FED UP [LXXXIV]

(Continued...)




She brought out her hand to shake him but he ignored the hand and hugged both her and her handbag.
  “Ejike,” She called him.
  “Mmm,” he answered still holding onto her.
  “The hug is too much na.”
                He let her go.
  “That’s for all the years I wished I could hug you in school,” he said.
  “Now people are looking, wondering whether I now sleep around with men.”
  “Why will they think that?”
  “My male colleague just dropped me and you now hugged me.”
  “That’s their business. You know yourself.”
  “Ejike! Don’t’ be insensitive.”
  “Sorry. It will not happen again.”
                A lady who lived in the opposite compound, a friend of Mabel’s, gave her sign like ‘is he the one?’ She shook her head and smiled.
  “You see,” she said.
  “Don’t mind then,” he said. “So what is the matter with you? You said you are not feeling well.”
  “Yes o. I fainted in the office.”
  “What! Are you serious?”
  “Yes.”
  “Why na? What happened?”
  “I think I was stressed out.”
  “Everybody is stressed out but not everyone is fainting. Something is wrong.”
  “I did not eat and take my medicine before leaving for work today?”
  “That must be the reason. What are you taking medicine for?”
  “Long story. I have been a bit ill for some days now.”
  “So which medicine are you on?” 
  “They are just stress-relieving medicine. I think one is anti-malarial.”
                Ejike folded his hand across his chest and asked, “How could you not eat and take your medicine?”
  “I was in a hurry,” Mabel said. “I was running late.”
  “You would have called me to come and drop you off in the morning or even to buy something for you to eat in the office.”
  “Why will I put you through all that inconvenience? As what na?”
  “As a friend.”
  “You are a busy person. Besides we just met, like met.”
  “I don’t like my friends going through things like this, especially those close to my heart.”
  “Eiyaa. That’s nice of you.”
  “My dad’s health issue developed this strange concern for people in ill health in me. I can suspend anything just to make sure someone is taken care of.”
                Chukka came back with the drink and biscuit and walked past them without saying a word.
  “Tell Cynthia I am around,” Mabel told him as he went in.
  “Ok,” he replied without looking at her.
  “Let me not keep you standing for so long,” Ejike said to her.
  “Yes. I really need to lie down and rest my banging head.”
                She turned a bit towards the compound in readiness to go in.
  “I really planned a nice TGIF outing for me and you today,” Ejike said.
  “Aww, We will have to reschedule.”
  “I will be traveling next week. That will be when I come back.”
  “Importer! Exporter!”
  “Na hustle we dey o. Survival of the fittest.”
  “Remember me in your paradise o.”
  “Once things are set, I will come.”
  “Come for?”
                Ejike pretended he didn’t hear her question.
  “Let me give you what I got for you,” he said, opening the back seat of his car. He brought out two nylon bags filled with provision and stuff. “For you.”
  “Ah ah na,” Mabel said to him. “You wouldn’t have bothered yourself.”
  “It is nothing at all.”
  “It is too much for one person na.”
  “You have a sister and a mother to share with.”
  “I feel like rejecting this gift o, just that you will feel bad.”
  “Why?”
  “It is looking like a Trojan horse.”
                Ejike burst into laughter.
  “Trojan what?” he asked. “There are no strings attached biko. It is for old times’ sake.”
                Mabel took one of the nylon bags and looked through.
  “With the price tags I am seeing here,” she said. “I hope you did not empty your account to get them?” 
  “Like I said before,” Ejike said. “This is nothing. If I had taken you out, we would have gone to somewhere expensive and I would have spent much more than I spent on this. Just accept my gift of love.”
  “Gift of..?”
  “Friendship.”
                Mabel tried carrying the second Nylon bag together with her hand bag but she needed an extra hand.
  “You will have to help me bring them in,” she told Ejike.
  “Really?” Ejike asked. “Your mother will not mind?”
  “She will mind but I will take care of that.”
  “Sure?”
  “It’s nothing to worry about.”
  “If you say so. I fear protective mothers o.”
  “Unless you have ulterior motive na.”
  “Nothing like that.”
  “Ok. Sometimes my mum thinks I am still the small girl she held by the hand and crossed the road with but the only thing she will do now is to ask me about you. That’s all.”
  “Ok.”
                Ejike made sure his car was locked. Then he walked behind Mabel into the compound, carrying the nylon bags.
  “Chei!” he said as they walked. “You go wound person o.”
Mabel laughed and said, “Yeye man like you. You will not face your front.”
  “Easy o.”
                When they got to the apartment, they met Chuka and Cynthia sitting on a bench in front of the house, with the biscuit and soft drink in her hands. She sat up and tried to hide the ‘cheap’ biscuit she was holding.
  “Welcome,” Cynthia said to Mabel.
  “Is mummy around?” Mabel asked.
  “Yes. She is in the backyard.”
                Cynthia greeted Ejike.
  “How are you my dear?” Ejike asked her.
  “I am fine,” Cynthia replied smiling. “You brought my sister back?”
  “Kinda. Yea.”
  “That’s kind of you.”
                Mabel just watched them exchange pleasantries. Chuka didn’t know whether to offer his hand to him for a handshake or not. He just looked away so he would not be embarrassed. Ejike looked at him from time to time to give him the eye contact greeting but he did not look up.
  “I will be going,” he said to Mabel.
  “Just like that?” Cynthia asked him. “You don’t want to stay a while?”
                Ejike looked at Mabel who shrugged.
  “As long as your mum is around, I don’t think it is a good idea o, and it is getting late.”
  “She is in the backyard,” Cynthia said.
  “Mabel is that you?” their mother asked from inside the house.






(...to be continued)

Nedu Isaac

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