It was class
four (4). Sir Skelewu was all we knew him as; his real name most of us dared
not to us. As fearful as his name sounded, his sizeable, long ‘rod’ was one
thing he barely spared, lest spoil us.
Most of us
would ‘load’ piles of books or even used clothing into the backs of either our shirts
or shorts, but all those weren’t enough to salvage us from the endless pain of
his ‘abaa’, to wit, cane. Countless times had we tried to steal
that deity of his that caused us so much discomfort, yet all to no avail.
This time
around he had asked us to go find out the name of someone who mowed lawns. He
was definitely going to verify the answers any moment from that day.
Early next
morning, Sir Skelewu was brandishing his ‘abaa’
at us. “Yes Yaw John, your answer.”
He stood up.
“The answer is gate man, sir!”
Before he
could bat an eyelid, two heavy strokes had travelled back and forth his back, with
the speed of lightning. He yelled.
As of this
time, the class was dead silent. Everyone’s heart thumped in their chest. The
last thing anyone wanted to hear was their name.
“Yes. Kofi
Paul, tell me what you discovered”
Kofi Paul
was visibly shaking. “Errrrm. Errrrm. Goat,
sir!” he quivered.
“Eeeeh?”
He repeated
it, this time louder.
“Dog, not
goat! Fool!”
In the
twinkling of an eye, Sir Skelewu had mercilessly unleashed his cane on him, too. No one dared
laugh, funny as it seemed. After all, one didn’t know whether what they were
thinking was right or not.
“Kwesi Boh,
what do you think the answer is?”
“Grass cutter!”
he swiftly replied.
“What!?” Sir
Skelewu wondered.
“Ah! My
mother told me. Grass cutter!”
The lanky teacher’s
deafening lashes suddenly resonated with his three-syllabled answer, Kwesi Boh
bursting into tears and dashing out of the class.
Sir Skelewu
continued with his whipping spree.
In no time,
Kwesi Boh returned with his furious mother. The Goliath-like physique, who was
famed for flooring even the strongest ‘Area
Macho’, struggled to enter the door of the class. Painstakingly she did.
“Where’s the
teacher?” she roared. Kwesi pointed at him.
“Give me
that ‘abaa’ now and let me show you
how sweet it feels like!”
Sir Skelewu’s
feet were wobbling. “Oh! But Kwesi, you should have told me your mum was the English
professor!”
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