It was while I was Technical Manager at Winsore College Preparatory School that I first met the Princess where she was a parent. For some strange reason Sarah, her adoptive daughter, had taken to me even though I was not a teacher per se, therefore was not in much in contact with the children. I was in charge of all the computing function at the school, with up to 64 computers under my care. This work meant that I worked closely not just with the IT teacher, but with others who were working at integrating ICT into the curriculum. In the computer lab I had to make sure everything was running as it should. When the children came into the computer department, they had to pass through the alcove that I worked in as they entered the lab.
This little girl liked to come right up to my bench as I worked on computers, modems, printers, cables or any of all manner of software for them. She would ask me what I was doing and I took pleasure explaining it to her, though I feared a lot of it would certainly be over her head. She liked the pictures of Old Nairobi that I was using for my forthcoming book called Mile 327: A Guidebook of Nairobi. I had started writing it some months before and I was nearing completion. The teacher, or sometimes I, often had to order her away from my desk. She was a 'touchy-feely' girl who would touch my hands, shoulders or back and liked to make contact with whomever she was with. Her form teacher did not think it was critical at that stage as she was still only eight, but it was thought that that tendency was a recipe for trouble in later years.
She it was who, probably unintentionally, introduced me to her mother, the Princess. Despite her royal birth, Princess Patricia was very down to earth. One afternoon, during a netball match with Brookhouse School on our grounds,some parents had come to cheer our team. I joined them and other staff on Front Pitch. The girls played very well making the final score very nearly even, but in our favour. Sarah came off the pitch, hugged a smart lady quite close to where I was seating, then came to ask me if I saw her score two goals.
"Of course I am very proud of you girls! You played like the champions you are. Those two goals of yours certainly helped us win the match. Well done!" I told her. She laid her head against my shoulder and I could not avoid rubbing her young shoulders in congratulations.
"Mum, this is my favourite teacher. He tells me wonderful things about computers," she told the smart lady. I was slightly shocked to discover that I was seated so close to royalty.
The Princess stretched out her hand to me. "I do believe I have heard what a sterling job you are doing in the computer line. But have we ever met?"
"I am very glad to make your acquaintance, Your Royal Highness!"
"Oh, please stop that. Just call me Princess Patricia."
"I am Roger Kuria." We made small talk briefly before it was time to leave.
They moved off, Sarah holding her mother's hand. As they took the path that would take them past the Music Gallery and into the parking lot, she waved at me. The Princess turned slightly and gave me a small, almost imperceptible nod.
The next morning Sarah came and placed a small Carrefour gift bag on my desk. "From my mother and I," she said simply. When I looked inside I found a giant bar of fine chocolate and a bottle of vintage French wine.
'What did this girl tell the Princess about me to entice her to buy this kind of present for me,' I wondered. At the end of the computer lesson I sent Sarah to thank her mother. She gave me such a sunny smile, that it might have been she who got a present from me. But now I hit a crisis. What would a fitting present be for a Princess of the realm? I couldn't think straight. Yet I couldn't let this gesture go unanswered.
Eventually it hit me. I would get her one of those traditional three-legged stools embedded with coloured beads from Kariokor market. I had it wrapped securely in dried banana leaves and coarse string. This sent a strong signal that I was getting her something of our culture, when I could easily have walked into Two Rivers Mall and bought a fine whisky. When I saw Sarah, I told her to be sure to tell her driver to speak to me when he came to collect her in the evening. The Princess had never married but chose instead to adopt a little girl. Since the stool was a male symbol in the household, it meant I recognized her role as father, as well as mother.
I heard nothing for the next few days, but early one morning, before going to class for registration Sarah brought me an envelope. In it was a card with wishes for All Saints' Day thanking me for the gift and asking me if I could join her and a few family and friends for an evening cocktail. 'These royals will have a party at the drop of a hat!' I said to myself.
I was introduced to ambassadors, CEOs and some highly decorated military men, who had here for exercises with our armed forces. Patricia was very attentive to me, noticing when my glass was nearly drained and signaling the waiters or offering me the delicious bitings available. Sarah surprised me by coming to jump onto my lap, chattering away. It must have indicated to those present that I had a special relationship with this family. But better was yet to come.
A month or so after this Patricia invited me to a dinner, at which only her friend Mrs Tina Prentice, the Princess, Sarah and myself were present. Though we ate well enough at school this was on a decidedly higher level. Patricia was even more attentive to me than at the cocktail. Tina regaled us with stories of their recent trip with her husband up to the Masai Mara, where a herd of elephants who had broken out of the fence, trampling the locals' crops were eventually fetched back into the park. They seemed to be in a bad temper and trumpeted deafeningly. The humans spent a very anxious night worried that the elephants might turn on them, trampling their tent flat before burying them with branches!
Sarah was wide-eyed with fright at the thought of being out in the wilds at night with a herd of elephants nearby. I tried to comfort her that elephants do not usually attack people unless the humans lit fires or did something else to alarm the elephants.
Tina was very enthralled when Patricia told her that I had been writing a book, whose manuscript had recently been handed over to the publishers. She became so enthusiastic about it and promised to organise a Book Launch as soon as it came out, which we expected would be later in the year.
When I was leaving at about 11pm, Sarah in her usual manner hugged me goodnight and it was the first time that the Princess went beyond shaking my hand. She pulled me in to her and embraced me warmly as she wished me a safe drive home and a goodnight. It made the blood race in my veins!
In appreciation I sent her a painting of an African family gathered around the fire in their hut in the evening, which she hung it at the first landing on the staircase. I could not remember what had been hanging in that space before, but the next time I was invited over I commented on her choice of place to display the painting.
"I have developed a love of these African paintings since I came here," she replied. "I thought my stay here to acquaint myself with the habitat of white rhino would only take a few weeks. Instead, I found myself restless after returning home." She was the patron of the Royal White Rhino Protection Society. "Two months later I was back to stay."
"What affected you in that way?" I asked.
"Well, the country is so much calmer than it is at home. But the weather was the clincher for me. When I learnt that you never lose four months out of the year because of the bitter winter cold, I wanted to live here for the rest of my life. My mother was not best pleased, but since I am no higher than fifth in line for the throne, I pointed out it was perfectly safe for me to leave. What chance is there that my brothers and their sons will die off, leaving me the sole heir?"