“What do you think?”
“How did you find your way?”
“By walking. And walking.”
Soft laughter.
Swirl of dust.
They disturb sand grouse, which fly away in shadow. In the distance, a man-shaped form shimmers, leading two donkeys, its metal adornments gleaming. The flowers perfume the car. Ali Dida Hada warbles a song. Ajany closes her eyes. It is one of the water songs he had taught Odidi to sing. Enraptured by the almost familiar vastness, Isaiah senses how outsiders who fall out of life and end up here imagine they are the first to have ever done so.
The sound of an AK-47 going off shatters the night’s peace. Ali Dida Hada stops the car.
“What’s that?” Isaiah asks.
“Gunfire,” says Ajany.
They listen. Then Ali Dida Hada gets out of the car and climbs on top, looking toward the west.
They resume their journey, and speed up in the direction of Wuoth Ogik. As Ali Dida Hada’s car reaches a crossroad, a mad d’abeela slides behind a tree. The car passes by him. He jogs southward, even farther away from the scene of a crime.
Cumulous clouds and a trail of dust, and they reach Wuoth Ogik. Most of the house is coral rubble.
Ajany scans the ranch, holding her flowers.
Isaiah says, “The house is dying.”
Ajany stands with one foot atop the other, staring in the direction of the cattle boma. To Isaiah, she resembles a thin, stripped-bare tree in an eternal landscape, or a solitary ostrich. He would have spoken but for the wind, so he shuffles to stand close to Ajany.
Galgalu approaches them, a bloody bandage wrapped around his head. He recognizes Ali Dida Hada and deliberately slows down, fingering the amethyst resting in the hollow of his chest. He distracts himself — thinks the thorn fence is thinner than usual, studies his shadow — and bends his head. Why has that man returned? There were an excess of curses at Wuoth Ogik. Nothing had gone right ever since Ali Dida Hada had entered into its life.
Galgalu spits sideways, depressed by the evidence of his declining powers of exorcism. He has performed arcane rituals to encourage all concerned gods to get rid of Ali Dida Hada. But here he was again.
The first time Ali Dida Hada came back to Wuoth Ogik, he had told Galgalu, “Call me bambaloona.…” Galgalu was convinced that the moment he called Ali Dida Hada “marabou stork,” he would be murdered for insulting a fool. A calculating glitter had popped into his eyes. What a silly man.
“I know a coffee song,” Ali Dida Hada had told Galgalu. “Do you want to hear it? It’s from Eritrea.”
“No, I don’t.”
Ali Dida Hada had sung anyway.
Galgalu would never admit that the voice singing bunabuna had transported him into a space of fine fragrance and perfect taste.
Anyway he was under no obligation to like everybody.
Galgalu turns to Ajany.
He had incanted hymns that killed lunacy. She seemed steady, even with her bunch of bright flowers.
Life in flow again.
“Ch’uquliisa!” He limps over.
Ajany hurries into his arms. “Gaaaluu.” She touches his bandaged head. “Who?” Her flowers are crushed between them. He hears the fluttery beat of her heart.
Sweet air. She touches his face, as she did when she was a toddler. Blue flies, a buzzing cloud over him, on him. She blows them away.
Isaiah and Ali Dida Hada watch them.
Ali Dida Hada’s skin gathers on his forehead as he reads the fading signs of hooves and sandals on the ground. Tracking them right, he follows until the footprints turn southwest. Dog waste. Tire-sandal marks. Cow dung, camel prints. He squats to read the ground, studies the churned soil leading out of the homestead. Ali Dida Hada’s body stiffens.
Footprints.
Here is where Kormamaddo the camel took off. Here is where someone with slender feet and a light tread caught and calmed him down. Sideways motion, flowing across the ground. Every creature’s footsteps have a unique rhythm. He knew the melody of these human ones. Ali Dida Hada squats on his haunches. He knows why he is here.
Hadada ibis cross the land in raucous song. Ali Dida Hada sidles up to Galgalu like a hungry apparition. Ali Dida Hada glowers at the second cairn. “Where is she?” he asks.
Galgalu lopes away, Ajany two steps behind him. She, too, notices the cairn. What did she expect? That her father would wait for her to reappear before burying Odidi?
A ghost scorpion scrambles from a long-gone predator. Isaiah’s eyes follow the creature. Restrained shudder. He has heard about these creatures. How pilots who discovered the hideous hairy things aboard their planes in midair screamed all the way to wherever it was possible to land without shame. A go-away-bird holds session close by. Isaiah’s shoulders sag, and he rubs the new stubble on his face. He can smell water. Can’t reach it. Feeling rising bile, he leans forward, unbuttoning his shirt. Sweat drips from his face, down his back. The whirly-burr of a falling insect. Ultima Thule, he remembers. He returns to the car to retrieve Hugh Bolton’s head. He will go into the house and sit among his father’s things. He swipes at flies.
Next to the new cairn, Ajany sees her mistake. The hole her father had been digging when she left is half done. Though Odidi’s coffin is not fully covered, it has been screwed shut, nailed down. She touches it, the idea of him, then she drops to the ground. Wind stirs, flings hair on her face. One day, I’ll forgive your death. The earth is warm against her skin. Odidi’s absence is now a deep-frozen clot within her heart. One day, I’ll forgive your death. New memories. And mine. Soft footsteps going somewhere. Ajany yuak, yuak, yuak. Her head swivels. Brought you flowers, Odi. Upward glance — she stares into the blue; a pair of bateleur eagles. She hears, I’ll find you, silly. A smile inches its way out of the depths of her heart.
Inside the cattle boma, Ajany finds and touches a bedraggled being that is the shape and texture of an aged, twisted tree bark. Bloodshot eyes, his bare feet are now cracked. The late orange light shines on his face as he contemplates the empty cattle enclosure. He is dark. At close quarters, he seems wavy, not solid, his cloak of solitude forbidding. Ajany almost drops what she is carrying, and clamps down on her lips to stop from crying out.
“Baba,” she whispers.
Nyipir drops his stick and, with both arms, scrambles up and reaches out. He grabs hold of his daughter. She is alive and at home. “Ibiro.” You are here.
She is clinging to her father. How small he has become. The wind throws dust around and covers them both.
Nyipir remembers: “Flowers?”
“Yes,” she says. Then, “I found Odidi.”
Nyipir’s head snaps back.
Ajany unrolls Odidi’s office picture.
“Here.”
Nyipir receives the picture with both hands. He lifts the image to his face and presses it in, inhaling the imagination of his son’s presence for a long, long time.
Later.
Voice hoarse, Nyipir says, “He looks well.”
Ajany watches.
Nyipir says, “He looks well, see?”
“Baba,” Ajany starts, wanting to wail about treachery.
“Yes?” He turns, eyes bright.
Hesitation. She says, “I’m happy you’re here.”
Later.
She tells him a little about T. L. Associates Engineering — that Odidi had left a legacy with his work in water. She tells him that Odidi’s time with the gang came from heroic idealism. He had only been organizing the disenchanted youth to work for a different future for themselves. It is sad, she tells her father, that the stupid state did not have the capacity to grasp Odidi’s vision and had instead destroyed him.