The Maker The Charles Causley Literary Blog
The Day Dad Came Home by Juleus Ghunta
I ran into his arms before he could park his bike
& we almost tipped over. He lifted me so high
my head brushed branches of the guinep tree.
For years, I’d imagined this, his breath on my
face, coarse palms squeezing my shoulders. Dad
in his Clarks & Corduroy, spliff hanging from the
side of his mouth, smoke ascending into his
dreads as he lowered the seat of his bike so my
feet could touch the pedal, not letting go until I
was ready. We rode up the street to the barber
-shop. Barber handed Dad his tools. I’d imagined
this too: Dad’s fingers tilting my head to various
angles, each strand of hair a concern, taking his
time until beams of light burst from my fades,
blinding onlookers. No one was home when we
got there. In the kitchen, Dad cleaned & chopped
callaloo while I kneaded flour. Showed me how
to add a little water at a time to make the dough
firm, how to break it into equal pieces, flatten
them in my palm & use my thumb to press small
valleys in their centre. Only Dad believed I could
do this. Dad put lumps of coal from the fire into
the hollow of the old iron, wrapped a kitchen
towel around its handle, spread my khaki pants at
the edge of the bed, said ‘Yu must keep pressing
until all wrinkle gone.’ That day even my loafers
were the sleekest they’d ever been. Dad could
not read but the day he came home he knew the
answers to my homework. But I wasn’t thinking
about school or the next day. At nightfall, we sat
under the guinep tree in the front yard, still as the
skyline, father, son. No one was home to disturb us.