Socks Ball

Page 1

FICTION

Socks Ball NII AYIKWEI PARKES

It was true that the boys of Teshie were rowdy when they walked out of their school gates. They strapped their sandals to their belt-holes and ran down the street barefoot, throwing stones and grass spears. The entire town of Teshie was their territory. Every blue window frame, rusty tin roof, white-washed wall, dusty shack, bougainvillea hedge and gum bush had been touched by their eyes, hands, feet or projectiles they had thrown. The streets were knots of footpaths and regressed roads but the boys knew exactly how to untangle the sandy twists. If you stood at the top of the red hill beside the roast corn seller, and the sun wasn’t in your eyes, you could see them running towards the taxi rank, their bodies framed by shifting hazes of brown dust, a cloud of moving chaos. They were loudmouthed too, the boys. Insults catapulted from their mouths like spat phlegm. All in the basest Ga, the language they dreamed in but were forbidden to speak at school. “Your head like calabash.” “Your mother.” “Your mother, father and grandmother’s grandmother.” Freed of the ‘international language’; the English they’d been told that they couldn’t get jobs without, they were effervescent. It was as though they had been canned for the whole day, left to ferment and bubble, and then been shaken and sprayed in the face of the world. Okaifio, Tettey and Atukwei were part of the troop of boys. They had a rivalry as fierce as their friendship was strong. Okaifio had a scar on the left side of his face, just above the cheek, which he got from walking into the lowered tailgate of a pickup truck while thinking. He was quiet compared to Tettey and Atukwei who regularly tried out kicks from karate film posters to the sounds they overheard from outside the local film house. Initially playful, these stunts would become actual fights and Okaifio would step in. They would emerge from conflict, bruised and smiling, and proceed to their next act of rebellion. Okaifio turned to face the other two boys. “Should we go to Mr Faisal’s factory today? The cocoa should be ripe by now.” “As for you, you always want to steal fruit. One cocoa to share will only make us hungry.”


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