Story: At the break of Dawn

Posted by Social Matters , Sunday, September 29, 2013 8:34 AM

The food is almost ready. Benta said to her husband, stretching out wearily, revealing her overgrown pregnancy belly. At any moment her bundle of joy would arrive into the world. It wouldn’t be her first bundle of joy…at times though they were a blessing…they were a big burden for a poor struggling young couple. Otieno did not say much as he shifted uncomfortably on the small round three legged stool, their two roomed mud house had no much furnishings apart from two small stools and the mat for the children to sleep and sit on.
Baba Cristabel.’ She started, hands rested on her tired lower back. ‘I am really tired.’ Her weight shifted to one side.
She should have given birth already.’ He thought to himself. ‘This seems to be taking longer than all the other ones.’
‘Do you mind finishing cooking the ugali?’ She shifted on the small stool rather uncomfortably.
Otieno cast an angry look at his wife, her face seemed rather old and creased, she did not resemble the woman he had married a mere fifteen years ago. ‘Am I a woman?’ he asked her angrily. ‘Mama Cristabel you are surely not the first woman to give birth in this village.’
Benta was rather too tired to argue, she turned to the simmering ugali over the stone jiko. She bent on her side uncomfortably, so that she could push the firewood closer before standing up to adjust the old worn out leso around her waist.

Benta!’ Otieno started. ‘I thought by now you should have given birth.’ He paused. ‘Why are you still like that?’ He finally asked the question that had weighed heavily on him the entire evening.
She rolled her eyes as she turned to the ugali, Otieno seemed to listen to the sound of the mwiko as it hit the sides of the sufuria.
‘Baba Cristabel!” she stopped suddenly rejuvenated. ‘This is not a disease.’ She pointed at heR round belly. ‘You did this to me, remember.’ She turned the Ugali a bit. ‘I did not wake up one morning and find myself like this.’

Otieno turned to face the mud wall, it was almost crumbling. ‘You speak too much woman.’ He muttered under his breath. There was silence in the tiny little mud hut with grass thatching, seemingly lying isolated far away from the shores of the Lake Victoria, in the middle of the dark sky filled with billions of little stars that shone like burnt out  firewood in the three stone jiko in the dead of the night in a dark little mud hut. He was a fisherman, without a boat but heavily relied on his friend’s boat, but at times the catch could not sustain his large family even for one evening.

Well mama Cristabel, I will leave for the city tomorrow first thing in the morning.’ He got up and let out a tired yawn. He needed money to fix the leaking thatch roof; he could afford another of his children falling sick again.
The food is ready.’ Benta said finally.
“I will eat at my mother’s hut.’ He walked out into the darkness.

Benta barely touched her food as she carelessly tossed the pale green plastic near the fireplace as she struggled to lay her tired body on the wooden bed which badly needed repairing. Having sent the children to stay in their grandmother’s hut a few nights ago, so that they did not have to see her going into labour like in the past, at times it felt like she had the worst childbirths ever. Her second child got stuck and they had to pull her out, the child that followed caught malaria a few weeks later but managed to survive, and the fourth pregnancy she had malaria throughout. At least the last one had been relatively easy, though she did not want her children on the way on the onset of labour, a terrible feeling of loneliness filled her heart.
She managed to fall into an uneasy sleep, only to wake up in the middle of the night in excruciating pain which cut across her stomach, making her to let out a shriek that cut across the dead of the night. Immediately she knew it was time, but the intensity of the pain seemed to overwhelm her tired body and she rolled off the bed, falling to the ground with a thud. She let out another shriek, with her right hand clutching tightly on her womb. She managed to drag her body a short distance outside the hut before collapsing in a heap, her contractions eased as she gazed at the sky in amazement of it beauty, strength and the still effect it had on her unborn baby.

‘Benta!’ her mother-in-law, an old rather frail looking woman, rushed to her tripping on the dusty yet wet with dew dark brownish clay soil, landing on her back awkwardly. Now instead of one woman in distress there were two, one freshly injured old woman and the other younger one, on the early stages of labour.
Mother!’ Otieno dashed out of his hut. He was bare-chested with the half cut trousers barely hiding his manhood.
He helped both women back into Benta’s house.
 ‘It is time son.’ His mother said. She had hardly slept; one ear always tuned in to Benta’s hut to make sure she was not alone when the baby made its way into the world.
What do I do?’  He asked, he was now a confused man.
Get me to the clinic right away.’ Benta said in between clenched teeth as her sharp nails sunk into his arm. ‘How comes you did not ask silly questions when you did this to me.’ She said angrily at him. ‘Ati what do I do?’

‘Go to your brother’s Otoyo’s house.’ The Older woman started. ‘And see if you can borrow his vehicle.’ She seemed rather composed.
Otieno headed first to his hut where he emerged fully dressed before rushing to his brother’s house, only to return half an hour later.
Where is the car?’ a frustrated Benta asked.
‘It’s in my pocket.’ He pointed out to his trousers turned shorts rather agitated.
‘Is he coming with it?’ the older woman asked in a composed voice.
‘It has no petrol mother.’ Otieno answered rather meekly. ‘What do I do now?’
‘Otieno!” Benta screamed in pain, clutching to the worn out blankets on the bed. ‘Why are acting like a foolish man?’ she struggled with some contractions. ‘This is all you’re doing.’ She screeched. ‘Did you not do this?’
‘Why are you acting like a teenage girl about to give birth Benta.’ Otieno pretended to retain his cool. ‘Is not your seventh child? Seventh…’ he emphasized.
‘Hmmm…’ Benta suppressed her contractions which seemed to be coming fast and furious.
‘Go to Mildred’s house.’ His mother instructed him. ‘She will take you to the traditional midwife’s house.’
Otieno turned to leave, Benta had insisted on giving birth at a clinic, after very bad experiences from the untrained midwife, though she had assisted hundreds of women in delivering healthy babies if not thousands.
Hurry my son, the pain is coming all too fast.’ She advised in a worried tone. ‘At this rate your son will be born before the break of dawn.’

Almost two hours later Otieno returned to his wife’s hut only to find his daughters gathered around their mother sobbing. She seemed faint and her cries were almost inaudible. Dread mixed with guilt filled his heart as he approached the wooden bed. ‘She traveled to the next village.’
He noticed his mother was preparing a traditional remedy for Benta. ‘Our neighbor Mzee Bartholomew has a wheelbarrow.’
Otieno dutifully obeyed, noticing the thick sweat on the face of his wife he hurried of Bartholomew’s house who lived a long way off. He found the old man seated outside his hut, gazing at the night empty sky. ‘Is all well at your homestead?’ he asked, worry written all over the endless thin lines on his forehead.

‘It is well.’ He approached the old man. ‘Women issues.’
‘Your daughter woke us all up, they had me worried Otieno.’ He seemed to breathe in more easily.
Any other night, an old man seated outside in the middle of the night could have easily be mistaken for a night runner or a witch doctor, but it was a special night, where good and evil were allowed to mix.
My two wives Judith and Mikaela are on headed to your homestead.’ He informed the younger man. ‘This time Otieno a great warrior will be born to your household.’
Otieno smiled for the first time that night. ‘She is in a lot of pain mzee.’ He said in a confused but in a matter of fact kind of way.

The old man nodded and then let out a wide grin, revealing the gaps in between his large brownish teeth. ‘That’s a good sign.’
Otieno felt confident for the first time that night.
‘My son Otieno let us go in.’ the old man got up and picked his three legged stool and walked into the mud hut.
Otieno followed the old man, all too gladly, happy to escape from the painful world of childbirth.

‘Otieno, is that you?’ his mother called out anxiously.
‘It is I mother.’ He responded not too keenly.
‘What took you so long?’ she limped to the fireplace where Otieno was busy removing the green plastic bag from the fireplace, it was beginning to smell. ‘The dawn is just about to break.’
‘I am here now.’ He remained rather calm. ‘Why are the children crying?’ for the first time he realized he could hear his daughters crying but there was no sound of Benta ready to give him a tongue lashing or a newborn baby.

‘It’s their mother.’ The old woman began. ‘She collapsed.’
For a moment Otieno seemed to go into shock, he wiped his hands on his little blue shirt.
Where is she?’ he asked quickly looking for her in the bedroom. ‘Where is she?’ he studied the faces of his daughters all huddled together in a corner wiping their tears away.
Bartholomew’s wives carried her off to the hospital.’ She leaned on the wall rather painfully.
He started running towards the gate. ‘Otieno!’ his mother peered from the door. ‘They might need that!’ she pointed at the wheelbarrow at the very corner of the compound.

Up the ridges Otieno pushed the wheelbarrow, across the river he carried it, though the huge torrents could have easily carried him away but it was the easiest way to catch up with the women on the dusty path that led to the main road. Where the women readily placed the unconscious woman on the wheelbarrow and Otieno quickly led the way.
He pushed with all his might, the sun was raising, it seemed beautiful but rather insignificant to Otieno, arriving at the clinic when the sunrays were beginning to show though a bit lazily. But the gate was locked. ‘We do not open until 8am.’ The guard informed them giving Benta a quick glance.
“she in labour!’ Mikaela said. ‘Please help us.’
He gazed around, he seemed to think really hard as he listened to their story of what had happened, like he was in no hurry, or maybe he could not notice the pain and anguish written all over their faces.
‘I will see what I can do.’ His voice seemed to be full of promise, only for him to return and declare that there was nothing he could do.

Otieno visibly angry realized that his only hope was the district hospital which was almost an hour and a half away. When they got there the emergency was full as usual, the patients seemed to be having worse problems than he could dream of. But Benta was admitted immediately, as they carried his wife away the image of a five year old boy drenched in blood occupied his thoughts, he seemed to have been involved in a very bad accident.

He seemed to wait for hours, such that his aging mother joined him. ‘The maternity ward is no place for a man like you.’ But he wanted to stay. Mzee Bartholomew’s wives stuck to him, they seemed to share in his anxiety.

Baba Atieno.’ Cristabel’s second name was used.
He jumped up anxiously; it was Judith, Bartholomew’s first wife, freshly from consulting with the doctors. ‘I am afraid they could not save the baby…’ she refrained from telling him that it was a boy, the whole village knew that he longed for a male child. The news would have crushed his spirit all the way.
‘She shall bear many more.’ His mother consoled him. ‘One does not cry when one egg breaks, the hen can easily lay another one.’
Otieno seemed consoled.
Benta had lost a lot of blood, but her recovery was swift and was discharged after two weeks, on the third week as she prepared breakfast for her household at the break of dawn, she collapsed and died.



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