Thursday, May 4, 2017

The Congruence VI

I could not get that statement off my mind…somehow I had an idea of what it meant or at least what it implied but was going to let sleeping dogs lie.

I had been in the University long enough to know stuff...I could be innocent but was no longer naïve. I had lived with Deola for a while to know what she was into.
I was in my 2nd year and she in her 3rd. And although I had never seen her do anything; I had eavesdropped, a couple of times, when she was on the phone and nothing else could account for the kind of expensive life she was living.

Did it ever cross my mind to leave and move back to the hostel? Yes, but I just couldn’t…because I was a beneficiary of the largesse.
Even my folks at home benefited from it, because I hardly asked them for anything…there was even a time I sent some money to my mum through my sister and it was Deola that gave me the money.
During our second semester break, I knew what Deola gave me when it was time to return home. Clothes, shoes, even things for my folks…it was as if I returned from a journey abroad. 

Another thing that I couldn’t ignore was the fact that she was the only true friend I ever had. I didn’t even deserve to be her friend when she reached out to me. I decided to keep it on a “don’t ask, don’t tell” arrangement.
One thing I did to repay her and also as a good friend, was made sure she studied when it was time for tests and exams; and she really appreciated that. I would insist there was no traveling that weekend and we would stay indoors and study together. She once made a joke over the phone that she could not travel because her “guardian” had placed a ban on it and she had to comply.

When our first semester results were released, I noticed that I had scored 39% in one of my courses. That was preposterous because I was the first to submit my answer sheet when we took the exam. I knew the course, I understood the concepts, I even taught Deola who had failed it when she was in 200 level and she passed it this time.
I was devastated and couldn’t help but cry. I cried because I knew what was happening. The lecturer, Mr. Sesan, had tried to play some funny games with me a couple of times, he once made some dirty comment (when I went to submit an assignment he had given us) about the top I was wearing and how it accentuated my breasts, but I quickly shut it down. I wasn’t rude but I was assertive…I knew my academic capacity and knew I would pass the course in a way that he couldn’t do anything about it.

Deola felt my pain and said we should go talk to him…I didn’t want to, I totally wanted to report this to the school authority and have my answers reevaluated.
Then Deola told me the story of a girl that did what I was planning and although she ended up getting a better grade in the course, she was frustrated into leaving the school…it was as if most of her lecturers ganged up against her and made her life miserable.
I asked why Deola didn’t do the same thing when she failed the course in her 2nd year; she made me realize that our cases were different. She did not pass the course; she also missed the 30-mark test.
However, she tried to talk to the former lecturer of the course but he was a born again Christian and was not interested in anything she had to say.

So we went to Mr. Sesan, and at first he pretended like he had no clue what I was talking about…but when Deola told him we didn’t come to fight but to discuss with him as our “elder brother” and that we were at his mercy, he soft-pedalled and blamed me for what happened.
He said I was rude to him and he was only trying to be funny. I apologized profusely (Deola made me) and begged him to help me fix things. He then demanded that I either “played along or paid to get along”.
I told him I was not that kind of girl and how I was from a poor family…he quickly interjected that he had seen me on campus many times and knew how I dressed and I should spare him the “poor girl from poor background” story.

Leave story jare...how many poor girls carry Chanel bags?” He asked while pointing at the purse I was carrying
To God who made me, I didn’t know how expensive the bag was, it was a “borrow-pose”…it was Deola’s.

He said to fix it, he would collect ten thousand Naira because he would have to go explain to the Dean why my score changed. I didn’t have the money and I didn’t want Deola to have to pay it for me. I tried to negotiate but Mr. Sesan insisted on that amount.
As we were about to leave, he warned me that the longer I took, the more expensive it was going to get and if I took too long, he wouldn’t be able to do anything about it again.
I was more angry than sad when we left his office…

Why should I have to pay to get what I earned?
See why I hate men? They are all the same
Users, opportunists, mean cold-blooded bastards
I went on and on as I poured out my anger.

Deola didn’t say anything until we got to our room…she later promised to help me raise some money so we could get it to Mr. Sesan as soon as possible.

I couldn’t let her do that; I told her I would try to get the money.
In my mind, I had planned how much I was going to get from each of my working siblings and since I had not really bothered them for money in a while, they should be able to raise the money for me or at least most of it. I was going to tell them it was for a school project.

So I called Sister Grace that same day to kind of prepare her mind and get her to talk to my brothers for me. She wasn’t responding well and I had to ask what was happening. She said all was well but I could sense from her voice that something was wrong. She then told me she had to go and would call me later. At this time I already had one of Deola’s old phones...she gave it to me when she bought a flip phone.
Because of the way Sister Grace was responding, I didn’t even get to tell her what I called about…I waited for her call that evening but she didn’t call. I started to “flash” her from my phone to remind her but she did not call back.

I did not have enough credit on my phone to make the call…Deola gave me her phone and I called my sister but she still did not pick up. I tried my brother’s line but it was switched off. My mum did not have a phone at that time…she saw it as a money drainer.
I was mad at my sister for not returning my call as promised and for ignoring, when I even attempted to call her. In my mind, they had gotten used to me not regularly demanding anything from them and they were taking me for granted.

I decided to travel home and give them a piece of my mind…I told Deola I would visit my folks the following day.

As I was preparing to leave the next morning, my phone rang and it was my sister. I quickly picked it and before I could say anything, I heard
It’s Mama o…” followed by a lot of static

Which Mama?
What happened to her?

What’s happening?
Hellooooo

I bombarded her with questions but she did not respond. I looked at the phone and it had disconnected.
Even Deola was concerned at this point, she gave me her phone and I called my sister back but her phone was switched off.

How could her phone be switched off? She just called me now” I screamed at the phone as if it could hear me
Well, it could be the battery or maybe the phone wasn’t fully charged” said Deola, as she tried to find a rationale behind what happened so I could calm down.

She later decided to travel with me because I still couldn’t get through to either my sister or brother.  We took Deola’s car…it was about an hour and half to our house.
As we pulled into our street, I saw my sister running toward the house…Deola honked and she looked back, tears all over her face. It took a while before she knew it was us. I jumped out of the car and ran to her. I didn’t want to piece things together to form a conclusion.

What happened to Mama?” I asked. I was scared to my very core and was hoping she wouldn’t answer the question...
PART 5                                                                                            PART 7

Picture Credit (c) Ghana Vibes
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental   


© 2017 Lanre Olagbaju All Rights Reserved

No comments: