They say God protects fools and the innocent, but when Dexter Wilson first saw Cameron Morris enter the City Hotel, he couldn’t make up my mind which one he was. Cameron was a brown man in his early twenties, dressed as a Tuareg from the desert. His head was wrapped in a turban, he wore amber beads around his neck, his feet were bare and dirty, and he had a look of wild adventure in his eye. The prostitutes took to him immediately; much to the chagrin of the bar’s other clientele. These were politicians, pimps, and the begging flotsam of Freetown’s society—all of whom gathered daily in this watering hole to concoct deals, spread rumors, start scandals and play out the petty distractions of ex-colonials, as the country ambled toward disintegration and war.“Lef him go now!” screamed Miriam as Mamadou, the resident police spy, grabbed Cameron and pulled him towards the door. Wilson was just inside the main doorway, in his usual seat, where he could observe all those who came in or out of the bar-cum-gossip conclave.
“Him say bad ting ‘bout nar go’vment,” bleated Mamadou. “Him nar say ting, yu lie Mamadou,” said Miriam
“Lef him go, lef him go now!” The din penetrated his consciousness. “What’s seems to be the trouble here?” Wilson rose to his feet. At six foot six inches tall, he dwarfed Mamadou and everyone else. His shock of white hair, stern white face, and authoritative voice demanded attention.
“Him canna say bad ting ‘bout go’vment, me ‘ere im!” remonstrated Mamadou, quieted and stunned by the shadow of the Englishman.
“What’s all this palaver you’re causing here?” said Wilson looking at Cameron. “No palaver mate,” said Cameron, “I was just having a beer with the girls and this dick head…” Mamadou threw a hard right fist, which caught Cameron on the side of the face. The young man crumpled to the ground.
“Hold it right there,” ordered Wilson, putting his body between Mamadou and Cameron. The girls jumped Mamadou en-masse, and beat him with anything they could grab to hand.
“Hold it right there, I said. Stop this fighting,” Wilson booming voice commanded. He pulled Mamadou up and away from the swinging arms, and put a hand up to Miriam and the whores. Cameron had bounced to his feet, and some of the whores attended his wounds while others continued to rain blows on Mamadou.
“Will you stop hitting me?” said Wilson, releasing Mamadou and absorbing some blows as Mamadou scurried thankfully out the door. “Now, what’s this all about?” Wilson continued, regaining his composure. “What’s your name young man?”
“Cameron. Cameron Morris.”
“You sound English. What are you doing dressed in those desert rags?”
“I’ve just spent the last three months coming through Liberia, Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana, Burkina Faso, and across the Sahara desert,” Cameron replied.
“What happened to your European clothes?”
“I traded them for these. It seemed like a good idea at the time.
“And now?” said Wilson, looking down at Cameron with disgust, “You do realize you look perfectly ridiculous dressed like that here in Sierra Leone?”
The bar clientele, having taken in the commotion, turned back to their drinks. Their machinations were immune to the whore’s pantomime, or the Englishman ‘pulling rank.’
“Well, maybe I do. But I have some contacts here in Freetown,” Cameron continued, “from my friend in London. I was hoping to get settled a bit, y’know, and maybe get a job.”
“Hah! A job? Are you kidding? This isn’t London, there are no jobs here. And anyway what do you want to stay here for?” Wilson was beginning to wonder why he’d got involved with this lost character to begin with.
“This is the land of freed slaves,” said Cameron. “I’m an escaped slave.”
Dexter Wilson was frankly taken aback by the bold sincerity of Cameron’s declaration. In his five years teaching history at Fourah Bay College, and his many years teaching in England before he came to Sierra Leone, he had never had a student who responded with such a simple straight statement about his identity.
“What do you mean?” Wilson asked, becoming intrigued by this young colored man who only moments before he’d dismissed.
“Well, this is the place created by Granville Sharp and the British abolitionists,” said Cameron. “They collected all the ex-slaves from the Americas, from Britain, and the rebels the British had imprisoned from Jamaica, Ghana, Nova Scotia and the liberated slaves from slave ships, straight out of various West African nations as they were being transported. Those guys founded Freetown, back in the 1700’s.”
“Did you study how they bought the original land for the Freetown colony from a Temne Chief, King Tom, the area just beyond where we’re standing right now?” said Dexter. “And about how, after he died, troubles broke out between the settlers and the native peoples?”
“I was getting to that,” said Cameron. “But what really interest me are the Creoles.”
“Don’t get me started on the Creoles young man,” said Dexter, thinking to himself that he would like to find out more about this young man. “But you’d better rejoin your friends now; I see them looking this way. We can talk about this again later. Just one word of advice before you go. If you want to survive in Freetown, trust nobody and stay observant. Also, if you insist on staying here for a while, remember that all the lessons you learn here in your first month will merely repeat themselves, many times over, because in Freetown nothing changes.”
THE ROAD TO RAMADAN
by Ian C. Dawkins Moore
amazdah3@yahoo.com
HOW TO GET THIS BOOK
$12.95




