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Okamma n’ilo – A Short Story by Cheluchi Onyemelukwe
- By Cheluchi Onyemelukwe
- Published March 18, 2008
- Short Stories
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Cheluchi Onyemelukwe
Cheluchi Onyemelukwe is currently a doctoral candidate in law at
I was enjoying a plate of jollof rice, moimoi and salad, and watching Ada and her husband dance to the excellent akwunechenyi music with people throwing money all over them, when I heard Nnaemeka’s voice from behind me, “Look, you won’t believe who I have here.” I turned round and, true to his words, I could not believe my eyes.
“Ikenna!” I exclaimed. “Where did you come from?” I asked a little foolishly. I was really surprised to see him.
“Happy New Year,” he said smiling.
“When did you come back? Don’t tell me you have been around and you have not come to see us?” I asked.
“Please ask him,” my brother said.
“I only came back to the village yesterday. I came into the country on the thirty-first,” he told us.
Ikenna was a childhood friend. We had all grown up together. When we were younger, we all played together at our house. We were not related by blood but we acted as if we were. Later on, he and I attended the same university, where we looked out for each other. After our national service, he won the
We had kept in touch very infrequently since he left for the US and I wanted to know what he was doing at home. As it turned out, he had come home to get married. He was going to pay the bride price of his wife, who was also from our village. I wondered if his parents had found her for him.
“So, you are home for Christmas,” he said to me. “When are you heading back to
Why did he assume I was going back to
“I came back some time ago,” I told him. “I work in
“You do?” he sounded very surprised. “You did not like it in
“Well, I wanted to come home,” I said. I did not really want to go into any long explanations.
“Lucky girl,” he said to me, but his tone implied something else. “I don’t know how you can stand it here, already the power outages are getting on my nerves. We had to buy fuel on the black market yesterday for the generator. Nothing seems to work in this country.”
I said nothing to that. Five years was not long enough to forget what the country was like.
“So where do you work?” he asked.
I told him.
“Lucky girl” he said again.
“How so?” I asked him.
“Well, I thought that you would be making money in a bank like your brother Nnaemeka or working in a consulting firm or something. But clearly, you don’t need the money. Or NGOs must be paying a lot more these days.”
“How do you mean I don’t need the money?” I asked him, cautioning myself not to get heated. “I have bills and things to do with money too.”
“But, you don’t have the responsibilities that I do. You know my parents are retired now and two of my sisters are still in the university. As the first child, I have to put up the money for their fees, as well as take care of my parents. Also, now I have to think of building a good house in our compound.”
I had not noticed anything wrong with the modest bungalow his parents had built, I thought.
“You are lucky,” he continued. You are the last child. Moreover, you are a woman. You don’t have any problem at all. Soon, a well-to-do man will come and marry you and you will live in comfort the rest of your life. Just look at
The last statement was more a joke than anything else;
“Really? Is that what your wife will do? Live in comfort the rest of her life?” I asked him mildly. It was interesting that five years in the
“Well, we will live in the
I looked closely at him, he sounded serious. How many women in
Before I could speak however, he said, “Perhaps, you could start your own NGO. You will make more money that way. You know, collect money from all those international aid agencies.”
“That is not the reason why NGOs work,” I said.
He said nothing to that, but his expression said that he knew better.
In an apparent effort to change the subject, he said, “You still look as pretty as I remember.”
“Don’t let your wife hear that,” I bantered back.
“Please don’t tell her,” he replied, smiling.
“I haven’t eaten,” he said.
“Let me see if I can get you some food. Sit here,” I said giving him my seat and carrying my half-eaten plate of rice with me to the cooking area behind the house.
********
Lord, let me land safely again. I still have plenty to live and see in the world, I prayed with my eyes shut tight. My stomach turned queasy as the plane climbed upwards towards the skies, the roaring noise of the takeoff hurting my ears slightly.
This time I had the window seat and I could look out and think. And I thought how good it was to spend time at home with my parents. How good it was to spend Christmas with my siblings, different as we had all turned out. I had enjoyed myself, enjoyed being with my family. But, I was not able to change any views or anything. If anything, I only succeeded in making them question what I was doing with my life. With no husband, no children and little money, it was no wonder that they thought I needed a different life compass from the one I was using. Recalling the loneliness of Lagos, the busyness of everyday life, the jumping off and on moving buses, the dirtiness of the streets, with gutters filled with bad, smelly water, constant power outages, and the seeming hopelessness of the job I did with street children, I knew that my family had good reason to consider me crazy for leaving an organized, easy to predict life in Canada.
My encounter with Ikenna had also given me the most food for thought. Did I really want to live permanently in my country, with its unpredictability, the corruption which drew almost everybody in its vortex- witness my having to pay a tout to get my ticket at the airport? Had my coming back home to
With my thoughts, the fifty-minute flight seemed shorter; I was surprised to hear that we were about to land in
“Aunty, let me carry your bags,” one of the men told me.
“I won’t charge you too much,” the other said, pulling on my bag.
I snatched the bag from him, keeping my eyes straight ahead.
“Where are you going?” yet another asked walking close behind me.
“Don’t mind him; his cab is too old for a fine girl like you. Come and enter my car.”
I held onto my bag tightly as I hailed yellow taxis. I waited in the scorching sun, sweating. Harmattan is almost non-existent in