THEME: A LOVELINE
GENRE:TRAGEDY
AUTHOR: OLUSANYA OLALEYE
CHECK HERE FOR CHAPTER ONE
All rights rightly reserved. No part of this work should be used without the knowledge of the author himself.
For
Loveline today was of more significance than any other she had spent on earth.
It was a day that spelled a year of accomplishment success and achievements: a
beginning that in itself marked an end of a long six years. A unique day which
uniqueness was found in its entity; the entity a definition of different
elements; the elements the collective enthusiasm of students and well-wishers.
It was her graduation day and she was more than ever ecstatic about it as her
friends whom hurriedly she was leaving to meet.
Like
every other girls of their time, Loveline and her group had agreed to a special
send off for themselves in a secluded venue apart from the one the school
authority had in place for them. They were supposed to be twelve, but one left
to a reason she felt justifiable. Paullina, Margaret, Lara, Esther, Tosin,
Nana, Fadekemi, Glory, Bosede, Atinuke, Roseline, Jumoke and her very self. The
reason for leaving was not giving by Adeola something that still up till now
gave them concerns.
Loveline
as a person was more of a gentle person like her mum, but careful than her dad
could be. She had more reasons to be having seen the wickedness of men and the
frailty of life. Her dad’s episode with Mercy gave her a reason to be all the
more. She stole a quick glance at the wall clock before freshening up. She did
it, her mind on her friends. No need greeting anyone goodbye this time, she
thought when she made ready to leave. Everyone had left, each to their various
places: mum to her trade to return by twelve as agreed to make preparations for
her daughter’s graduation; dad to the farm to harvest yams for pounding; and
Francis to his school. She closed the front door behind her, had it locked and
the key hidden under a stunted stone at the far left corner of the house.
Wole,
Loveline’s dad, had gone back to his sunrise immediately after the Orubebe
episode which gave him his life to escape with. He had tendered his resignation
letter the next day showing his disinterest to continue in the profession. His
reasons were cogent and brief, bearing no thread therewith with previous
events. If one couldn’t move forward, he thought, the only sane thing was to
regress. He did that without the gods. Whoever and whatever they were, they
could all go and die. He still believed they were alive and well, he didn’t
just see their relevance in his life. Left within, the gods had become as
though they never were. Wole therewith, had become, so to say, a deist.
Loveline
made her leg walked faster. The selected place for their little catering was
not that lengthy. Five minutes on bike and thirty on legs. To rich people it
might be but to her it wasn’t. It had never been, so she had decided to walk
it.
Being
a pleb was something she had come to learn to live with. And like every other
pleb out there, she had asked herself overtime if a God exist at all. If he was
loving as said, caring as been preached by pastors in those long boring Sundays
in annoying all the same piercing voices. Maybe those manna stories in the Bible
were just fairy tales to preserve hopeless hope of hapless helpless souls.
Maybe God was just an idea successful people relate with their success. Maybe
that was why, every time she spoke to God she received no answers, nothing but
returning echo of blankness. All these things, they made Loveline slipped
unconsciously into an awakening world of disbelief. She got sad every day,
unhappy with God. If he exist, why wouldn’t he help? Loveline had never
understood why, why he would stay his hand and pleasurably watched her suffer.
But regardless of what God did, Loveline had made up her mind on just one
thing. Whether or not God helped, she would not give up on redeeming her
family. She would not watch in silence her father get wearied by poverty.
Neither as well, would she watch her mother waste away with sorrow. She would do her best in succeeding
academically, and like the rising sun wheeled away the cart of poverty off the
terrain of their household. Today only
spelt she was close.
***
“How many hours do we have?” Tosin said handling the can of salt to
Roseline.
“Hours,
we have all day girl!”
“Yea…yea…yea...”
Nana said resting her ankle on Glory’s shoulder.
The
girls were happy, who wouldn’t be. They had reasons to, different reasons.
Common would be, since it was a public school, the end to rows of early morning
lashes for late coming had come. No more note skipping, and most importantly
noisemaking won’t be a crime—they could now talk, not just as much as they
wanted, but as freely as they could.
“Lovely
hair, where had you get it done?” Esther asked Paullina who was absorbed in
God-knows she was doing on her phone. She tapped her to have her attention.
“Madam
Shark, Fifth Street.”
“That
grouchy imp?” Lara commented, joining the conversation.
“Oh
not again.” somebody whinged.
“What
not again?” Lara asked Nana unsure what she meant.
“Must
you always speak grammars? Haba!”
Lara
laughed. “I only meant she is a grumpy old witch.”
“Oh
God! You see… grouchy, imp, grumpy… she never listen.”
Lara
laughed the more. “You should have just said you are jealous.” Esther spiced
up.
“Jealous!
Me? Of Lara’s grandiloquence? Never! God forbid. Lara herself understands, she
will always be my student.”
“Mentor
you mean?”
“What
about womentor?”
***
Loveline hastened her legs as she walked on.
She had covered much in such a little time and would more if she would take the
Edward instead of the main road which, actually, she planned to. Walking the
main road would but take a longer time which in itself she estimated was a
minor problem. The major problem would be the single ever jobless guys walking
the road in guise of finding adorable girls to appreciate their demeaning
status. Of course, she couldn’t deny the fact that she enjoyed the attention; that
pride of boys wanting her as a girl but then, giving it a thought, what girl
wouldn’t at eighteen given the norm in the society. Such girl in her
neighbourhood, whether a beauty or an excrescence would be considered nothing
but progeny of a generational curse. And her beauty was such that made boys
heart skipped and ladies in melting jealousy watched. So she had no reason not
to enjoy the attention, none. The only but however was their perpetual
irritating all the same annoying whistling.
***
“Grouchy
imp here, cognitively means an ill-tempered, morally bad woman.” Lara said responding
to Nana’s argument.
“If
that is what grouchy means then I beg to disagree with you.” Paulina said. “She
is a nice woman.”
“Nice?
Well, that, depends on your definition of the word, nice.” Said Lara.
Esther’s
ear drew in attention.
“If
‘nice’ is any woman who style your hair for you at free cost for dating his
cute son, then I think we both can agree you are right.” Lara said with the
right cadence.
“Pardon!”
Esther exclaimed.
“You
heard me right.”
“Paulina?”
“What?”
she shrugged.
“What
Lara said, is it true?”
“Not
true. We are only…"
Esther
flared up. Her response triggered a delicate part of her being and she was
prepared to lose it all on her but was cut off by Bosede before she could.
“Where
is Loveline?” Bosede said.
Loveline
stood in the path door unnoticed. She had been there for seconds past watching
in silence the unscripted mini-drama the girls were acting out. She seemed to
enjoy it—the argument or, to be sincere enjoyed it, and would have continued to
if not for the question that demanded an answer, her answer. She coughed and joined
them in the open kitchen.
Open,
one couldn’t tell if that should be the right adjective to describe with the
kitchen, but on a second thought, it seemed to, was, or maybe more a suitable
adjective than probable nearer adjectives: the open space that housed the
kitchen had at its centre a grown mango tree which, on a sunny day, under
normal condition should cast a deep shade on the roofless kitchen; the cashew
being the roof, and the shade the kitchen. Not the only kind around, just one
of many kind.
“See
who is here!” Nana said in open arms expecting a hug. Loveline indulged.
The
hug lasted but a brief moment. Both were happy really happy to see each other
just Loveline was happier. She had been her friend since the first day in
school, even in what she would describe thick darkness when the shadow of a
man, whoever he could be, was destined to desert him she stuck. She also stood
with her against bullies and envious haters who saw her brilliance an
intimidation to their one-for-nothing surviving efforts at academics. Besides,
Nana was jovial than every member of the group.
So
Loveline proceeded with the ritual of greeting, a five was dished to each girls
with chats in between: Margaret first, next was Lara; then Esther (who was
still fuming over Paulina statement); followed by Tosin; who had as seat a
stunted rock which according to Bosede their chief host, the gods had placed a
restrict of develop-no-more on; next was Fadekemi who responded with a
resounding five; then Nana; followed by
Glory; then Atinuke; followed by Bosede who sat her buttocks on a grown branch
of the mango tree; and finally, Roseline the cook.
“How
long you have been there?” Paulina asked after the ritual of greeting had been
completed.
“Two;
five; ten; fifteen…does it matter? You are here, and I’m glad to see you.”
Loveline said sitting on Paulina’s lap.
“Any gist” she said crossing her legs.
“Yea…”
Said Esther, “there is.”
“And
the gist,” she was saying, “Is: Our dear, faithful Paulina, is now dating…”
“Esther,
please. Not that again. We are aware now, are we not?”
“Aware!”
Esther exclaimed, “And that is all you can say!”
Loveline
relaxed her mind and thought out her response, it was evident enough that
Esther outburst had an undertone, but whatever the undertone was, it wasn’t
going to stop her from expressing her view.
“Yea.”
She said unsure if she could steady her voice. “Like, I don’t get: what was it
you expected me to say uhn? Shout on her like people do on eagles eyeing
chickens for lunch, uhn?” She hissed and continued, “See,” she said standing
up, “you care what I have to say? All I have to say is the dye has already been
casted, and so let bygone be bygone.”
“Or”
said Nana jokingly, “Is your eagle eyeing Bernard too?”
Esther
watched the two close friends in close suspicion. Loveline action came to her as
a surprise but not much a surprise. It was to her as if she was supporting
Paulina inhumane action but the piquancy was her lifestyle contradicted her
words. Though Paulina was as much a friend as Nana was to her yet her lifestyle
rendered invalid the famous idiom “Birds of the same feather flock together.”
Something she didn’t quite well understand. But on the other hand, on Loveline’s
part, the defense didn’t attribute to their being friends: she would have done
the same for any other person, even Folake who had the honour of being the most
repulsive girl in their set, the reason being it was her philosophy, the way
she viewed things. Dwelling on the past, she had always said, adds nothing to
the presence but takes everything away from the future. Up to her, she saw no
reason for whinging about an uncorrectable past nothing practical in reality
could be done to help. Besides, she thought, it is her life, and she is free to
do whatever she pleases with it. Even to say, it was not like she, herself, or
any of them was a saint: they all had their bad too, which, practically
speaking, gave no credence to a judgmental ground. But even more, that was just
a by-the-way-thing: it was their day, and they were meant to enjoy it. Just
like couples do with their honeymoons and kids their candies.
“The
vegetables,” Roseline said, “has he brought it?”
“Wait,
vegetables? We had no discussion on vegetables.”
“O
sorry,” Bosede began, “we are talking of…”
“Kenny.”
Nana helped completed the unfinished statement. Loveline’s felt uneasy in her
skin.
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