So it came that one night a jester among
herders formed a legend about a mystic little girl who had found refuge with
stranded caravans over icy mountains in search of grazing pastures. He carved a
tale of her birth happening underground, a fetus that clawed her breathless
path from raw earth’s belly. He claimed she ate the soil around her for
nourishment over years of her stay alone in the wild, after having consumed her
mother’s shriveled body buried with her still unborn.
MmaMobu’s physical strength had astounded
those among the caravan whose initial encounter with her was unwomanly violent;
many had lived bearing scars and maimed but looked after. As she was eventually
accepted into the band of herders, she grew to become an indispensable nurturer
to both man and animal, injured or sickly. Playing menacing games with hunting
dogs, tackling goats; at one time an elder said MmaMobu had fed on her mother’s
soul. This led many to fathom stories of her cannibal nature, and her
preference for raw meat become misconstrued for a bad omen. The claimed that from whence she commenced to
consume her mother’s flesh, her organs became hard as mud.
It later came to light that many of the
elders of the caravan knew the sordid face of a woman once buried with her
unborn child kicking in her belly. Inside of her came not an infant’s cry it
was said, but a harsh howl of a triumphant beast that knew it would defy death.
And MmaMobu having being born full grown as they had discovered her, was not a
mystery in itself; but having not been mothered there would forever be no
witness to her craning neck and first wails, as she stretched conquering arms
around life.
MmaMobu
She walks the dark of night, among bored
hounds and midnight preachers, a song guiding her tongue lulling ghosts, ghosts
of dreams sleeping broken in the shacks and other makeshift abodes. Sky
flickers with a distant thunderbolt and random barking stops, echoes standing
on air, and mesmerized by the dizzying shadowy wonders around her, she carries
on in song and a faith in a god who protects women even in dark corners of a
brutal township.
That night she sleeps in peace among fighting neighbors, humming
hope in her drying bones, a resonance of blessings she feels are coming. And as a stubborn sun rises slowly
creeping through a familiarly caked horizon, spreading radiance over the
veld-land, a cue for her to wake breezes through nail holes and other cracks in
her wooden shed. Morning prayers beckon her to ready her soul for another brace
through muck and sour souls making their way to towns and other alternative
destinations meant for those who cannot stand the normal. But on this day, fate
had mustered a plan for her to encounter what she had long desired; a love
where she could feel respected.
Sudden was the stun later that dawn while
buying vetkoeks, her crisp black dreadlocks and purple skin glistening, worn
with a pride of one who is used to cruel eyes. A young man stood gazing
uncompromisingly at her, a cigarette bellowing in his slightly parted lips.
Both looking coarse yet electric in the rusty surroundings of fading fences and
shabby houses, she proceeded walking to the beat of her brand of pious
happiness that belonged not in this dead-land.
She might have lived roughly thirty years,
but a darkly frozen exhilaration danced in her pupils, he had thought; and this
was envied by many a witch who nursed monstrous failures gained with jukebox
love and thrills. She was light, a compelling poise of being, and a black woman
standing a couple of feet from the tuck-shop wire-meshed window.
A lunatic bustle of school children buying
junk diet delicacies couldn’t get in his way as he resolved to approach MmaMobu,
and she could feel the heat of his approach burning through her skin. A second
passed in the eternity of vetkoeks being stuffed into a plastic sachet, and she
turned slightly eyes cast on the dust; yet he remained mute a sheep in an
abattoir. And when her purchase exchanged hands, she left stunned by the cold
fear which was now resonating from his every pore.
That afternoon when men were milling around
taxi ranks for the last hours of day, many afraid to go home after work; faces
evaporating, blurs of self-hating persons – everything became a splitter that
pieced his enraged heart. How could he just not speak to her? That was what
gnawed his gut the whole day long, slaving underground where two days ago his
friend lost his life to a rock-fall. He could not mourn his that day, for he
thought he had seen life. Seeing her was close to laying eyes on god before
approaching hell – hell if she weren’t to be there in his bilious primitive
existence. Was she a figment of meant as his final truth unborn by words?
***
MmaMobu
Mother of soil - her story proverbial and insanely fitting
of the times when villages were burned and no cordial sentiments shared. And though
it was rumored among the elders that MmaMobu's mother was addicted to eating soil, she found no sign in her reflecting that disdainful
habit. A diabolical affiliation which was proving hereditary was her calm
silent resolve and unhurried manner, as well her cracked heels. She would mock
pregnant women with hilarious observations of new borns every three moons,
calling the women of the caravan a harem of baby springs.
For her mischief among girls, their secrets sundered rowdy herd-boys, she was nevertheless an electrifying matchmaker. Many maidens fertile grew bellies each winter turning to MmaMobu for a midwife, and over the years her prophecies fell on no deaf ears as sagely medicine men from far off lands came in hordes for her wisdom with plants.
For her mischief among girls, their secrets sundered rowdy herd-boys, she was nevertheless an electrifying matchmaker. Many maidens fertile grew bellies each winter turning to MmaMobu for a midwife, and over the years her prophecies fell on no deaf ears as sagely medicine men from far off lands came in hordes for her wisdom with plants.
*
Her face's misfortunes and immortal youth; purple-black skin untouched by neither blade nor fire, eyes like candle-lit caves. He was sweating the deaf night away, waiting for a rooster's crowing to awaken early birds for chore in holes and mansion and other garbage heaps. The toss of her locked hair could banish all his sore regrets of failing in love numerous times, he wished. A holy spell was creeping around him, strange and flaming that made his heart leap for weeks to follow.
Her face's misfortunes and immortal youth; purple-black skin untouched by neither blade nor fire, eyes like candle-lit caves. He was sweating the deaf night away, waiting for a rooster's crowing to awaken early birds for chore in holes and mansion and other garbage heaps. The toss of her locked hair could banish all his sore regrets of failing in love numerous times, he wished. A holy spell was creeping around him, strange and flaming that made his heart leap for weeks to follow.
*
Dearly she loved him while endless months crept by, wild and new, her spirit forgetting the markings of men's feet on her soul. And by some chance omen, she'd managed to slay many a demon huddled in her bosom, for his sake. But, a shrill secret she held close, quite like the day of her birth, and that was why he often cut deeply and wished her to blind him with truth.
Dearly she loved him while endless months crept by, wild and new, her spirit forgetting the markings of men's feet on her soul. And by some chance omen, she'd managed to slay many a demon huddled in her bosom, for his sake. But, a shrill secret she held close, quite like the day of her birth, and that was why he often cut deeply and wished her to blind him with truth.
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