Read Coincidence: A Novel Online
Authors: J. W. Ironmonger
Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Romance, #Suspense, #Psychological
But then, of course, the Acholi have to labour. They have to rise early and tend to their animals, and they have to bend at the waist and work their fields, and they have to carry water and firewood and bundles of produce; and here there are no weekends or bank holidays, no coffee shops or supermarkets, or escalators or tube trains. They have to work, these people of Africa, Thomas thinks. Or else . . .
Or else what?
Or else, perhaps, they die.
He sits down to rest again. A great weariness after three days of travelling is starting to descend. He isn't used to this intolerable heat. The weight of his bag is making his shoulders ache. His feet hurt. He is painfully thirsty. What is he doing here? He is a pale, urbane philosopher used to little more than the corridors of Bloomsbury and the commuter routes of London. His natural habitat is a seminar room overlooking Gower Street, or a squash court in Camden, or a coffee house in Soho, or the dusty back room of a bookshop on Tottenham Court Road.
Perhaps â just perhaps â it is getting cooler. He throws the bag across his shoulder and sets off again. A trudge this time. A slow, methodical plod. One foot in front of the other, then another, that's a yard. Then again, that's two yards. Counting the paces, watching his shadow.
Some way ahead of him on the same side of the road a woman sits on a stool in front of her hut, selling something. Whatever it is, he shall buy it. Unless it's charcoal, of course. But if it's water, or mango, or prickly pear, hang the cost, he will buy it. One foot in front of the other; then another. How faint he suddenly feels. His head is beginning to spin. Heatstroke, he thinks. I really should have brought a hat.
One hundred yards to go. The Acholi woman is motionless on her stool. Her face is turned away.
Fifty yards and he can see. She is selling beans of some sort. Pulses. He feels a crushing disappointment. Then she turns her face towards him and for a moment his heart stops. She has no lips.
He closes the distance between them and makes himself look at the gums and teeth that define her face. On impulse he scoops up a handful of beans. âHow much?' He pulls a banknote from his wallet, an indefinable sum of money, and thrusts it into her hand. She must be a survivor of Joseph Kony, he thinks.
âDo you have any water?' he asks. He mimes the request for her. âWater?'
The woman rises and disappears behind the roundhouse. She returns with water in a tin mug. Thomas drinks it all. He thinks about all the infections that he might catch. Amoebic dysentery, perhaps. He doesn't care. He passes back the mug.
âHow far is it to Langadi?' he asks, not sure if the woman will understand; or if she will even be able to reply.
But the lipless woman holds up her bony fingers. âLangadi,' she says, âthree.'
âThree what? Three miles?'
The woman nods mutely.
âIs there a mission in Langadi?' Thomas asks.
She gives him a piercing gaze as if computing the question.
âA mission?' he asks again. âSt Paul Mission?'
Very slowly she shakes her head. âNo.'
âNo mission? Are you sure?'
She looks as if the question has alarmed her. âNo,' she says again.
Thomas releases a long and heavy breath. What stupid, futile thing has he done? He is a day late, anyway. Azalea will be dead. Or she will be alive. Like Schrödinger's cat, she is maybe dead and alive at the same time. Maybe she will be alive until he finds her. Maybe he will never find her. There are countless villages in this part of West Nile. He can't search every one.
The heat is making his head swim. He looks up and down the long dirt road, but even now, turning back seems less attractive than going on. He slips the handful of beans into a pocket and hefts the bag back onto a sore shoulder. One more foot in front of another.
And then the ring of a bell. A bicycle bell. Coasting down the gentle slope behind him comes the bicycle boy from Moyo with a wide grin across his face. âBoda boda?' he calls to Thomas, knowing well what the answer will be.
This time as they wobble off, Thomas keeps his long legs out of the way. I'm such a fool, he thinks. This is what I should have done all the way from Moyo. Ahead of them is a little township.
âIs this Langadi?'
âYes.'
âAnd is there a mission here?'
The boy shrugs and shakes his head. Thomas pays him and feels a new wave of energy. A cluster of low buildings with shops and workshops are strung out along the road. No mobile-phone stores here, Thomas notes. West Nile seems still to be holding out against the encroaching technology. He lost the signal on his own phone sometime after Laropi.
There is only one direction to go, and that is onwards. He walks the length of the town and the buildings begin to peter out. But somewhere, he thinks, the old mission must still be standing. He should at least try to find them. Someone would have seen Azalea when she came here in February. Someone, surely, would know what had become of her.
A young man is walking towards him. There is something ungainly about his gait. As he draws closer, Thomas can see that he has no arms.
âGood day to you sir,' he says in clear English.
âGood day to you,' Thomas replies.
âCan I help you, sir? Are you looking for something?'
âI don't know,' Thomas says. âI was looking for a mission. But it seems that there is no mission in Langadi any more.'
âNo, sir. There is no mission in Langadi.'
âThen I think perhaps I've had a wasted journey.'
The young man shakes his head sympathetically.
âDo you know how I might find someone to take me back to Moyo? A taxi perhaps?'
The young man smiles. âThere is an Englishman at the Centre,' he says. âHe has a car and a driver. I'm sure his driver can take you.'
Thomas feels the first stirrings of relief. âThank you,' he says. âCan you show me where I might find this man?'
âOf course. Just follow me.' The man with no arms turns around and starts down the road in the direction that Thomas had been heading.
âYou speak excellent English,' Thomas tells him.
âThank you. I had a very good teacher.'
âWhere did you go to school?'
âHere in Langadi,' the man says. âAt the Centre.'
A bright red bird flies across their path and for a moment Thomas's attention is diverted. Thomas looks at the man. âHow did you lose your arms?'
âThey were cut off, sir. When I was just a boy.'
âCut off?' It seems almost too appalling to say. âBy Joseph Kony?'
âYou know of Joseph Kony then?' the man says.
Thomas nods.
âIt was his men. His men did it.'
Something is surfacing in Thomas's mind. âWhat is this Centre you mentioned?'
âIt's here, sir.' They have rounded a corner and there in front of them is a signboard, one of the thousands of signboards that decorate the roadways of Uganda. This one reads, âThe Rebecca Folley Centre for the Children of Conflict'.
Thomas's heart begins to race. âThis is it!' he cries. âThis is the mission!'
âNo, sir. This is a rescue centre.'
âA rescue centre?'
âYes sir.'
âA rescue centre for children who were abducted by the LRA?'
âYes sir.'
A dirt driveway leads from the road to a cluster of buildings almost hidden among trees. Around the compound is a high wooden fence, and topping the fence, a coil of barbed wire.
âIt looks like a prison,' Thomas says.
âNo sir, it isn't a prison,' says the man with no arms. âThe wire is to keep the LRA men out.'
The driveway is protected by a high wire gate. A tall man, wearing fragments of a uniform, lets them through. They walk up the murrum drive. A cluster of children gather to watch them. Most of the children, Thomas is relieved to see, are undamaged.
As for the ârescue centre', it isn't quite how Thomas has pictured it. It is shabbier, somehow, than the mission in his imagination. The buildings are dusty and rather unkempt; the once whitewashed walls are stained the colour of overripe bananas. The vegetation grows wild and the grass is sparse. But ahead is an inviting, open-sided building that can only be the mess hall. This would be the place where Kony and his men first confronted the Folleys. There are tables and benches and a kitchen space where a large, greying Acholi man is stirring a huge stewpot over a charcoal stove. He is barking commands to a clutch of teenage assistants, and one is setting out forks and knives on tables in preparation for dinner.
In a winged wicker armchair, looking out over the compound, sits a European man; his mirrored sunglasses, weathered face and long grey hair lend him the look of an ageing rock star.
The man with no arms addresses him. âMr Boss,' he says, âI have a visitor here to see you.'
The grey-haired man turns in his chair to face them. âYou'll forgive me if I don't get up,' he says.
Thomas holds out his hand but the man appears to ignore it.
âI don't get many visitors,' he says. âDo I know you?'
âNo, sir. My name is Thomas Post,' says Thomas.
âAh,' says the man. âThen I do know who you are.'
âYou do?'
âOf course I do. Can I offer you a drink? You must have travelled a long way.'
Thomas feels the weariness flood over him again. He sinks down onto a stool. âYes please. I should love something to drink.'
âI'll get one of the boys to fetch it,' says the man with no arms. âTea, coffee, or something stronger?'
âTea,' says Thomas. âTea, please. Not too strong. And water, if you have some.'
âOf course.'
âAzalea told me you're a tea drinker,' the grey-haired man says.
Thomas feels his head spinning. âAzalea told you?'
âIndeed. She tells me everything.'
Tells me. The glorious present tense. Thomas finds himself choking on his words. âAzalea . . . so she . . . she's . . . still alive?'
The man looks puzzled by this remark. âOf course. Why shouldn't she be?'
Thomas shakes his head. His eyes have filled with tears and he turns his face away, not wanting to be seen. He feels a sob emerging like a deep eruption within his chest and he fights to keep it from bursting to the surface. Instead he manages just a whisper. âAzalea is alive. She's alive.'
âMy dear young man, what were you imagining?'
âI don't know. I'm not sure. I . . .' Thomas can't turn to face the man in the wicker chair, not yet; not with his eyes brimming so. Instead, he looks out over the compound, over a raggle-taggle of buildings and trees. That low building there must be the old mission house. And that long rectangular structure â the school, perhaps? Or maybe the hospital? A man is washing a minibus with water from a bucket. A group of children are tethering some cattle to a tree. Somewhere he can hear voices singing. Children's voices.
âYou must be Luke Folley,' he says.
âI am.'
âAzalea thought you were dead.'
âI know.' The man who is Luke Folley nods slowly. âShe thought I was dead, and I thought she was dead. And so we wasted twenty years.'
The voices of children are coming closer. Thomas feels a sudden sense of urgency to understand everything; to know everything. âWhy didn't you track her down?' he asks, aware as he speaks that his voice is cracking, but aware too that it doesn't matter any more. Nothing seems to matter any more. Azalea is alive. The thirty years since Marion's death are like the lost pages of a manuscript telling an ancient story that no longer has any relevance.
But Luke answers all the same. âNo one called Folley ever left Uganda, or Kenya, or Congo, or Sudan.' Luke says. âNot one soldier of fortune ever returned to Uganda. I tracked down Kony's men and they told me that all the children had been blown up on the truck. They showed me the burned-out lorry. What was I to think?'
âI'm sorry,' Thomas says; and he truly is.
âWorst of all,' says Luke, âAzalea never came home.'
Thomas nods.
âThis place was a war zone for twenty years. We had LRA and SPLA and Uganda government forces all at each other's throats. You couldn't move in or out for a long time. The roads were blocked; the airfields were closed.'
âI see.'
âI was abducted myself by the LRA.'
âYou were?' Thomas is surprised. âI never knew that.'
âWhy should you? Until four months ago Azalea didn't even know I was still alive.'
âHow long did they hold you?'
âTwo months. I drove up into Sudan to find them, and when I found them they were afraid I might tell the authorities where they were. So they held me captive.'
âDid they . . .'
âDid they what?'
âDid they . . . mistreat you?'
Luke gives a snort and his shoulders shake in a silent laugh. âOh yes,' he says. âOh God, yes. They mistreated me.'
âWhat did they do?'
âYou don't want to know.'
There is an awkward silence. And then a group of children come around the corner of the big rectangular building that might have been the schoolhouse. They sing and call to one another gaily as they start to file into the mess hall.
âYou will join us for dinner?' Luke asks. The discomfort of their last exchange has passed.
âI should love to.'
The shadows are growing longer.
âIs Azalea here?'
âNo,' Luke says, and then he smiles. âBut she will be.'
âWhen?'
âSoon.'
The mess hall is noisy with voices now, and alive with movement. Someone rings a bell, a slow, persuasive, ding, ding, ding. Thomas finds that his face has drawn itself into a wide smile.
âThe mission bell,' he whispers.
âNot any more,' says Luke. âThis isn't a mission any more.'