Wednesday, 24 December 2014

THE TALE OF TWO DYING STARS (EPIOSDE 5)


 
TAGS: FICTION, ROMANCE, SERIES


Click here for Episode 4






 Confused, I push the door open. The traffic is worsening on this lane. I cautiously pass through the slow-moving cars.

On getting to the rowdy scene, I move towards the crowd along the ATM house if I could see Mathew, the secretary, and the driver. 

“Please, carry him!”

“Let’s get a car, quick, quick”

“Don’t let him die here please!”

The ringing voices of the crowd send my head spinning on my neck. Forcing my way in, I bump shoulders with three young men, a woman backing a baby, two old men —my intestines clenching and squeezing from the sharp smell of cannabis, body odours like stenches of dead rats. I seize my breath, trying to see their object of curiosity.

 I crane my neck —once, twice, then I see…

 “Please, please, please. Help me carry him please!” I scream and explode with terror, tapping the back of a man in front of me, “He is my driver. I sent him on an errand!”

He is writhing on the ground like a salted earthworm, stomach heaving like a stormy river, mouth gushing with white foam. Oh my goodness!

“You send a man of this age on an errand?” A woman snaps at me, anger-stricken.

  “Wha— wha— what is wrong with him?”  I utter the word in a fast, frenzied tempo, as if my tongue is burning behind my trembling lips.

 Some people hiss and walk away, others staring at me, eyes injecting my skin like needles. Just then, two men are bending over my dying driver after scrutinizing me from my head to toes.

“I go carry am inside my motto. Na big money I go collect sha O!” says the Yoruba man, trying to lift the man by the shoulder, but avoiding the foams.

“I don’t care how much. Please just help me!”

Then suddenly, somebody is pushing through the crowd, with two bottles of water.

Oh. Mathew!

Before the men could lift him Mathew pours the cold water on him. But it makes no difference.  He is still under convulsion.

A chunky part of me is swallowed by a strong fear—the minor part, excitement. I’m fearful that the driver might give up, which will be weighed on my neck, excited that Mathew is within reach.

 One of the men hurries across the road to start a Taxi cab. Mathew assists the other to carry the victim.  They lay him at the backseat. Meanwhile, the crowd already scattered like cluster of flies invaded by insecticide.

 I occupy the seat beside the cab driver. Right behind me is Mathew, the convulsing man in the middle. The car breaks into a speed—a sluggish speed. Rack-ta-ta, rack-ta-ta, rack-ta-ta, cries the rickety auto parts. The knocks and whacks of the engine is much more irritating, my head swells with aches—thunderous aches. We’re still heading to the Lagos General hospital, the closest here in Marina Broad Street. Almost a mile away.

What have I gotten myself into? I wonder what happens to him. Could it be epilepsy?—impossible. When did that start? He’s been working with me for literally eight months— a fifty-two-year-old Benin man with five children.

****

 The nurses rush him inside on the emergency stretcher. Thank you Lord! He’s still breathing. I implore the doctor to give a first aid while I rush to get my ATM card in my car. This is the same hospital Mum was admitted for high BP. I visited Mum on a daily basis for a whole week. So the doctor immediately acknowledges me. Dad had personally given the doctor a hundred thousand, for restoring his wife’s health. He sure knows that my father is a VIP.

 “We shall begin the treatment right away,” The doctor says, “Just hurry up!” 

“I’m so grateful sir, that’s my driver, Please and please save his life doctor!” My fear is more transparent in my frantic voice than my comportment. And the doctor can sense it. I barely finish the statement before he speeds to the ward like a lightning.

 Those two motorists are seated at the reception. On their faces are bright masks of expectations. They are definitely waiting for the fare.  Mathew is seated at the opposite bench, gazing at the celling. We have not exchanged a single word since this incident.

“Please just a minute!” I say to the men, brushing my palms together.

 And right now Mathew looks ahead, at me, “Take it easy Miss!”

“I will be right back, Mathew. Please, don’t leave yet.”

“Oh yeah, I will be here.” He says, glancing at his wrist watch.

“Fabulous!”

 My high heels resounding like series of thunder-claps. I nearly trip off while rushing down the stairs. Some questions are craving answers in my head. Mathew should be able to give a detailed account of the incident. This is no time for such question. I wonder how the secretary vanished. That pig. She is the cause of this.  I will make sure she is fired.

*

About twenty minutes later, I dismount from a bike at the frontage of the hospital. I have cashed a sum of N120, 000 at the ATM, close to the junction. I don’t have any idea about the bill. I presume it will cost nothing above eighty.

Walking through the reception, I can’t find Mathew on seat.  I ask the two men about him.  He has left for the restroom, says one of them. Then I reward them with ten thousand each. They begin to praise me like a goddess at shrine, adding slangs and hails I couldn’t comprehend. These men should be in their early forties, both cladded in shorts, except that one is wearing a lace top and the other one, a shabby polo shirt, each with Dunlop slipass.  I’m rather stunned than surprise when they prostrate flat before me.

What!

I hurry off.

At the reception desk, the receptionist says the doctor needs my attention.  On getting to his office, I sit in the opposite chair, my composure shattering away.
“Young lady,” the doctor begins, removing his eyeglasses, “Just be calm. He is responding to treatment. If he had been admitted two or three minutes later, a tragedy might have occurred. We have carried out a test. Your driver is having a slow poison in his system…”

“Poison?”

“Yes. He will be fine. According to the diagnosis, the poison was mixed with a substance he consumed not less than forty minutes ago….”

Not less than forty minutes!  It resonates in my head. I have lost the appetite to eat the remaining apple, out of the three I brought from home. And I gave it to the driver. He ate it before coming downstairs.

“What is the substance like?” I ask.

Then the doctor leans back as though my question necessitates a relaxation, “A fruit of some kind.”

I bother not asking any further question about it. Too much for me to believe. Was the fruit poisoned by somebody or something? If yes, why must it be that particular one? What if he had been affected by the poison on the highway? I wonder what would have become of me.

I sigh.


***

After settling the bills, I walk straight to Mathew at the reception. He’s staring upward— still like a statue, his face absent. I sit closely beside him, yet he never stirs.

  As if to whisper into his ear, I call softly, “Mathew…Mathew....”
  Until I increase my voice a bit more. He is startled as if shocked with electric wave.

 “Oh, you are back. How is he?”

“The doctor said he’s responding to treatment.”  I don’t want to tell him about the poison issue. I need to keep that to myself for now.

“Good to hear that.” He says; after a long pause, he sighs deeply like one intending to commit suicide.

“Mathew. You’re not feeling alright, are you?”

“I’m okay.” He says, rather weakly.

“You are not, Mathew. Do you know how long I’ve been here, calling your name.…”  I keep my voice as low as I could so the person on the next seat wouldn’t hear.  

 I must know why he’s been so moody. My driver’s condition could not have rendered him as miserable, since there is no bond between them.

 He shakes his head and gives a sigh, “It’s my mother. “

“What about her?”

“Her sister called in the morning that she’s been rushed to the hospital, from a severe high blood pressure… ”

“Jesus!”  I shift, or rather bounce on my seat, shocked.

He is silent. Speechless. But I want him to continue. That’s the same symptom my Mum is curing. But hers is now under control.

“So what is the next step? Whe…where is she at this moment?” My voice is a bit higher than a whisper.

 He wastes a few seconds before a response: “Her hometown, Ibadan. The only problem is I don’t…I don’t….” his voice staggers, head nodding frantically, “I can’t just afford the hospital bill.”

“Oh my….!” I exclaim quietly, my body melting like a burning wax, “Please, how much is the bill?”

 “The bill is much.”

“How much is it?”

“Fifty thousand naira,” he says hesitantly.

“Fif…fifty. Just that?”

 He nods.

“That’s no problem at all, Mathew.” I begin to rummage through my bag, “I think I still have about…...Damn it! You know what?”


YINKA

I keep mute. She doesn’t sound like she requires a response.

“Just follow me. Come over.” She smiles, motioning me along.  Fluently and gracefully she walks ahead of me. Like dead ashes and coals, my dead muscles and veins are instantly kindled alive with fuel of excitement, my head returning to my neck; my lungs invaded by deep fresh air.

According to Chinedu, she just likes me. Nothing more. But to me, she is the sun that lightens my shadowed heart, if not for fate.

  I wish I hadn’t succumbed to Sandra’s stupidity. Up till now I’m still wondering what the driver was looking for. He collapsed by the road, some meters away from me. While I struggled to revive him Sandra was hurrying away like a green snake. People rushed to the scene wondering how they could help. But majority thought he was an epileptic patient; thus, avoiding the infection. I rushed to get some water, and I returned only to find Janet.  I have decided to satisfy Sandra before the incident. I’m excited I didn’t betray myself.

*

I look away as Janet processes the cash. I fear she would change her mind, like Sandra did at the peak of my hope. I’m leaning against the wall about two feet away, my file clutched to my right hand.

The ECHO bank ATM is facing one of the major crossed-roads in the city of island. Far across, buses and motorcycles are struggling, pulling, overtaking, horning, screeching brakes. None is ready to obey the traffic light. Two motorists on the road exchanging insults, then knuckles, kicks. More kicks. One conductor is banging the body of a bus in front. Just then my eyes shift away.  From far above, the roads are brightly painted by the streetlights in creamy white. The distant buildings are less tall, but dark as charcoal and patched with multiple colours like Christmas trees.

“Mathew, this is a hundred thousand naira.” 

Janet plucks my mind from the scenery. I stare shockingly at the bale in her right hand.

“Take it.”

I pause, hesitate, as if to ask if the money is meant for me. My lips begin to burn with words of appreciation. She motions me to stop, using a quick wave.

“Would you spare me all those gratitude,” she beams, her voice tender like the cool breeze, caressing my ears like a feather.

 “You can go now. But make sure you see me tomorrow.”

“I will. I will. Thank you. Thank you so much, ma’am.”
                                                
Then her eyes open wide, face shaded with protest. She clears her throat dramatically.

“Thank you…Miss.”

“Yap. Fabulous!”  She smiles, rubbing palms together.

She also forbids my address of “ma’am” or “ma”.  Is this supposed to be an evidence of liking too?

****

 I’m getting to work around 9.45 am, when I’m supposed to resume by 8:am.  Last night I’ve called Mama’s sister and she said Mama was eventually given a proper treatment. Again, in the morning, l received a call that she is responding well to treatment. According to her, she could borrow some money from her friends, so the money made up 26,000. Thirty minutes ago I have sent a sum of N70, 000 to her bank A/C, and thirty minutes after, she contacted me about receiving the alert. She was surprised. Then I hinted her about my boss, how she’s been so kind to me, how she’s become my benefactor. I ask her to keep praying for her, and to inform Mama when she’s alright.

“Is Miss Adaeze in the office?” I ask the receptionist.

She nods, “Yes, she is around. She asked after you.”

She then calls her telephone line, asking if I can come inside.

“She said you can come over, and no further visitors.” she says after dropping the phone.

“Okay, thanks.”

“I hope you’re going there right now.” She says, curving the corner of lips like cow horns and grunts like a chocking pig.

 It’s obvious in her tone and face that she’s among those birds of rumour.

I keep quiet and turn back on her.  Sandra abruptly drops her face on the keyboard as I walk past her. She clears her throat loudly, several times. 

At the office door, I knock lightly and open. As usual, she beams beautifully at me like early morning sun.

“Have your seat, dear.” She motions me to the opposite seat.

Getting Seated, I begin to thank her again.  With two stretched palms, she cuts my gratitude.

“That’s okay,” she says and asks after my mother. She’s glad to hear she is now responding to treatment.

“And how is the driver?” I also ask.

“Cool, cool. He will probably be discharged tomorrow.”

“Oh, good to hear,” I remark, then drop my head.

I still have to bow or stare above her head while addressing her. Aside from the restriction, there seems to be something about her face that would pleasantly hurt your eyes. Just like a crystal glass, her features are delicately built and magical. She must have been a river goddess in her past life.

I’m expecting her to tell me the purpose of the invitation; rather she keeps quiet, staring deeply at me— absent-minded.  The silence is very loud, stretching close to two minutes.  Her stare is setting fire on my seat, so that I’m forced to adjust my hot bums.

“Mr. Frances will return today, right?” I break the silence.

She is jerked to life like one sprinkled with iced water, “Woops! Sorry. Frances, you said?”

“Yeah... Mr. Frances, when will he be back?”

“He has postponed his trip to next week,” she says, then sighs deeply.

She opens her drawer, producing a wrapped object of 30cm by 40cm, 2 inches thick.

“It’s yours, unwrap and give your candid opinion,” She extends the object to me with dazzling smile. Even with my hands around it, I can’t figure out the content.

My heart is now beating in anticipation. Hesitantly, I begin to peel the tape at the edges, glancing at her in the process. She rounds her lips. This time, the smile is more transparent in her eyes than her face.

Clock, clock, clock, clock, clock…my heart knocking faster —the wrapping is about to be removed.

I freeze.

 Grab my chest to hold back my bursting heart. Oh my good God! 




 Next Episode will be out 27/12/2014


 












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Breaking the fear(short story)



Monday, 15 December 2014

THE TALE OF TWO DYING STARS (EPISODE 4)




TAGS: FICTION, ROMANCE, SERIES

click here for Episode 3



 
















“She’s in the hospital,” her voice shivers, “It has started again.”

 Oh! This woman would cause me a heart attack. I could feel my blood reducing pressure, from 99o boiling point. Mama has been suffering from depression since the demise of her lovely husband. And she would try to console herself with alcohol, especially a dry gin. Three years ago, a doctor diagnosed that depression and anxiety had made Mama develop a high blood pressure, and her consumption of alcohol was even aggravating the symptom. Two months ago, I still visited her in the hospital over this sickness. And she told me she was looking forward to see my fiancee. But Adeola refused to go with me. Mama wanted to ensure that her grandchild was coming soon. Now she’s been taken to the hospital again.

“Mummy, please, take it easy. Are you with her now?”

 “No, I just rushed home to pick up some things. Her condition is so critical this time and….”

“Critical?” I voice out in shock.

“Yes. The doctor diagnosed she has taken a hard drink. Her heart is under a severe condition.”

 “Oh my God! But I thought Mama abstained from this thing long time ago! So…how much is the doctor billing, Mummy?”

“It’s fifty thousand naira.”

“Fifty what?!”

I can hear my voice boom so loud the walls are almost vibrating. Thank goodness. The doors are shut. I’m alone in the department.

“I have only N7, 000,” she says, “she would not be given a proper treatment until we pay up to N25, 000.”

“I...I don’t have more than….”

I'm stuck, my voice heavy like a rock, and it costs me a hard breath lifting words from my throat. Mama’s sickness has been draining me. This is where I spend a larger part of my salary. I really need to preserve her life however I can.

 “I don’t have more than eight thousand naira.”

“Eight thousand?” Her voice strains in alarm.

“Yes,  Ma. My salary is not even up to the total bill. You know it’s my first year at my place of work. I need to rally round if I could borrow from friends.”

“Please do that. May God help you...I’m also on the run, if I could get more money.”

“Thank you so much for your care, Ma. You shall live long for your children….”  I continue to pray like a pastor in spirit.

When I later drop the phone I feel wetness on my palms and forehead, despite the perfect air conditioner. My body is shivering as if drown in iced water. She wouldn’t have bothered me with the bill if her husband had not abandoned her since travelling to the US ten years back. And her five children have to live on the N50, 000 salary earned from her teaching job.

 Now, I’m almost seeing a trace of smoke in the air, like my head is on fire. I can’t think straight. I wonder where to get such money. Which friend would ever lend me?  Most of my friends live on salary allowance, except for my old school friends who are into fraud.  I met one of them some time ago. Before granting my request he said: “Any company worker na high class slave….upon all your big, big grade for school, I no expect say na you go need common 30k, the money wey me I dey use buy cigarette.”

*

During closing hour, around 7.pm, I can’t still find a way out. I walk out of my department in a cloud of confusion. I have asked my colleagues if any of them could help, all they could offer was sympathies and moonlight tales.

Right now, my pipe is burning under my trousers, hot like a funnel. So I increase my pace as I walk towards the restroom. Along the white-painted hallway, the fluorescents are sparkling over the white tiles. My liquid is almost losing resistance with each pace. My black shoes are giving loud echoes, knocking rapidly in my head like sledge hammer.

To my greatest surprise, the four rooms are occupied. So I begin to match up and down like a soldier, slapping at the wall in each second.

A minute past. No one is coming out. Until I bang the door open?

 I hurry out, cautiously looking around like a daylight thief.

 I hastily make my way to the ladies. The four closets are vacant. It’s not a big deal. I have caught a lady in our domain before.

Done. I sigh. Glory be to God.

 I walk out to adjust my shirt at the wall mirror. While doing this, I’m washing my hands in the basin, twisting on the stainless tap.

Koh-kah, koh-kah, koh-kah….. high heels resounding in the hallway.

 I hurriedly lock the tap to escape.

Too late. I stumble upon Sandra and one other lady.

“Oh my goodness… what the heck are you doing in here?”

That is Sandra smiling from the doorway. She seems to have added more flesh to her slim, but shapely fair figure. I don’t think she’s ever facing the kind of war I was fighting earlier on. Otherwise, she wouldn’t dare the patience to interrogate me.

I don’t want to say a word, so I step forward to walk past. She is standing in my way. Her friend is ogling at me with pouted lips, leaving for the restroom. They don’t really mean their waste-downloading business.

I glare at Sandra, my eyes hard like mid-day sun. Yet she wouldn’t step aside. Her pawpaw breasts firmly packed in a pink blouse, pointing at my chest level. What nonsense are you performing when my mother is an inch away from her grave?

“Please, out of my way!” I say in a firm voice. I have distanced myself from her for a week. She has called my phone tirelessly, I wouldn’t pick up.

She is yet proving stubborn, probably trying to seize this opportunity to flirt with me.

I push her slightly aside, stepping out to the narrow passage.

“Yinka, please wait.” she whimpers like a child in pain.

I wave her off, walking away.

“I can settle your mother’s hospital bill. Everything.” 

The statement lingers in my head, like leaves in the breeze. Playing and replaying in my mind. My feet become sinking stones. Not moving.

 I turn to her.

“Are you serious about that? How did you get to know in the first place?” I ask in a voice so gentle I would have denied I’m directing those words to her. Perhaps, she still has enough from what Mr. Frances has showered on her.

“Anyway,” she crosses her arms, leaning against the wall, her eyes roaming on my face, “I heard from a person I can’t mention.  I know you’ve not been yourself since morning. So I had to trace you down here when I saw you pass, since here is private.” She pouts her lips, rolling eyeballs.

“Really?” I lay my right hand on the wall, just above her weave-on, “so, how do I get it?” I begin to feel stupid with each word I utter, but the only sanity is lying on my mother’s survival.

“Not so easy,” she drawls, a naughty smile on her face, her finger pokes at my nose, but I grab it. Yet she continues in a whisper, “You have to give it to me tonight, baby. You are the strongest man I’ve ever come across…I’m dying by each passing moment, for this.” Her left hand is pointing beneath my belt, her body writhing on the wall, snake-like.


Then I push the finger away. “If you want to help, just do. I have no time for this nonsense, gar’rit?”  My voice is still low, but hard as granite.

Just then she lays her right palm on my chest. And before I could yank it off she coos to my ear, “I will give you the money right here.” The statement freezes my hand. Now her both palms are rubbing and caressing my chest, “I miss this too….everything about you is large, baby.”

My blood is cold at her touch. I feel nothing. Rather, my ears are alerted for the slightest sound of any approaching feet so I could get rid of her filthy hands. I don’t mind her flirtatious moves, as long as it would be the only sacrifice I must perform to get the money. I keep staring at her like a dummy, wishing I could bury three slaps on her cheeks.

 At last, her hands are off there. She sighs like one that just fulfilled all her dreams. “You can follow me downstairs, so we get it at the ATM.”

“That’s so nice of you, baby.” I voice softy, following behind her. I feel a little relieved. Thank you Jesus!

*

We eventually arrive at the WEMA bank ATM across the highway. In between her right hand hangs a red handbag. I’m standing beside her, watching her fingers on the bottons. I’m having a black folder by my armpit. After getting the money, all I have to do is get a bus at the nearby junction

As she clicks the digits, my heart clicks in accordance: 5….0….0….0… (Finger halts on the last digit)

“But, baby,” she smiles, turning to me, “You know what…You need to satisfy me tonight, else don’t expect this.”

“How do you mean?” I try to control my voice “You’re expecting me to do something with you in a state of distress. How do I perform with passion?”

I wish my trick could work on her. Have I ever performed with passion on her before? All I do is just a lustful exercise.

With this I-don’t-care expression on her face, she rests her palm on her hip. “I don’t mind. Give me what I want. Period!”

 I glance around, checking if there is anyone. An old man and a lady are passing by. The avenue is busy with horns and blares of yellow buses and motorcycles.  

I bow my head and sigh. Her two-bedroom flat is not far from here. She is no longer a worker in the company, but a disguised whore. Her apartment was actually secured by Mr. Frances. She exposed that to me during one of my visits.

And I never want to associate with this babe again. My mother’s life is worth a sacrifice. Isn’t?


ADAEZE

 The moment I ask the driver to start the engine, my eyes stray across the road only to find the secretary and Mathew again! They’re right beside the ATM. He wants to get her some money, I guess. His head is lowered before her. They must be waiting for the loading machine.

 Huh!

Is this the lady Mathew is going to marry?  She can’t even stand a half of my beauty!

I hiss.

“Baba, please halt the engine!” I almost yell at the driver.

I can feel hotness from within, like my blood is on fire. Even though, my spines are wobbling with painful cold.

Now, his head is up. He stares at her face, uttering the words I wish I could hear. He is probably asking how much she needs.

Damn it!

These passing cars wouldn’t let me see well. I wave my hand, as if to use some magic to sweep all the passing vehicles away.

 Motor headlamps and streetlights are glowing on their figures, casting tall shadows.

She is talking to him, his head falls again. What is he thinking about?

What sort of rubbish is this? I curse under my breath. A luxurious bus is parking along the ATM house, obstructing my view.

“Baba!”

“Yes Madam.”

I ask the man if he could help me call Mathew at the ATM.

“Okay, Madam.”

 They might have left before my car undergoes a U-turn. Otherwise, I would rather park beside them. There is a slight traffic on this lane.

“Baba, wait first.” I say to the man, who is already opening the door. “I think I have his contact.” I rummage through my bag, bringing out my phone.

Good. I’ve seen the contact I copied from his credential.

I dial the number in haste. Three times.  Switched off.

Then I plead with the man to get him. He leaves immediately.

Frances will be back tomorrow. This is the right time to tell Mathew about my fake engagement. Perhaps he will regard me in a different way. And if otherwise, I will just entice him. I can’t wait to have him in my world. I wish to establish for him a personal business, which would set a pace for other necessities. All in all, my problem lies on my parents. How would I survive the hatred that is born into a taboo? How do I tell my parents I have been fooling them, and now I’m falling in love with our ancestral enemy?

I heave a distressful sigh. Then look across the road. The man should have reached there by now. The luxurious bus is no longer there. The ATM house is vacant. But the adjoining road in front of it is crowded. People are jostling, pushing, jumping, craning necks and tiptoeing, looking at something in the middle.

Is there any accident? I can see neither the driver nor Mathew. All I can see is a circle of crowd. 







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Breaking the fear(short story)