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A Sunday Moonlit Stroll Through Kampala (standard:drama, 1439 words) | |||
Author: DAVID TUMUSIIME | Added: Aug 13 2005 | Views/Reads: 3524/2333 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Strange things can happen once you decide to walk unguided in Kampala. What happened. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story a weekend, a Sunday evening especially. There is nobody about, no policemen in sight, no publicom vendors, the sky is clear of any Marabou stocks and you can walk in the middle of the road if you wish. I did. I did not think about where I was going. I merely walked. Drawn on it seemed to me by a whisper in the silence under those sad trees towards the National Theatre to see what I know not. There were no cars on the road, Dewinton road bars were open with sombre patrons and no special hire taxis had come to work it seemed because there were none. In the National Theatre was a play. I could hear the distant laughter so strange sounding in the parking lot with silent unoccupied cars and no one about. The play was South Pacific. Somehow South Pacific here right now playing to a scattered audience, I suspected, of mostly white European expatriates seemed to stand as the last bastion against something I was not sure of what as I hurried away. There was something frightening here. In the 1970s and in the 1980s I have heard my elders tell how Nile Avenue was the last road many people travelled in the boot of a car on their way to Conference Centre then Nile Mansions and to death. Day or night. The hush of silence on Nile Avenue was deathly. In my own early youth it was the street of hope and each pavement on Nile Avenue is fraught with meaning for me and I can still tell you on which pavement and which day what marvellous thing happened to me. What heights of ecstasy I was lifted to, what depths of despair I was plunged all in a single hour. Nile Avenue does not scare me and there are no ghosts for me here. The luminous combs of light on Nile Avenue are full of promise for me. I walk Nile Avenue and I'm young again. I have walked on Nile Avenue long past midnight on a Friday from Crested Towers with a lovely woman searching for more excitement. There is excitement to be had and it begins at Rock Gardens. Sheraton hotel is opposite and her dimly lit expansive gardens stroll silent waist holding couples. Paradise. And outside Sheraton's fences, harlots. And across Rock Gardens. In Rock Gardens on a lucky Sunday night there is a deejay, a spin-maestro, the best in Kampala. Kampala can't dance? Come here and be amazed! A few streets down, creaky empty taxis cruise silent Kampala road with the most forlorn look, conductor and driver worn and tired and without hope. In the doorway of a closed bank, a sleeping security guard shifts in his blue plastic chair to his left murmuring and fighting through a frightening dream. On Entebbe road a deserted mother of four hopefully makes her way into an ATM booth to check their joint account for the 1000th time in hours though she knows there is nothing there. There is poverty and suffering everywhere around but not in Rock Gardens. Perhaps it's because they know what's waiting outside that these young patrons dance so frenziedly. 100% effort. Her eyes squeezed shut, the buttons of her white shirt open to the v- of her breasts, gyrating, her fingers snapping, her mouth open wordlessly mouthing Can you feel the music? He bobs protectively around her, his date, in amazement, laughing, he has never seen her like this. He is feeling a lot of things. Time stands still. You can walk through a time warp on Luwum Street going down to the Old Taxi Park. Nakasero Market has disappeared. There is a new K.C.C garbage skip that doesn't stink. The streets are new swept and wet. In these buildings along Luwum Street the old planned Kampala is here. It's only a little after midnight, Sax Pub is busy, but down Luwum Street to the echo of footsteps Monday is already here. Tweet
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DAVID TUMUSIIME has 18 active stories on this site. Profile for DAVID TUMUSIIME, incl. all stories Email: braveworldus@yahoo.com |