Meredith had almost gotten used to being stared at. After being ignored and invisible all through grade-school and her two years at college, she finally found herself the center of attention, and all it took was moving to a different continent, a different hemisphere. Of course, it had nothing to do with any sort of beauty on her part--though she was beautiful, at least in her own mind. No, she was the center of attention because she was probably the only white woman these people had seen in their lives.
She hadn't intended to come to Uganda. She had signed up for missionary work in Haiti, but spent only a few weeks there before political riots forced the humanitarian aid organization to pull out their people. And so they sent her here instead.
It was a non-Christian mission--educating people about AIDS. And it was difficult work; local folklore contradicted their teachings, and few people believed that AIDS could be contracted as a result of sex. Many associated it as a result of bad hygiene. Some educated people felt that it was a government conspiracy.
She sat at a table with a couple other missionaries, local officials, and several educators, who were discussing ways of breaking through those barriers of understanding.
"When my students look at western culture, they see a society that is much more promiscuous than our own," it's a school-teacher from one of the larger urban centers speaking. His eyes flash with concern as he speaks. "And they see nothing of AIDS in America. Or in your Canada," he said, looking at Meredith now. "How can we convince them that promiscuity is a problem? They see it as being part of a modern life.
They associate promiscuity with things like Coca-Cola."
"It's not a new problem," Paul said. Paul was a social-anthropologist from Egypt. "AIDS may be new, but it's not an isolated event. Evidence shows that viruses like this have sprung up throughout history. The problem is more with a mobile society that spreads the disease, rather than isolating it."
Meredith looked out the window. They were talking in circles now. A storm was moving in, another storm: it seemed like there was one every evening. It was the rainy season, though. She missed her hometown, the grain elevators and wheat fields, and the prairie churches. It was so different here. Such a hard life, even in her relatively up-scale position. Maybe she'd write a letter home tonight. Or maybe just reread the last one her family sent.
One of the men was staring at her, not in the normal, curious way. She knew that look. He would probably approach her later. Meredith gave the man a bitter stare, and he smiled back at her, a flash of white teeth on his dark face.
When at last the session ended with no real headway, she took Paul aside. "I need some time to myself tonight. Can you cover for me? Tell people I'm not feeling well and went to bed early."
"Is that true? You aren't well? I used to be a doctor, you know."
Meredith nodded. "No, it's nothing. Just exhaustion."
"Okay, get some sleep."
Ilapu brought Meredith some food after dark. She had been sleeping, and was awoken by his footsteps outside. Ilapu was a young Ugandan man who helped out around the school, and he was tall, and as lean as a rail.
When she first met him, Meredith was convinced that he was starving.
She'd constantly try to get him to eat more, even though he seemed to eat as much as anyone.
"I know what you must think, Miss Birsch," he said to her one day at lunch. "That I am hungry, that I am undernourished. But this is the way I'm built. We're different people than you. We're different..." he paused for the right word "...genetically."
That much was true, was obviously true. But she still hated herself any time she observed the lanky form of Ilapu or one of the other locals, and saw in them something different, somehow like an animal, somehow like a God.
He pushed open her door now, bringing her food. "We have goat stew,
Miss Birsch. It's very good."
She turned up her lantern, and took the bowl of stew from him, sitting up on her mattress as she did so. The roof above crackled with rain; the forest beyond the window roared with a billion raindrops landing on leaves.
"How many more months?" she asked Ilapu.
"The rain? Not much more. One month, maybe. You don't like the rain."
"I like the rain fine, I just miss the sun."
"You'll get sun soon enough. Soon, you'll come to love the rain,"
Ilapu looked out the window, as though listening, and Meredith listened, too. She also watched. His skin looked so coppery here in the lantern-light, and it looked so thin, thinner than skin, like kitchen-wrap stretched across the muscles and bones.
"Where is everyone tonight?"
"Poker," Ilapu replied.
"Ah."
"Were you playing?"
"Yes, Miss Birsch."
Well, I should let you get back then."
Ilapu nodded. His spoken-english was good enough to understand those subtleties of the language, such as this dismissal. He closed the door behind him.
It was still raining hours later when Paul awoke her. He was standing in the doorway.
"Feeling better?"
Meredith nodded. "Yeah, I needed a long sleep. How'd the poker game go?"
Paul shrugged. He sat down on the edge of Meredith's mattress, forcing her to move. "Our friend Ilapu did well. He was the big winner.
Something like fifty bucks."
"Wow," Meredith said, only slightly interested. "Any gossip?"
Paul gave a big sigh that caused his entire considerable mass to raise and then sink back down. "I shouldn't tell you."