Read previous episodes of Β The Fourth Finger
So the truth was out. Joyce had been a deadbeat mom to Tayo and his younger brother, Dapo.
She had engaged in extramarital affairs with other men to put food on the table because her disabled husband had been unable to care for her and her sons.
Big deal. Wasnβt it the manβs job to ensure that the family was well-catered for? If he failed in that department, was the woman to be branded a whore even when she did everything to ensure that her sons fed well and got an education? Did the same sons have any right to judge her?
Anger brewed in Lade as she listened in on Tayoβs heated row with his mother. They had been at it for almost half an hour, spilling family secrets that had previously been hidden from her. She couldnβt help but loathe her husband, having now heard the entire story of his past with Joyce. The manner in which he disrespected her with his words and tone of voice set Lade on edge. How could someone treat their mother that way?
This was a woman that suffered the pain of losing her first child via the treacherous hands of a trusted friend. Whilst Joyce pursued her education as a teenage mom, she often left her little baby in the care of her friend, a mistake which she hadnβt forgiven herself for. The friend had, on one day, while Joyce was in class, taken her baby and made away with her, leaving no leads. Joyce was blamed by friends and family, and months of searching for the child led to nothing. But her troubles had only just begun.
Her husband, a truck driver for a food packaging company, ran into an unfortunate spell when his truck tumbled down a ravine and left him paralyzed in a wheelchair. His mishap took what little finances he and Joyce had and thus she was forced to start hawking food to survive.
Five insufferable years went by and she watched her youth which had scarcely begun, ebb away. But fate threw a fine, young soldier her way one day while she was hawking. The army warrant officer had a short afro and a shiny green Volkswagen bug. He hardly smiled but his eyes were affectionate. He wanted someone who would entertain him on certain nights for a handsome fee. For Joyce, he was answered prayers and easy money. The first few weeks were awesome but ultimately, she fell pregnant and when the baby was due, she birthed him, a healthy boy she named Omotayo.
Tongues wagged. The boy looked nothing like his father. He took Oga Soldierβs fair skin tone.
Joyce ignored them and carried on with her lover two more years, falling pregnant a second time. Sadly, Oga Soldier was called back to his base in the north and never saw the birth of his second son. Joyce was heartbroken but being the brave woman she was, she continued on her own as much as she could. However, she ran out of money fast, facing the demands of caring for two little boys and a disabled man.
It wasnβt long before she sought for cash by the only means she knew. She went for the capable men in the small community they lived inβa supermarket owner, the prophet of a large white garment church, the police DPO, her landlord, the Igbo man who owned the beer parlor her husband liked frequenting.
As it was with girls who slept with other womenβs husbands, Joyce faced harassment in public places by members of the community, especially the women. Still, she continued her affairs. Her boys needed to eat. They had her alone to care for them. But it all ended when the local furniture maker died while having sex with her on a rainy evening.
Joyce had tugged at his lifeless body in panic and slapped him around but met no reaction. Without looking back, she fled from the slimy hotel room and went home. She packed a small bag, kissed her sons goodbye and left the town just as a mob was trying to break down her door. She never went back, although she always found a way to send across money for the upkeep of the boys because somehow, through the years she straightened out her life, acquired the education she always wanted and became something for herself.
To Lade, that was a happy ending. But not for Tayo. He wanted his mother to hang for her past.
βI will never forgive you!β he roared. βYou stand here and remind me that you sent money to us! What fucking money are you talking about?! Was that supposed to replace you?!β
Lade itched so much to storm out and give Tayo a piece of her mind. Where she came from, mothers were irreplaceable, no matter what their mistakes and shortcomings were. Tayo needed to grow up and let go of the past.
βAnd your father?β Joyceβs voice came on, broken but firm. βHeβs the saint in all of this as usual. The good husband. The handicapped man everyone pitied.β
βAt least he wasnβt the one who whored around!β
βHe was worse than an infidel, Omotayo! He lost his legs but not the use of his hands! He sat in that wheelchair and refused help from family and friends because of his pride! And yet he ate the food my whoring around put on the table! And after he washed his useless hands and cleaned his mouth, heβd turn around and call me names just because he wasnβt man enough!
βYour real father was man enough! Because of him you went to the best schools! Ask that infidel to tell you who paid your fees until you finished secondary school and I took over! Ask him!β
Lade clutched the doorpost of Ifeβs bedroom, still itching to walk out and caution Tayo. He had banished her back there, following their last fight. Since then they hadnβt spoken to each other and she was okay with it. Memories of Ife still brought her peace. She didnβt believe in reincarnation but she felt that the baby growing in her was a re-embodiment of all she had lost. Gone were her earlier thoughts of desiring an abortion.
βI was a bad mother, Omotayo,β Joyce went on. βI have never defended myself against that. Yes, I did horrible things but I was just a girl and I didnβt know better. I was barely twenty-two when I ran away but I knew even then that leaving you boys was my worst crime against you ever. And so I turned my life around. I worked hard. Very hard to get to where I am today. Many times, I wanted to come back for you and DapoΒ but I was scared. Scared that Iβd be locked up by the police for murder. Scared that you would not remember me. Scared that I was going to make more mistakes with youββ
βBullshit! And I want you to take all that garb and leave my house this minute!β
Lade felt she had heard enough. She barged out with reprimands on her lips but stopped when she heard Joyceβs shattered tone.
βIβll leave since itβs come to this but youβll soon realize that I am not the problem. This anger, this hateβ¦ youβve dumped it on your poor wife. That girl has done nothing to deserve the way you treat her. With all the loss she has suffered, you still hurt her just like your father did to me. And somewhere, not far from here, you have your long lost sister whom you hate for no reason too. You will not even attempt to look for her. Why this much hate, Omotayo? Why?β
βPlease, leave!β
βLeave to where?!β Lade made her presence known. βTayo, what is wrong with you?!β
βStay out of this, Omolade!β
βNo!β Lade put her arms around Joyce in tears. βThis is your mother! Our mother! You do not talk to her like this! I donβt care what pain youβre feeling or what happened in the past, you donβt do this, Tayo! What is wrong with you?!β
Tayo ignored her and stomped out of the sitting room. Shortly after, the gateman appeared.
βTake that box out!β He pointed at Joyceβs luggage. βA taxi is waiting outside!β
At this, Joyce crumbled. The strong exterior she always carried around gave way to quiet tears.
βSee what youβve caused, Tayo!β Lade screamed. βMommyβs crying! See what youβve caused! How can you do this to your own mother?! Better go on your knees and beg her o!β
βDonβt get on my nerves! Iβve told you to stay out of this!β He charged at the gateman. βMy friend, carry the box outside!β
Throwing an apologetic look at Joyce, the gateman did as he was ordered.
Joyce dabbed her face with a scarf hanging off her shoulders. βItβs okay, Omolade. Stop crying. Everything is fine.β
She sniffled.
βCome and walk me outside.β
βTayoβ¦β
βItβs okay. Let him be.β Joyce grabbed her hand forcefully. βLetβs go.β
Leaving furious eyes on Tayo, Lade followed Joyce outside the house.
βYou donβt have to go, mommy. Heβll calm down and see that he acted stupidly. Thatβs how he does.β
βNo, darling. I really must go.β
βMommy, please. Iβm begging you.β
Joyce took her face in both hands. βIβve overstayed my welcome, my dear. I have to leave.β
Lade held her hands and lowered to her knees.
βWhat are you doing?β
βYouβre leaving without settling things with Tayo and itβs a bad omen for himβ¦for us. Thatβs why I want to beg on his behalf. Please, forgive him. He didnβt mean those things he said to you; he was just angry. Please, forgive him and pray for him, mommy. On his behalf, I apologize. Iβ¦β
Joyce pulled Lade up.
βIβve forgiven him, Omolade. He is the way he is today because of his father. The man poisoned his mind and Dapo’sΒ against me. Itβs going to take a while for Tayo to erase all the filth that man has heaped on him. But he will come round. As for you, please, pursue whatever dreams you have. I see them in your eyes and itβs the saddest thing to have them trapped in there. Donβt be afraid of Tayo. Follow your heart and do whatβs right or one day youβll regret it.β
Joyce wrapped her arms around her and afterwards gave her an envelope she pulled out from her handbag.
βThatβs a lot of money in there, Lade. Use it for yourself.β
βThank you.β
Lade opened one of the backdoors of Suleβs cab and Joyce let in. They hugged one last time and the car fired away, leaving silence in its wake. The neighborhood was yet to stir.
Lade stood until the cab disappeared, clutching the collar of her pajama shirt, feeling sorry for how she had distanced herself from Joyce.
She turned back to the house and saw Tayo getting into his car. She gawked at him, feeling her restraints snap. Once in a year or maybe in two, she was known to lose her calm. At such moments, the soft-spoken Lade would morph into an extreme version of her. It took a lot to get her to that point but Tayo had been pressing her buttons for quite a while.
As she charged towards him, she didnβt care for what he could do to her; she was going to give him a piece of her mind.
ββββββββ
At the first sight of her daughters playing outside Comfortβs home, Salma gasped.
βShe loosened their hair.β
βYou mean, Comfort?β Folarin turned off his car engine.
βYes. I took my time, making their hair on Sunday and sheβs loosened everything and has done this horrible thing to them.β
βActually, I think they look cute.β
βNo.β
Salma released her seatbelt and opened the passenger door. Deejah saw her first. She abandoned her sister and ran towards her.
βHey, mami.β Salma scooped her up. βHow are you?β
βIβm fine.β
Leelah showed up next. She flashed a huge grin at Folarin. βUncle Folawin!β
He stooped down. βYes, my love. How areβ¦?β
She wrapped her arms around him, forcing him into startled laughter. He had almost forgotten what it felt like to be doted on by a little girl. Vanessa hardly had his time these days. She would rather hang around Cyrus.
βWhere is Fahad?β Salma asked, putting Deejah down. βI got something for you guys. Itβs in the car.β
She had scarcely finished when the girls bounded towards Folarinβs car. Fahad and Raheem popped out from nowhere and joined them.
βEveryone has a bag! Fahad, donβt dip your hand into your sistersβ bags!β
βHow do you cope?β Folarin asked with a smile.
βIβm used to it now. Fahad gets the naughty room at least once a day. Deejahβs not trouble but when her bad day comes, she can be worse than Leelah and Fahad combined.β
An elderly lady popped her head out of Comfortβs front door.
βGood evening, ma,β Salma greeted.
The woman came out to meet them, and despite her age, she bent a knee to greet Salma. They had met only on one occasion.
βIs Comfort in?β
βNo, aunty. She never come back from work.β
βOkay. I just came to check on the children.β
βOkay ma.β
The woman hung around a little, unsure if she should stay outside or go in. Salma told her it was fine to go back in. Curtsying again for no reason, she returned to the house. Salma and Folarin sat at the entrance.
βHave you ever cheated on Christie?β she asked. In her hand was a twig she tugged off the soil beneath her. She broke its thin stem in bits.
βIβve never cheated.β
βYou didnβt want to or youβve never been tempted.β
βI have but I didnβt give into it. There was this girl. She was really beautiful. South African. We barely knew each other but I was deeply attracted to her. If I had as much as touched her hand, she would have followed me to the ends of the earth but I just couldnβt. Itβs stress at the end of the day. Lies, secret phone calls, hotel dates, hush-hush trips to wherever, broken hearts, all of that. Just not worth it. I lived that life in the past and itβs no longer for me.β
Again, Salma wondered why Raji was not like Folarin.
They talked until the sun went down and Comfortβs car pulled up in the driveway. As the kids rushed to welcome her, Salma stood up. She didnβt want Comfort to feel at ease around her. Nothing would ever change the fact that she had come between her and Raji.
βHi Salma.β
Salma merely smiled at Comfortβs greeting as she came towards them.
βGood evening, sir.β
βHello Comfort,β Folarin replied. He was Comfortβs boss at work. The job was given to her based on his relationship with Raji.
βSalma, I thought you said you were going away for a week,β Comfort mentioned with an easy smile.
βI did say that. And Iβm still going to be away for another week. I donβt want to be a burden on you, so Iβll take the kids.β
Comfort stared at her son playing with his half-siblings.
βActuallyβ¦ I think the kids are all happy to be with each other, Raheem especially. You and Raji can enjoy the holidays. Weβll be fine by ourselves.β
βYouβre sure?β
βYeah. Oh! Lest I forget, I have their term reports with me. The school said they tried calling you on Wednesday and Thursday but you didnβt pick up. They couldnβt reach Raji too but I think the headmistress mentioned that he was there yesterday morning. Wasnβt sure I heard well.β
Salma didnβt explain her absence to Comfort. She had been a mess from Wednesday night and the whole of Thursday. She hadnβt taken any calls, even when Raji called first thing Thursday morning.
βDid they do well?β
βYes. Trust the girls. They were exceptional. Fahad also aced but they complained about the playfulness. Itβs all in their report cards.β
βOkay. Please, keep them. Raji would be bringing more clothes. You can hand them to him.β
βOkay.β
βThank you, Comfort.β
βWell, enjoy your holiday.β
βWe will be leaving,β Salma announced and turned to the kids. She kissed each of them while Folarin waited in the car.
A sad Deejah stood, clutching her doll as the car drove away.
βAre you sure this is what you want to do?β Folarin asked as they settled into a confortable drive.
βI just have to.β
βNo, I mean the night travel thing. Why not just wait tomorrow and take a flight?β
βI love night journeys, Folarin.β
βWell, I donβt.β
βIt reminds me of my past. My family was not poor but we were not rich as well. Air flights were a luxury. Even if my dad managed to give me money for a plane ticket, I would stash most of it and take a bus, preferably a night bus because I loved to just go to sleep and wake up the next day in my destination. I did that a lot while dating Raji. Iβd board a night bus and by 4am Iβd be at his door.β
Salma was smiling distantly.
βHeβd scold me always and then transfer money into my account. He spoilt me a lot. And I used to think to myself that it was love. Now, I know better, that a man can do all the right things that can be done to a woman and still have no feelings for her. He buys me flowers every weekend, Folarin; flies me out during the holidays, makes love like Iβm the best thing that ever happened to him, calls me all those sweet names and yetβ¦β
βDo you still love him?β
βPainfully.β
βI hope this trip gives you better perspective.β
βFolarin, I am going to cry on my motherβs shoulder and sheβll scold me after cleaning my tears and remind me how my dad was no different from Raji and I should endure. I dare not even mention divorce. My parents will disown me if I leave him. Iβll lose him and lose them and probably lose my kids because I donβt have the means to fight for them in court.β
βHeyβ¦β
Folarin took her hand. She was beginning to cry.
βI thought we said weβd do none of this.β
βI feel lost, Folarin. I have all these emotions. I hate Raji. Iβm mad at Christie. Iβm already angry at my parents for what they would say to me. I feel weak and helplessβ¦β
βItβs okay. You will rise over this.β
βHow? With what, Fola? I abandoned my job when I had the twins. I started living off the money Raji gave me. I have nothing. Where do I start? How do I start?β
βBy not going homeβ¦β
βIβ¦β
βJust listen to me. You already know what your family will say. I think it would be best if you stayed away from them for now because they will influence your decision. Go somewhere, a hotel or something. Stay there, eat well, sleep well, pray, read, watch TV, and entertain yourself. Trust me, youβll have a better perspective when you get back.β
βAnd you?β
βIβll be fine. Iβm sticking to our plan of letting nothing out. I want to catch them together, Salma.β
βI wish I was as strong as you are.β
βI am not.β
Salma sighed in silence. Folarin went from holding her hand to slipping his fingers between hers. It comforted her to a certain degree.
βIf Christie comes home right now and wants to have sex with you, would you oblige?β she asked.
βWhy not?β
Salma huffed. Folarin laughed.
βThe little man does not care if Iβm heartbroken or not. He will get what he desires.β
βHow can you look at her, knowing she slept with your best friend, and still sleep with her?β
Folarin was laughing again. It wasnβt the normal robust laughter that always came from his belly. It sounded bitter in Salmaβs ears.
βSal, Iβm the type of person that will be planning evil and still be smiling. I can live comfortably with my enemy and they will never know how I feel about them. Right now I am dying inside but I canβt express the pain; Iβve never been that person. I seem to take it all in.β
βMe, I canβt pretend.β
βChristie will be home today, by the way. She called.β
βIβm still hoping that weβre imagining things.β
βThen stay back and letβs find out if we are or not. If weβre together on this, weβll be stronger. Let me be your strength.β
Salma exhaled. She rubbed her eyes. βI hate hotels.β
βI have a place youβll love.β
βWhere is that?β
βA friendβs place. Heβs out of the country and Iβm sort of the caretaker. Iβve been looking for a tenant.β
βWhatβs wrong with the place?β
βNothing. Itβs just really expensive. Should I take you there?β
βI get scared staying alone.β
βThereβs a woman there with her daughter. They clean the place and have a shop in the gatemanβs room. You wonβt be alone.β
βOkay.β
βIs that a βyes, take me thereβ?β
βYes.β
βThatβs my girl.β
Folarin kissed her hand.
βYouβll be fine.β
He let go and turned the steering in a different direction.
ββββββββ
Only bastards fixed brainstorming sessions on Good Friday.
Bastards like Izu.
Toni sensed she was going to kill him soon. She would come to work, her hand clutching her favorite Chanel purse which would be holding a petite pistol. She would march into his office, aim it at him and just fire. Once, twice, and thrice for good measure.
βToni?β
She looked up and saw one of her colleagues staring at her with a smile. He was some guy whose name she always forgot. She knew he had a crush on her. Any other thing about him, she didnβt care to know. She didnβt like guys that smiled at her a lot.
He was grinning now, in that creepy way he did every time they bumped into each other in the parking lot.
βYour phone is ringing.β
Is that why youβre grinning like a fool?
Toni attended to her phone which had now stopped ringing. It was her father calling. She sighed.
What does he want?
She sat upright as much as she could and tried to resume her earlier rumination but she forgot what it was about. Instead, she watched moving lips, hands pitching about in descriptions, fingers swiping over screens, faces animated in hilarity or frustration… None of it affected her as much as the pain thumping in her head and the burning feeling in her throat.
She was tired and probably ill. It had been a long day and it wasnβt going to end soon; no thanks to the brainstorming session Izu somehow felt wise to toss her into. Covet had a presentation alongside other ad agencies the following week. They were to present their ideas for an ad campaign to BMW who were officially launching one of their new automobiles, M235i into the market. The creative department believed they were done with their pitch but Christie who was Head of Creative had, over a video conference call, decided it wasnβt good enough. Her deputy, under his own stupid directive and maybe Izuβs, felt brainstorming on a holiday was the solution.
Key persons from the different departments were instructed to attend. Toni had requested to be exempted, citing that she was feeling under the weather but Izu insisted her presence was needed. It wasnβt a surprise when he spent the bulk of the time staring at her.
Where was Christy?
Toni was sure she wasnβt the only one asking that question. She hardly was invited to brainstorming sessions but the few times she had worked with Christie she was left awe-inspired. It probably was the way Jesusβ disciples felt around him. That feeling a mere mortal had in the presence of a god.
Toni stretched and yawned at the same time. Two young boys from creative had just burst in, excited at three rough video ideas they had come up with. Toni had an urge to slap them and pull their ears. Didnβt they know she wanted to go home?
They played their videos, one after the other, on a huge screen in the room. The verdict was that one was brilliant, a clear winner, and the other two were safe but lacking in innovation.
Head of strategy and the clientβs advocate account supervisor immediately connived to have the betterΒ footage killed. It was at this point that Toni rose up. She was craving for a smoke.
βGuys, madam will hate it, the clients will hate us too,β the account supervisor stated.
βEdzatily!β Head of Strategy exclaimed.
Toni almost guffawed at the way he pronounced βexactlyβ. On a good day, she and Leticia would have a good laugh as they always did each time he spoke. But Leticia had traveled home for the holidays. She missed her.
Toni waited by the door to hear what more βEdzatilyβ had to say.
βItβs off-point,β he continued. βWhat happened to the other three essential copy points I put in the brief?β
βI do love how it all goes but can we use it for a celebrity instead of a car?β Izu added pointlessly.
Toni felt for the two young guys, both aged under thirty. She hated how the agency was doing its best to kill the spirit of the millennials. Everyone knew they had all the great ideas.
One of them boldly spoke up, βI think the first idea is great. We have to present it!β
βI think youβre wrong.β
βWhy donβt we let Mrs. Christie decide that?β
Toni walked out, knowing that an argument was imminent. She walked past Rajiβs office. The door was thrown wide open and she was surprised to find Christie with him. They were speaking in hushed tones and giggles.
She turned around.
βI didnβt know you were back, Christie.β
Christie smiled at her. She wasnβt dressed in her normal work clothes. She had a blouse and jeggings on. A fresh glow was spread across her skin. Her trip seemed to have done her well. She was wearing her natural locks loose.
βMy flight just came in. I was supposed to stay till next week but this BMW thing wonβt let me coddle. I havenβt even been home yet. How are you?β
βIβm good. Tired. Going home. I think they need you in the idea room before the place blows up.β
βYes. Let me straighten things out and head home too.β
Christie gave Raji a hug and made her way out of his office.
βShut the door, Toni.β
Raji went for a bottle of liquor on a table beside a couch. He poured out two glasses and handed one to Toni after she shut the door.
βI got a call from our friends from Finland early this morning. They want to meet after the Easter break. I asked them why. They said they canceled their ad campaign with DFL. They want to come back here.β
Raji put his glass to his lips for a drink.
βI donβt want to know how you did it but I want to say I am proud of you and I unofficially welcome you to senior partner. You now own a five percent stake in Covet.β
Toniβs eyes popped out. βShit. You werenβt kidding.β
βI wasnβt.β
She swallowed the content of her glass in one go. She could hardly believe what she was hearing.
βChristie and Izu know about this?β
βYes. And they think itβs a welcome development.β
βYouβre sure about that? Izu, especially?β
βYeah, he was difficult but he came around. Congratulations, partner.β
Toni pointed her glass at him. βMore.β
Raji served her a refill and together they clinked glasses in a toast.
βNo one has had the better interest of this agency than you, Toni. Weβre glad to have you with us. But I do hope you know that being partner means more responsibilities and sometimes, sacrifices.β
She gulped the drink as she did the first one. βI know.β
βPaperwork will be done on Tuesday. Make sure youβre at work on time. And ermβ¦the BMW presentation will be spearheaded by you.β
βMe?β
βYes. Any problem?β
βWell, I think we should sometimes let the boys in creative present their own ideas.β
βNot with a client this huge, Toni. And no offence but sex sells and youβve got lots of it.β
Toni hated times like these when her sensuality was called to save the day. The feminist in her would have put up a pout but now that she owned a stake in the company, she knew she had to play her part to ensure its success.
βYes, sir.β
βAnd Iβm guessing the news of you being partner will leak out?β
βDefinitely.β
He smiled and took her glass cup from her.
βGood night.β
Toni walked out of the office a lot lighter than she went into it. The day may not have been bad after all, and if she learned anything, it was that hard work still paid.
The morning before, she had gotten a phone call from her contact at DFL Creative. The guy let out information regarding the pullout of one of the senior partners from the agency. He was leaving to start something new and wanted to sell his shares. It was rumored that Nkechi was the top bidder. Immediately after the phone call, Toni dialed Mark. He was already up and about. She could hear the sound of a busy street from his end, though it was still dark.
She asked to meet with him in the next hour. He agreed, adding that there was a place he wanted to show her. They could talk there.
An hour later, he had her in a house that was best described as a gallery for the life they once shared. Upon entry, her eyes fell on a huge framed photo of both of them that had been taken in a phone booth somewhere in London. At first glance, Toni felt a stirring in her pits.
The sitting room was a larger replica of the apartment they had both shared while they were dating. The colors and setting left her rather uncomfortable. She shot questioning eyes at Mark.
βIβve had this place from the moment I lost you, cuddle bear. I just couldnβt let go.β
He was standing beside her, his pinkie linked to hers as she took in the sight before her.
βNow you know Iβm not lying when I say I loved you and I still do. This is my escape when things get really nasty with Nkechi. I just come here and get lost in time. Remember how you always fought me for space on that couch?β he asked pointing at a green, worn-out piece of furniture that could hardly take two people.
βAnd how weβll end up having sex on it, you always on top?β
Toni blinked the memory away.
βOr how youβd bury your face in that throw-pillow and cry if I upset you? Always that throw-pillow.β
βMark, I didnβt come here for this. We have to talk.β
βWe will but firstβ¦β
He put his hand behind her head and drew her in for a kiss. She forced down strong emotions that threatened to engulf her.
βLetβs talk.β She pushed away.
He led her to the couch they used to fight on. He sat and had her on his laps. Being that she was wearing a skirt, Mark didnβt hesitate to have his hand underneath it. He began caressing her.
βI want to buy your partnerβs shares at DFL,β she revealed, lighting a cigarette.
Markβs hand stopped moving for a second. βWho told you there were shares up for sale?β
βA little bird.β
βThey liedβ¦β
βBecause you want Nkechi to have it?β
βIβd sooner die.β
βGood. Then Iβll buy the spot.β
βToni, I have different plans for us. DFL is just not it. Yes, itβs a big deal but what I plan for us is bigger and better.β
Toni pushed his hand away and stood up. βThis is like the past all over again. I get work at DFL and you give me this long speech about two of us maintaining a working relationship and not being seen together as a couple, only for you to go behind my back and fuck Nkechi.β
βWhy are you bringing up the past, Toni?β
βBecause you have me standing right in the middle of it! Itβs as if weβre continuing where we left off! You saying the same nonsense and trying to shove me off what should be mine!β
βCalm down, Toni.β
She wasnβt angry or upset. It was all an act. She pretended to mellow down.
βImagine DFL and Covet merged as one agency,β she said, eyes twinkling into the air. Mark smiled first, brows squeezed, and then broke out in deriding laughter.
βIs it funny?β
βDFL and Covet in one place?β
βAs one agency.β
βPlease.β
βTogether weβll be able to beat the giants like Insight and 141 and Noahβs Arkβ¦ Help me hold this.β She handed him the cigarette in her hand, knowing well he had ditched his smoking habit years ago.
Slowly, she unbuttoned her shirt and took it off. Mark ogled like a teenager. She sat on his laps again and continued smoking. Mark was only interested in having his face between her breasts.
βI want to buy into DFL. Make that happen, Mark. And Iβm not coming in as Toni Braithwaite. You will buy the shares in your name but I will own them. When the time is right, I will come out publicly.β
Mark loosened his tie a little and clutched her hands. She came down on him with a kiss.
βIs there anything else you want?β
βI want you guys to pullout from any ongoing negotiations you have with the Finnish phone company.β
βCome on, Toniβ¦β
βYour wife screwed, or might still be screwing their brand manager for the campaign.β
Mark frowned. βWhat are you talking about?β
βLike you didnβt know? Doesnβt she get a certain percentage for reeling them in?β
βWho is telling you these things?β
βWord goes round, Mark. Or rather, Nkechi goes round.β
Toni almost smiled as she watched his annoyance grow. His earlier mood was lost but he maintained calm.
βYouβll get all you want, cuddle bear.β He tightened his tie back into place. βI have to go to the office. We should leave. Put on your shirt.β
βI donβt even get the chance to thank you?β
βWeβll arrange something this weekend. I promise.β
They shared a long kiss.
βI love you, Antonia.β
βI know.β
He wasnβt lying. He really did love her, she could tell. And the other thing that was obvious was how much he was burning to unleash his rage on Nkechi.
Toni smiled.
Things were going smoothly.
βToo smoothly,β she muttered to herself as she drew out of recalling the moment she had shared with him. She was out on her balcony, having the last stick in her pack of menthol cigarettes. She leaned on the metal railing that kept her protected and peered across the street to see that Andreβs office had its lights on.
He was still at work?
Her phone rang. She looked at it. He was calling.
βHi Andre.β
βThe Federal Ministry of Health warns that smokers are liable to die young.β
βImagine that.β
Andre snorted. βHow are you?β
βTired. About to go home. Are you in your office?β
βYeah.β
βDoing what?β
βThinking of a million different ways to get my ass off my chair. I have a cold. Slight fever.β
βAww, poor you. You want me to come over?β
βAre you a good night nurse?β
βIβm a bad one.β
βHow bad?β
βVery bad.β
βHurry over.β
The call ended and she found herself beaming from ear to ear, an act that somewhat annoyed her.
“Calm down,β she pacified herself. βHeβs just a man.β
Β©Sally@moskedapages
Images:Β alfa-img.com,Β ayfawka.org,Β myvirtualassistants.net
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This post is not an Easter bonus. It is specially for Modupe Monebi and everyone that was at the meetup last Sunday. Thank you for supporting me.
I was surprised that it was ghost readers that turned up. What a twist. And all of you who have been bugging me in this comment section for more than a year didn’t even show face.
*weeps*
No wahala. I’m still here for you. You can always bank on that.
But back to the story, do you think Salma and Folarin will be justified if they fell into some sort of emotional affair, that is they manage not to sleep with each other?
Express yourselves.
Happy Easter….
Dunno if there’ll be a post tomorrow o!
Thanks Sally, now i can so brag about this ehn……
I live in far away benue state, but i still look forward to meeting you someday. You carry a lot of creativity that i am in awe of.
i think salma and folarin are already in a emotional affair. they need the support from each other. as far as there is no sex, they can cry on each others shoulders
i cant imagine toni’s plan for mark and nkechi
thanks to modupe and co for this episode. i was elated when i saw notifications for 2 TFF posts in my mail box.
Happy easter to you and your family
Unfortunately for me, I’m not a lagosian so I missed ?
I’m not even bother about Salma and folarin, they will do fine.
It’s that comfort that scares me. She’s already taking salmas place.
Toni is not just mouth. She has Mark by the balls. I just like her.
Poor Lade. I hope she finally leaves Tayo. Big curse is hanging on his head. He needs deliverance
Happy Easter Sally
Please bring another tomorrow
?????
An evil part of me wants Salma and Folarin to get together but if they do, it doesn’t make them any better than Christie and Raji. I’ve changed my mind Sally i think the dark side has won…….. If they get together i would love Christie and Raji to catch them at it. Sometimes its good yo let people have a taste of their own medicine, sounds mean but life is mean too. Lol!
Nice work Sally,been waiting for this, Salma and Folarin should hold on on the affair till the right time, that wld be perfect revenge for Christie
I won’t mind folarin and Sal to get their groove on Christie and Raji can feel the pain but I see comfort pushing Sal out of the show. As. For tayo his case na God.i kinda like Andre sha.weldone Sally waiting for kd/jos hook up with Sally. Am so loving Okada books.
Oh my!!!
This is so intriguing,i don’t think it’s justifiable for Folarin and Salma to have an affair even if their partners are cheating….nice write up sally, happy Good friday
Well payback is a bitch, folarin and salt Might just be justified is getting squared, dre marriages is been messed up by 2 ppl dey love, so it’s tit for tat, that is if dre morals will let dem do dt, dey seem lk two very principled person
Am first to comment oo! Hw lucky. As par ur question, dey will surely fall into emotional affair bt sleep with eeaach other, I don’t fink so Sal!
Folarin and salma, under normal circumstances, would end up having their own affair, but then, clichΓ© isn’t your style.
Hi sally…. *guilty face*
i see folarin and Salma having affair soon but wnt last.
We will be happy if they have revenge sex. We really don’t mind. Somebody needs to deal with those other two
Meanwhile I hate Tayo.
Hollup Sally. I think I need a plain white sheet for each character. Comfort has shidren for Raji? Whao! And she still stays around? No wonder Salma is bitter. No do no do Fola and Salma go eventually kiss one day. Pain is a powerful chord that binds two unlikely people together.
Toni wear condoms o! Or else your miss Beyonce-independent lifestyle would soon be over when you dance shoki with Andre this night o, ehn ehn!
Nice one Sally. You really psychanalyzed the characters wella.
I believe that Sal nd Fola may still have an affair just cuz of the emotional attachment they r feeling right now cuz of their partners…Toni is so going to love Andre I cant wait for more…I love you Sally….I’ll keep reading to see how the story unfolds
So Toni is most likely Joyce missing daughter… I can’t seem to get enof of Tondre
Ehm an emotional affair? Is most likely going to result out of ‘Salarin’ after all they say misery loves company… But is it justified… Never. Sally Oshe oooo and complements.
@Sandra u hit d nail on d head bout toni. I m not bothered bout sal nd fola cos if it happens its going to b a one off thing. Comfort? dosnt ve raji. Raji’s for Christie nd he wnt let go just yet. Fola knws more dan he is letting bout d affair. He is arranging his evidence. Chai sally well done. I missed seeing u. Had hosp. Wahala
Tayo is an emotional boy com man dat witnessd abuse frm d father nd some how is like him cos of sitted bitterness wit evry one includin his father whether dead or alive nd dat has made him to believe dat being vulnerable is a sign of weakness so he hates pple dat re like his wife. He is afraid to show love cos he was not given wen needed
oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Now this made my day….
Thanks Sally, Arent you just the best?……
In other News, so Tayo and Toni are family abi…and that Christy of a woman sef.
Being someone who is trying to fight for custody of my son, I can understand Salma and her wanting to think things through cuz somehow the court always favours the man when they feel he has “means” issshhh……
Thanks again Sally
Happy easter Sally and all readers. Toni is Tayo’s sister, the stolen baby. Salma and Folarin relationship is not justified, so Sally don’t make them do it. Christie! “The suffering Folarin will suffer you is doing press up”. Mark’s head and brain is between his legs and that is where Toni controls.
So, madam Sally we should expect Easter post.
amnt a lagosian and cldnt mk it. tanks to all dose dat did. fola and sal emotional yes. sex no, it wld cloud dere payback strategy cos dey seem lyk gud pple.dere mind go jst dey disturb dem. let d payback b big. seem fola has a character u hvnt showed us cos we knw his a VGBG we jst wanna c d badguy
amnt a lagosian and cldnt mk it. tanks to all dose dat did. fola and sal emotional yes. sex no, it wld cloud dere payback strategy cos dey seem lyk gud pple.dere mind go jst dey disturb dem. let d payback b big. seem fola has a character u hvnt showed us cos we knw his a VGBG we jst wanna c d badguy
Bring it on!!!
Wonderful lady Sally. You are the best!
Emotions are not easy to control, Fola n Salma…..nobody is perfect, shit happens. Toni n Tayo, I knew it…..please go bond with you sister n calm down jor Tayo.
Well done madam Sally, thanks alot….xoxo.
You see your life now Mark, I hope you’re ready for what is about to befall you…. I don’t have any word for Raji and Christie for now and as for Fola and Sal, I’m sure they will be fine… Thanks for this wonderful episode my sugar Mama Sally, God bless you.
Happy Easter Sally and fam here. Christie and Folarin are definitely going to kiss but don’t make them have sex tit for tat does not solve problems but make you guilty at the end. Toni is the Joyce stolen baby but the reunion though. Tondre should not be a fling o make them work abeg. In another news we are waiting for today’s update. Always the best kudos
Hi Sally *covers guilty face*
No, it is not justified if Salma n folarin’s do the same thing as their spouses. I will like to have them do the right thing at the right time.
So my girl is sibling with that arrogant tayo, and the rubbish tayo knows this and still don’t care! Pls what kind of a man is that? I await the day Toni finds out and also gets to know how he’s been treating their mum badly…
And yes Tondre love is budding up.??? I support nykky their love should have a happy ending.
Shebi you know if I’m in Lagos, I’d have been at the meet up. Hoping i’ll have that opportunity soon.
Tayo may never find a reason to let go of his reservations towards his mom because it took years for him to be fed taless about his mom, and how terrible a mother she’s been. Of course, stuff heard from childhood sticks and it takes a lot to re-tune the mind. I hope he finds a way tho, cos that is affecting his outlook to life.
Christie and Raji have given Sal and Fola the best template to cheat in return. What better revenge is there than being with the partner of a cheating partner. I’m scared it might become complicated anyways. We keep watching. How both Christie and Raj will wriggle out of this is what I watch with bated breath.
As for Mark and Toni…the pull some people have over us ehn! Mumu button things. And Andre be weakening Toni’s defenses already, but has she not weakened his’?
Well done Sally. Thanks and thanks again.
Oga Folarin is ready! I’m ready for when shit hits the roof too… I can’t wait.
me too…
Time for Lade to step up and move out of Tayo’s shadow.
Folarin and Salma will be more than justified. Hey, it may not be the popular choice, but it’s the realistic choice.
Also, I think it’s about time we met Nkechi. We hear so much about her but when is she going to make an appearance?
I’m sorry I couldn’t make it to the meeting with you. I live on the outskirts of the mainland and island is like traveling for me o and I have a three months old. Will definitely make it to the next one. Christie is still going to be the biggest loser. I have a feeling that the first meeting between Tayo and Toni will be bloody. Folarin and Salma, no. Folarin and Comfort, Salma back to Raji.