The Museum of
Silver Lights (An Excerpt from Emmanuel Iduma's Farad)
I
She was gone
before I remembered. Her voice had sounded like the pouring of water into an
empty cup; her eyes had seemed as though they could see things yet to be. Her
life had always seemed to be on the verge of happening. She used to talk of
doing something. Even when my elder brother was alive, and laughter bounced
about within the walls of our house, and music was an early morning gift.
There was a
mahogany plank fixed to the front door of my brother’s house. On it he had
inscribed, “Because it is mine” underneath the words “Peace Villa,” the name of
the house. The letters seemed to have been painstakingly engraved, such that
they seemed buried deep in the wood. Even before he had died, she had spoken of
changing those words to “Because it is ours.” She was my brother’s wife, see.
She was tall and
appeared effortlessly athletic, and there was a gaze in her eyes that seemed
awakened yet vulnerable. Her complexion, which I considered peculiar, appeared
to roam through the shades—she could seem dark-skinned today and albino-yellow
tomorrow. And she spoke of the Museum of Silver Lights. I heard her argue with
my brother once about turning the hallway of his brick house into the “first
phase” of the museum. He asked her, in a mocking tone, what she’d keep in the
museum. She told him the word “museum” was a variant of the word “muse” and
that it could mean “a place for muse.”
My brother, in his
usual dissatisfied manner, asked, “What do you mean?”
And she told him,
“I want to keep old photos in the museum.”
My brother shook
his head and looked at her in a way that spoke of her longstanding madness. Her
eyes met mine, and I bowed my head.
My brother died
the next day in a big fight. He was a car dealer. His was, by all standards,
the biggest car shop in Jos. The fight had started two shops before his
warehouse. It went the way all big fights go. His shop was burnt. He went with
his shop.
Her crying was the
least pronounced. Our neighbours shed more tears than she did. They spoke to me
in her stead. But even in my brother’s days, they would have talked to him to
talk to her—even if she sat with them in the parlour. When a group of Igbo men
came to commiserate, they considered me old enough and talked to me while she
sat with us. If you had not known, you’d have thought she was an apparition
sitting in the parlour while we mourned.
The Igbo Community
in Jos staged a protest against my brother’s death—on the manner in which the
authorities had treated his case. It was a clear case of ethnic hegemony. On
the morning of the protest, I asked her if she was going to join. She shook her
head and asked me if I had eaten. She was the kind of person who tied two
unrelated things together—a protest and a meal, a death and a museum. So I
wasn’t surprised when she asked me next, “You think I can start the museum
now?”
I could have said
I didn’t think museums were started, or that it was an inappropriate thought
given the circumstances. But instead I said, “Yes.” And when she nodded,
smiled, and rubbed my shoulder, I said, “Yes,” again.
I did not join
them in the protest. I heard that only ten men had shown up, and that they had
called it off when no one else joined them.
She replaced the
mahogany plank that read “Peace Villa” with “The Museum of Silver Lights,” and
underneath the words, she inscribed “Because it is ours.”
Yes, she had confronted my
brother about the words he had inscribed on the plank. Incidentally, it had
been the day just after I had come from our parents—they had insisted I go to
my brother, so he could ‘speak some sense into my head’, for my decision not to
go to university. She talked about the
phrase in a manner that showed she had spoken about it before.
“You can’t just declare that this house is yours. If nothing, there are other people living here.”
“You can’t just declare that this house is yours. If nothing, there are other people living here.”
My brother said,
without turning to her, “Leave me alone.”
She pursed her
lips and looked upwards then shook her head. She walked away from him. I
wondered why she spoke of the words on the plank—I thought she shouldn’t be
bothered about such little things.
She was the kind
of person that was bothered about small things.
One day, she
called me. She had come home earlier with photographs in silver frames. Now she
had driven nails into the wall of the hallway and hung the photographs in a
criss-cross manner. She still stood on the stool onto which she had climbed to
cover the yellow bulb hanging from the ceiling with a silver screen shade. They were photos of my brother and her on
different occasions. She spoke of each photograph as a guide would do in a
museum— “We took this in Abuja”, or “He had just come back from China, at the
airport.” But I was angry. She hadn’t asked for my help in putting up the
photographs. She said, “We’ll fill the house with more photographs. Maybe we
can open it up to the public. They would see his face.”
I walked away from
her. She spoke of my brother as though he had had no mind of his own.
While she slept, I
took down all the photographs—all twenty three of them, despite the way the
hallway glowed like silver. I carried them outside the house.
I took a stone and
broke each of the photographs into bits.
In the morning
when I woke, she was gone. There was a white sheet of paper on the table in my
room. She had started to write something, but cancelled it. I could see where
the pen had torn the paper while she scratched off the words she’d written.
The Igbo Community
in Jos told me they were going to stage a protest against the manner of her
death. I told them it was unnecessary. Their spokesman, a Reverend Father who
kept dreadlocks asked me why. I told him I was going back to my parents in
Ibadan. That was all.
“Is that all?” he
asked.
I said, “Yes.
That’s all.”
I told him that if
he wanted to do something for her memory, he should have something important
written on her grave. He asked what. I told him “Because you were ours.” Then I
told him no. He should have them inscribe “Museum of Silver Lights” instead. He
frowned. I told him to call off the epitaph idea entirely.
On the day she was
buried, someone came with a handwritten invitation he claimed she had given
him. It read, “Please attend the opening of the Museum of Silver Lights.” And
our address was written on it.
They said she had
been hit by a car while distributing her handwritten invitations.
II
I often dreamt of
an empty room with light bulbs covering its ceiling. In my dreams, I watched
the lit room from a distance, usually unable to go in. Sometimes this dream
happened when I was awake. I knew then that it was fixed in my memory; I knew
my dreams by heart. I had come to that point when I was the one who determined
what I dreamt about, what I made-believe. And this capacity, this ability to
stretch myself to such lengths, did not come by chance.
When my
sister-in-law died, in the process of distributing invitations to her Museum of
Silver Lights, my parents came to Jos and took me away. They had decided for
me. I was going to Ife; I was going to study law. There are times when I assume
I was beguiled, brain-washed. In my earlier stubbornness, I had not conceived
that my parents’ could prevail over me. Yet, in a matter of time, it became my
own wish to study Law in Ife; I made my dream. There were so many things that
had happened – my brother and his wife, their deaths – that perhaps my grasp on
what was real and what was not, the dividing line between both, had become
blurred. In circumstances of this kind, you would ask yourself whether you were
certain of what was and what wasn’t—and when you thought you had found the
answer, the question would present itself to you again.
There were other
reasons why I chose to attend the Chapel, aside from the fact that a classmate
whom I admired had invited me. She was a girl I thought I loved, until I told
her and she said we would spoil things if she accepted. So, even though she
stopped attending the Chapel, and I began to see her with another boy in
another Church on campus, I kept attending the Chapel. There was something
about the size of the compound that intimidated me, made me believe that I
couldn’t understand its complexity even if I tried. The hall could probably sit
about five thousand, and; illusorily, less than five hundred were regular
members.
I joined the Youth
Fellowship as soon as I made the resolve to be a member. On my first Sunday,
Tutu – that was her name – had given me a copy of Seeds, a monthly publication
by the Youth Fellowship. Then, in my first year, I had decided that I wanted to
write poetry. Seeing that Seeds had no poetry, I considered joining the
Editorial Team so that I could contribute some. I asked Tutu to introduce me to
the Editor. His name was Jackson, he was in his final year, and was bored;
editing Seeds had become humdrum. In another two years, by my third year, I had
become the Editor of Seeds.
Oko Egwu wrote for
Seeds occasionally. He told me, after a Youth Fellowship meeting, that he
wanted to write a short piece about the Choir, or that it would be better if I
wrote it. I told him it was going to be difficult, seeing as we had a short
time, a little over a week, before the next issue would be released.
He told me why he
wanted me to write it.
“You think it’s
going to be sensible?” I asked him. “
Well, let’s try.”
I shook my head,
understanding the import of what he was asking. “We’re really inconsequential,
here,” I told him.
“Really?” he
asked. I took it to mean he was asking, “You want it to remain so?”
Before he left
Ife, Jackson had introduced me to a friend of his, a medical student. He said
that his friend was a good poet, the best he knew, and that while poetry bored
him, his was an exception. Jackson said he had always been unable to get his
friend’s poetry into Seeds, and that I could try, that I could succeed. So he
introduced me to his friend, a certain Damilola Ajayi. I asked Damilola for his
poems on the evening when Oko Egwu spoke of writing about the choir, and he
searched in the bag he was carrying for something he had scribbled that
morning.
I decided to use
Damilola’s poem for the coming issue of Seeds. I had typed it on my laptop, but
when I decided to write about the Choir it became likely I would do away with
the poem, for space. I decided, also, to do away with an excerpt from C.S.
Lewis’ “God in the Dock”. Yet, there were lines in Damilola’s poem that
answered the question Oko had asked me. He had asked me “you want it to remain
so?” and I had been unable to answer. It was like the feeling of not knowing
what was real and what was false, not knowing when you had caught a plague or
when you were dying from natural causes. The lines from the poem were:
The story is a
tragedy
But it’s a story
nonetheless.
Oko’s objective
was to get the young people in the choir, which he happened to head, to agree
with the Assistant Choirmaster’s proposition to hold an election during the
forthcoming retreat. Seeds was due to come out two Sundays before the retreat.
I told him he was relying on a fluke, that not many people took our work in
Seeds seriously.
He looked at me. I
understood his concerns. It was surprising even to me that I edited Seeds but
did not believe in my work. It was surprising that my life seemed to comprise
of things I didn’t believe utterly in—commonplace, lacklustre, elements gave
form to my life. Despite having accepted to write about the Choir, I did not
trust myself, or my writing—Damilola had once told me a writer’s life was a
hybrid of moments of intense doubt and moments of stellar brilliance.
I called Oko when
Seeds arrived. There was a fight in my head even before he said he wasn’t sure
we could distribute it. It was the first time he read what I wrote—our schedule
had been tight. I smiled and asked him why.
“This is
dangerous, Christian.”
I knew he was
afraid but I asked myself if I was any different. We sat in a small room that
served as an office for the Youth Fellowship, filled with musical instruments,
a computer, a small collection of Christian literature and undistributed past
editions of Seeds. I had called him because I had wanted him to see what I had
written. And he had worsened what I felt by saying what he had said.
“That’s
impossible. You know it.”
“Are you ready for
what will happen?” He asked.
I smile again.
“You expect trouble when you are speaking the truth.”
He chuckled,
nervously. “Is this the truth, Christian? Agreed, it might be our truth,
because we want to believe it is. But there’s the truth of the older people,
and they won’t fancy our truth, I tell you.”
I held his
shoulder, showing affection I felt was unnecessary, and said, “It doesn’t
matter whose truth it is . . .”
He retorted,
sharply, “It matters.” But that was all he said; he looked crestfallen, a look
that showed he was leaving things unsaid. He walked out. I wanted to call him
back, talk to him, and convince him that I was not as scared as he was. But I
could only see his hunched shoulders, the way his body seemed to sag when we
talked, and I knew mine wasn’t different. It was sagging and unsure.
There was man in
the Chapel, Dr. Addo, who always sat in the first pew. He was considered
eccentric and unreasonable, but he had a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and
lectured in the same department. His students said he cursed in class, called
the Yoruba gods of thunder and lightning on all those who taught them that it was
unnecessary to memorize whole textbooks or substantial parts of his lecture
notes. But in the Chapel, during the sermon, mostly, he raised his hand in
agreement, asserting himself in a way that made me think he was putting an end
to doubts of his irrelevance.
I saw him walk up
to the Choirmaster just after the Church service had ended. He walked as though
on fire, casting his legs in front of him with absolute certainty. The Chapel
was still filled with members who were chatting amongst themselves, making
small talk before leaving. I stood behind, some yards from the Choirmaster,
talking with Charity, Tutu’s friend, who had remained committed to the Chapel.
We heard Dr Addo saying, “Did you see this?” over and over to the Choirmaster.
The Choirmaster was surrounded by Choristers, who had assembled after the
Recession. Then Dr. Addo stopped asking the question, and began to tear Seeds
into shreds, bit by bit, littering the Chapel. There was now a substantial
number of Choristers standing by as he tore up Seeds. Some members of the
Chapel walked to where he stood.
Two minutes later,
I heard Dr. Addo say, “Where is that Christian Ike? Does anyone know him?” A
part of me wanted to walk to him, and surrender myself to any consequence they
were going to mete out. But I considered that foolhardy. I walked quietly out
of the chapel, hoping that someone saw how I escaped from the limelight, or
whatever it was that could have happened if I had spoken to Dr. Addo.
As I walked away
from the Chapel, I tried to think about whether it would be trite to put that
issue of Seeds in a glass, and hang it in my room in school. Perhaps it would
be better to take it home, where there were reminders of the life I had lived
in Jos—the life my brother’s wife had
lived, the lights she had seen, her botched Museum of Silver Lights.
As I walked, I
wondered what Oko was thinking, if he had got what he wanted, if he had not
given himself the excuse that he did not know what he wanted. I imagined there
were young people who would have been stirred by what I wrote, and I imagined
there were those who wouldn’t have cared, for whom the Choir had no need for
change. And there might be those in-between for whom nothing was right or
wrong—for whom all that was necessary was the continued functioning of the
Choir, irrespective of what I wrote, or did not write.
I heard my name
being called. I stopped, and saw that it was Oko. He was panting from running,
but he was smiling. I wanted to ask him why he was smiling, but I can only
imagine that he had dreamt my dream, of an empty room, whose ceiling was
covered with light bulbs, waiting for us to enter, awakened, dreaming no more.
Emmanuel Iduma is a writer of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry, and has received recognition in each genre. Emmanuel is the co-founder of Iroko Publishing, which publishes Saraba. In 2011, Emmanuel participated in the Invisible Borders Trans-African Photography Initiative, a road trip aimed at creating photographic and written material that addresses Africa from a more individualistic viewpoint. Farad is his first novel.
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