A poor, overweight orphan girl, forced into marriage with a homeless man; a few days later, he arrives in a Rolls-Royce.
In the remote reaches of the village of Adabe, where the red earth clings fiercely to the sandals of passersby and where the sun seems to burn with a crueler intensity than anywhere else, stood a small cement house with cracked walls and a sagging zinc roof. This was where Amara lived. The house leaned slightly to one side, as if it too were exhausted from standing, like the young woman who lived there. Amara was twelve years old when the accident happened. She remembered it in painful fragments: her mother’s laughter in the front seat of the bus, her father’s promise to buy her fried plantains when they arrived, then the screech of tires, a scream that was inhuman, and finally, silence.
After that, there were only the cold lights of the hospital, the whispers of loved ones, and a white sheet covering two motionless bodies. Her parents hadn’t been rich, but they had been warm. Their home was modest, but it echoed with laughter. Once they were laid to rest, that laughter seemed to follow them to the grave. Her aunt, her mother’s older sister, had taken her in not out of love, but out of obligation. « You’re lucky I’m not heartless, » her aunt often repeated, « others would have thrown you out. » Amara quickly learned that gratitude was expected, even for the crumbs she was given.
At first, she tried to be small: small in appetite, small in voice, small in presence. But grief does strange things to a child. Food became her only comfort when the house felt too cold or when her aunt’s words cut too deeply. When her cousins rolled their eyes at the sight of her, she would find herself eating discreetly in the kitchen, long after everyone else had gone to bed. It wasn’t gluttony; it was survival. At sixteen, her body had become rounder, more voluptuous than those of other girls her age. Her cousins were slim, wore fitted dresses, and braided their hair with a confidence she lacked.
Amara avoided mirrors. It wasn’t just her height that made her different, but the way people looked at her, as if she were a problem that had taken on a physical form. « Ah, Amara! » the women at the well would exclaim, « You’re turning into a real sack of rice! » Laughter always followed. She laughed too, because that was the rule: if you laugh at yourself, it hurts less when others do. But in truth, the pain never lessened. She carried water jugs heavier than herself, swept the compound before dawn, and washed clothes until her fingers were wrinkled, but her aunt’s favorite phrase remained the same: « You eat more than you work. »