Stranger In Lagos

Stranger In Lagos #9

YEMI

If you want something done, you have to do it yourself. Or so they say. It simply means you should handle your own mess. And nobody knows how to get into a messy situation like I do. Handling it, on the other hand, is a tale for another day.

Falling in love with another female after being badly burnt by my ex is going to be chaos. If I had known Halim would be this much distraction for me, I would have turned her away the moment she showed up at my door. I can’t spend four years cleansing myself of my past, just to jump back into a similar situation. I just can’t.

I skip breakfast this morning, which is something I don’t do. Who eats when they want to carry out a seemingly heartless act? I feel the horns growing out of my head as I think of the best way to tell Halim she has to leave.

I grip the handle of my door and hold it, grinding my teeth and boosting up my guts.

She’ll be fine. She’s rich. She won’t be out on the streets. She has an ex who loves her and a mom desperately waiting for her to come home. She’ll be okay.

I nod in validation and proceed on my mission. I find her door ajar. She is seated on her bed, backing the door. I position my fist to knock when I hear a sniffle. I pause. Another sniffle and a whimper. She stands abruptly, turning as she does so.

β€œI was just about to knock,” I explain.

β€œOkay.” She heaves, still sobbing. β€œYou want anything?”

β€œNo. I just wanted to… But forget it. It’s nothing.”

β€œOkay.”

β€œWhy are you crying?” I ask, hoping that Clement has done the unpleasant job of asking her to leave.

β€œI don’t want to talk about it.”

β€œAiit. I’ll be in my room.”

I make to turn away.

β€œHe died,” she says. I stop.

β€œWho died?”

β€œThe guy I slept with, that infected me…he’s dead.”

And then I lose her to her tears. I enter her room and take her hand. We sit on her bed.

β€œYou know I’ve been looking for him for these past three months because he went missing. Without a trace. They finally found his car two days ago on the way to Kogi state, off the highway. His clothes were in the car, torn and stained with blood. The driver seat was also stained with blood. There was no trace of him. The police suspect that whoever killed him dragged his body into the forest and disposed of it or something like that. God! Who even knows what happened to him.”

She passes over her phone, showing me pictures of the car she has just described.

β€œHis family is calling off the search. I don’t think they can handle it anymore.”

Her shoulders shake in sobs. I stare awkwardly for a bit before I reach out and hold her. I am drawn in by her marked fragrance which brings to mind scenes of the outdoors and open spaces and a life I once lived.

Halim smells like my ex. This might be another reason why I want her to leave. Heck, it could even be the reason why I’m growing feelings for her. Her scent, just like my ex’s, is green and earthy. It was what got me on our first encounter. I’ve always had a weakness for women who smell heavenly. To me, a woman’s scent is a feature that delicately highlights her appearance; it’s the unseen seasoning that puts the finishing touches to her persona. And even after she’s gone from your life and imageries of her start to fade, the memories her perfume leaves behind cannot easily vanish.

Halim has kicked off my past, bringing back recollections I have long discarded. But beneath that, she comes with her own distinct story. As much as I want her gone, a part of me is curious to know more about her.

For a moment, I forget my mission and do all I can to bring her to calm. When she manages to stop crying, she pulls away from me, apologizing for staining my t-shirt with her tears.

β€œHalim, did you have feelings for this guy?”

β€œPaul?” She shrugs. β€œI thought I did, until I was told I was HIV positive. I started to hate him for infecting me. Now, I feel sorry for him. I can’t imagine the type of pain he went through in the hands of the people that killed him. They didn’t take his car. What did they want?”

β€œWho knows?”

She shakes her head. I fear that she’s about to cry again, following the way her face contorts, but she pulls in a long sniffle and walks to the window to throw it open. The honk of a heavy duty vehicle out on the street blares right into the room.

β€œYou didn’t play any music this morning,” she comments. β€œI thought you went out.”

β€œNo. I was not in the mood.”

β€œYou’re okay, though?”

β€œYeah. You?”

β€œWeirdly, I feel lighter. I cried a lot last night. I’m still sad, of course, but Paul’s death has put a lot of things in perspective. I used to think HIV was the worst thing. Out-and-out death sentence. But look at Paul, for example, he had HIV and a long stretch of life to live if he managed it well, but it was taken from him.”

β€œWow. See who’s learning.”

β€œI’m still not taking any more tests.”

β€œAnd I won’t force you. Do it when you desire, but please, eat well and exercise.”

β€œWill you help me?”

I look pointedly at her. Would I still be considered a bad person if I ask her nicely to leave now?

β€œI’ll buy my own food,” she appends. β€œJust tell me what to buy and the quantity I have to take every day. I’ll register in a gym too.”

I think it’s okay to say, at this point, that I’ve been trapped. I don’t know if it’s the counselor in me or it’s Yemi feeling some type of way for Halim.

I stand up, and with a tight face, lift my thumb in the air.

β€œThank you.”

I walk to the door and stop. β€œDo you wear Chanel Bois des Îles?” I ask.

β€œYeah,” she answers with a curious smile. β€œHow did you know?”

β€œI once bought it for someone. Twelve bottles of it.”

β€œTwelve?”

I smile.

β€œWhy?”

I don’t reply. I start to walk out, but she stops me.

β€œYemi… Do you have feelings for me?”

The question hits me like a canon.

β€œExcuse me?”

β€œYesterday, I overheard you on the phone with Clement. You said want me to leave because you may have feelings for me. Is that true?”

Crap!

I rest my eyes on a spot on the doorpost. β€œHalim…”

How do I get out of this one? I’m deeply embarrassed right now.

β€œFirst of all, you shouldn’t have eavesdropped.”

β€œI didn’t mean to.”

β€œSecond, all you heard me tell Clement was a lie.”

β€œAll you told him? So, that means your cousin is not coming?”

β€œHe’s coming… I mean, he’s supposed to come. But he just called this morning and told me he found somewhere else to stay.”

β€œOkay.”

She doesn’t believe my lie. I see it in the slight tilt one side of her face bears.

β€œI just want to be sure where we stand,” she states. β€œI don’t want any weirdness between us, because if you’re really crushing on me, it’ll be a waste of your time. I don’t feel the same. In fact, I’m done with guys.”

I look at her. β€œYou should go and make your hair. It’s a mess.”

I hurry out of the room.

ENIOLA

β€œWhat if he still loves Halim?”

I am frustrated and exhausted. My new job is taking a toll on me on one end, and Eben is proving difficult on the other. I have done everything a woman can possibly do to get a man’s attention but nothing is working. I’m about to take it out on Sandra who has been my chaperon on all matters relating to Eben. It was she who suggested that I go about the house in skimpy clothes. It was also she who pushed me into some pretend lesbian act because she was certain it would turn Eben on. I have done all she has instructed, and yet, Eben walks past me in the house every day like I’m one of his sisters.

β€œHe doesn’t still love her,” Sandra assures me, taking off a red thong she is wearing and flinging it across her room into a laundry basket. She lives in a single room apartment that barely has space for one to move about. It contains the basics of a bed, wardrobe, a kitchenette and a small fridge, but she pays half a million for it each year, just because it is situated in the heart of Ikoyi. You see why I hate Lagos?

β€œCan you just believe me when I tell you that you’ve gotten Eben already?”

She goes for her skirt next, wiggling her wide hips as she forces it down. We have just returned from getting her car from the mechanic, after a tedious day at our respective jobs. I am badly in need of a bath, a meal with lots of meat in it and a full body massage. Not necessarily in that order, though.

β€œIt’s Friday. It’s the weekend. He’s taking you clubbing. Sweetie, relax. Trust me, this night, you’ll be screaming out his name and clawing his back. Rrrrr!”

She laughs as she places one foot on her bed and faces me, parting open the folds of her vagina. β€œDo you think my clit is too small?”

I give her a frown. She gets on my nerves sometimes, just like she used to do in school back then. We had been roommates on campus in our first year and then moved on to become quite close for the remainder of our stay in the university. It was she who introduced me to a clandestine life I have today which is filled with tales of sexual escapades. She is not so thrilled to find out that after all those years, the values she instilled in me have been replaced with the need to be with one man. However, she respects my wishes and has been quite cooperative in helping me fulfill them. She is worried that my emotions for Eben are making it difficult for me to execute my plans.

β€œRemove heart from the matter, Eni,” she had told me a week ago. β€œYou want this guy, don’t you?”

β€œI do.”

β€œThen go after him already!” she had added. β€œYou’ve been there long enough. This nonsense cooking and wifely acts you’re doing won’t get him. Men respond to pure animal lust.”

And then she had gone ahead to suggest the pseudo lesbian sex we engaged in to get his attention. It turned out to be a waste of my time. Eben didn’t fall for it, and our interaction since that day has been ordinary. I’m getting depressed over the issue. It’s been almost four months since Halim left and I’ve not gotten as much as a kiss from him. It’s either he wants her back or he’s seeing someone else.

Sandra sits on the bed beside me with a sympathetic look on her face. She pulls my chin to her.

β€œDon’t give up, Eni. Try the old trick of using alcohol and some dirty dancing when you go out tonight. When you guys get back home, just go for it. I promise you that it’ll work.”

β€œYou’re sure?”

β€œVery.” She grabs my cheeks with both hands and pecks my nose. β€œLet me wear something so that we can go out and eat. I’m starving.”

She jiggles her ample bum away to her wardrobe as my mind tries to think up a killer outfit for my night out with Eben.

YEMI

There’s a rat in my ceiling. A big rat. Probably that type that stares down at you when you catch it doing things in your kitchen. They usually come with pink feet and mouths, and grow as big as cats. I once saw two of them crawling in a straight line. They had actually looked blind; a third partner would have had me calling them the three blind mice. Neither of them saw me. Not even when I dashed outside the kitchen and picked the concrete slab I used as a step at the entrance and smashed them to death in one slam. And they didn’t even squeak as normal rats are known to do when they are dying. Eerie. They had smelled like old shoes and bed sores and mold, all at once.

That’s what I smell now as I lie here, staring upwards, listening to the bastard crawling around in my ceiling.

But there’s a sweeter, more overwhelming fragrance. It’s stuck on me. It’s Halim’s. An unpretentious, carefree fragrance that sadly, does not reflect the present person she is.

The rat scurries around. I poke the ceiling with a headless mop stick that has been made longer with an attached broken microphone stand. It stops but moves again. My phone rings.

I drop the stick. It’s a call I’ve been expecting.

β€œHey, Clem.”

β€œYemo, sorry o. I dey surgery that time you call.”

β€œI wasn’t even expecting the phone to ring. How was your trip?” I inquire, referring to a medical-related project that had him out of the country for almost three weeks.

β€œTiring, but we’re alive. Wetin dey? How your end?”

β€œGood o.”

β€œSo, did you talk to her about your cousin coming?”

I hiss. β€œYou’re asking me this after three weeks.”

β€œI just dey ask ni.”

β€œHalim would have told you if I asked her to leave.”

β€œYeah, she would have. But did you speak to her?”

β€œNo. The guy called and said he wasn’t coming again.”

Clement laughs. β€œYou be idiot, I swear.”

I lift my legs and rest them on the wall.

β€œMe and you know there’s no cousin.”

I don’t counter his words.

β€œYour wahala too much. You too dey behave like woman sometimes. Walahi.”

β€œThere’s a bigger problem, Clem.”

β€œProblem? What happened now?”

β€œHalim overheard our talk that night.”

β€œWhich talk?”

β€œWhen I told you how I felt about her.”

β€œShit. Everything?”

β€œEverything. She asked me if I had feelings for her.”

β€œAnd wetin you tell her?”

β€œI said I didn’t but she didn’t, or rather, doesn’t believe me. She dey give me weird eyes since then.”

β€œBut seriously, you like the babe?”

I should reply this answer with a lie, but I can’t lie to Clement. He’s that one friend you tell everything.

β€œI dey feel her.”

β€œBut…?”

β€œI’m going to let the feelings die, Clem. I can’t tow that line.”

β€œDude, you know you have to let go of the past, right? What has happened has happened. Enough water don pass under bridge. Freaking move on. In my opinion, you and Halim would make an awesome couple…”

β€œNobody asked for your opinion, guy. And quit the pep talk. I’m not acting on any feelings. They’ll come and go. And if they don’t, I’ll kill them.”

Clement hisses.

β€œAbeg, wire that money back to me,” I tell him.

β€œI’m taking out 20k for the stress and time already spent.”

β€œ5k.”

β€œ15k.”

β€œ5k, Clem.”

β€œ10k… But how is Halim, generally? Still depressed?”

β€œShe tries to come out of her shell these days. But she still locks herself in most of the time.”

I spare him the details of Paul’s death. It’s not in my place to share.

β€œLook, I have to run,” Clement tells me. β€œKiss Halim for me.”

β€œYou dey craze.”

Laughing, he hangs up. I pick the mop stick and resume hitting the ceiling. The rat is long gone but I continue with my action because it distracts me. I’m thinking of how to get rid of this adolescent crush for Halim that’s growing with each minute.

HALIM

I feel something is wrong with me. But it’s a good feeling. I don’t know if that makes sense. Paul has passed away, and I’m supposed to be sad, but here I am, staring at the huge amount of cash I have in my bank account and asking myself what I want to do with it.

β€œAunty, you no sabi use ATM ni?” shouts someone behind me and I remember that there is a long line of people waiting to use the cash machine in front of me.

I had left the house with the intent of making my hair but after I sat before the mirror in a salon in the neighborhood and stared at my reflection for almost five minutes, I decided I was going to have everything shaved off. I hopped off the chair and dashed out of the salon with something akin to a renewed life purpose.

It had all begun with Yemi who had dragged me out of bed a week ago because he was worried I was mourning Paul too much.

β€œHe’s dead and gone,” he had said. β€œYou’re still alive. Start living!”

And he had gone ahead and given me three fun days out of the confines of the house, as a means to distract me. On the first day, we visited the finer side of the Island, where the rich lived. After you get to see five or six houses set in extravagance, you think you’ve seen it all. It begins to bore you because it’s much the same thing with much the same people, driving cars of luxury that all come across as the same.

A trip to the Lekki mall to see a movie after that was rewarding. The next day we were on our side of city, going farther into the mainland. Yemi had me tagging along for a meeting with a client in Festac. He taught me how to jump off a danfo while it was still moving and also how to hop on one in the same manner. The second tutorial was done in theory, and gratefully I didn’t get to experience it. I thought it was a ridiculous thing to do, though. I told Yemi I would never try it on my own and he laughed at me. Beneath the laugh I could hear the β€˜no be Lagos you dey?’ tone.

We were off to Oshodi next because Yemi needed to buy a particular brand of headphones he was certain would be cheaper there. He had asked me to take off my gold necklace to avoid attracting the wrong attention. I had also had to put on an angry face; not because I wanted to, but because everyone else was looking angry. I didn’t know why but it seemed like the best mood to be in. It was at this point I began to have a headache. Yemi was concerned about my health and was quick to want to call a cab. I stopped him, however, and insisted on using a bus back home.

That turned out to be a regret. Traffic sent from hell had come out to play on that random evening. One can’t compare being stuck in a bumper to bumper situation in a car to being caught in it, sandwiched with strangers, having all manner of body odors in a wobbly danfo. We got home three hours later and I passed out.

The following day had us visiting Oyinbo market. Yemi wanted certain food items from the north which he could only find there. The trip was without stress and we returned in good time to make lunch. My mourning mood was lifted after those three days, my zest returned to me. In fact, I felt like an entire new person. And it was in that frame of mind I decided I needed a haircut.

So, there I was, having just left the salon, in a bus heading to CMS, surfing online for an expensive barbershop on the Island. I found one just as the bus was coming to its final stop. It was a unisex salon in Victoria Island that was part of a bigger establishment which held a spa and a cosmetic shop. I had plans to splurge, using money in my account I have refused to touch for months. Aunty Ada has been sending money to me every week from the moment I left home. It has accumulated to millions, and that is what I’m staring at right now, battling with how much I need to withdraw.

I punch in the numbers and wait. Seconds later, a wad of notes are ejected out of the machine. I dump them into my handbag and leave the place. I need to withdraw more cash, but I want to take a walk around the marina to see the sights. This is my second visit to the legendary CMS. The first time I was here, Eben and I had breezed through, and I hadn’t enough time to stare at the high-rise buildings owned by famous banks and enterprises. Today, I’m all on my own, feet clad in gladiator sandals, a batik t-shirt over my torso and a pair of khaki shorts to match. There’s nothing peculiar about my looks. Complemented with a pair of sunglasses and a serious expression on my face, I’m just another Lagosian on the street.

There’s so much to take in around me – the self-important men and women in corporate wears, bumping into other pedestrians as they walk briskly by; the smalltime traders calling out to people hurrying past to buy their unusual wares of safety pins, envelopes, hair brushes, Shea butter, mail stamps, fancy water bottles and other oddities, spread out on the sidewalk; the mallams who stylishly accost people who are moving along, asking them if they want to buy or sell dollars; the mix of exotic and commercial vehicles driving down the main street, some branching off into or coming from smaller connecting streets that can hardly let in two cars riding side by side; the parading police vans and bikes, looking for some offender to become their next unfortunate victim; and overall, the jumble of human and automobile sounds coming together to form a weird sort of coherence that is peculiar to the marina. And to think I’m only exploring just one of the main streets!

I become tempted to go off-ramp, to see other sights… but I remember that I have a full day ahead of me. I continue on, feeding my senses as I stop at a couple of cash machines to make more withdrawals. I strike a banal conversation with a security guard at the entrance of a bank who tells me that I remind him of a long lost girlfriend. He wants to have my number and know if he can visit me sometime. I laugh as I walk away from him. There’s a feeling of lightheartedness in me. I’m suddenly becoming alive. I feel the old Halim returning.

I wave at a yellow cab, hands flailing in the air like a Caucasian tourist. I get some odd stares but none that linger. People in Lagos see enough madness on the daily.

The cab stops before me and I give him the address of my destination. We haggle on the price briefly in Yoruba. The man quickly picks my accent and asks if I am Egba, from Abeokuta. I tell him I have lived most of my life there and he tells me to jump in. He says my Yoruba is pure, not like the type they speak here in Lagos, which they try to funkify. Yes, he uses that exact word and leaves me laughing. We talk all the way to Victoria Island. When his cab comes to a halt, he asks if he should return to pick me. I tell him not to bother as I pay him. Life is too short to enjoy cab rides in worn-out yellow taxis. I’ll find a better replacement on my way home. Heck, who knows, I may go on a binge and buy a car.

Just kidding.

I step out of the cab and into the salon. At the front desk, there’s a girl in black scrubs that has the insignia of the establishment on her chest.

β€œGood day, ma. How may I help you?”

β€œI need a haircut, a facial, a massage, a mani-pedi and a face-beat.”

She laughs. β€œThe entire treatment.”

β€œYes, the whole shebang.”

I can see on her face that she doesn’t know what shebang is. I don’t bother to explain.

β€œFollow me, please.”

She guides me through a glass door, and thus begins my full day of pampering. Hours later, I materialize looking like a butterfly version of me just emerged from a cocoon. In fact, I have even gotten a tattoo of a butterfly on my butt cheek.

It’s dark now, and I have one missed call from Yemi. I’m about to return it when my eyes sight a boutique across the street with a pair of sneakers that I think will look good on him. I waste no time in dashing into the boutique to ask how much it costs. I am barely there three seconds in when my eyes begin to roam. Something tells me I need a change of wardrobe. Another reminds me that this is a high-end store and I would be charged ridiculously for anything I pick. I go back and forth on it, and settle on picking a few things. One of them is a blue gladiator dress that flows to the floor, and yet doesn’t possess any of that seriousness you find in dinner gowns.

β€œIt can be worn to see the movies or on a date or even to church,” the owner of the shop tells me. β€œIt really looks good on you. Your boyfriend will love it.”

I smile. The mention of church has left me feeling guilty. I have been angry at God. I still read my Bible sometimes, but only as a habit. Anytime I try to pray, angry words come out. I’m not sure I can forgive him for letting me get HIV.

β€œIt’ll go with these sandals.”

The woman is standing before me with a pair of gold sandals. β€œIt’s Nine West,” she adds.

Another smile strikes across my face. β€œI’ll take it.”

I pick a few more things and hand over my card for payment. The woman is kind enough to call a cab for me.

β€œYou’re wearing the dress?” she asks. I look at myself in a mirror before me and laugh. I have forgotten I have the dress on.

β€œYeah.”

β€œOkay.” She yanks off the tag and escorts me out of the store. The cab is waiting outside. I am helped into the backseat by the driver like a princess. I begin my journey home. I wonder what Yemi would say when he takes one look at me.

EBEN

Smashing!

Eniola stands before me in an outfit tailored to lure me to do bad things. I’ve gone speechless, struggling to come to terms that she is still Lekan’s younger sister.

β€œYou like?” she asks, spinning around. I don’t give an answer. β€œOr is it too much? I can run upstairs and ditch the skirt for a pair of jeans.”

Damn! The curves on her!

β€œEben?”

β€œIt’s em… it’s fine.”

β€œYou’re sure?”

β€œYeah.”

β€œSo, where’s Lekan? I tried calling his number but I can’t reach him.”

β€œHe’s at an owambe. He says he’ll catch up with us later.”

β€œOkay.”

β€œYou’re ready?”

She nods and I point the way, just so that I can get an eyeful of her bum.

β€œSo, where are you taking me?” she asks once we get into my car. β€œAny of the popular clubs?”

β€œNope.”

β€œWhere?”

β€œYou wait and see.”

One of the reasons I love Lagos is that it offers you a variety of pleasures. If you’re looking to have a great night out and you don’t want to hit any of the popular clubs, you can switch to covert clubbing mode. In every district, there is an underground nightlife running; most notable are the ones found in Lekki, Ikeja, Ajah, Victoria Island and Ikoyi. For tonight, I take Eniola to Ajah. As we speed down the Lekki-Epe expressway, she turns to me with a squeezed face.

β€œYou’re taking me to the dead-end of Lagos.”

I laugh. β€œRelax. You’ll love it.”

β€œI didn’t tell you I wanted to go back to Ogun State…”

I laugh.

β€œI better enjoy this.”

There’s something daring and cheeky about her tonight. Her usually-quiet self is gone. Right now, she’s dancing to Drake playing on the radio. The scene reminds me of Halim. The old Halim, before I lost her to the solemn version of her.

β€œWhooo! Whiz Kalifah!” Eniola shrieks as the music switches to another. I take a closer look at her.

β€œNini, are you high?”

β€œWhat?”

β€œAre you high? Did you smoke something?”

She stares at me with suppressed laughter.

β€œYour eyes are red.”

She pulls down the sunshield and peers at her reflection in the mirror. β€œThey are o. You know I use glasses…”

β€œMnh-mnh. Don’t lie, Nini.”

β€œOkay, okay, okay. Sandy gave me weed.”

β€œWeed?”

β€œYou’re not disappointed, are you?”

β€œNope.”

β€œPhew!” She giggles. β€œMy first time. I just wanted to try it out. First drag had me coughing. Second drag the same thing. So I just stopped there. But look at me. Whooo! Imagine if I had smoked more.”

β€œYou still have the weed with you?”

She looks at me. β€œYou want to…?”

β€œYes. One can’t be friends with your brother and not get the occasional joint.”

β€œI know, right? I’m not saying Lekan allows me smoke, but he’s always smoking in his bathroom. Mommy knows, but she’d rather believe that the neighbor’s children are doing it. She’ll come out in the morning and whine about the smell disturbing her sleep. Silly old woman.”

β€œLet me have the weed.”

Eniola passes over a rolled joint to me. I put it between my lips and take the lighter she offers.

β€œMommy would flip if she sees me like this now, in these clothes and with this igbo.”

β€œWell, Mommy doesn’t have to know,” I reply, lighting the weed.

β€œOoooh…naughty!”

I tilt a brow up at her.

β€œAnything I say or do under the influence of marijuana can’t and will not be used against me at a later time.”

I fall into laughter. Eniola does have another side to her. A side I like very much.

β€œWhoooo!” She yells again for no reason. I decelerate and bring the car to a slow stop.

β€œWe’re stopping? Why are we stopping? Is it my screaming? I’ll shut up.”

β€œI need to finish this,” I respond.

β€œOh.”

I park by the wayside.

β€œDo you mind if I play something from my phone?” she requests. I shrug. She connects her phone to the car and some R&B tune I don’t recognize begins to play.

β€œYou want to…?” I ask, pointing the joint at her. She shakes her head.

β€œI’ll cough again, and it hurts.”

β€œI’ll give you something called shotgun.”

β€œShotgun?”

β€œI’ll blow smoke in through your nose. You’ll inhale it and breathe out through your mouth.”

β€œOkay.” She giggles. β€œSounds like fun.”

I put the burning end of the joint into my mouth, letting the filter stick out.

β€œYou’ll burn yourself, Eben.”

I call her forward with a finger. She leans towards me and I let out a thick doze of smoke into her nostrils. She inhales it with her eyes shut and lips slightly puckered. She doesn’t know when I pull away, take the joint out of my mouth and gaze at her. She only comes alive when I move closer and touch her lips with mine. Her eyes pop open in surprise, but she doesn’t pull away. She opens up to me and I taste her lips like one searching for something. I stop and relax back in my seat.

There is sudden silence, except for the cars speeding past and the unknown R&B song playing. I let the windows down.

β€œI did that out of curiosity,” I tell her. β€œI just wanted to know if there was something between us or I’ve been imagining it.”

β€œAnd what did you find out?”

β€œI can’t say. It must be the weed.” I smile.

She dips her hand into her purse. β€œGum?”

β€œSure.”

She hands me two pellets of blue chewing gum from a pack.

β€œPerfume?” she offers.

β€œI got mine.” I reach over to the glove compartment and take out my Armani cologne.

We spend a few more minutes, taking in the cool December air, and trying not to talk about the kiss. Finally, I let the windows up, fire up the car and put some miles on it as we gun for our destination.

Β©Sally@moskedapages

Sally

Author. Screenwriter. Blogger

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28 Comments

  1. Olaide says:

    Love is in d air

  2. Awwwwn……much love aunt Sal
    Gud one for all of dem

  3. I’m happy Halim is gradually coming out of her shell. Yemi, i wish i met you first for Halim but ehm, I prefer Uncle Eben who is presently treading on the tail of the serpent. I hope heis able to come out with his head in the right place.

    I am hoping Halim decides to stop and have a bit of fun and runs into Eben and Eniola.

    Thanks Sally for this.

  4. Ejibabe says:

    Nice one thanks Sally……

  5. hacolyte says:

    D Sodom n Gomorrah yaf started wif Enny n Eben on one side n Halim n Yemi at d oda end.
    It was an interesting episode dat make my day jollificate.
    Kip it up Sally, nyc one.

  6. Akua says:

    Halim you are going to give Yemi a heart attack f with you new look. Temi is in trouble if her unkempt state could cause havoc then wonder how hw will cope with the new her. Oh Eben hmmm! Mine ! Sally you know how to make us want more. Interesting read.

  7. Adefunke says:

    silly adults. Anyways, life continues sha

  8. Dupsyneby says:

    Uncle Eben, well done sir, if only you know how you got to where you are now, isshh. Well done sal

  9. Eve says:

    wow….. nice as always….

  10. Simplygold says:

    Awwh nice one, wish it won’t end.

  11. Nwanne says:

    I just want to know if Halim coloured her hair πŸ˜‰

  12. Shuga says:

    Well done Sal…….nice one!!!!

  13. Ekaete says:

    Wow! Uncle Eben well done oh! Eniola – more grease to your elbow. Your prey is about to fall into the well laid trap abi is it the trap u set is about to catch its prey….

    Halim – pls snap out of your shell. Life is for living.

    Yemi – ayam not sure about u but I hope u fulfil your purpose.

    Sally Darling, another fantastic spell binding episode… Thanks.

  14. Ekaete says:

    Even – it must be the weed…. My hands are upt! No try an abeg..

  15. Girl says:

    I don’t even know what to say sef!
    These adults are just annoying me upandan!
    Can you imagine this Uncle Eben ehn?!
    Mind yourself oh!
    Eni! Eni! Eni! Stay away from our Eben o!
    Oh Halim I’m so happy you’re finally opening up!
    You go girl!
    I have a soft spot for Yemi, let’s see how it goes.
    I secretly don’t believe that Paul is dead though. I think it was staged.
    Thank you Sally for another amazing episode!

  16. Olamide says:

    Wow! This is serious. I’m glad Halim is out of her solitude. Eniola and Eben; e ku use I. This episode is a wawu something. Well done Sally!

  17. Eunice Oladeji says:

    Blood of God!!! Eben and Eniola…. My chest!!!
    Yemi is about to fallllllllll big time. I can’t wait. Thanks Sally mama!!!

  18. Febz says:

    I pity Eben. This Eniola girl is dangerous. Poor dude… he has no idea

  19. Ejiro says:

    So i feel like Eben and Eniola finding each other is very good. I mean Eben was practically pushed to Halim, i love Halim don’t get me wrong but this Eben and Eniola combo is awesome.

    But typical of Sally i’m sure there will be a storm before they all get their happy ending.

    Kudos Sally.

  20. Sarah25 says:

    Hope Yemi won’t be heartbroken oh. Good job Sally, always making my day…..xoxo.

  21. Thanks Sally for this episode. you’re the best

  22. Ifeanyi Onochie says:

    Eben is really, really taking his time with Eniola. Before he knows it, Halim will return and add more confusion. Yemi, weakened by Halim’s tears and strengthened by her fragrance. Typical plight of the male!

  23. Etoya says:

    Won ti get Eben last last… Nice one Halim. You will be alright. Thank you Sally. You the real MVP

  24. JustDotun says:

    Eben is such a tease. Kilode.

  25. Turban Girl says:

    I sha like Eniola sha. All that bad girl routine she is giving Eben is on point! Eben is not an angel, and that kiss, I am sure was hot, they might not have love chemistry, but they have sexual chemistry.
    Sallzzzz, go on soun

  26. Gift says:

    Choi, I knew this was gonna happen sooner or later..we understand eben, we still love ebehal

  27. Knonye says:

    Eben na curiosity kill the cat o… eni baby is working her fans really tight. Feel sorry for Yemi already. Halim snap out of your mood and stay happy

  28. Seye says:

    Staying in t he dumps and then snapping out of it all is a great achievent. Good for Halim. I still have fears that the days will bring her closer to Yemi and there’s the risk of getting infected for real if she’s not actually infected already. The possibility of throwing caution to the winds and going all the way because “we both are positive”, and of course the result that might follow.
    Eni and Eben were bound to get closer. Babe set out to get the guy on her side and she won’t rest till its done. Let’s see if Lekan’s presence might alter things as it looks.
    Sorry for Paul…hard luck
    Thanks for this again Sally. Blessings all the way

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