Complete the Story Challenge: Flash Fiction – All in One Night

30 Mar

Hi people, I put up a writing challenge for flash fiction on my BBM channel (FICFAC – C0014488E) on Monday. I started the story with just two lines, asked subscribers to post continuations and I ended it. Read the result of the challenge below:

dark night

She’s tired and breathing hard. She stops to catch her breath, holding her thumping chest. It hurts so badly. Tears run down her face as she feels her swollen lips. This was the first time she had been on the receiving end of T’s ferocious beating. She had only witnessed his overly ringed knuckles make bloody mush of girls’ faces when they failed to deliver his weekly cut. She whimpers as her hand meets blood from her nose. Her stomach churns as she continues her breakthrough journey, her whole system beeping red lights as she forces her sore feet to move. She can’t stop. No she wouldn’t! This is the only way to get away from him. Continue reading

Ojuola (5)

23 Mar

Blind eye

(Read Part 4 here)

His head lays on her lap as she runs her fingers in small roundish circles on his scalp, as a mother trying to lure her baby into sleep. One of his eyes is closed and the other halfway open in between a seeming state of wakefulness and sleepiness. When she stops the motions of her hands, both eyes open wide. He sits up on the bed and cracks his knuckles. She’s watching him like a bird surveying its prey from its vantage position perched on a tree. She knows him well enough not to interrupt his introspection. He gets cranky when a clog is put in the wheel of his thoughts.
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It Will Rain Again

21 Mar

rain again

You and I are seated under the agbalumo tree. The silence hangs like a cobweb between us and we talk only with our eyes. I see the rage in yours. Not the kind of rage that makes a person foam at the mouth, hairs standing like a cat about to strike. No, it is the type that makes you swallow saliva, waiting and searching for the fleshiest spot to bite. There are so many things I want to tell you but my throat feels as if a ball of cotton wool is stuck in it.

I waited for you.

Even when the letters stopped coming, I still waited. I kept my hope alive, dragging out the carton under the bed every night to reread all your letters. The tears rolled off my face and dotted the paper like the small circles dotting your ‘i’s.

“It’s for our good, Tinuke. I have to go and hustle,” you’d assured me that night, your eyes shining brightly in the candlelight. You’d gotten your visa to Scotland that day and you bubbled with happiness. Your mother clasped her hands on her chest and then waved them in the air in jubilation.

“My pikin dey go London. Ah! Oluwa E ma seun o, thank you Lord.”
You’d looked on amused. You’d corrected her several times that London wasn’t the same as Scotland but she never listened.

I became the wife of Londoner and Iya Risi who sold yams across the street started to hike her prices when I went to her stall. They all thought you were already sending gbemu home and I was just being stingy.
Your mother was nice at first, very nice. She would cook and clean before I got back from my salon, welcoming me with “iyawo mi, my wife.” But as the days stretched into months and months into years, she became grumpy. She complained that the house was too quiet.
“A house without children is like a fallow farmland,” she’d grumbled.

I wondered if it was my fault that I did not get pregnant in the eight months of our marriage before you travelled.
You’d promised that morning at the airport, in that endearing tone that always weakened my legs. “I will send for you soon, Atinuke mi owon.”

I missed you most at night, when I ached for warmth, your warmth. I tossed until the sheets were rumpled, and then put the pillow between my legs. During the day, I ignored the ache and immersed myself in braiding and perming hair, to forget.

Time became divided into two – the period you were here and after you left. When a customer complimented my ankara blouse and skirt and asked when I bought it, I said, “It was a year after my husband left.”
The woman had seen the perfect opening to pry and so she pressed on –
“And when is that husband of yours sending for you? He fit don marry oyinbo o.”
My heart skipped out of beat and the comb in my hand fell. I pressed my lips tightly and closed my ears to her nonsense talk. Amebo oshi, she’s only envious of me.

It had been five long years since you left and I pined for you. That was why one day, when the man from the post office parked his okada outside the house, I flew out and shouted in his face – “Where is it? Where is it?”
The man had looked confused, “Where is what?” he asked. Before he realised that I was pointing at the letter in his hands.

Six months! Only one hundred and eighty days and you, Temidayo would be back. The other parts of the letter where you wrote about the hard times – the streets you swept and the toilets you cleaned, did not matter to me. I just wanted my husband back, money or no money.

I was so happy that morning that I did not go to open my salon. I started cleaning the house, making everything perfect for you even though your arrival was still afar. Your brother arrived that evening to visit Mama. He said the house was too dull for him that we should go out and flenjo. I thought, what the hell, I wanted to celebrate your homecoming. So, we went to Sweet n Hot, that nightclub on the Island.

You’d often teased me about my soft belly that couldn’t hold alcohol. And that night, I drank three bottles of Baileys, lost in its ice-creamish taste. At midnight, we left the club and headed home. My legs buckled under me and I fell on the steps. That was my last memory.

I woke with a blinding headache the next morning. When I saw Deji beside me on the bed, I screamed loud enough to wake the dead. If Mama had heard, she paid no heed. The gown I wore was bundled around my waist. I shook Deji and he responded with a drunken grunt. His zipper was open. When he finally roused, we avoided each other’s eyes.
“Nothing happened. If it did, I would have remembered,” he mumbled as he left.

I became numb. I drifted with the wind, stepping nimbly around the house. Then, I began to get fat. I was eating too much, I thought and decided to start a diet. Mama chuckled when she saw me eating only vegetables and water.
“The baby is surely a boy. I can feel it in my bones, walahi!”
“Baby? What baby?” Alarmed, I clutched at my stomach and in that moment it hit me hard.
“Whether he is fathered by my older or younger son he is still my grandchild,” Mama said calmly and left me staring after her.

I wanted to run and hide before you came but Mama stopped me. She said my baby was not a bastard. “He shall be the aarole of Odejimi’s family.”

I die several times when I remember the laughter dying in your eyeballs as you came in from the airport and my protruded belly greeted you. You’d gone inside Mama’s room and stayed there for hours while I paced restlessly on the veranda. Through the door, I heard your animal cries of pain and anger and Mama’s hushed voice pacifying you.
You came out, eyes bloodshot, Mama on your heels. “Go and talk with your husband,” she said, pushing you towards me.

Now, under the tree we sit, our eyes doing all the talking while our tongues lay heavy in our mouths. You clear your throat and I look up expectantly.
“When is it due?”
It? I do not understand for a moment until I realise you are referring to the baby.
“March,” I answer.

The child will arrive with the early rains, wetting the parched earth. Your hand stretches over the distance between us and covers mine.

Yes, the rains will water our love again.

Ojuola (4)

16 Mar

Blind eye

Read Part (3) here

The doctor says I may see again. Sight! I will stare at the clear blue skies unblinking when that day comes. I wonder if the sky in the city is the same. In Adatan, they hang like balls of fufu begging to be moulded by eager fingers and swallowed down a hungry throat. I have learnt the smell of this house. I don’t like it. It smells like the coming together of many herbs and scent leaves. It leaves my nose and throat dry. I miss the smell of the wet grass and rain. Here, when it rains, I taste dust on my lips. The noise. The television playing loud music that has no semblance to the rhythms of the bata and gangan. They repeat a meaningless string of words. Words that make blood rush to my cheeks. If I could but see, I would cover my eyes in shame. That’s his kind of music. He listens to it all day. Continue reading

The Ultimate ‘Huntee’

14 Mar

huntee

When the chickens come to roost, they huddle together, finding the best positions for the night’s slumber. To hunt the hunter, I must cast off the cloak of the prey. Three nights. Three hundred missed calls.
‘Relax, have some fun,” Susie had poked me in the side. I stiffened as he came closer. “Hello baby,” he croaked in a scratchy voice. Baby. I hate the generalisation that comes with the tag. Anyone or no one can be baby. Pink clothed, dandy creatures. I do not want to be of that crowd category.
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Ojuola(3)

9 Mar

Blind eye

Read Part 2 here

She is humming. A grating scattered tune that jars on Mary’s nerves. She endures. Mary’s mother keeps casting her dark stare at the back of her daughter’s head. Mary can feel it even as she stays her eyes on the car’s windscreen, perched on the front passenger’s seat.

“I did what’s right, it’s right,” she repeats mentally, as the breeze from the bushes on the highway caresses her cheeks. Ojuola’s face is wreathed in smiles. She is peaceful. Mary pats herself on the back for standing her ground.

“She comes with us, mum!” Mary had insisted, standing eye to eye with her mother. Her mother’s lips trembled. The fire in her daughter’s eyes quenched the ashes in hers. Her aunt had told her at the hospital when she birthed Mary – “My sister has returned to us. Your mother is now with you.” Mary, the mother to her mother can have whatever she wants.

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A Star?

7 Mar

Flying-Woman-Silhouette

She sits on the bunk, facing her roommates. Her forehead folds in that scrunch common to her when she’s passionate about a subject.
“My boyfriend can beat me, if I do something wrong. It’s just love,” she says.
They argue. “It’s wrong for your man to hit you!”
They try to convince her but her ears are full – stuck with the wool of all the wrong examples in her life. Her father beats her mother. Her uncle beats his wife. Her brother beats his girlfriend. It must be normal.
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Ojuola (2)

2 Mar

Blind eye

Read Part 1 here

The rivulets of sweat on her Mother’s shiny black back, courses through the hollow, to her shoulder and drips to meet her sagging breasts. The hoe raised high connects with the dark soil, moulding medium rounded heaps.

“The heaps for yams have to be bigger than the ones for maize,” she says.

Ojuola dangles her small hoe over her shoulder. She’s tired but she won’t stop. She wants to impress her.

“Maami, how long before sunset comes?” Ojuola asks, wiping her sweat-beaded brows with the back of her hand.

“Bebe idi, I know you’re tired,” she smiles. She tells Ojuola to rest in the shade of the banana trees.

“We have to finish the heaps today, the rains will soon be here.”

Ojuola’s arms feel like lead and even as she wills them to move, they don’t obey. So, she moves to the banana alcove where she closes her eyes and dreams of big cities and high heeled shoes. She wants to walk in them one day. The type of shoes that Mama Mary, her aunt in Lagos wears when she comes to Adatan. Koi, koi, koi, she used to mouth as she trailed behind her, lugging her big bag stuffed for children in the compound. Continue reading

Eyes of the Tiger

29 Feb

wedding_gallery-1-big

Grace was living a nightmare. The glitzy ivory dress in the open wardrobe mocked her. She closed her eyes tight. She willed herself to make it all disappear. It was today. The wedding. “I’m going to propose to Yiga!” Mike had announced that night, many months ago in the dim lighted garden, their favourite place, where they sat listening to country songs, sipping on chapman and munching their sharwamas. Yiga never listened to such songs. She said it was churchy and too slow. She loved the fast paced beats, hopping in the club till she dropped. Grace and Mike were petals and leaves of the same tree. He did not see it. She could not tell him.
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OJUOLA(1)

26 Feb

She sits by the east wall of the compound facing the blinding sun. Her hands quiver in sync with the creaking branches on the mango tree.
“They came during the dry season. When the maize farms had been torched,” she mumbles. Mary inches closer to her. The bench under her squeaks its protest at the sudden movement. No one has ever spoken of that time. The old men in the family do not speak about it. They grunt and clear their throats and spit thick sputum mashed underfoot as answers. The old women avert their eyes and turn the red oily stew with a ladle until it spurts and splashes on their hands and they retort in anger. “Afira! Be gone, silly child!”

“It was too dark. I didn’t see them,” she mutters.
Mama Agba passes shu-shu-ing her brood of chickens and the moment passes. A brief tightness around her lips, ears pricking up and the spark in her unseeing eyes dwindles.
Ojuola; the eyes of affluence become bereft pools of sorrow.
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