It was D-day; Uncle Mwaria#theStoryteller's birthday was finally here.
I
woke up to rousing smells from the kitchen. For sure it was going to be good or
as we say, it was finna be lit. There were over 7 different dishes being
prepared not to mention over 5 desserts! I could not contain my excitement.
The
last part was getting my Uncle home. That was my one responsibility. Get him
home by 12pm sharp. The whole clan was counting on me. I was confident I'd
deliver, easy-peasy.
I
had already crafted my plan on how to get him home. My strategy was
simple. I was going to pull the - we need to talk urgently card. About what?
Business of course. That's the one topic that Uncle Mwaria would drop
everything for. He's very passionate about seeing the family business rise back
to its former glory and beyond. More so with a cross generational touch.
I had this in the bag.
"Mali,
you better head off... Your Aunty is waiting anxiously because Uncle Mwaria can
up and go on his wild adventures any time, “urged my dad.
"Alright...alright.
I'm leaving just now," I said as I reached out to give him a morning fist
bump, "I got this dad...don't worry."
With
that, I was out of the house munching on the last of the tasting waffles that
had been graciously left on the counter. They were so fluffy. I couldn't wait
to down the full meal with the whipped cream and fruit toppings.
Throughout
the drive there I kept rehearsing the narrative and figuring
out responses to his quick fire questions. The narrative was simple. We
needed to talk because Dad was giving me a hard time in running the family
business. I'd express that I needed him to intervene urgently. To inflame
it more I'd state that I didn't feel their trust or commitment and that I was
on the verge of losing my mind.
The
pressure of the rising conflicts with dad and risk of the business failing due
to missing out on opportunities would be too much. I'd feel like I failed again
at something so major after the Gathoni saga. It would wipe me out. I'd leave
him with an ultimatum that if he didn't intervene, I'd walk away from it all by
the end of the week. Being a peacemaker and believer in the vision he'd be
wiled enough to accompany me home.
Uncle
Mwaria#TheStoryteller didn't get the hashtag affixed to his name for
nothing. He had stories to tell from here to kingdom come. Fortunately,
they were enjoyable. He was dad's eldest brother. He was a visionary, a
fantastic problem solver but best of all was he was an influential storyteller.
Equipped
with these there was no problem he couldn't solve. There was nothing he could
not engage on and how he did it, was an art. Twas as if he had a PhD in
public speaking and engagement: he was a master at it. With that also came the
gift of discernment in sniffing things out, including the fake.
On
the other hand I was the son of Njama and his mentee. If there is
something I perfected, it was execution in delivery: I wasn't going to be the
one to drop the ball. I too knew how to weave stories. I had learned from the
best, dad and him. In twenty minutes I had arrived.
"Fix
your face. Keep it neutral," I told myself as I did last checks on the
mirror. I found him sitting at his usual spot, the verandah facing the
backyard.
"Uncle
Unc...Hey hey! Happy Birthday to you! Who's younger now?" I teased as I
greeted him.
He
let out a little chuckle and rejoinder, "You best believe it.” We always
loved a little rough housing and his birthday wasn't going to pass just like
that. Next thing I knew he had put me in a head lock and I had a few seconds to
manoeuvre before he made it worse. He lived for moments like these.
I
began to tickle him because I knew he was super ticklish. He squirmed and
giggled like a little boy.
"Mali,
stop it! Stop it! You're cheating," he shouted over his deep laugh. I
persisted.
"I'm
serious...stop it...stop!!" he pleaded as tears streamed his face.
"Ahahaha
let me go then I'll stop," I negotiated.
"Never!"
he yelled as he tightened his grip and tried to get my hands away.
"Uploading
the Tickler 2020!" I yelled as I tickled him relentlessly
"Mali,
stop...that's not wrestling" his grip began to loosen and his voice became
faint, "Mali...stop...stop...Mali.”
I
was winning, that was until I felt him collapse on the floor. He was probably
exhausted from all the laughing and rough housing. I couldn't put it passed him
not to pull a prank to pull a win.
"Uncle
Mwaria, stop joking around. You couldn't take me winning?" I asked as I
got off his hold and rubbed my sore neck, jeez he was strong.
He
didn't budge nor respond.
"Uncle
Mwaria. Unc...are you ok...Unc!" I got a bit frantic because he wasn't
responding. What had I done?
Great piece!
ReplyDeleteThank you :-)
DeleteBeautiful!
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