A Good Man in Africa
“More coffee?” he asked. “Another brandy?” Moses and Friday were away for the night.
“Gosh no,” Priscilla giggled, “I’ll be peeing all night.” As if this mildest of improprieties were a signal Morgan bent his head round to kiss her. In the last half hour she had relaxed sufficiently to allow gentle tongue probing and the infrequent squeeze of a breast. Morgan kissed her neck, it was moist and tasted vaguely salty. He noted that her short black skirt had ridden pleasingly up her thighs.
“Morgan,” she said in a small voice, “do you know why I came out here? To Nkongsamba?”
“Haven’t the faintest,” he lied, nuzzling her ear while he undid a button on her blouse. He slid his hand beneath the satin and inched it along her chest until he met the abrupt gradient of her breast and the lacy reinforcement of her bra. Try as he might, and short of using his other hand as a lever, he could not prize his fingers under it.
“I just wanted to say thank you,” she said. Morgan withdrew his hand and looked at her in some astonishment.
“What on earth for?” he asked.
She pecked him on the cheek. “For not storming off in a rage because I wasn’t … relaxed.”
“Don’t be silly,” he admonished.
“It’s just that I’m not very sure of myself … I’m a bit ‘uptight’ as I believe the current expression goes.” She picked up Morgan’s right hand and examined it minutely as if it were some mysterious and rare artefact. “Which is why I’ve come out here.”
“Oh,” Morgan said, carefully non-committal.
“You see I used to be almost engaged to this chap Charles, only we had a terrific bust-up. The whole thing was getting fairly serious; I … I had practically moved into his flat.” Morgan stored this piece of information away. “When I suddenly realised he just wasn’t the right sort of person for me. Just one day, no particular reason, I saw it was completely wrong. Hopeless.” She paused. “Charles was a sweetie, but not for me, if you know what I mean.” She looked at him for support. “You can’t, you shouldn’t let things go on under those sort of circumstances. It’s better to make a break.”
“Oh yes. You’re right,” Morgan agreed. “Absolutely. Yah.” He looked serious, intensely understanding.
She cuddled up to him. “It was pretty gruesome. Shouting and crying. He was terribly upset. But I knew I had to do it.” Morgan smoothed the hair on her head. “Which is why I’m a bit, you know, stiff and cautious. Emotionally bruised, Mummy calls it. You understand.”
Morgan nodded. “A case of once bitten.”
“Exactly,” she affirmed. “Exactly,” squeezing him with gratitude.
Morgan deposited a kiss on the flipped-up end of her nose. “We’d better get you home,” he said.
They enjoyed the final and the most passionate embrace of the evening in the dark driveway of the Fanshawes’ house. As he drove home Morgan was glowing with self-congratulation, attributing the persistent dull ache in his groin to an unrelieved night-long erection. Later, lying back in his bed, he lazily contemplated the vivid memories of Priscilla’s strong smooth legs and tried to imagine what her breasts looked like, gently releasing his frustration into a wad of toilet paper. As the tingling pleasure seeped along his legs and out of his toes it was replaced by a slight but uncomfortable burning, scorching sensation at the tip of his penis. Further examination established that there was a slight rawness there which was effectively soothed by the application of some Nivea cream. He assumed that it had been caused by the rubbing of his buckled hard-on against the zip of his trousers or raised hem of his Y-fronts, a small price to pay, he reflected, for such a well-conceived and executed evening’s wooing.
Before he fell asleep he thought about Priscilla’s lie. He scoffed briefly at the illusions people erected around themselves in desperate pretence before he realised that he himself wasn’t exactly in a strong position to deride this form of behaviour. Priscilla’s version of her falling-out with Charles made her the agent; moreover, a mature and sensible one, demanding overall a mutually fulfilling relationship and, by the by, just letting him know she was no virgin. Morgan smiled to himself; one gift he was blessed with, he considered, was the ability to see through people, to size them up, see what they really were beneath public pose: an invaluable talent.
As he thought on, it occurred to him that maybe this gift of Priscilla—young, unattached, not ignorant of his charms—meant that his luck was on the turn. Those drab years as an executive officer in overlit, overheated civil service offices in the South of England, the disastrous interviews and repeated failings of Foreign Office exams before the eventual scrape-through. The shaming training period, the snobbishness, the cold shoulders of his colleagues, the prolonged wait in some Whitehall cul-de-sac, the fifth-grade overseas posting to Nkongsamba where he’d already languished eighteen months longer than he should have, perhaps, perhaps all this had been arranged by someone just so he could meet Priscilla. Fate, Destiny, Big G—he offered up a prayer of thanks just in case—who knows? For the only time in his life he was the right man in the right place at the right time. He could feel a warmth welling up in his heart, a languor suffusing his body; he sensed his muscles bulge and flex, he spread his arms across the bed, stretching his fingers wide. He knew what it was; he felt pleased with himself, and, better still, he was sure he was falling in love with Priscilla.
Chapter 4
The lawn of the Commission was bathed in a yellow glow from the high-powered floodlights strategically placed at first-floor windows. A hundred or more people, blacks and whites, swarmed around the cold buffet tables and the two bars. Over to the left was a large cinema screen with rows of seats ranged in front of it. Morgan looked down on the throng from one of the back windows, invisible behind the glare of the floodlights. He had been unable to spot Adekunle on the ground and had moved up here to get a better view. He saw many faces he recognised among the cream of Nkongsamba society who had been lured here tonight by the prospect of free booze and food and who were, because of this bait, prepared to suffer the private screening of yet another film on the Royal Family. That, Morgan had to admit, had been a stroke of genius on Fanshawe’s part. This film, billed as an “intimate portrait,” had been despatched recently to all the British High Commissions and embassies throughout the world as part of a large-scale diplomatic publicity stunt. It had not been scheduled to reach Nkongsamba for many months yet but some judicious pressure by Fanshawe had managed to get it sent up prematurely from the capital. A private viewing was duly arranged and official invitations hastily sent out. It was to be an excuse for a jingoistic explosion of self-admiration for the expatriate Britons, and the anticipated regular shots of splendid castles, historic artefacts, beaming Royalty and endless immaculate parades would surely provide a gentle but potent reminder to all the non-British present of precisely just what it was they didn’t possess and why, therefore, they just weren’t quite such special people. Normally these sorts of occasion had the same effect on Morgan as weddings—they were awash with false sincerity, hypocrisy and a dreadful back-slapping bonhomie that always made him sweat with embarrassment.
Tonight, however, was different. To his surprise he had found himself looking forward to it, and now as he peered down on the assorted heads beneath him—blond, brunette and balding, woolly peppercorn and towering head-ties—he felt an unmistakable surge of excitement. This was a set-up, he reminded himself; he was working—yes, undercover—for his government. It was a small job perhaps, merely the securing of information on a foreign country’s political party, fairly low-priority stuff, but such jobs, he told himself, were the broad base of intelligence, the firm foundations of global diplomatic gestures, the unnoticed background to those headlined ministerial initiatives.
Morgan had to confess that Fanshawe’s enthusiasm for their plan had been infectious. He had behaved like an excited schoolboy playing at spies; he had given a drawer of a filing cabinet over to the project, to which only he and Morgan had t
he key. He had even gone so far as to bestow a code-name on the operation: he called it “Project Kingpin,” after Adekunle’s party’s initials—KNP. “We’d better have a Kingpin meeting,” he would say cautiously to Morgan in the passageway, or, “This is material for the Kingpin file,” or, “Any progress on Kingpin?” Morgan had thought at first that it was all a bit sad really, but had happily gone along with it anyway as he was reaping the benefits of this new alliance with Priscilla’s father. “You know,” Priscilla had said to him during one of their latest meetings, “Daddy’s been terribly impressed with you recently—singing your praises night and day. What are you two up to?”
“Nothing really,” he had said modestly. “Routine stuff, that’s all.”
Earlier on in the evening Morgan had been remarking on the excellence of the punch to the overweight wife of an engineering contractor when Fanshawe had sidled up and muttered in his ear “Kingpin’s arrived,” and had glided off dramatically, like a courtier informing a prince of a plot against his life.
Now, looking down on the herd of loyal subjects, Morgan saw Adekunle standing by the beer bar with a white woman he took to be the politician’s wife. Adekunle was wearing native dress and was carrying a carved ebony stick. His wife, Morgan thought, looked unhappy and incongruous in a loose yoke-necked blouse, a wrap-around cloth skirt and bulky head scarf. As he watched, Morgan noticed the way people came up and paid court to Adekunle almost as if he were the host. Scanning the faces Morgan recognised two other political leaders keeping as widely separated from each other as possible. There was Femi Robinson, an angry little Marxist who was the local representative of the People’s Party of Kinjanja, and there was Chief Mabegun, governor of the Mid-West state and head of the Mid-West branch of the ruling United Party of Kinjanjan People. Widespread popular discontent over its bloated members and the inefficient lean years Kinjanja had suffered while it was in power had brought about the approaching general election. Mabegun, Morgan thought, looked like he was running on the graft and corruption ticket again. He was a vastly fat man who seemed to be implying by his own comfortable obesity that power had been good to him so a vote cast in his favour might, possibly, provide everybody with similar benefits.
But both Robinson and Mabegun were, Morgan accepted, small fry beside Adekunle. The main leaders of the PPK and the UPKP were in the capital; the Mid-West representatives were only minor luminaries, with little or no influence outside their own small state. Adekunle, on the other hand, was in a different league. He was a respected academic who had spoken at the last meeting of the Organisation of African Unity. From the information Morgan had gathered thus far, Adekunle seemed to spend more time flying round the globe to various third world conferences or UN special committees than he did giving lectures or, as dean, administering his faculty. There was also talk, Morgan had established, that he might be the next vice-chancellor of the university.
As Morgan watched, he saw Fanshawe and his wife go up and chat to Adekunle who smiled and beamed at them with urbane geniality. He saw Fanshawe, in response to some remark of Adekunle’s, laugh uneasily and shoot a quick glance over his shoulder up at the first-floor windows. Morgan swiftly pulled himself back behind the wall though he was fairly sure he couldn’t be seen. Typical Fanshawe, he fumed inwardly, the man clearly wasn’t suited for this covert work if he revealed the positions of his confederates so thoughtlessly. It was time, he decided, that he went down and sorted things out.
As he slowly descended the stairs on his way to meet Adekunle, he felt his pulse quicken and a tight ball of pressure establish itself securely behind his sternum. He stepped out of the back entrance of the Commission and on to the crowded lawn.
As he weaved his way through the groups of people towards Adekunle, he could feel his palms moistening and his mouth drying. Adekunle was a large man. He was going steadily to fat as all successful Kinjanjans seemed inevitably to do—as if it were a generic concomitant of power and esteem—and he had about him an aura of self-confidence as unshakable as a force-field. He was talking sternly and in a low voice to his wife who looked sullen beneath her headdress and who was smoking a cigarette, nervously staring down at the trampled grass. As Morgan drew near they both looked up, smiling suddenly in a well-practised insincere way.
“Professor Adekunle,” Morgan said. “How do you do? I’m Morgan Leafy, First Secretary here at the Commission. I think we met once briefly before.” This was not true, they had only been in the same room, but it was his favourite introductory device, often throwing people into confusion as they racked their brains trying to remember the occasion. It had no such effect on Adekunle. He smiled beneath his wide moustache.
“Did we? I’m afraid I don’t recall, but how do you do anyway.” He shook Morgan’s hand. “This is my wife, Celia.”
“Hello,” Celia Adekunle said in a demure voice. She kept her eyes on Morgan’s face. As with all direct looks that he received he found this one somewhat disconcerting; he suspected they stirred vast untapped reservoirs of guilt deep within him. He returned to Adekunle.
“Very good of you to invite us here,” Adekunle said, before Morgan could speak, in tones of thinly disguised sarcasm. “I see my distinguished rivals are present too.”
Morgan smiled. “All in the interests of balance,” he laughed. “Talking about which …”
“And to see a film of your wonderful Royal Family,” Adekunle continued regardless. “Most thoughtful. Most uplifting.”
“Well, between you and me,” Morgan said confidentially, “any excuse for a bunfight, if you see what I mean.”
“Ulterior motives. Now I understand. Devious people, you diplomats.” Adekunle signalled over a waiter who was carrying a tray of drinks and helped himself to an orange juice. Morgan was distressed by the note of hostility and sardonic displeasure that still coloured Adekunle’s voice. He decided to be direct.
“How’s the campaign going?” he asked as innocently as he knew how. “Well, I hope.”
Adekunle affected surprise. “My campaign? Why on earth should the British be interested in my campaign? Why don’t you ask my opponents, Mr. Leafy? I’m sure they can judge its effects better than I.”
“Ah now, professor, let’s not be naive,” Morgan chuckled knowingly. “I think it’s fairly common knowledge that the British government would naturally be very interested in the outcome of the elections.”
“Very interested?”
Morgan looked around and became aware again of Celia Adekunle’s intense gaze. “Well yes, I think you could say that.”
“How interested?”
“Just a moment, professor,” Morgan said quickly, realising that the conversation was going further and faster than he’d intended. “We can hardly discuss such matters here.” He flashed a nervous smile.
“I don’t see why not,” Adekunle insisted obstinately. “If you invite representatives of the three major parties to a function such as this you must expect politics to show her face, as the saying goes. Isn’t that so, Celia?” Morgan couldn’t tell if this was banter or a serious point.
“It shows its face everywhere else,” Celia Adekunle said drily, “why make an exception in this case?”
Alarmingly, Morgan noticed that Femi Robinson was edging closer to them.
“Commissioner Fanshawe seemed most interested in my campaign too,” Adekunle observed further.
“Did he?” Morgan said with as much unconcern as he could muster, thinking that Fanshawe was a stupid meddling old berk; he had probably got Adekunle’s back up. “He’s just returned from leave,” Morgan said in explanation. “He’s probably catching up.”
“You haven’t briefed him then?” Adekunle asked.
Morgan felt his bow tie tighten round his throat. This just wasn’t going as he’d expected. Adekunle was being most aggressive. “I think we should change the subject,” he said looking appealingly at Celia Adekunle and smiling broadly.
“I think the film’s about to start,” she s
aid. Morgan looked round in astonishment to see Fanshawe clapping his hands and herding people towards the rows of seats. The stupid shit! Morgan swore inwardly, Fanshawe was meant to wait for his sign; couldn’t he see that he and Adekunle were still talking?
Adekunle meanwhile had deposited his untouched orange juice on the nearby bar. “At last,” he said, rubbing his hands together. “This is the icing on the cake, as the saying goes. Nice to meet you, Mr. Leafy.” He moved off towards the seats accompanied by his wife. Morgan was about to follow him when he felt a tug on his sleeve. He looked round to see Femi Robinson, the Marxist, his patchily bearded face by Morgan’s shoulder.
“Mr. Leafy?” he said. “May I have a word with you?”
“What?” He wondered how Robinson knew his name. He looked back and saw Adekunle about to sit down. “No,” he said with more force than he meant and snatched his jacket cuff from Robinson’s still clutching fingers. He ran after Adekunle. “Professor,” he called desperately.
“Ah, Mr. Leafy, yet again. Always turning up like a bad penny, yes?”
Morgan kept his voice low. “It would, I think, be a good idea if we had a talk.”
“Oh yes?” Adekunle said sceptically. He turned to his wife. “This will do fine, Celia.” He looked back at Morgan. “A talk, Mr. Leafy? What could we have to discuss?” He sat down beside his wife. His seat was on the end of a row next to the centre aisle. Morgan grew aware that most people had secured their places by now.
He leant forward, bringing himself into Celia Adekunle’s unflinching stare. “Well,” he said, “we could talk about … interest and balance, er, that sort of thing.”
Adekunle smiled, his muttonchop whiskers raised by his bulging cheeks. “No, Mr. Leafy,” he said finally. “I don’t really think they’re attractive topics. And by the way, I think you’re obstructing the projector.”