“I’m telling Nick what happened when you got jet lag a few minutes ago.”
His mom blotted her forehead with her napkin. “Maybe it was the hydrofoil. Maybe I was seasick.”
“Lucky thing that guy helped you up off the street.” Splinter chewed on the pen cap for a moment. The man had been awfully nice, he thought, considering the circumstances. Not everybody would mop you up with his own handkerchief and then carry you to a table at an outdoor café where you could rest. Especially not after you tossed your cookies all over his shoes.
Splinter studied his mother as she took a sip of her tea. It wasn’t like her to whack somebody over the head with a camera bag. It seemed a particularly mean thing to do to a guy trying to help you. But that’s what she had done— hauled off and smacked him and then yelled at him to get his hands off her and leave her alone.
She told Splinter it was jet lag. He hoped it wasn’t contagious.
Splinter bent over his letter.
—barfed. Now we are having tea at an outdoor café. I can see a cockroach right by my mom’s foot. This is the most fun I’ve had in a long time. I’m going to like Zanzibar. Write soon.
He signed the letter with the practiced flourish of an artist. At the bottom of the letter he sketched a picture of the model dhow he had bought. It had triangular sails and a wooden hull. He couldn’t wait to put it into the ocean and see if it would float.
While his mother sorted through the piles of official papers documenting ownership of the old house, Splint penciled a cartoon of her losing her breakfast. Nick would get a kick out of that.
It turned out to be quite a good drawing. His mom was clutching her stomach and crying out, “Oh! Oh!” in a little balloon beside her head. The man who helped her was bent over, one arm supporting her shoulders. His balloon said, “It’s okay, Jessie. It’s okay.”
Splint frowned. How had the man known his mom’s name? He turned the memory of that moment over in his mind. Very strange. There was some kind of magic here in Zanzibar. He could feel it.
He tore off a clean page and began making a copy of the cartoon to hang in his new bedroom.
Jessica Thornton had never seen a more welcome sight than the small figure of Hannah Wambua waving from the bridge of the hydrofoil late that afternoon. The morning had been an earthly image of hell. She and Splinter had gotten hopelessly lost in the winding alleys of old Zanzibar town. Despite the fact that they were late to the lawyer’s office, Mr. Patel had kept them waiting an hour for the scheduled meeting. The house deed, though official, looked like it came from a Monopoly game. Mr. Patel had hinted at problems that might crop up. Something about the autopsy report and possible litigation from someone who was rumored to be considering contesting Dr. bin Yusuf ’s will.
“Autopsy report?” Jess had queried. “I thought he died of cancer.”
“Not to worry, not to worry!” Mr. Patel had assured her. “Everything will be fine.”
But how could she not worry? As the morning slipped by, things had only gotten worse. Dr. bin Yusuf ’s car had not been parked at the café as promised. The telephone-company supervisor had informed Jess that phone lines did not extend to the part of the island where her house was located. It was too isolated. At the post office, she had learned that her mail would have to go to a box in Zanzibar town. The house was too remote.
Even shopping for supplies had turned into a major endeavor. Groceries, she had discovered, could not be purchased at a single store. Meat came from one tiny shop; vegetables and fruit were stocked in a collection of market stalls. Sundries such as toilet paper, household cleaners, and brooms had to be purchased from a variety of little booths tucked here and there along the winding alleys. Comparison shopping was unheard of, and there was no such thing as a fixed price.
“Is that Mama Hannah?” Splinter asked as the hydrofoil drifted into port. “She’s not very big.”
Jess smiled. “She has a big heart.”
Bright yellow scarf tied around her hair and pale green dress fluttering on her thin frame, Hannah looked exactly like an angel to Jess. True, she was tiny and withered, and her raised hand looked like a small, dark bird’s claw. But Jess knew that those bent fingers could soothe troubles with a motherly touch. The frail body disguised the fortitude and determination of a lion. And that head, as round and brown as a coffee bean, contained the wisdom of Solomon. Joy swelled inside Jess at seeing the woman who had been a mother to her through so many difficult years.
When their birth mother suffered a violent death, the four Thornton children had been devastated. Jess wasn’t sure her oldest sister, Fiona, had ever recovered from the trauma. These days Fiona lived out in the isolated African bush where she studied elephants and talked to as few human beings as possible. Grant, the family rebel, would not have survived his teenage years without Hannah’s guiding hand. Now he was a successful anthropologist. And Tillie, the youngest of the four Thorntons, hardly remembered having a mother other than Hannah.
In fact, the old woman had recently arrived back in East Africa from Tillie’s home in Mali. Jess could hardly wait to hear all the news of her sister. Evidently, Tillie had impulsively married some mysterious writer following a whirlwind romance. It sounded like a delicious adventure.
“Mama Hannah!” Jess shouted, jumping up and down on her toes as the hydrofoil engines shut down. “Hi, Mama Hannah!”
“Mom, you’re acting like a little kid,” Splint said. “It’s embarrassing.”
Jess rumpled her son’s coarse brown-gold hair and gave him a quick hug. “She looks the same, doesn’t she? She’s beautiful.”
“She’s wrinkled.”
“What did you expect? She’s old.”
“How old?”
“I don’t know. She’s always been old.”
“She has great big holes in her earlobes.”
“That’s because she’s a Kikuyu. The men and women of that tribe stretch their earlobes so they can hang lots of earrings in them.”
“Barfola.”
“Aren’t you the fellow who was leading a cockroach down the street on a string a few minutes ago? That’s barfola.”
“She’s got a dent in the top of her forehead.”
“When she was young she used to carry huge loads of firewood on her back. The leather strap cut into her head and made it that way. Don’t you remember?”
“I don’t remember her at all. But I do know one thing: She won’t be able to keep up with me. Mom, I don’t want her tagging along when I’m trying to hunt treasure and explore the bay. I won’t have any fun with some weird, old, wrinkled lady—”
“That’s enough, young man.” Jess jerked her son’s arm and marched him down the dock to where the people were debarking the hydrofoil. Splinter had a knack for finding his mother’s Achilles’ heel in any situation and then homing in for the kill. He sensed how much Jess loved Hannah, so he had made up his mind to dislike her. Fortunately, Jess knew that in this situation Splinter had met his match. Hannah could be every bit as stubborn, willful, coercive, and cunning as any ten-year-old boy.
“Jessica!” The old woman stepped into the younger woman’s arms and gave her a hug. “How are you, my toto?”
“Fine. Great.” Jess blinked back tears as she held Hannah. Her ayah smelled as she always had—of thick black coffee and rich stew cooked over a charcoal fire. Her skin felt like an old flannel blanket—soft, warm, and comforting. “I’ve missed you, Mama Hannah.”
“‘A cheerful heart is good medicine,’” Hannah whispered, repeating one of her favorite proverbs. “To see you this day fills my soul with happiness.”
Hannah turned from Jess and studied the lanky young boy standing beside his mother. “And who can this be?” When he didn’t answer, her sparkling brown eyes narrowed. She cocked her head. “I am Hannah Wambua. You may call me Mama Hannah, if you wish.”
Jess gave her son a nudge. “I’m Spencer Thornton,” he said. “I’m ten.”
“So you are. W
hen I saw you last, you were four years old. You were small. You talked a lot. You also climbed on everything. At that time, I believed you would grow up to be clever and pretty to look at.” She shrugged. “But even I sometimes make mistakes.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” Splinter stuck out his jaw.
Hannah placed one crooked finger under the boy’s chin and tipped his face toward the afternoon sunlight. “Now I see that God has made you more than clever. He has given you the gift of a great mind. You will astonish us with your thinking.” She shook her head and gave a Kikuyu expression of dismay. “Ehh, tsk tsk. But you are not pretty. Not at all. Instead, your face is handsome. A handsome man’s face.”
Splinter beamed. “I’ve already got peach fuzz on my lip.”
Hannah appraised the silky brownish blond hair with a critical eye. Though there was nothing resembling a whisker in sight, she nodded sagely. “Mmm. So I see. In a few years, your mother will have to buy you a razor. And what about these fingers?” She held up the boy’s ink-stained hands and turned them this way and that. “I see you are an artist like your mother. A writer, too, perhaps. I think you like to build and climb and swim. But I don’t think you know how to make a bird from a palm leaf.”
Splint’s eyes widened. “Huh? How can you do that?”
“Or open a coconut to drink the milk?”
“Well—”
“Or find living clams buried in the sand?”
“I could dig.”
“Do you know the secret hiding places of the sand clams?” Hannah gave the boy a wink. “Can you turn a mango into a rocket?”
“A rocket!”
“Do you know how to roast an ear of white maize so its kernels will taste like nuts? Can you tell an elephant shrew from a lemur? Can you build a house from sand?”
“I can do that. I can make sand castles.”
“Can you? Hmm. We shall see.” She lifted her focus to his mother. “Come, Jessica, shall we go to your new home now? I see your car is waiting.”
Jess turned to find a small white Renault parked in the lot near the harbor. A brawny African man stood beside it. Arms folded, ebony face set like stone, he stared at the approaching trio with unflickering black eyes.
“Jambo, Bwana.” Jess greeted the man in Swahili, pleased at how easily the language had come back to her in the few hours she’d been in Tanzania. “Habari gani?”
“Njema, Memsahib Thornton. This is your car.” His mouth rigid, he opened the back door. “I shall drive.”
“But I thought . . . it’s my car. I’ll drive.”
“I shall drive.”
She stared into the hard eyes. “What’s your name?”
“Solomon Mazrui.”
“Were you the driver for Dr. bin Yusuf?”
“I drive. I cut grass and grow flowers.”
“You’re the gardener?”
“Ndiyo.” He nodded. “I fix the house also. I am a very good worker.”
“You were the man helping Dr. bin Yusuf restore the house. He was proud of what had been accomplished. But there’s a problem now, Solomon. I can’t afford to pay a driver and a gardener. And I can’t spend any money on the house. I have a son and—”
“Miriamu will be your cook.”
“No, I can’t afford a cook. Absolutely not. I’m very sorry. Look, I know you worked for Dr. bin Yusuf, but I’m not as well off as he was.”
“Miriamu cleans the house.”
“I’ll have to clean it myself. I’m used to that. In London we lived in a flat. We had no house help.”
Solomon’s eyes hardened. “Ahadi ni deni.”
Jess looked at Hannah for help. “‘A promise is a debt,’” the older woman translated.
“But I didn’t make you a promise, Solomon,” Jess said. “You worked for Dr. bin Yusuf, but you don’t work for me. I have not hired you. You and I have no contract. No agreement.”
“Baas.Twende.” He beckoned them to climb in, as though he had comprehended nothing Jess was saying. “I shall drive.”
“Let him drive, Mom.” Splinter clambered into the front seat beside Solomon. “When he gets his first paycheck and it’s blank, he’ll figure it out.”
“And I’ll be accused of slavery and thrown in the Zanzibar jail.” She slipped into the back beside Hannah. The Renault chugged to life, sounding like it had lost its muffler, a few pistons, and maybe a belt or two. A puff of dark gray smoke belched from the tailpipe as Solomon eased the car out of the parking lot.
“I will show you Zanzibar town,” he announced.
“We already saw it,” Splinter said. “We walked all over the place this morning. Mom got lost. She barfed in Suicide Alley.”
“Barf?”
“Spit up. You know, blaaagh.” Splinter pantomimed.
Solomon’s stony face didn’t crack a smile. “Ndiyo. In Kiswahili, we say kutapika. To vomit.”
“Kutapika,” Splint repeated carefully. “Kutapika.”
In the backseat, Jess groaned. “Great. My son has just learned his first Swahili word.”
“You are ill, toto?” Hannah asked.
“No, it was just . . . something upset me. Maybe I was seasick or had jet lag. It’s been a hard day.”
“Africa has brought you painful memories?”
Jess let out a breath and rubbed her eyes. Hannah had the annoying knack of seeing straight to the heart of things. And she never held in check what she was thinking. If she had a question, she asked it. If she had an opinion, she stated it. The characteristic could be endearing. It could also irritate beyond words.
“Painful memories?” Jess said. “Worse than that, Mama Hannah. I’m beginning to wonder why I ever came back.”
“This is the land which the Lord your God has given you.”
“The Promised Land?” She shook her head, thinking of a house with no phone, no mail, no supermarket, and a staff of cooks and gardeners she couldn’t afford to pay. “It’s not going to be flowing with milk and honey anytime soon.”
“What has made you ill with anger and worry? Bitterness fills your stomach, and you have no release from it but kutapika.”
“I didn’t think so until today. I thought I’d gotten over it.”
“Over him?”
Jess looked up, concerned that Splinter might hear. Her son was deep in conversation with Solomon about the possible presence of an octopus colony in the ocean near their new house. She could barely understand them over the roar of the Renault engine.
“I saw Rick today,” she told Hannah in a low voice. “Here. In Zanzibar.”
Hannah’s eyes widened. “How can this be?”
“I don’t know. I thought he was in Kenya. If I’d had any idea he might be here, I never would have come.”
“Are you sure it was him, toto? It has been many years. I am sure he has changed, as you have. Perhaps you saw someone else.”
“Maybe. The alley was dark. A group of men walked around the corner. Europeans and Africans mixed. Maybe an Asian or two. I glanced into their faces. Then I saw those eyes . . . his eyes . . . and everything just swept over me. I felt like I was going to faint.”
“You did not see him again after you became ill?”
“He picked me up off the sidewalk!” Jess heard her voice rise in near hysteria at the memory. “He cleaned my shoes, and then he picked me up, Mama Hannah. He carried me to a chair at a café.”
“A kind thing to do.”
“Are you kidding? I didn’t want that man touching me! When I realized what he was doing, I hit him with my camera bag.”
“Perhaps you were beating a Good Samaritan. A stranger.”
“I don’t know.” Jess covered her face with her hands, recalling the moment when she had been so sure she was staring into the blue eyes of Rick McTaggart. The man who had been her husband. Spencer’s father.
“Oh, God.”
Hannah nodded. “It is good to call upon the Lord in difficult times. God is wise. ‘For I know the plans
I have for you,’ says the Lord. ‘They are plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope.’”
“Mama Hannah, please don’t quote Scripture to me, okay? You know I’m a Christian. I go to church when I have time; I’ve taught Splinter to sing ‘Jesus Loves Me’ and all that. But if you and I are going to live in the same house, I’m going to have to ask you not to turn every little thing that happens into a message from God.”
“What about the big things?” Hannah was staring straight ahead, her hands folded on her lap. “Perhaps God had his hand in your meeting this afternoon in Zanzibar town.”
“Oh, please! If anything, that was demon inspired. I can’t think what could make my life worse than having to face that man again. And if he saw Splint . . . If he found out . . .” Her voice grew tight as a lump of fear formed in her throat. “I won’t let him near my son. I swear it!”
“This is Kenyatta Road,” Solomon shouted over his shoulder. “Post office.”
“We already went there,” Jess enunciated the words slowly and clearly, lest he miss her point. “Take us to the house, Solomon.”
“Long ago, the post office was the sultan’s royal stables.” He gave her a dark look, as if to warn her not to interfere with his plan. “Across the street is Babla’s Expert Optical Service. Very old watches at that shop. Also sunglasses, cigarette lighters, cameras.”
Jess dropped her hands in exasperation. Did the man never listen to anyone but himself?
“Dhow Palace Hotel,” he announced next. “Ten rooms for tourists.”
Jess stared out at the maze of murky streets. Women wearing the long, black, veiled bui-buis that bespoke their Muslim faith glided down alleys too narrow for cars. Most of the two-story houses had been built of mottled gray coral or soft limestone. Some were freshly whitewashed; others hadn’t seen paint in two hundred years. Some boasted elaborately carved doors with brass studs; some had cheap wood doors; others had no doors. Jess could look into the open courtyards of multifamily dwellings where laundry hung on long lines and children chased puppies across open drains.
With the window rolled down, the smell was overpowering. Repellent odors of human refuse and rotting garbage formed a subtle undercurrent to the rich, alluring scents of curry, cinnamon, incense, charcoal smoke, fresh bread, and the island’s famous cloves. The fishy saltiness of the damp sea breeze seasoned the potpourri of aromas.
A Whisper of Danger Page 2