ANGELINA'S WOES [I]


 


There was a knock on the door but no one responded. Angelina and her children were in deep sleep as a result of the stress they went through the previous day. The knock kept coming. When it turned to banging, it was Erinma who stirred.

  “Mummy mummy,” she called, nudging her mother.

  “Mmm,” her mother said still feeling sleepy.

  “Wake up. Someone is at the door.”

                        The next banging got Angelina fully awake. She checked the wall clock in the room. It was just 6:15am.

  “Who could be knocking like this by this time of the day?” she asked herself.

                        Her mind scanned through the events of the previous day as she wondered whether she had defaulted in any way. While she thought, the banging came again as though the person was bent on breaking down the door. She got up in a hurry and went out of the room to the parlour. By then her daughters were all awake. Erinma followed her.

  “Go back,” she said in low tone.

                        Erinma went back.

                        When she got to the window, she pushed the curtain a bit to peep at who was at the door.

  “Mcheew,” she hissed when she saw who it was. “What is Dee Okoro doing here by this time of the day?”

            She stood for some seconds with her arms akimbo.

  “Mummy who is that?” Ulunma her second daughter asked in hushed tone, standing close to Erinma at the doorway to the room.

  “Your uncle,” their mother answered.

  “What is he looking for here?” Erinma asked and leaned against the wall. “Won’t he allow us rest?”

  “Let me find out.”

                        Angelina opened the door and met Dee Okoro fuming. Dee Okoro was Angelina’s late husband’s younger brother.

  “Have you not been hearing my knock?” he asked her.

  “Dee good morning,” she greeted squeezing her face to show her distaste.

  “What is good about the morning? You kept me here for the past 20 minutes, knocking like a mad man.”

  “Dee, this is just after six. People are still sleeping in their houses.”

  “Sleep kill you there. That is how you used sleep to kill my brother.”

  “Aah, you can’t say that.”

  “You think we don’t know?”

  “Dee it is unfair to say that.”

  “How can you be sleeping like a dead woman by this time.”

             Ulunma and Erinma murmured from the parlour where they were, and he heard them.

  “What did you people say?” Dee Okoro asked, making to enter the house but Angelina blocked him.

  “Please leave my children alone,” she said to him.

  “Useless children.”

                                          Erinma and Ulunma murmured again.

  “Look,” he said. “If I hear pim there again, I will flog both of you mercilessly.”

  “Not when I am alive,” Angelina said.

  “You will soon leave this house, you will see.”

  “Which house?”

  “My brother’s house which is now my entitlement.”

  “You mean my husband’s house?”

  “Better behave yourself before we find out who owns what?”

                          Angelina sighed and folded her hands across her chest.

  “So Dee, how can I help you this morning?”

                        Dee Okoro scratched his head, looking over Angelina’s shoulder at the children.

  “I will come back,” he said. “You and your useless children just spoilt my mood this morning and broke my hand with your door.”

  “Sorry.”

  “Sorry for yourself. I will come back later.”

                        He turned and left in anger. Angelina sighed and went back into the house, locking the door behind her.

  “Mummy what is it this time?” Ulunma asked her mother. “What does he want?”

  “The only thing he wants is to frustrate me, that’s all.”

  “It will not work for him.”

                                    Angelina sat on the chair in the sitting room and a tear dropped from her eye.

  “From the first day I came into this family,” she said. “it has been torment after torment.”

  “Mummy please don’t cry,” Erinma said.

  “Your father was my shield from their hatred, but now he is gone.”

           She swallowed a lump in her throat. 

  “Mummy we are here for you,” Ulunma said.

            Angelina pulled her daughters close and hugged them.

  “You are still too young to understand what I have gone through,” she said to them. “I pray you will not marry into a wicked family, especially where they don’t like you.”

  “Mummy we won’t.”

                        She held them for a while then she cleaned her teary face with the back of her hand.

  “Do you still want to sleep small?” she asked the girls.

  “No mummy,” Ulunma said. “Let us sweep.”

  “And eat,” Erinma added.

  “Fooood,” Ulunma teased her younger sister.

                  Angelina got up from the chair and told the girls to get brooms.

  “I will sweep the room,” Ulunma said.

  “No, is me that will sweep it,” Erinma said.

  “Ulunma said it first,” Angelina said.

  “This parlour is more difficult to sweep,” Erinma said. “Unless I will not sweep under the chair.”

  “You will o.”

                        Ulunma smiled and went to get the brooms while Angelina went to the kitchen to clean up and prepare breakfast for the girls.

  “Mummy when is Adaoma coming back?” Erinma asked as she swept.

  “Whenever she is done with her exams?” Angelina answered from the kitchen.

  “Ok. She should hurry and come o.”

  “I will tell her when next I speak with her aunty.”

                                When they were done with the chores, they ate.

             Later that evening, Angelina and her daughters were sitting on the pavement in front of their house when they looked up and saw Dee Okoro coming towards them. Angelina’s heart skipped a beat as she readjusted herself where she was sitting. When he came close, Angelina and the girls greeted him. He mumbled a response. There was silence for a while as he kept looking at the girls as though they were obstacles to his mission. Angelina, still having a feeling of disgust told Ulunma and Erinma to go inside the house. They were reluctant to move.

  “Go ok,” Angelina told them.

             They got up and dragged their feet as they went into the parlour.

  “Why do you keep seeing me as your enemy?” Dee Okoro said, sitting close to Angelina.

            She shifted from him.  “You have never liked me from the beginning.”

  “It is not true.”

  “Hmmm.”

  “Have you considered my offer?”

  “Which offer?”

  “You know na,” he said with a babyish smile on his face, and tried to caress her arm.

                        Angelina shifted again and cleaned the part of her upper arm where his palm touched. It was barely one week after she buried her husband and she knew the harassment from his brother would not end. At least, not anytime soon.

 

 

 

{to be continued}

 

Nedu Isaac


PhotoCred: Canva.com


BOOKS TO EXPECT IN 2021


 


There are several books to expect this coming year all written by Chinedu Isaac Ezeala (Nedu Isaac). Keep tabs with this space and be carried along.


 




1. ANGELINA'S WOES 

[The story of the ordeals of a widow in the hands of a family that despised her. click on the picture to read]







II





[…CONTINUED...]

 

                The elections had come and gone and things had gone back to normal; the dust raised by the elections had settled and people had gone back to their normal routines. The little money Charles and Ben made from their political jobs had been used up and they were back to square one, wondering what next was up for them. Six months into the new government and there was nothing tangible to make people breathe a sigh of relief. It was majorly litigation after litigation and elected officials sharing the portion of the National cake they had access to; with their friends and family. The anticipated progress seemed like a mirage. The promises and ‘agendas’ were like water under the bridge. However, six months was too early to call.

                Among those feeling the disappointment were Dave, Ben and Charles. They are in a bar close to their house, thinking of what to do; over bottles of drink which Charles had sponsored. He had just come back from a brief travel.

  “How is your hand today?” Ben asked Charles.

  “The pain is not as bad as when I had the accident during that election time,” Charles said.

  "When last did you massage it?"

  "Professionally or personally?"

  "That place you usually go to massage it locally."

  "I don't have money to pay that man again. I am doing it by myself now."

  “Running with ballot box was never a good idea,” Dave said and sipped his drink. “I warned you.”

  “Na the money wey remain from am buy you this drink now,” Charles said. “Nonsense.”

                Ben laughed and they joined.

  “No mind me jare,” Dave said. “I happy sey they no waste you sef.”

  “Me I look the thing as e be,” Ben said. “I no come continue again,”

  “Chicken heart like Dave,” Charles said.

  “Guy, that thing no be work for young man wey get future,” Ben said.

  “But the money pass wetin civil servant dey get in one year,” Charles said.

  “But the risk meehn,” Dave said.

  “Life is full of risks.”

  “So if you see another opportunity, you will take it?”

  “Yes na. I for hama well well if not for the accident wey make me stop. Just few weeks work, I almost buy motor. What are you not talking?”

  “But why e be say na only illegal work dey pay pass for this country?”

  “Na so dem don spoil the country reach.”

                Ben brought out his phone to surf the internet.

  “When person put im mind for good work,” Dave said. “Na so so story dem go dey tell.”

  “Shee for that your job abi?” Charles asked.

  “As in eeh. Dem dey make plenty money o. If you see as dem dey carry money for bag go bank eeh, you go shock. Yet to pay person well na wahala. Ok the chikini one wey dem agree to pay, dey go still wan chop am, delay am on top.”

  “This country na ‘monkey dey work baboon dey chop’” Charlie said. “Na why I don lock up. Anything I see, I go do. Na money I wan make, I no kill person.”

  “I believe say e go better sha. Na just trial and temptation.”

                Charles eyed him.

  “This church wey you don begin go sef don enter your head.” He said to Dave. “You wan use church cover the real situation. Everything na temptation.”

  “Ehe na,” Dave replied. “God wan know wetin I go do if my blessing delay.”

  “If Im know finish, wetin Im wan use am do? Im no see say person dey roast?”

  “Guy relax, God’s time is the best.”

                Charles eyed him again.

  “Dey dia dey wait for God’s time,” Charles said. “You fit wait forever. As e be me now, any opportunity I see, I dey take am sharpaly.”

  “E good to be patient,” Dave replied. “The patient dog dem say na im dey chop the fatest bone.”

  “So the dog go waaaaiiiit, dem go chop the meat finish, na bone go remain for am, im go now chop am. Wetin dey inside bone?”

  “I am just saying sha. Na so dem talk.”

  “Oboy change that nonsense mentality o. As things dey tough, tough up your mindset join. No dey dull.”

                Ben touched Dave.

  “I just dey browse how person wan take make money for this country,” he said.

  “Ehe, which one you see?” Dave asked, his face beaming with excitement.

  “This one na talent hunt.”

Dave and Charles burst into laughter.

  “As you don old reach, you wan go do talent hunt?” Charles said.

  “Nothing dey dia," Ben said. "Age no matter. Na the money be the main thing.”

  “Wetin be the talent for this one?”

  “Singing.”

                Dave and Charles burst into laughter again.

  “You think say you be 2baba?” Charles asked, still laughing. “Wetin you sabi sing?”

  “I fit just try sha,” Ben said laughing. “You never know.”

  “Talent hunt na waste of time o. Na based on who know who.”

  “But the money no be here o. 1st price winner go carry 5 million plus motor. Which work you wan get wey go pay you that amount? You go don work like 3 years first.”

  “Aswear.”

  “This country tire me o. Person wey graduate, get first class sef no dey see this kain money. Na person wey sabi sing ordinary sing. Na wa.”

  “They no dey encourage education at all.”

  “Who education epp for this country now? Certificate wey rich people dey buy anyhow.”

  “Na talent be the koko now o. On how you sabi sing come release one single wey hot, you don blow o.”

  “Or you manage feature Phyno or Davido, you don buy house for Banana Island be that.”

  “Or you sabi act enter Nollywood, you don hama.”

  “Or you sabi play ball, you don make am.”

  “As in eeh. See wetin these guys dey make per week. Person dey kill imself dey find certificate.”

  “Certificate good sha. At least e show say you get education.”

  “Who e epp? That paper fit pay my bills?”

 “All these celebrities sha get educated people wey dey help them manage their money and things,” Dave said with a shrug. “So e no bad.”

  “De console yourself,” Charles said. “I wish say I find my talent early in life. You fo de manage my money for me.”

  “E never late o. At least you sabi carry ballot box.”

                They burst into laughter.

  “Una dey mad,” Charles said. “Ben abeg browse another thing. Talent hunt no work.”

  “Abi o,” Ben agreed. “If to say na BBN now, eheeeee.”

  “You say wetin?” Dave said. “That one wey people dey do anyhow inside.” 

  “Baba,” Charles said, touching Dave on the shoulder. “E no matter.”

  “You know how much dem dey carry?” Ben asked Dave. “Plus endorsement deals.”

  “No mind am,” Charles said. “On how you enter there come out, you don become popular o. Even if na you dem first evict. Your gain no get limit. Na on how you take package yourself.”

  “No be lie,” Dave agreed. “But to enter no easy.”

  “Na the thing be that,” Ben said.

                Ben touched the screen of his phone and scrolled.

  “See this one,” he said. “Bidding for quotation to supply things.”

  “What type of things?” Dave asked.

  “E depend on the company wey put am. This one na building materials…this one na agricultural products.”

  “Which site be that sef?” Charles asked.

  “One site where dem dey post opportunities to make money.”

  “The thing with all those supply people na sey some of them no pure. I remember one of my friends wey do am last year. The person wey need am tell am say im need one trailer load of rice to share to im community people during Christmas. Na before election. So my guy run around o, borrow money, enter motor go north, find way carry the rice come. Na im the man say im no need am again. my guy vex. As im no fit do the oga anything, im just beg am make im just pay am money wey im use buy am. After other people put mouth, the man collect the rice, pay my guy half, tell am say im go pay am the remaining when im win election. Unfortunately, the man no pass primaries sef. Na so my guy money take go o. Im come dey sell im property take pay people wey im borrow money from. When property finish and creditors still dey, my guy disappear o. Nobody know where im dey till now.”

  “Na why e dey good to collect the money first.”

  “Who wan give you money first na? Make you carry the money run?”

  “Nawa. Na risky business.”

  “I no do am lailai.”

  “But you fit start with small money something wey even if e loss, you no go feel am well.”

  “The gain no go much na, considering expenses. Na inside bulk supply gain dey."

  “Na true sha.”

  “This country sef. Why people no dey trust people?”

  “Are you a learner?” Charles said, laughing. “Here wey people dey find who they go chop mugu on a regular. Even brother fit use brother brain sef.”

  “The best thing na to just travel abroad.”

  “You don go embassy recently?”

  “No.”

  “Space no dey dia o. Guys dey sleep outside Embassy for night just to get VISA comot this country, and some na VISA to third  world country sef.”

  “Travel abroad sure pass but e no easy. To go those countries wey money dey no easy. You go pay agent plenty money and on how e no work, the money don go be dat.”

  “I get friend wey im papa sell land pay agent to make papers for am. The thing no come work. Money go, land go, how person wan take tell that kain story.”

  “Na to use study visa travel.”

  That one too no easy. Schools don lock up now o because dem know say people dey use school travel.”

  “I go look into am make I know which way possible.”

  “The only way e de easy na if you get person abroad wey get money, get mouth, get leg, wey go invite you, sponsor you, do papers for you, you come travel.”

  “Seriously.”

  “But e no dey like this before o. To travel no dey hard.”

  “Yes now. In the 60s, 70s, 80s, to travel abroad dey very easy. We no de gree travel sef. Na oyibo people dem dey beg our papa and mama dem make dem come.”

  “I no know wetin make my papa no travel that time," Ben said and hissed. "I for be citizen there now.”

  “Things don spoil now. To get VISA travel na big testimony.”

  “Guy, people don tire for this country. Nothing dey here. No infrastructure, no steady light, no opportunities for young people, nothing.”

  “If them say everybody wey wan travel abroad make dem come airport, nobody go remain for house o. Naija go empty aswear.”

  “Na as e don bad.”       

                The waiter came to their table and asked if they need extra drinks.

  “Who will pay?” Charles asked.

  “Sorry bro,” the waiter said. “Seeing your bottles almost empty, I thought you need another round.”

  “We will call you when we need ok,” Dave said.

  “Ok.”

                The waiter left.

  “Una need extra bottle?” Charles asked.

  “Leave am,” Ben said. “Make we use that money chop for night.”

  “Yes,” Dave agreed.

  “E no go reach anywhere for food na,” Charles said.

  “Small food stuff wey I collect from my mama still dey,” Dave said. “Na to buy small things join.”

  “That your mama don save us o,” Charles said.

  “Aswear,” Ben agreed. “If no be am eh, person for don carry plate enter road.”

                They laughed.

  “But to dey go carry foodstuff from her dey shame me,” Dave said.

  “she dey complain?”

  “At all. Na she dey call me self dey ask if the last one wey she give me don finish, make I come carry another one.”

  “You see. No reason as you dey reason.”

  “She don suffer train me. Now wey I suppose take care of am, I still dey collect foodstuff from her. Nawa”

                He sighed.

  “No think am,” Charles said to Dave, squeezing his shoulder. “E go better. Na just a matter of time.”

  “No wahala sha.”

                Ben put his phone back in his pocket.

  “I don tire to browse all this work sef,” he said

  "Nothing de dia guy," Charles said. "The only thing wey fit sure now na..." he reduced his voice, "yahoo"

  "No ooo," Dave said. "Oyibo don wise up o so nothing de dia unless you wan put hand in diabolism."

  "Use your destiny do collateral," ben added

  "No way dey easy guy," Charles said.

  "Then when sars remember you, you go hear am."

  "Taaah nothing dey happen. Na just say I don old for that. I no fit follow small boys carry laptop upandan."

                Suddenly, Dave froze.

 

 

[TO BE CONTINUED……]

 

.........................................................................................................................

To read the next part, click here

If you missed the first part of this story, click here

 

To see all Nedu Isaac writings so far, click here

 


#LazyNigerianYouths #YouthEmpowerment #NigerianYouth #NigeriaRising #YouthUnemployment #NigerianYouthVoices #YouthInAction #NigeriaSpeaks #LeadershipInNigeria #YouthDevelopment #EmpowerTheYouth #NigeriaFuture #YouthEngagement #YouthRevolution #WorkEthic #NigerianCulture #ChangeNigeria #NigeriaGrowth #YouthMotivation #RiseAboveChallenges #Education #Literature #Reading #Writing #Nigeria #Africa #Canada #elections