even older than her first husband, but he was rich: very rich. Dana was again safe. But at a cost. s.e.x with Oswald was unexceptional at best, and often failed completely. After a few months he moved into an adjoining bedroom and soon gave up any idea of sharing hers.

Dana locked away her libido. There could be no dalliances. Oswald would not tolerate her casting even a sideways glance at another man, and she knew if she strayed even once, it would be the end of her marriage.

Being a dutiful wife wasn't as hard as she'd imagined. She'd enjoyed a pa.s.sion with Sam that she'd been unable to replicate with others, and rationalised that in the absence of a similar obsession she could tolerate her enforced fidelity. It also helped to remind herself of the reason she'd entered into marriage with Oswald in the first place.

She'd denied herself a son and a lover to retain security for herself and her daughter, only to throw it away in a bewildering procession of beds.

She would not allow that to happen again.

CHAPTER 39.

Jelani moved into a hut in Likoni, a ferry ride and long walk from the office of the Transport and Allied Workers' Union. His main job was to compile the union's newsletter, the Kenya Worker, from material prepared by Chege Muthuri. At other times he folded pamphlets and ran errands. His wages were small, but enough to survive.

He also tried to understand the aims of the Transport and Allied Workers' Union - and indeed those of the union movement in general. He couldn't see how the union could possibly make the improvements to pay and working conditions that they promised. From Jelani's perspective, and he kept his opinions to himself, the entire movement was powerless to alter the present situation where the government and employers had complete control. This impression, however, was challenged some months later.

During 1950, Mombasa's industrial unrest escalated to unprecedented levels. Workers and strike-breakers fought in the warehouses and factories on an almost daily basis. The situation was nearly as bad in Nairobi, where a large group of squatters from the farms around the neighbouring towns swarmed onto the lawns of Government House in Nairobi to demonstrate against the settlers' harsh employment conditions. A b.l.o.o.d.y battle ensued. The Governor promised to investigate the protestors' claims, but did nothing.

Finally, a general strike was called, and three-quarters of Mombasa's twenty thousand workers walked off their jobs. The strikers came from all the crafts and industries and were joined by domestic workers. The city came to a standstill and widespread rural protests arose in sympathy.

Jelani was with Chege Muthuri at the head of a march through the centre of Mombasa when the strikers faced police lines four deep. The officers carried batons held across their chests. In the rear were others mounted on horseback.

Muthuri leaned close to Jelani's ear. 'Go,' he said.

'What?'

'I said, go. You will be needed at the office if I get arrested.'

'But ...'

'And if I get arrested, you will find me for your orders.'

A whistle sounded from deep in the police ranks.

'Go!' Muthuri said, pus.h.i.+ng Jelani away as he and the leaders at the head of the march roared defiantly, and surged towards the oncoming baton charge.

Jelani ran into an alley and climbed onto the roof of a building facing the street to watch the battle.

He watched as the batons rained onto the leading rows. The hors.e.m.e.n pressed their panicked mounts into the ranks while las.h.i.+ng out with long thick canes.

In the aftermath, four hundred people, including many union leaders, were arrested and thrown in gaol without charges being laid.

Jelani eventually found Muthuri in the old gaol.

'How did you get here?' Muthuri asked when Jelani stood on the other side of the barred gate. Behind him were scores of men milling in the open compound.

'Everyone likes a little tea money.'

'Hmmph ... Now this is what you must do,' he said and rattled off a string of instructions.

'But I know nothing about unions,' Jelani protested.

'There's no one else, Karura. Everyone's in here. Do what you can and report to me. Save your tea money and ask for Sergeant Obare - he's one of us. Keep the newsletter going, whatever you do. If we can't keep the members aware of what's happening, we're finished.'

The detentions didn't stop the union members' actions. They rallied again, and again the police retaliated with vigour, this time killing three and severely injuring thirty others.

An uneasy peace simmered through the doldrums - the weeks between the kusi and kazkusi trade winds when not a breath of air stirred the long tendrils of bougainvillea in the trees above Jelani's office. From the members.h.i.+p network came a constant string of complaints against employers, which Jelani duly noted. Women and children were being forced to work in difficult or dangerous situations; domestic servants were physically and sometimes s.e.xually abused; local chiefs exploited their position of authority to extract free labour from their communities; administrative police extorted money or livestock from impoverished squatters. It took a groundswell of outrage to compel the normally placid Africans to complain to the authorities, but when they did, it came with a flood of pent-up fury. When these protests failed, and they often did, they had nowhere else to turn, except to the union.

As instructed by Muthuri, Jelani reported all in the Kenya Worker.

While the industrial campaign raged in the cities, another group had appeared in Kikuyuland and was building a reputation for helping the oppressed. They had no name, but Muthuri thought they might be potential rivals to the union and told Jelani to go to Nairobi to find out more.

A member brought a man to the lean-to in Bazaar Street that served as a union office. He was a Kikuyu squatter-labourer from the rolling hills below Mt Kenya; he seemed a little awed by his visit to the city.

Jelani asked him about the group.

'They are called The Movement, and they have been helping many of us squatters up there near Kirinyaga,' he said.

'And how have they helped you?'

'In Naro Moru where I stay, there is a farm owned by a man called Botha. He has many, many squatters working his farm. It is big. He works us very hard. Too much. When we complain, he beats us and threatens to chase us away. But these people, The Movement, they listen to us. They say we must join them and they will help us. So we join. Then they come to Naro Moru.'

'What did they say to this Botha?' Jelani asked.

'They say nothing. They did not meet him.'

'Then how did they help you?'

'They burned down his house.'

Jelani returned to Mombasa knowing little about the new group who appeared more like vigilantes than negotiators. They did, however, also sound capable of attracting supporters who might otherwise turn to the unions.

It wasn't an ignorant Kikuyu farmer who presented the most compelling argument that something strange was happening out in the rural areas surrounding Mt Kenya, but a district officer.

Jelani stumbled upon the DO's comments among doc.u.ments given to him in Nairobi by a disgruntled office clerk. They were closed files detailing numbers of Africans employed in the districts by the administration and so were of interest to Jelani. The comments came in a footnote to the DO's annual report to his boss, the District Commissioner.

He wrote that local white farmers had complained about suspicious livestock losses soon after rejecting pet.i.tions from their workers for better pay and conditions. The whites expressed concern about what they called a secret society formed from mainly young Kikuyu men intent on stirring up trouble among their squatter-labourers. This society argued that the squatters' problems could only be solved by expelling all whites from the fertile highlands - the traditional home of the Kikuyu people. It was a step too far.

The District Officer suggested to the DC that he might ask the white farming community to become more aware of their resident squatters' concerns and take some time to understand their point of view. He said that too many were inclined to bully their workers into submission and that they quite often chose to use a fist of iron rather than a helping hand.

The DO said there were many names for the secret society including The Movement, the Freedom Struggle a.s.sociation and, more ominously, the Land and Freedom Army. However, he thought the most commonly used name was Mau Mau.

Jelani flipped from the report to a file note where he found the District Commissioner's succinct and dismissive comment: Noted.

On his next visit to the Mombasa gaol, he raised the matter with Chege Muthuri, who nodded his understanding, but said no more. On a second occasion he brushed Jelani's concerns aside, saying the stories about the group who promised land reform and an end to the white's domination were merely wishful thinking on the part of ignorant farmers.

'They would rather invent a mysterious saviour than to join the union's ranks and fight for better conditions,' he said. 'Ignore them.'

Muthuri and the other leaders were released after a prolonged industrial campaign. Eventually it was the whites - farmers and factory owners in the main - who demanded they be released: their businesses were suffering.

Jelani was rewarded for his conscientious work by being given the job of editor of an expanded newspaper - Uhuru, or Freedom. Muthuri said it would be the backbone of the new independence movement.

Jelani was flattered, but thought it unimaginable that a small newspaper could halt the whites' changes to the African way of life.

As part of his induction to his new role, Jelani accompanied Muthuri to the Rift Valley town of Nakuru where the union secretary planned to hold the first of a series of meetings with his members. He wanted Jelani there to take notes. Thereafter, he would continue on a whistle-stop tour to Kisumu. Jelani would return to the Mombasa office to write up the meetings for the next edition of Uhuru.

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