SO SORRY FOR THE DELAY GUYS!
NEW POST COMES IN NEXT WEEK!
A girl comes to the famous city of Lagos, without a certificate, a falsified name and an unbelievable character. Let's see how she'll turn out eventually.
Thursday, May 8, 2014
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Forward Ever!
I felt myself on the ground outside the compound and the
stares of people as they looked on at me. I wailed loudly and screamed in
tears.
“You must leave my house today…you witch!” Solo said to me
then turning to the onlookers he said. “If you want to prosper, flee from this
girl…she is bad luck.”
“Solo abeg…wetin I do you? Abeg no chase me comot…I nor get
wia I fit go.” I cried.
As the commotion continued outside, the landlord walked out
to the balcony of his flat. Solo’s house was structured in a way that the
landlord lived upstairs alone while all the other tenants lived downstairs.
“Solomon! Why the noise? What is happening?” The landlord
asked Solo, his head peeked out of the balcony railings of his house. This was
the first time I was ever hearing Solo’s full name.
“Oga landlord, this girl has finished me! I brought her into
my house weeks ago and she swindled me. I have nothing left…nothing! My
girlfriend left me because of her, she made away with a generous amount of my
money and now my furniture has disappeared too, I have lost everything. How can one girl do this to me?
How?” Solo said in tears.
My heart went out to him and I wondered how I could do all that
to a grown man.
“You are very insensitive…how would you throw a poor girl out on
the streets. I have noticed that she washes your clothes, cooks your food and
takes care of your needs and why do you repay her with this?” The landlord thundered.
“With all due respect sir, I beg to differ. Bringing this
girl into my house has been the worst decision I have ever made. I cannot let
her back into my place…no way!” Solo said.
“Solo na beg I dey beg…nor throw way me for outside I beg.”
I pleaded.
“Get out of this compound…get out!” Solo screamed.
“You have no right to send her out of this house. Is this
your compound? Did you build it? Did you inherit it?” The landlord screamed at
Solo.
“Well sir, it seems you do not understand me at all… you can
leave her in your compound but you can’t force her into my house besides I pay
my rent and have the right to let her in or out.” Solo screamed.
“My dear, what is your name?” Asked the Landlord.
‘Na…na Senorita sir.” I answer.
“Senorita…get up and come upstairs to my flat, you’ll be
living with from now on.” The landlord said, flashing me a smile with his
sparkling gold teeth.
I get up from the ground and squaring my shoulders, I catwalk
towards the staircase of the house. Some of the tenants smirk and say;
“Iya Segun go use pepper for dis one yansh ooo…landlord don
arrange new wife for himself ooo shio.” Said the first neighbor.
“Dis one na competition shaaa…Iya Segun and Mama Jibunoh wey
don old finish…this our compound go sweet wella…deir action film no go be for
hia ooo..” Said another neighbor.
“Oga landlord, you disrespect me ooo…how would you house her
after I’ve chased her out of my house.” Solo shouted.
‘Shut your little mouth! When I was building this house,
where were you? Get back into your room, wear a shirt and go and make a
statement in the police station.”
“Good idea sir, I will make a statement and identify her as
the culprit.” Solo threatened.
Oga landlord waved him off and walked over to open the door
for me. As soon as I entered the house, he said.
“I have seen you all these while and I have always envied
Solo. You will be my new wife and I will throw a big party for us.” Said the
landlord as he hugged me.
I smiled at my goodluck and said to myself;
“Na how God dey bless pesin? From grass to grace, na im I
dey so.”
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
BAD Luck!
As soon as those hands grabbed me close, I sunk into his warm embrace. I couldn’t believe my eyes and ears, ‘Benson was here!’
‘Benson! Oga Benson! Na you?’
“Na me ooo…” Benson whispered as he roughly kissed me on
the lips.
“Wia Johnny? Wetin happen for our office?”
“Ahh…dat one na long tori ooo…”
“Abi Johnny don open office again?”
“How you dey? Hope say you dey fine?” Benson asked, carefully deviating from my question.
I start sobbing quietly.
“Na for kitchen I dey work now ooo. I nor dey do seke work
again.”
“E fit you ooo…see as you come fine like paw paw.” Benson
says.
“If I hear…” I warn angrily.
“Why you dey vex…kitchen work fit u na.”
“Senorita nor come Lagos for Kitchen work ooo…nor dey talk
dat kain rubbish.”
“Okay…sorry, no vex. You
dey go house?”
“Yes ooo…I dey live with Solo…e don even try for me sef
after de time I collect im money.” I say and suddenly stop quickly. ‘Benson,
wey de money wey I give you?”
“Which money?” Benson asked.
“De money wey I give una for dat business wey we talk…wia e
dey?”
“Ohhh…no be me you give money ooo…na Johnny and e dey
police custody.”
“Wetin? For wia?”
“My dear…abeg forget that tory…I just miss you die.”
I look at him and hissing, I turn away and head out towards the
street. He runs up to meet me and pulls me close.
“Senorita…I know say wetin we do you no good at all but nor
be me ooo…na Johnny.”
“Na so una come troway me for dustbin abi?”
“Me? When?” Benson denied vehemently.
“Na for dorty dem find me na…” I continue.
“What are you talking about?” Johnny asked, changing rapidly
to English.
“Forget jare…make I dey go house. Tomorrow na kitchen work
again.”
“Err…Senorita…abeg I need ya help.”
I stare at him confused, this was the man who just a few
days ago told me about the money he had made due to business investments. I
didn’t understand why he needed my help.
“Wetin you want?”
He smiled and placed his hands on my shoulders.
“Sweetie, abeg I dey find place were I fit sleep for today.”
“Wetin dat one come mean? I resemble landlord?”
“Senorita abeg, na you be my only hope. I take God beg you.
Johnny carry all my money run comot…all de investment wey I make don waka. Abeg
if I fit sleep for ya house, I go dey happy.”
‘Nor be me get de house abegi. Na Solo get am.”
“You fit beg am on my behalf? Tell am say I be ya broda.”
I look at him and immediately feel sorry for him, his
shoulders slumped forward and his eyes looked tired and weary.
“De day Solo see me for express road, I tell am say I be
orphan. I nor fit tell am long tori again.”
“Oya make I follow u reach house, we go agree wetin we go
talk.”
Ten minutes later, we were inside the house, Solo was
already at home and from the look he gave me, he wasn’t too happy that I stayed
out later than usual.
“Solo gurevening.” I greeted.
“Where have you been?” Solo thundered.
“Na work I go…”
Solo turned to stare at Benson rudely.
“Who is this man with you?”
“Ehen Solo make I gist you. As I dey waka from kitchen na so
I see one man wey dey for front, something come tell me say, ‘Senorita! Dis na
ya broda ooo…’ na so I come shout im name. I come see say na my broda for
village.”
Solo looked carefully at the man.
“I think I know you…you’ve been seen regularly at the next
street right?”
“No…lai lai…na my first time to see Lagos be dis ooo.”
I fall on my kneels before Solo and beg.
“Abeg Oga Solo, e nor get wia e go sleep for today…abeg
helep am.”
Solo grudgingly agreed, he stared at Benson for a while and
said to me.
“I am going to for night taxi work, will be back tomorrow
morning because I will be sleeping over at my friend’s place. Make sure you go
to work on time tomorrow.”
“Sure…thianks Solo.” I echo.
As soon as Solo leaves the house, I fall into Benson’s arms
in helpless relief.
I woke up as soon as I heard the door crash open. I yawned
and stared at the intruder, it was Solo. Everywhere looked different, the whole
house had been picked clean, there was not even one furniture left in the house. I was astonished as Solo was, my mouth hung open in shock.
“What happened here?” Screamed Solo.
I clean my eyes with the back of my palms and stare around
the room in a daze.
“Wetin happen?” I squeak stupidly.
Solo crouches to the ground and sobs loudly.
“What kind of misfortune have I brought upon myself.
Senorita! Oh my God!”
Neighbours started gathering, everyone had questions and no
one had seen anyone leave the house with any of the furniture, besides the
house must have been raided in the night while everyone was asleep.
“Senorita! Where is my television? My radio! My fridge!
Where are my valuables?” Solo asks in confusion and despair. "I worked hard to get all those appliances and now, they are all gone. Not even a dust trail is left."
“Solo…I nor know…na sleep I dey sleep…” I croak.
“Don’t let me slap your senses back into your head. Where is your brother?” Solo screams.
“My broda…Benson!” I said in alarm “Benson! Oga Benson…wia you
dey ooo?” I ask in tears while I look around the empty sitting room.
“Who be Benson?”
Asked one of the neighbours “Abi una get broda wey dey live for dis place?”
“Her brother came here yesterday, begging to spend the
night. I let him in and…” Solo trailed off.
“Wait…where ya broda?” Our neighbor asks me.
“I nor knooooo…” I wail.
“You sure say na ya broda or ya boyfriend?” Asked another neighbor,
a woman this time.
“Na…na for wia I dey do seke work, na dia I see am ooo…” I
confess.
“What? He’s not your brother? Who is he? Who did you bring
into my house?” Screamed Solo.
“Na de man wey collect dat money wey Anna give you. Na im I give
all dat money, e talk say he wan use am do business…” I start.
Solo charged towards me like an angry bull. I felt the heavy slap on my face, then another till I felt
numb with pain.
I had finally crossed the line...
I had finally crossed the line...
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
Let's Help Save MJ

Here's the silver lining: He doesn't have to.
Here's the simple solution: Five minutes of your time.
Since he was eleven, MJ has suffered from Mitral and Aortic Stenosis - a heart disease that causes his valves to leak. In 2006 he came to the UK in order to have life-saving surgery that is not available in his hometown of The Gambia. It is now 2014, and having not been able to have the surgery due to lack of funding, we have now been advised to raise it ourselves. The cost of the surgery is going to be a huge £30,000 - far too much for a young, working class couple such as ourselves to afford.
MJ has been advised by his consultant that if he doesn't have his treatment within five years, he will die; however, there is now an added threat from the UK Home Office that he is also in danger of being sent home - to the very place he fled from to avoid certain death.
We need YOUR help to afford the treatment and consequently keep MJ alive. If you are unable to donate, then simply sharing this page can do a world of good. MJ is just twenty five years old with a disease that predominantly affects the elderly, and so with the necessary treatment, doctors are certain he will easily make a full recovery, but without it, he will only get worse. Together, let's stop that from happening. Let's help MJ live.
I’ve had quite a few reasons to quit Facebook and proceed with life out of touch from basically the world recently, but I’ve kept it alive purely to stay connected. Now, obviously I’m not BFFs with everybody on there, but that doesn’t fuss me because what I write and share wouldn’t reach many people at all if I expected to know and speak personally with every single one of them, and I want it to reach people. That’s the truth, and I expect a lot of others probably feel the same.
However, I recently posted an important article about my fiancee’s heart condition, how the only way for him to stay alive was for us to somehow come up with more than £25,000. I hoped, at least, that all of my friends would share that one particular post, because I thought that while we indeed weren’t all best friends and didn’t talk every single day or maybe even ever, the simple matter of caring for life was something we all had in common.
Out of almost 350 of my friends, I’d say that around twenty people shared it. It did end up making quite a stretch, because some of their friends subsequently shared it too, for which I’ll be eternally grateful; I got a few messages from complete strangers who had a couple of mutual friends saying how sorry they were about our situation, and a few of them even donated to my fundraising page. But I’m not going to lie. I’m disappointed – hurt, even – that more than 300 of them completely ignored my message.
Well… that’s unreasonable. Maybe they never go on Facebook, or have stuff going on themselves – we’re all human, after all – and so in that case I have to put up my hands and apologise. But sometimes it’s hard to be totally reasonable, especially when your fiancee’s heart is a ticking time bomb.
A line about MJ. We’ve been together for almost seven years. For the entire seven years, we’ve had this issue – in fact, he’s been struggling with it since he was eleven, and he’s now twenty five. We didn’t know until a few months ago that we were going to have to come up with the money ourselves, because we thought the NHS was going to help us out. Problem is, MJ is a Gambian national. It may seem fair enough that because of this, he has to pay for surgery that is completely unavailable in his home country, but I wonder if it would open your mind some to know that he came here in 2006 specifically to have his heart fixed, and they didn’t fix it.
They didn’t do it because the funding that was supposed to be available for MJ from Gambia was voided for some unknown reason after he was already in this country. In Gambia, he was having heart attacks. In Gambia, he was diagnosed with Mitral and Aortic Stenosis – a disease that causes his valves to leak – and he was subsequently told that he needed surgery they couldn’t give to him, otherwise he was going to die. So multiple times, MJ has been to the hospital here under the impression they would operate because that’s what he’s been told, but every time it hasn’t happened. It was only explained to us in 2009 – three years later – exactly why it wasn’t being done: because he didn’t have the money.
As a young, teenage couple, with MJ having no family around to help explain it, we thought the operation would be done and the money dealt with later. Not the case. So in 2010 we had to apply for a visa that would allow him free treatment, because I think we can all agree that £25,000 is a ridiculous amount of money to just whip out of your pocket. The Home Office then took two years – I repeat, two years – to merely refuse. When they did, we appealed. Again, they refused. Since then, it’s been a back and forth between us and them, with us saying that he needs this surgery within five years otherwise he will die, and them saying that it isn’t their problem. Now, because of the amount of time that has passed with MJ not being on the right visa, they want to send him home. That can’t happen. Why? Because MJ will die in Gambia. Still, their answer is no, and yet they want MJ to leave on a voluntary basis. But tell me: would YOU willingly walk to your own death?
So before they get really pushy, we need to try and raise this money. We’re on a time limit – two, in fact: MJ’s heart’s time limit, and that of the Home Office.
Social media connects the world. We share hilarious memes and cute cat videos, and yet just twenty of my friends clicked on a link not too long ago entitled: ‘Can you help mend my fiancee’s poorly heart?’ I think to ignore such a thing is to indirectly say that as far as one is concerned, MJ can die. It seems extreme, but does it really say anything else?
I don’t like to think that anybody I’m associated with could be capable of such a thought, which is why I’m asking you to at least share this post. Just share it. It happens with the click of a button, and you – one person – have just opened it up to hundreds, maybe even thousands more. I’m not religious. My faith lies in us. I believe that we’re in control of what happens to each other, and I believe that because of that we have a huge responsibility to help each other in any way we can. So I’ll continue to post my hilarious memes and cute cat videos for everybody’s entertainment, but remember this is the one I care about, and this is the one that matters. This is the one that’s about life and death, but hopefully, life.
I don’t want likes for this post. I want shares. I need shares. MJ needs shares. I’m British, and if I had the same condition as he, it would have been treated back when I was eleven. MJ has suffered for fourteen years because he comes from Gambia, so let’s not let him suffer any longer.
One more thing: By posting this, I don’t want to open up a dialogue anything political; I’m merely explaining the facts. All I want to do is make sure my fiancee stays alive. He’s young. He’s otherwise healthy. He’s human. You can help him stay that way just by sharing. That’s all I ask.
If you do want to donate in any scale, here’s our fundraising page.
http://www.gofundme.com/68fbzw
Thank you, and again, if you like this post, please don’t let me know by pressing the ‘like’ button - let me know by sharing it.
Tweet me @karisgould if you have questions – I’m happy to chat - See more at: http://africansweetheart.blogspot.co.uk/2014/04/fiancees-life-saving-heart-surgery.html#sthash.9X4yA1td.dpuf
Monday, April 7, 2014
Iya Rosa's Kitchen!
As soon as I walked into Iya Rosa’s kitchen, I told myself
‘Senorita! Dis place no be ya portion laiye…’
The kitchen was very big and quite messy too as the whole
place was filled with flies, dirty bowls of finished soup and foods.
“Customer…” Shouted a very tiny looking woman who had a
front gap-teeth. She walked over to meet us and smiled in welcome. “Wetin una
wan chop? Abi na ya new gial be dis?”
Solo laughed and spoke to the woman.
“Iya Rosa…I wan talk serious talk with you today… I go chop
but no be now.”
“Ahhh…hope say no problem?” Iya Rosa asked, sounding
worried.
“At all. It’s my err…it’s this girl, her name is Senorita
and I want you to give her a job in your kitchen.”
“Hmmm…. I see.” The woman replied as she stared at me from
head to toe.
“I really want you to help her.”
“Na jolly just come?” The woman asked Solo.
“No…she is a confirmed Lagos babe but please I need you to
teach her to be responsible.”
“Ahhh…she go response by force…” Iya Rosa said.
“Thank you.”
“I get vacancy for waitress, the one wey I get don carry
belle follow one man. I hope say dis Seni wetin be her name sef?” The woman
asked.
“Senorita.” Solo supplied,
“Okay… I hope say Senorita no go follow all dem men wey dey
come chop for hia. Na fine gial she be and many men go pursue am.” Said Iya
Rosa.
I silently rejoice at her words about my beauty and I
smile at her.
“Senorita has a heavy debt to pay, she doesn't have time
chasing after men. She owes me more than a hundred thousand naira and she must
pay me or else she’ll leave my house.” Warned Solo.
I shiver in anger and fear. I didn’t want Solo to get angry
with me for any reason at all.
“So we go discuss money wey I go dey pay am abi?”
“Yes…please give me all her salaries, I need to augment the
sum of money that she took and return it to its owner.”
The woman smiled in understanding. Less than an hour later,
I was given a pink checkered apron and my job began. The first three hours were
stressful as I mixed up the orders every time and got disapproving looks from
my new madam. However the best part was the glances I received from men who
came to eat and my madam seemed to notice them too but made no comments.
My first three days at the kitchen were the best days in my
life as many men couldn't tear their eyes off me. I was the center of attention
and the fact that I hardly spoke to anyone had them all rushing to ask me to
take their orders. Iya Rosa’s business boomed in those three days as she seemed
to have stolen all her competitors customers.
One day, I wondered aloud why the place
was crowded and one of the other waitresses told me that it was my
beauty that attracted the men. I had long forgotten about my beauty as the
tolls and stress of life had taken so much out of me but now at Iya
Rosa’s kitchen, I can feel my beauty return.
It was almost eight pm and I was already closing up
for the day with Jemima, the store keeper when one small boy of about ten years old walked up to and said;
“Aunty…e get one broda wey dey find you.”
I crane my neck in a bid to see who he was talking about but
couldn’t see anyone as the street was dark and Jemima, had
turned off the lights and was already closing up the shop. She seemed oblivious to our conversation as she stood quite far away from us.
“Who be dat?” I ask.
“He dey for dia…e talk say make I give you this…” The boy
said and placed a note in my palm.
“Hummm…” I whisper and stare at the money with interest, it was a thousand naira.
The boy having delivered his message, hurried away from
sight.
“Who be dat?” Jemima asked as she walked up to meet me.
“I nor know ooo…na one boy wey dey find him street.” I lied.
“Na wah for people ooo, how pesin go send pickin comot from
house for dis kain time?” Jemima said.
I nodded stupidly.
“So… make we dey go house.” Jemima said.
I noticed something strange about Jemima since I started
work at the kitchen. She persistently followed me home each evening and accompanied
me to work every morning.
“I wan go buy something for dat side…” I lied.
“Oya make we go dia na…” Jemima said.
“Abeg dey go house jare…I wan buy private something for dia.”
I say again.
“Which kain private something? No be de woman wey you be, I be so?”
Jemima said.
“Shio! You don turn bodyguard ooo like play…”
“Dat one you dey talk na tori… wia you wan go?”
At that moment I knew that Iya Rosa had assigned Jemima on
my case. It was a very competitive market and no one wanted their workers
stolen by other kitchen owners in the area. Suddenly like a miraculous dream,
my breakthrough came, it was Jemima’s phone. It rung.
“Helloo…wetin happen? I dey come back na…why you dey talk
like dis? Wetin I do again? Na eight o’clock we dey close na.” Jemima spoke
into the receiver.
As soon as Jemima ended her call she looked at me in
desperation.
“Wetin happen?” I ask.
“Na my Oga for house ooo… e dey suspect say I dey do one man
for kitchen hia. He dey hala me sake of say I neva reach house.”
“Carry ya leg dey go ya house na…wetin you still dey do for
hia.”
“Abeg no tell madam say I no follow you waka reach house ooo…” Jemima begged me.
“No problem.” I say.
As soon as Jemima hurried off, I look around and walk towards
the direction the boy had shown me. I walked for a while and when I had given
up hope that there was anyone looking for me, I felt the crumpled naira
note in my palms and moved on.
“Fine sisi…” Hissed a male voice.
“Ehn! Who be that?” I ask.
“I dey for hia.” Said the man as he turned on the torch
light in his hand.
I walked towards the small empty stall beside the road. The road
was not too bright as there was no light and there was hardly any generator on.
“How far, how you dey?” Said the man in the stall.
I couldn’t see his face but his voice sounded familiar.
“I dey fine…abeg who you be?” I asked.
“You nor remember me again?” Said the man as he turned the
torch light towards his face.
I gasped as soon as I saw him.
“Benson!” I whispered.
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Solo's Kindness!
“Wait oh!!! Where is the money?” Solo asked in a baffled
voice.
“Are you asking me? Ask Senorita besides she was the only
one left in the house when you drove me home.” Anna snapped.
I heard Solo’s footsteps as he walked up to me. Tapping my
shoulder roughly he said;
“Wake up quick! This faint will not solve anything…where is
the money?” He asked me.
I was seriously feigning unconsciousness till the desperate
urge to sneeze materialized from nowhere.
“Aaaaarrtttishoooo!” I sneezed.
“Senorita! Get up and explain the disappearance of the
money.” Anna screamed.
My cover was blown so I had to stretch tiredly and slowly
rise from the floor.
“Speak!” Solo demanded.
I have never seen him so angry in the short while I spent in
his house.
“Oga Solo…u fit give me water make I drink? My throat don
dry so…” I squeaked.
I received a heavy slap and another, then a blow to my head.
At that point, I knew he was serious.
“Ahh…no be me touch de money ooo… na dem take am…” I squeak.
“Who?” Solo asked, ready to give me another blow.
“Na Johnny and Benson…na my oga and him friend. Na dem ooo…”
I cried.
“How did they get into this house? How did you find out that
money was in the house and in my bag…how?” Solo asked, pained.
I launched into the story, afraid that Solo would kick me
out of his house for lying to him and stealing from him. By the time I was
through with my tale, Anna was already heaping curses on me.
“Idiot…ashawo ten kobo…so this is how you run from one man
to the other right? You have not seen anything yet… your days are over in this
house.” She screamed.
“Senorita! You will work hard for that money and pay back
every dime. Starting from tomorrow, I am taking you to Iya Rosa’s kitchen at
the entrance of this street. You will wash plates, cook, and clean till every
dime you've stolen from me is paid. Do you understand?” Solo said.
“Who’s going to wait for her to gather up the meagre
shillings that she’ll pick up from her lousy chores at Iya Rosa's kitchen? I want
my money now!” Screamed Anna.
“I have some money in the bank. You can wait while I get
dressed, I’ll pay your money in full.” Said Solo.
I opened my mouth in shock. Solo was the kindest man I have
ever known, I wondered how I would pay him back for all his kindness to me.
“What? Are you going to pay me with your hard earned money?”
Anna asked baffled.
“I never begged you for that money, yet you forced it on me.
Now it’s missing and I want to pay you back every dime I owe you, is that too
much to ask?” Solo asked in anger.
“Baby, I can’t believe you’re doing this. Do you love her?
Are you guys sleeping together? This is the reason you
let her stay right? How could you do this to our love?”
“Do you want your money or not? Please spare my time and
let’s get to the bank so that I can give you your money in full. You've always
been insecure of our relationship and it started when Senorita entered this
house. Look at her? Look at yourself? Who would trade her over a damsel like you? I refuse to
believe you still have trust issues where I am concerned.” Solo said bitterly.
“I’m not interested in the money anymore, you have hurt me
more than I have ever imagined. Even after all this tramp has done, she’s still
under your roof. I’m leaving and you know where to find me.” Said Anna as she
stormed out of the house and banged the door.
“Praise God! She don comot for hia…witch!” I boo.
“Will you keep shut?” Solo said.
“Solo I dey sorry, I think say you go happy sake of say she
don comot. E don tey wey dat gial dey do you bad thing…” I continue.
“Are you mad? You have no remorse whatsoever. I am in a
dilemma because of you and here you are rejoicing.”
“Di…wetin? You never die na…” I whisper.
“Oya…wear your slippers quick, we are going to Iya Rosa’s
shop now. Perhaps it’s time you started cutting your clothes to your size. Look
at what your supposed secretary work has brought you.” Solo said.
I quickly wear my slippers and follow him out of the house,
muttering under my breath.
“Me wey don do seke work go join kitchen for wetin? A whole Senorita like me! Shio I go show dem for dia say, seke pass seke!”
Monday, March 24, 2014
Anna's Money!
“Solo! Oh my God! I thought something had happened to you.
Baba Michael called me and told me that something bad happened… I rushed down
from school. Why didn’t you tell me anything?” Screamed Anna.
We were in the house, Solo lay on the sofa staring at the
ceiling, I lay on the floor of the small sitting room still dumbfounded over
everything that had happened. I couldn’t imagine how Johnny and Benson
disappeared in one day.
“Hello dear…” Solo whispered as he turned to look at his
girlfriend who had just entered the house.
“I need an explanation…” Anna demanded.
“Please sit down and stop screaming, I’m having a headache
and haven’t slept since yesterday.”
“What happened?” Anna asked, dropping her bag.
“It was right after I dropped you off. Suddenly, my phone
rang, it was Baba Michael who was calling to tell me that he found the door to
my house open and when he knocked, no one answered.”
“Okay…so what happened?” Anna asked impatiently.
“When I came back, I looked for Senorita but to no avail. I
went back for some rounds with the taxi and came back at nine pm to still meet
an empty house. I initially thought that she went to get something’s to prepare
dinner but I was surprised to still see an empty pot so I sat in the sitting
room, waiting for her. Somehow, I slept and woke up this morning to a heavy
knock at my door. It was Ismail’s son who had gone to empty their dustbin and
who told me that he saw Senorita in the garbage heap.”
“What??? What was she doing there?” Anita asked puzzled.
“I don’t know…some people said she was duped of large sums
of money but come to think of it, how much does she have?” Solo said.
“Money? She has no money…where would she get huge sums of
money from?” Anna asked.
“It baffles me…Senorita started work a few days ago and she
hasn’t even been paid…”
“Where is the money that I gave to you?” Anna asked.
“It’s in my bag over there at the corner.” Solo answered.
My ears pricked, I was finally in trouble! All these while,
Solo didn’t know the full story of my encounter with Johnny and Benson and now,
his girlfriend was about to solve the mystery. I had to act fast;
“My head! I don die ooo…” I scream.
Solo rushes to my side and quietly shakes me, in a terrified
voice, he says;
“Senorita…sorry… I could only afford the Nazareth clinic but
you refused that the doctor examines you…all the other hospitals are
expensive.”
Anna ran to us and dragged Solo’s hands from my body.
“Stop touching her… she’s not dying haba!”
“She is very sick and it’s all my fault, I should have taken
good care of her.”
“When did you become her guardian? Anna asked.
“The day we found her at the side of the road.” Solo
snapped.
“Oh please! I can’t take this anymore…how do you expect me
to believe that there’s nothing going on between you two?”
“Believe whatever you please. I am not ready to deal with
your jealousy today.”
“Me? Jealous? Of this piece of thrash? She’s not half the
woman I am!” Boasted Anna.
That insult was too much, I shed off my pretense and
struggled to my feet, Solo was surprised.
“Wetin you talk?” I asked Anna.
“Oh! So you have been pretending all these while.” Anna
spat.
“Talk that thing wey you talk before…talk am again!” I say.
“You’re not half the woman I am!” Anna said.
I jump and throwing my hands in the air, I slap the breeze
and touch my tongue.
“I swear for my mama head say, you no fit hold man like me.
Who you be sef?” I ask in anger.
“Senorita! Stop this! You are still recuperating… don’t tell
me that jibes like this can get you all worked up.” Solo started.
“Are you taking her sides over mine?” Anna queried Solo.
Solo was lost for words and shaking his head, he walked to
the sofa and sat down, trying to ignore the two of us.
“I go beat craze comot for ya head…” I warn.
“I don’t have time for illiterates like yourself…” Anna says
to me.
I push her hard and she falls to the ground in a helpless
heap. Solo stares at me, his expression, unreadable. Anna gets up again and
lunges towards me, I push her again and she falls a second time. She tries to
stand again and I jump on her, determined to beat her blue black.
“Stop it! I will not have two wild cats in my house. Get up
both of you and get out!” Solo says as he struggles to drag me off Anna’s body.
He separates us and proceed to throw us out.
“Solo! I am your girlfriend and I won’t leave this house.
She’s the one that’s supposed to leave.”
“Go home Anna! We’ll see some other time and as for you
Senorita, get out of the house and stay outside.”
“Ahhh… no be me cause am…na she ooo” I wail.
“If I leave this house, Solo, if I leave this house, it’s
the end of you and me.” Warned Anna.
Solo ignores her warnings and pushes us out of the house.
“Give me back the money that I gave to you now!” Screamed
Anna in anger.
Solo walks towards the bag in order to retrieve the money. I
look around for an escape route, there’s no other way out of this mess. Solo
would find out soon enough that the money is missing and I haven’t had the
chance to go looking for Johnny and Benson in order to ask for the money.
“I kept it here, I am sure of it…” Solo started.
“Don’t give me trash…where is my money?” Anna shouted.
Solo scattered his bag and searched for it frantically but
it wasn’t there.
“Senorita…” Solo called out to me.
It was too late, I had long reached the floor in a mock dead
faint. Deep down I muttered to myself,
"Make una dey find money de go...Senorita don faint!"
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