Читать книгу The Wolf at Number 4 - Ayo Tamakloe-Garr - Страница 8

Оглавление

1

MR. ADDISON SEEMED GENUINELY NICE WHEN HE hired me five minutes into my interview, not even asking what happened with my old job in Accra.

When I told him about my mother and I having to relocate to a dingy compound house after my father died, he gave me a cosy little colonial era bungalow to live in. He then suggested a fun trip to the Grand Cape resort in Elmina that Saturday night, after I had moved in.

And it was fun at first.

Then came the touchiness—holding my hand, wrapping another round my waist, then “playfully” smacking my rear. Nevertheless, I followed him up to the hotel room. Maybe I wanted to believe that he would turn out different, that Cape Coast would be different, a fresh start. Anyway, what saved me was his heart giving up on him.

In the emergency room after the heart attack, the nurses rushed past, and each one of them gave me the eyes. It was not hard to know what they were thinking. He was married and old and rich. I was unmarried and young and my dress was high above my knees.

What the nurses thought, Mr. Addison’s driver said. When he dropped me off at the junction leading into West End Ridge, he muttered “Ashawo” before slamming the door and speeding off.

My house, number 3, sat atop the ridge and was the farthest from the main road. But fortunately, West End Ridge was a small neighborhood with the houses far apart and surrounded by trees and shrubs. I hadn’t seen a single neighbor since I moved in the day before, and I was glad no one was around to see my puffy eyes and the bright red stain on the white, polka-dotted dress I was wearing.

I had met many Mr. Addisons; I just never learned. The doctors said this latest one would be fine but he would have to live life at a much slower pace. Not that I cared anyway. I just wanted to fall into bed and wash the previous night’s events from my memory.

But it was then that I met my first neighbor.

The bungalows in West End Ridge all had the same basic format. Two bedrooms, a bathroom, kitchen, and living room. The back door opened into a garage, and the front door opened into a porch bounded by a low wall and a small wooden gate. Well, perched on my porch wall was a little boy.

He looked no more than ten or eleven, and he sat perfectly still. I dragged my feet to get his attention, but he kept on staring off into the distance. Even as I unlocked the porch gate, he just sat there, unmoving.

“Hello,” I called out.

There was no response.

I took cautious steps towards him. Nothing.

He only reacted when I tapped him on the shoulder. His thick, bushy eyebrows slanted down towards each other, and his large, bulging, owl-like eyes fixed themselves intently on me.

“‘Nevermore,’” he whispered.

“What?”

“‘Thus quoth the raven.’”

“What?”

“Never mind,” he said. He hopped off the short porch wall and into the grass. “I don’t think you’re coming from church.”

I folded my arms. “No, I’m not.”

“I saw you yesterday. You went out with Mr. Addison. Is this your house?”

“Yes it is,” I replied. “Who are you? What is your name?”

“My name is Wolfgang. But you should call me Wolf. It’s shorter. And . . .” He paused and mischief crept onto his face. “Do you want me to tell you a secret?”

My curiosity got the better of my desire to just fall into my bed, so I nodded.

He beckoned me closer and whispered into my ear. “I may look like one, but I’m not a human. I’m a wolf.”

I laughed and he set his jaw and balled his fists.

“Look, little boy,” I said to him. “Where do you live?”

He pointed behind me. I turned to look.

“Number 4. That’s my house.”

“I see. Well, you can’t just come sit on someone else’s wall like that. People don’t do that. It’s an invasion of my privacy. Do you understand?”

He nodded.

“Good boy.”

“I’m going home,” he announced. He started to walk away but turned back to me and said, “Edgar Allan Poe. You should read more.”

I couldn’t help making a face. “I probably read ‘The Raven’ before you were born.”

He stopped. “Then you may be of some use to me,” he said. “Maybe.” And then he continued on his way.

I kissed my teeth and went inside. I immediately stepped out of my dress and took it to the sink. The dress was a gift from a dear old friend. In his attempt to get at me, Mr. Addison had knocked over a bottle of Merlot that I had ordered. Having had the entire night to set and dry, the stain refused to come out. So I threw the dress onto one of the unpacked suitcases that lay strewn about my living room.

I contemplated calling my mother, but I couldn’t bear to hear the disappointment in her voice when she found out that I had blown yet another, and possibly my last, chance. She worried about me far more than was healthy for someone with a blood pressure of 160 over 100.

When prostate cancer took my father, we lost everything. We lost the houses and the cars. I lost my opportunity to get my master’s degree and eventually even my job.

That night, as I waited for sleep to arrive, I wondered if I should have just let Addison have his way. I wondered if I was too naïve and too soft for this world. Father had always said so, never in a harsh manner, but when I look back now, with a sort of remorse. Perhaps he knew how I was to end up. Father always knew.

I got up, dug into one of my suitcases, pulled out a bottle of red wine, downed a glass or two, and returned to my bed.

The Wolf at Number 4

Подняться наверх