Obiageli walked quickly to the car park, craning
her head slightly and peering into the darkness which enveloped the
parked cars. She did not see the navy blue Mercedes. Did Paul not say he
was going to be here at half seven? As she waited impatiently, a
mosquito bit her on the leg and she bent down and scratched furiously
and then spit on her hand to wipe away the white scratches that she did
not see in the darkness but which she knew from experience must have
appeared on her dark legs.
She stared into the dim darkness, hoping that he
had not parked right in front of the hostel. She had asked him not to;
she did not want the florescent lights shining on her. She did not want
anyone to see her entering a car, even though many girls did this; men
came to pick up their girlfriends every evening. Many of the men even
went into the hostel to see the girls -- the ones who had become
girlfriends and the ones who were still being wooed. They parked their
cars in front of the hostel. Some of them would wait for the girls
outside; others would go into their rooms to get them. This Friday
evening was no different; girls were coming out, some of them skimpily
clad, others in more modest clothes like Obiageli, chatting with their
campus boyfriends or entering into the cars of men who were waiting to
take them into the town for the evening or for the weekend or for the
wild parties that provided fodder for gossip in the university.
She had met Paul two days ago as he drove into
the university campus and she walked into the campus. Paul had stopped
in a flat-boot Mercedes car and offered to drive her in. He asked her
charmingly, a pleasant smile on his dark face. She thought it would be
churlish to refuse; she did not admit to herself that she was flattered.
She could immediately tell from the way he spoke
that he was not Igbo. She was right; he told her he was from Benue and
had just been posted to Enugu from Jos a few months before. He worked in
the army at the 82 Division of army command in Enugu and was thinking of
doing a diploma programme in the Faculty of Business. She had told him
she was a second-year student in the Faculty of Law.
"You are very beautiful," he told her.
"Thank you," she said a little
diffidently. She hoped he really thought so; she was conscious that her
clothes were not of the same quality as those worn by many of the girls
in school.
"No, seriously," he said, an earnest
look on his face, as if he had telepathically read her mind. "You
should think of entering one of those beauty contests, you have a
beautiful face, a nice figure and the height."
She smiled shyly. She was tall like her mother
and people said she also had her mother’s pretty looks. She had never
thought of entering a beauty contest before and even though she knew she
would not do so, she found herself liking this man for paying her such
compliments. He was good-looking too; his complexion was brown and not
at all too dark, and he had a dimple when he smiled. Even though he was
sitting, Obiageli could tell that he was tall.
When he dropped her off at the hostel, he asked
if he could see her again one evening and they had settled on today. She
hoped that he did not pick up on her overwhelming eagerness.
From the morning, she had been excited, picking
out her best blouse and a skirt and ironing them carefully with her
roommate’s iron. When she dressed up this evening, she applied white
powder on her face and lined her eyes with an eye pencil; that was all
the make-up she knew how to apply. Two of her roommates asked where she
was going and she lied and said she was going to the class to study. She
had no reason to share anything with them, least of all this special
first date.
A few more minutes passed and she was beginning
to wonder if he would show up before she saw Paul’s car pull into the
driveway. She walked up to the passenger door and entered the car.
"Good evening," she said.
"Good evening," he replied. "Have
you been waiting long?" he asked and without waiting for her to
respond, he added that he had left work a little later than usual and
had to do some other things before coming out. It wasn’t a full
apology but Obiageli did not make too much of it. Her heart was pounding
a little strangely with excitement. "You look nice. I like girls
who do not wear too much make-up," he said.
She smiled at him, but said nothing. She was
afraid that her voice would come out trembling. He looked and smelled
nice too, his lean body said that he took regular exercise and his
cologne was strong and masculine just as in the books that she read.
Would he notice that she was not wearing any perfume she wondered? She
glanced at his profile as he drove. He was as handsome as he had been on
the first day and subsequently in her imagination, handsome and mature.
She was not sure how old he was, but she guessed that he was perhaps
about thirty. Chikelu would think that was too old. But Nkiru her best
friend would say that he was mature. Obiageli found herself agreeing
with Nkiru.
"So, where would you like to go? We could
go to a wonderful suya place I know in New Haven or to eat some nkwobi
in Ogui Road although that place may be crowded this evening," he
told her.
She wanted to say that it did not matter where
they went. She did not know either place and did not particularly care
what she ate. It was enough to be with him and look on his handsome
face, listen to his strangely accented deep voice, smell his masculine
cologne and glory in simply being with a man. But he was waiting for an
answer and she said. "Wherever you choose is fine," she said.
"Ok, we will go to the suya place.
Sometimes they waste plenty of time in the nkwobi place, and they
may have lots of people especially on a Friday like today," he
said. This made little difference to Obiageli had had neither suya or
nkwobi. She leaned back from the edge of her seat in the luxurious car
and tried to enjoy the ride to the suya place.
At the suya joint, a crude barbecue
machine, which was really a big metal drum, perhaps formerly used to
store oil or water, with a metal see-through tray was roasting several
pieces of kebab-like sticks of meat, sweet-smelling smoke rising into
the sky. Paul called over the waiter, who greeted him familiarly,
calling him captain. Although she was nervous, Obiageli could tell that
he came here regularly. She hoped that she could act as though she was
used to this sort of thing.
"What type of suya do you like to
eat?" he asked her.
"I don’t have any preferences," she
told him. She did not know what types of suya there were; she had
never had suya before.
"Oh, really? I prefer chicken suya
myself. Ram suya can be tough to chew sometimes and I find they
put too much groundnuts or whatever they make the beef suya with
that it just turns my stomach. Get us the chicken suya," he
told the waiter with authority.
"What will you have for drinks sir?"
the waiter asked.
"Bring me big stout," he said to the
waiter and turning to Obiageli, he added, "You will have small
stout, or do you want big stout?"
"No, I don’t want small stout,"
Obiageli said a little shyly, trying to look at him, but unable to place
her eyes on his. It was enough that she was sitting out at night with a
man, but she would not add drinking alcohol. Involuntarily, the sound
and image of Papa Osondu, their neighbour in the quarters, singing
loudly and falling down drunkenly in front his house when he had had too
much to drink as he frequently did, and the gratitude that her father
did not add drinking to his gambling problem rose up in Obiageli’s
mind.
"I thought that girls liked small stout. Do
you prefer Star beer?" he asked her.
Obiageli could tell that he really believed that
most girls drink alcohol, so she said, "No, I don’t drink
alcohol."
"Come on baby," he cajoled, "you
are a big girl now. How old are you?"
A little anger welled up in Obiageli. He was
asking her how old she was right in front of the waiter who was
listening intently to them.
"I would like a Fanta please," she
said, choosing to ignore his question. As if he could sense that all was
not well, he told the waiter to bring a Fanta and a big stout.
"So, you don’t drink alcohol," he
said smiling indulgently at her. She did not smile back; there was
something belittling in that smile. It said that even though he had said
she was a big girl, she had acted like a child, but he was willing to
forgive her. "You should try it," he continued. "It
clears your head and makes your thoughts sharper, particularly
stout."
"So, are you enjoying your course?" he
asked.
"Yes," Obiageli said immediately.
Study was something she liked talking about. "Law is actually very
interesting. The cases are really interesting, especially the old
English ones. There was this case of the woman who found a dead snail in
her drink and sued the company. When I have Fanta now, I check the
bottom of the bottle."
He was smiling at her but she could tell that he
was not really paying attention to her. She kept quiet.
"Baby," he said, and she wondered why he called her that. Did
he call all the girls he knew ‘baby’ she wondered. "I can see
you like books. That is good. I was a lazy student myself, even before I
went into the army, I knew I did not like books."
"Why did you join the army?" she asked
him. He launched eagerly into the story of how he joined the NDA.
Obiageli could see that the army was a big thing in his life and that he
liked to talk about himself. He told her how an uncle had been an army
and how he had admired him, how he had been a troublesome child at home
and how this uncle encouraged him to join the army. The discipline in
the army, the hierarchy and the order fascinated him. He had joined in
1983 at nineteen just before the Buhari/Idiagbon coup that overthrew the
civilian Second Republic led by Shagari. Now that they were running the
country, life in the army was very good, he told her, and there were
many opportunities to make money.
"But don’t you think the country would be
better if we had a democracy?" she asked.
He frowned; he did not like being interrupted in
the middle of saying important things. "Democracy?" he said.
"When there was democracy what did it do for the country? Did
politicians not go sharing bags of money leaving the so-called poor
masses to suffer?"
"But is that not exactly what the military
is doing now?" she asked him. There was no logic in what he was
telling her. Everyone knew the military was bad for the country. People
lived like prisoners in their own country and their human rights record
was appalling.
"At least now there is some semblance of
order in the society. You were still little in 1983 I am sure. How old
are you?" he asked.
Obiageli did not see the connection between her
age and knowing the history of her country. But she told him, "I am
eighteen. How old are you?" she asked boldly.
"I am thirty-four, quite a bit older than
you and certainly more knowledgeable in these matters than you," he
told her smugly.
She had guessed thirty, but thirty-four was
close. Their drinks and suya had arrived while they were talking
and he dug into his plate, clearly unwilling to pursue this particular
conversation. Obiageli ate too, enjoying the chicken suya and
thinking that she would have liked to take some home for her brothers,
but her mother would ask how she got it and Paul might wonder at her
wrapping up the chicken to take with her. They made some conversation,
nothing more about politics, mostly about Paul and how much he liked
Enugu, which he found quieter than Lagos, but not too quiet with good
eating places and attractive girls like Obiageli. She sat quietly
listening to his deep manly voice; hoping. He did not seem to mind that
she was not saying much; he obviously liked to talk.
At the end of their meal, when Obiageli was
wondering if this was the end of the night and if he would see her
again, he suggested that they should go to his house and stay for a
while. The night was still young and she had no classes the next day.
Obiageli had no watch, but she knew it must be at least ten o’clock at
night. But she did not object, she was not going back to anything
special in the hostel and she was eager to extend what seemed a magical
night.
His house was a small bungalow in GRA, where the
British colonial government had once housed the civil servants and which
subsequently was taken over by the state government. Some of the houses
were still allotted to civil servants, but increasingly accommodating
private persons were buying them for large sums from the government, and
putting tall fences in the previously unfenced compounds to keep out
armed robbers. Paul’s house was lightly furnished; the sitting room
was covered in a brown carpet and contained just a single sofa, a
rectangular, wooden centre table and a large TV set and CD player. There
were a single enlarged photograph of him in his uniform and a large
round wall clock on the wall. It did not really say much about the
person who lived in this house except, perhaps, that he was a bachelor.
He asked her to sit down and make herself comfortable and went into the
house.
She sat down on the sofa, but she was careful
not to get too comfortable. Now that they were here, she was not sure
why she had agreed to come home with him. Besides, it was late, the
clock on the wall said it was quarter to eleven. She was thinking that
she would tell him that she wanted to go back to school when he came out
with two bottles of Star beer and glasses on a tray.
He poured the drinks and held out a glass to
her. She shook her head and said no.
"What is wrong with you?" he asked,
gulping down his drink quickly. "Are you the only girl in Enugu
that does not drink beer?"
She did not answer the question and said quietly
that she would like to go back to school.
"But, you only just came here. I will take
you back soon, stay with me a little while," he said cajolingly.
Perhaps he was lonely, Obiageli thought. It could not be easy being new
to a town, with no family living close. But, she thought uneasily, it
was getting really late, she had never been out of the school this late.
He sat down and put on the television. The CNN
news was on. He listened to it for some seconds, poured himself a second
drink and moved closer to her. His free hand went around her shoulders
and he hugged her to him. She was rigid with nervousness and excitement,
her heart beating the tune of a crazy drum; she was uncertain what would
happen next, but afterwards, she could not be sure whether she merely
thought or hoped he would kiss her. He put down his glass on the centre
table and with both hands now he drew close to her again. She was not
quite sure what happened next but he was hugging her tight and his lips
were on hers. Something told her that this was going too fast, faster
than she had anticipated. Any idea of romance fled from her brain, a
little panic gripped her, sweat formed in her armpits and she began to
struggle out of his hands. He held her even more tightly.
"Please, please, this is too fast,"
she begged.
"You Enugu girls too do," he said in
Pidgin English. "Even when you want it, you want the man to beg for
it," with which he proceeded to tear off her blouse. Somewhere
during the struggle Obiageli gave in. He was too strong for her.
He grabbed her breasts and began to suck
greedily, his saliva dribbling over her face. His own face was no longer
handsome, but was contorted into something ugly and predatory. In a
hungry and lustful voice, he complimented her on being a proper woman,
an African woman with breasts. Big breasts ran in her family; her
mother, her grandmother, her aunt Mama Ogechi all had big breasts. But
she did not say this, instead her mind hurried him on; she wanted it to
be over soon. She tensed as he entered her. The first pain hit her and
almost sucked the breath out of her. When she recovered a little, the
smell of beer wafted from his open, grunting mouth all over her face. As
he pounded up and down between her legs, she did not say to herself that
this was a travesty of what she had imagined her first time would be.
That belonged to the world of novels; this was what the real world felt
like: this pain and shame. Indeed, she did not think of the act that was
going on. A dissonance stood between her mind and body: her mind always
worked feverishly when she felt herself to be in trouble. Instead the
smell of beer brought back the image of Papa Osondu, their neighbour,
his loud nonsensical songs, his stumbling around. Was the Constitutional
Law test on Thursday or Friday, she wondered. Why did law lecturers find
it difficult to give areas of concentration for tests? It sometimes felt
as if they wanted to punish the students. Her mind went to anywhere and
everywhere but to the inescapable act which was going on as if it would
never end.
He gave a little cry as he climaxed, and he
shook as if the cold was gnawing his insides, which could not be,
Obiageli thought, because his sweat was dripping down on to her chest. A
short time later, he ceased all movement. His body felt limp and heavy
on hers and she felt something inside her shrivel up in defeat and die.
Afterwards, he rose from her body and lay by her side on his back.
"I would like to go back to school,"
she said to him after a short time. She had put on her clothes which had
been strewn on the carpet and were now rough-looking from the earlier
struggle. She could see some blood stains on the floor where she had
been lying. If he saw the stains, he did not say.
"It is late," he replied, his back on
the carpet, and his face looking up at the white ceiling but not at her.
Let us go to the bedroom and sleep. ‘I will take you back tomorrow
morning."
"No," she said coldly. "I want to
go back now." She wanted to shout and say, ‘I want to go back and
have a shower and wash myself and see if I can get the dirtiness out of
my skin, my insides,’ although something told her that no amount of
water would make her clean and whole again. Her anger was directed more
at herself than this man whom she barely knew. She had been stupid and
naïve and now she was soiled.
"Don’t be silly, I will take you back
tomorrow."
She said nothing; she just walked to the door.
When he saw that she seemed serious, he stood
up, not bothering to cover up his nakedness and said coldly, "You
will have to walk back to school then." It was obvious that he
could not see what she was creating fuss about. He picked up his clothes
and went into the bedroom.
She opened the door and peered outside. The
mango trees in front of the house seemed menacing, like ghosts with big
heads waiting to catch the disobedient little child who against his
mother’s instructions leaves his bed in the middle of the night when
he thinks no adult is looking. Anger and frustration gnawed at her from
inside; she did not know the area well and could not think of walking
out into darkness. She would have to wait for the morning. She went back
into the sitting room, sat down on the sofa and began to sob quietly.
She did not know when she fell asleep. When she woke up, it was almost
half seven and the sunlight was streaming into the sitting room through
the windows as if the night had not happened. But the night had happened
for there Obiageli was, sitting on the sofa, her neck which she had
rested on the arm of the sofa aching from the awkward position it had
been in and her breasts painful from all the grabbing, pulling and
chewing of last night.
In the morning, bare-chested he walked into the
sitting room and greeted her as if nothing had happened, as if he saw
her in his sitting room every other morning. He asked her affably if she
wanted some breakfast. She was careful not to look at him directly as
she said no, she just wanted to go back to school. He said he would have
to dress up. She waited for him to do so. Soon, they were in his car
driving to school. The silence in the car was thick and the air
conditioner she had considered a luxury the previous night felt as if it
was blowing air on a corpse in the mortuary.
In front of the hostel, he stopped the car and
asked when he could see her again. It was incredulous that he would ask
her that, but she did not say so. She only said she did not know. He
looked at her for a moment and then took some money out of his wallet
and offered it to her. She hesitated, looking first into his smiling
face and then down at the money. It seemed like a large sum of money;
there were hundred naira notes in the bundle still intact with the white
paper band that the bank put on it to hold it together. Recalling how
difficult things were at home, the mimeograph lectures she could buy
with it, she pushed out intruding pride and futile humiliation, took the
money silently and got out of the car.
She walked into the hostel, hoping no one she
knew would see her; how did other girls who went out at night walk into
the hostels in the morning she wondered? Her own walk into the hostel
was hesitant, less sure than it had been only the previous night.
When she looked back on that night afterwards,
the shame that pervaded her being attached itself to the excitement of a
first date, to her painful innocence and naiveté, to her powerlessness
in the face of a domineering evil, and to the humbling moment she took
the money.
Cheluchi Onyemelukwe is a Nigerian writer. She is currently a doctoral candidate in law at Dalhousie University. Her short fiction has been published in several journals, including most recently
Conte: A Journal of Narrative Writing.