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The narrator, her uncle Babamukuru, aunt, and Nyasha set out on 23 December 1969 to spend Christmas at the family homestead. Chido stays in Umtali with the Baker boys after being invited to a shooting party, disappointing Bababukuru who had offered to drive him home. Nyasha also hesitates to return, arguing with Maiguru about the family’s expectations; after a heated exchange she finally agrees to go. The party travels in a car loaded with a side of ox, mealie‑meal, bread, margarine, sugar, tea, powdered milk, oil, orange juice, peanut butter, jam, paraffin, soap, and detergent—enough for the two‑week stay. During the journey Bababukuru hums a hymn, showing an unusually cheerful mood.
When they arrive, the narrator observes the homestead’s ruin: thatched roof with holes, crumbling mud‑brick walls, a filthy latrine swarming with maggots, and overall decay. She and Nyasha clean the latrine together. Bababukuru immediately orders the boot opened and the provisions carried inside; Mother (the narrator’s mother) is weak and lies down, while Netsai and Rambanai greet the newcomers, wrapping arms around Bababukuru, Maiguru, Nyasha, the narrator, and Anna.
Discussions arise about the whereabouts of the narrator’s father and his companion Takesure. Netsai says they left early with Takesure; Bababukuru is surprised and asks for clarification. Lucia, the mother’s younger sister, appears from the hozi, embraces Maiguru, and begins a long conversation about her pregnancy, her relationship with Takesure, and the family’s past. She claims the child is the narrator’s father’s, not Takesure’s, and argues that her marriage to the narrator’s father would be advantageous. Bababukuru rebukes her, insisting that bigamy is unacceptable and ordering Takesure to leave with his wife. The conversation reveals longstanding tensions about fertility, gender roles, and the clan’s expectations.
Meanwhile, the family unloads the provisions—Rambanai carries a loaf of bread, the narrator teases her, and the mother, though ailing, greets them from her sickroom. The narrator observes her mother’s lingering pain and uncertain pregnancy. The chapter ends with Bababukuru reassuring the mother that the Christmas will not be lonely, while the narrator reflects on her shifting relationship with Bababukuru and the complex household dynamics.