Bernardine Evaristo

Girl, Woman, Other


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days in England

      she surprised herself at the strength of her grief

      she then regretted never telling him she loved him, he was her father, a good man, of course she loved him, she knew that now he was gone, he was a patriarch but her mother was right when she said, he’s of his time and culture, Amma

      my father was devastated at having to flee Ghana so abruptly, she eulogized at his memorial, attended by his elderly socialist comrades

      it must have been so traumatic, to lose his home, his family, his friends, his culture, his first language, and to come to a country that didn’t want him

      once he had children, he wanted us educated in England and that was it

      my father believed in the higher purpose of left-wing politics and actively worked to make the world a better place

      she didn’t tell them she’d taken her father for granted and carried her blinkered, self-righteous perspective of him from childhood through to his death, when in fact he’d done nothing wrong except fail to live up to her feminist expectations of him

      she had been a selfish, stupid brat, now it was too late

      he’d told her he loved her, every year on her birthday when her mother was alive, when he signed the card she bought and sent for him

      her successful older brothers kindly gave her the greatest share of the family home in Peckham

      which paid for a substantial deposit on a small terraced house with a box garden in Railton Road, Brixton

      a place to call her own.

      5

      Yazz

      was born nineteen years ago in a birthing pool in Amma’s candlelit living room

      surrounded by incense, the music of lapping waves, a doula and midwife, Shirley and Roland – her great friend, who’d agreed to father her child when the death of her parents triggered an unprecedented and all-consuming broodiness

      luckily for her, Roland, five years into his partnership with Kenny, had also been thinking about fatherhood

      he took Yazz every other weekend, as agreed, which Amma regretted when she found herself missing her newborn instead of feeling deliriously free from Friday afternoons to Sunday evenings

      Yazz was the miracle she never thought she wanted, and having a child really did complete her, something she rarely confided because it somehow seemed anti-feminist

      Yazz was going to be her countercultural experiment

      she breastfed her wherever she happened to be, and didn’t care who was offended at a mother’s need to feed her child

      she took her everywhere, strapped to her back or across her front in a sling, deposited her in the corner of rehearsal rooms, or on the table at meetings

      she took her on tour on trains and planes in a travel cot that looked more like a carry-all, once almost sending her through the airport scanner, begging them not to arrest her over it

      she created the position of seven godmothers and two godfathers

      to ensure there’d be a supply of babysitters for when her child was no longer quite so compliant and portable

      Yazz was allowed to wear exactly what she liked so long as she wasn’t endangering herself or her health

      she wanted her to be self-expressed before they tried to crush her child’s free spirit through the oppressive regimentation of the education system

      she has a photo of her daughter walking down the street wearing a plastic Roman army breastplate over an orange tutu, white fairy wings, a pair of yellow shorts over red and white stripy leggings, a different shoe on each foot (a sandal and a welly), lipstick smudged on her lips, cheeks and forehead (a phase), and her hair tied into an assortment of bunches with miniature dolls hanging off the ends

      Amma ignored the pitying or judgemental looks from passers-by and small-minded mothers at the playground or nursery

      Yazz was never told off for speaking her mind, although she was told off for swearing because she needed to develop her vocabulary

      (Yazz, say you find Marissa unpleasant or unlikeable rather than describing her as a shit-faced smelly bottom)

      and although she didn’t always get what she wanted, if she argued her case strongly enough, she was in with a chance

      Amma wanted her daughter to be free, feminist and powerful

      later she took her on personal development courses for children to give her the confidence and articulacy to flourish in any setting

      big mistake

      Mum, Yazz said at fourteen when she was pitching to go to Reading Music Festival with her friends, it would be to the detriment of my juvenile development if you curtailed my activities at this critical stage in my journey towards becoming the independent-minded and fully self-expressed adult you expect me to be, I mean, do you really want me rebelling against your old-fashioned rules by running away from the safety of my home to live on the streets and having to resort to prostitution to survive and thereafter drug addiction, crime, anorexia and abusive relationships with exploitative bastards twice my age before my early demise in a crack house?

      Amma fretted the whole weekend her little girl was away

      adult men had been ogling her daughter since before puberty

      there are a lot more paedophiles out there than people realize

      a year later Yazz was calling her a feminazi when she was on her way out to a party and Amma dared suggest she lower her skirt and heels and raise the scoop neck of her top so that at least 30% of her body mass was covered, as opposed to the 20% currently given a decency rating

      not to mention The Boyfriend, glimpsed when he dropped her off in his car

      as soon as Yazz was in the door, Amma was waiting in the hallway to ask her the sort of harmless question any parent would ask

      who is he and what does he do? hoping Yazz would say he was in the sixth form, a relatively harmless schoolboy then

      Yazz replied with dead-pan insolence, Mum, he’s a thirty-year-old psychopath who abducts vulnerable women and locks them in a cellar for weeks on end while he has his wicked way with them before chopping them into pieces and sticking them in the freezer for his winter stews

      before waltzing upstairs to her room leaving a whiff of whacky-backy

      nor is the child she raised to be a feminist calling herself one lately

      feminism is so herd-like, Yazz told her, to be honest, even being a woman is passé these days, we had a non-binary activist at uni called Morgan Malenga who opened my eyes, I reckon we’re all going to be non-binary in the future, neither male nor female, which are gendered performances anyway, which means your women’s politics, Mumsy, will become redundant, and by the way, I’m humanitarian, which is on a much higher plane than feminism

      do you even know what that is?

      Amma misses her daughter now she’s away at university

      not the spiteful snake that slithers out of her tongue to hurt her mother, because in Yazz’s world young people are the only ones with feelings

      but she misses the Yazz who stomps about the place

      who rushes in as if a hurricane’s just blown her into a room – where’s my bag/phone/bus pass/books/ticket/head?

      the familiar background sounds when she’s around, the click of the bathroom door when she’s in it, even though it’s just the two of them in the house, a habit begun at puberty which Amma finds affronting

      the exactly ten crunches of the pepper mill