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The chapter opens with Mother (Mainini Patience) berating Nyasha for refusing to sit on the lone wooden dining‑chair, mocking her future “mukwambo” and demanding she greet Mother. Babamukuru orders Nyasha to greet Mother, while Maiguru politely declines to use the chair and later sits elsewhere, provoking Mother’s delighted criticism of Nyasha’s “bad manners.”
That evening the extended family arrives for Christmas: Tete Gladys, Babamunini Thomas and their spouses and children, Takesure and his sister Lucia, plus numerous cousins and nieces, swelling the homestead to twenty‑four people. The narrator describes the cramped sleeping arrangements, the conversion of the living‑room into a bedroom for the uncle, and the unmarried women being forced into the kitchen. Daily life becomes a frenzy of fetching water from the Nyamarira River, washing in only two enamel basins, cooking on a smoky open hearth, and rationing scarce food. Two milking cows supply milk, but the meat bought for the celebration quickly spoils in the tiny paraffin refrigerator; Maiguru, as senior wife, fiercely guards the fresh meat and refuses anyone else to touch it, prompting Tete to spit out a piece of greened meat in disgust.
Amid the domestic chaos a deeper conflict erupts. Takesure, hired by Jeremiah to work the land, refuses to leave his sister Lucia when she demands he go. Babamukuru convenes a “family dare,” a council meeting, to address Takesure’s disobedience. In the kitchen the women argue fiercely: Maiguru declares the dispute not her business, distancing herself as a non‑relative; Mother launches a vicious tirade, accusing Maiguru of witchcraft, of having killed her son Nhamo, and of stealing Tambudzai; Lucia defends herself, mocks the accusations, and blames Jeremiah’s failure to marry in church and the family’s reliance on witch‑doctors and cleansing ceremonies.
Babamukuru attempts to restore order, rebuking Jeremiah’s suggestion of alcohol‑filled witch‑doctor cures and instead proposing a proper Christian wedding for Jeremiah and Mainini as a solution, hinting that the family’s misfortunes stem from neglect of religious practice rather than evil spirits.
The narrator later recounts the whole episode to Nyasha over breakfast. Nyasha, now more critically aware of colonial influence, chastises the narrator for equating missionary education with progress, warning that colonisation’s adoption of the coloniser’s ways signals “the end.” The chapter ends with the family still debating whether to perform a traditional cleansing ceremony or to proceed with the church wedding, underscoring the ongoing tension between ancestral rites and the new Christian, Western‑influenced order that Babamukuru seeks to impose.