Thirty-four
The American Embassy officer scrutinised my
documents. She scanned the pages of my passport and saw evidence of
my frequent trips to and from the UK and the Schengen region. She
saw written evidence that I had my own importing and exporting
business. She observed my bulging bank accounts and knew that I
could not be planning to remain illegally in her country, flipping
burgers in McDonald’s or bathing corpses in a morgue.
Still, the scowling brunette on the other side of
the glass partition grilled me belligerently, as if it was my fault
that she had found herself in such a lousy job.
‘What are you going to the United States to
do?’
‘Let me see your tax clearance certificate.’
‘Fold it!’
‘How long do you plan to stay?’
‘Why aren’t you going with your wife and
children?’
‘Don’t interrupt me when I’m talking!’
‘Have you ever been involved in any terrorist
activity?’
‘How do I know you’re planning to return to
Nigeria?’
After about forty-five minutes, the inquisition was
over. The Gestapo officer instructed me to return to the embassy by
2 p.m. the following day for collection of my stamped passport.
Hurrah. My journey from Aba to Lagos had not been in vain.
‘Thank you very much,’ I replied. It was always
best to repay evil with good. Besides, it could not have been any
easier for Columbus; what right did the rest of us have to
complain?
‘Congratulations, my brother,’ several
panic-stricken visa seekers mumbled as I walked past.
I left the building elated. An American
neuroscientist was very willing to invest in a Ministry of
Education contract, and this new mugu sounded like another
long-term dollar dispenser. The packaging was getting to a stage
where I would need to schedule a meeting with him in Amherst,
Massachusetts.
I walked past some other embassies on my way to the
car park at the end of the crescent. Even the embassy of Bulgaria
gates were besieged with long queues. The US and the UK - and
perhaps Ireland - were understandable, but why on earth would
anyone want to run away from Nigeria to Bulgaria? As I reached the
car, I heard someone shouting my name.
‘Kings! Kings!’
I turned. In that instant, I forgot all the
sinister plots I had devised in murderous daydreams. All the
diabolical strategies I had composed in midnight moments of pain
and anger vanished from my mind. I beamed like a little boy lost
who had just been found by his mother.
I ran screaming towards the sweet sound of my
name.
‘Ola! Ola!’
We rushed into each other’s arms. We hugged like
old friends. I looked her over from head to toe.
‘Wow! Ola, you look . . .’
I stopped. She was as fat as a dairy cow. There
were light green stretch marks tattooed into her swollen
cleavage.
‘You look lovely,’ I said, and that was the
truth.
‘I had two babies, that’s what happened,’ she
replied with a satisfied smile. ‘You, how are you?’
‘I’m fine.’ I could feel myself still grinning
stupidly. ‘Honestly, you’re the very last person I imagined I would
bump into today. I just came for my American visa interview.’
She nodded.
‘I came to renew our British visas - me and my
children.’
‘Wow. Ola, it’s so good to see you. Why don’t we
sit somewhere and have a proper chat. I hope you’re not in a
hurry.’
She agreed. We walked around in search of somewhere
to hang out. The complex housed a number of shops, business
centres, and eating places, but most of the restaurants were dingy
- obviously designed with only the waiting drivers in mind.
Suddenly I remembered that times had changed. Ola and I did not
have to put ourselves through this.
‘Why don’t we go somewhere nice in town?’ I asked.
‘We could go to Double Four or Chocolat Royal. Or wherever else you
want.’
I was bold to throw the offer open. Unlike those
days, now I could afford it.
‘No, I’m OK with anywhere here,’ she said and
smiled. ‘I’m not that hungry, anyway.’
We chose the least dingy restaurant of them all.
The air smelt of a mixture of fresh fish and locust beans. Large
and small flies buzzed and perched about with alarming sovereignty
and audacity. A sweaty, matronly waitress who looked like she knew
all the flies by name galumphed to our table. Eating anything in
that place would have been like signing a treaty for the invasion
of my digestive system.
‘I’ll have a Coke,’ I said.
‘Diet Coke for me,’ Ola said.
I handed the matron the highest denomination naira
note I had in my wallet. She grumbled and dug into her belly region
in search of some change.
‘You can keep the change,’ I said, loud enough for
Ola to hear just in case she had been distracted.
‘Thank you, Oga!’ the matron beamed. ‘Oga, thank
you very much!’
‘Kings, Kings,’ Ola joked. ‘You’re now a big
boy.’
I smiled. The drinks arrived immediately, served
directly from the bottles, with a suspicious-looking straw sticking
out from the neck.
‘But Kings, if anybody had told me that somebody
like you would ever do 419,’ Ola continued, ‘honestly I would have
said it’s a lie.’
Strangely, this was the first time someone who knew
me, someone whom I did not work with, had told me to my face that I
was a scammer. Nobody ever mentioned it. Even my mother, despite
all her misgivings, was still in the realm of hunting for
euphemisms. There was something emancipating about the way Ola had
put the elephant right on top of the table. I would not have to
spend our time together being furtive.
‘I wonder who’s been telling you these things,’ I
said with mock shock.
Ola laughed.
‘How won’t I hear? You know Umuahia is a small
place. When a maggot sneezes, everybody hears, including people
outside the town. Anyway, I hear you’re still humble and
level-headed. Unlike many of these other loud 419 guys.’
I sniggered.
‘Ola, the things that change us are quite
different. I always find it funny when people say that money makes
people proud. If you check it, poor people are some of the proudest
people in this world.’
My father, for example.
Ola kept quiet. Then she nodded.
‘I agree with you, you know. Poor people can be
soooo proud. There was a time back in school . . . that time I
joined the Feed the Nation people . . . I don’t know if you
remember?’
Like almost everything else about her, I remembered
it clearly.
‘When we used to go out every Sunday to feed poor
people in the streets. One time, there was this man who came and
asked us for his own pack of rice and sachet of water. We gave him.
Then he asked us to give him another one for his wife.’
They asked the man to go and bring his wife; they
were only supposed to feed those physically present. He explained
that his wife was ill. They asked him to imagine what would happen
if everybody collected an extra portion for a spouse who was ill.
There would be nothing for those who actually came.
As Ola spoke, a huge fly came and took up residence
on her left ear. I wanted to stretch out my hand and frighten it
away, but for some reason, I did not.
‘Do you know that the man got so angry with us?’
The fly ran away but returned almost immediately. ‘He told us that
we were insulting him, that we were calling him a liar. That did we
think it was a big deal that we were giving him food?’
Then he flung the rice and water on the floor in
front of them and stormed off.
‘Can you imagine?’ she concluded.
She had narrated the story to me the very same day
it happened. Still, I shook my head and tut-tut-ed in all the right
places as if I were hearing it for the first time.
‘Like I said before, I’m quite surprised that
somebody like you is doing 419. You used to be so soft and
innocent. How do you cope with swindling all those white people of
their money? Don’t you feel guilty?’
I shrugged. The fly left her ear at last.
‘Well, I guess I just don’t think about it too
much,’ I replied.
‘But how can you not feel guilty?’
She appeared truly bemused. What was there to be
guilty about? Was anybody feeling guilty about the artefacts and
natural resources pilfered from Africa over the centuries? My mugus
were merely fulfilling their role in the food chain.
‘So how’s married life?’ I asked, changing the
topic.
‘Oh, everything is fine,’ she replied quickly. The
smile that should have accompanied her voice came some nanoseconds
after she had spoken. ‘My husband opened a new headquarters in
Enugu, so we moved from Umuahia almost immediately after we got
married.’
She paused.
‘The kids and I will be leaving for London by next
weekend.’ Her face lit up with excitement; emotion had now
returned. ‘We’ll be there for about two weeks and then we’ll go on
to America.’
She rhapsodised some more about the forthcoming
holiday trip. I asked her what she was doing at present. All the
excitement left her voice in a deep sigh.
‘My husband doesn’t want me to work. He wants me to
just stay at home and take care of the kids and it’s really
frustrating. Everybody has tried talking to him but he’s been
adamant.’
Apparently, the man’s decision had taken her by
surprise. I could have warned her for free. His actions perfectly
fitted the profile of the average, uneducated Igbo
entrepreneur.
‘What type of job would you have wanted to do?’ I
asked.
‘I’d like to work in a large organisation . . .
Something related to my degree. Or maybe just get one of these bank
jobs that everybody seems to be getting these days. Anyway, I’ve
already made up my mind. As soon as my youngest child starts
school, I’m going to look for a job.’
‘What if your husband says no?’
She frowned.
‘Kings, leaving my brain to lie fallow is too high
a penalty to pay for maternity. God knows I won’t allow that to
happen.’
Good luck to her. The best the man would probably
ever allow her was a boutique where his friends’ wives could go and
purchase expensive shoes and bags.
‘How old are your children?’
She smiled.
‘Ah, I have some pictures here.’
She dipped into her Louis Vuitton handbag and
whipped out a batch of photographs.
‘These are from the birthday party of my first
child.’
I inspected each photograph. There was a shot with
the two children sitting in front of a huge Spiderman birthday cake
with their mother and a man who, by the proud smile on his face and
the way his hand was clasped around Ola’s ribs too close to her
breasts, appeared to be their father. Hopefully, my face did not
betray my shock. Poor Ola - her husband was unpardonably ugly, as
if he had done it on purpose. As if he had gone to a native doctor
and asked for some juju that would make his face hideous. Where was
I to start? Was it the square eyes or the spacious nostrils, or the
puckered face or the quadruple chin? The man was a veritable
troglodyte.
Fortunately for the children, their mother’s genes
had won the battle. The outcome could win a Nobel Prize for Nature.
Ola’s children were all quite handsome - saved, delivered, from
their father’s DNA. At that moment, I decided that if losing Ola to
this man meant that the human gene pool had discontinued some
frightful traits and produced a better-looking hybrid, then I was
glad to have made my noble contribution to the advancement of
humankind. I handed back the photographs.
‘You have very lovely kids,’ I said.
Like all proud mothers, she smiled as if she had
been waiting all the while to hear me say just that.
‘And they are American citizens,’ she added. ‘They
were born in the US.’
I smiled louder, to prove that I was happy for
her.
I asked about Ezinne, about her other sisters, and
about her mother. She asked about my mother and my siblings:
‘How’s your uncle . . . Cash Daddy? I still find it
difficult to believe that he’s actually contesting for
governor.’
I smiled. She laughed. Then, we were silent for a
while. Sitting in front of her like that reminded me of old times,
of how much I used to love being with her.
‘So are you seeing anyone?’ she asked
suddenly.
I could not look her in the face.
‘Not really.’
‘Not really, how?’
‘I’m not in any serious relationship.’
‘How come?’
‘How come not?’ I forced a smile.
How was I supposed to tell her that while she was
busy popping babies and growing fat, I was paying dollars for
sex?
‘I don’t really have the time,’ I lied.
‘Time? Why? Are you burying your head in your books
again? What? Are you doing a postgraduate course?’
Haha.
I sighed.
‘Ola, right now, I’m not thinking about any of
that. I look at my siblings and I’m satisfied that they’re doing
well and it makes me content with being the sacrificial lamb. I
don’t mind setting aside—’
‘Kings, it’s not worth it.’
The force of her words, though quietly rendered,
could have smashed a hole right through the Great Wall of
China.
‘Kings, you can’t set aside your goals and
convictions just for the sake of your family or any other people.
Take it from me, I know what I’m talking about.’
We went back to silence again, both of us deep in
thought. I had spent my childhood daydreaming about my future as a
scientist. Ola knew this. My name was going to appear in my
children’s science textbooks. I was going to be known all over the
world because of my inventions. Top on my list, I once told her,
was an electric fan that also ran on batteries so that the
mosquitoes would not bite even if NEPA took the light in the middle
of the night.
A wave of depression came over me. Ola was right.
This was never the life I had planned.
Suddenly, it struck me. Inside all those layers of
fat, the Ola I loved was still there. She had a way of getting to
me, of making me think differently. She had seen me at my lowest
and at my highest, at my best and at my worst. And I had not been
able to talk to any other person with such easy freedom in a long
time - with honesty, with confidence, without apprehension. Ola was
my soul mate. Unlike my mother, she understood without being
judgemental.
‘Ola . . .’ I paused. ‘Maybe if I had you by my
side, things would be different. Maybe you’re what I need.’
She remained quiet. Abruptly, she stood and said
that it was time for her to leave. She had not touched her Diet
Coke. I had not touched my Classic Coke.
‘Ola,’ I said.
I reached out and held her hand. The warmth of her
soft palm was as delicious as a forbidden fruit. I felt a slight
tingling run down my spine. Still holding her hand, I asked if we
could arrange to meet some other time. She did not respond.
‘Even if it’s just to talk,’ I added. ‘Even if it’s
just for a meal. You know I always dreamed of taking you out to
somewhere nice and expensive but I never had the chance.’
Ola continued being quiet. After a while, she
pulled her hand away and shook her head. In desperation, I cast off
all restraint and said it.
‘Ola, I still love you.’
She did not appear startled or repelled.
‘I’ve never stopped—’
‘Kings, let’s not start something that neither of
us can finish,’ she said quietly.
‘Ola, there’s nothing to be afraid of. Things are a
lot different now. I can make you happy. I have a lot of money and
I can buy anything you want for you. Whatever your mother wants,
I’ll give it to her.’
Udenna was the least of my worries. His only merit
was his money. I was educated, certainly did not look like a
troglodyte, and my bank account could now do fair battle with his.
I reached out for Ola’s hand again. She drew it away and averted
her eyes.
‘Ola, please. We can both start our lives afresh.
Please, just give me another chance. Please.’
She looked into my eyes.
‘Kingsley,’ she said softly, ‘I’ve made enough
mistakes in my life already. I think it would be extremely foolish
of me to start making any fresh ones at this stage.’
She patted me twice on the cheek with her fingers.
I continued staring long after she walked away into the car park.
When my mugu’s phone call rammed into my misery, inquiring about
his payment for the completed Akanu Ibiam International Airport
project, I almost asked him to take his millions and shove them up
his Winterbottom.