- Home
- Short Stories
- In America - A Short Story by Maik Nwosu
In America - A Short Story by Maik Nwosu
- By Maik Nwosu
- Published May 23, 2005
- Short Stories
-
Rating:




There was a reception after the mass, consisting of verbal sacraments and a light meal – although I had not learnt to look on a twin piece of bread with a wafer of meat or a stuffing of vegetables in between as a meal at that time. It was a strange scenario for me: a church that treated its members to a post-mass buffet, instead of the priest having to rush off to another mass. In such a church, a newcomer like me could not remain anonymous. I was sucked into a round of introductions and re-introductions, with a lot of intervening questions.
“Where are you from?”
“
“In
“Yes, West
“I know a couple that went to
“Oh no,
“Where do you live in
“
“Is it large, as large as
“It’s larger. It’s the largest city in
“Really? Are there a lot of Christians there?”
“Yes, many, and many Muslims too.”
“Do you all get along?”
“Most of the time.”
“Why are you in
“I’m on a visit. I came to spend some time with a friend of mine.”
“That’s nice. How do you like it here?”
“It’s a fine place, but it’s very cold too.”
“But it hasn’t been a mean winter this year, really.”
When I got back home and narrated my experience to Tunde, he muttered: “That’s the logic of
Once Tunde assured himself that I was indeed worthy of Dr Lookout’s recommendation, our relations improved. I never did get to know him very well, because he spent a great deal of his time on campus. He had spent twenty six years abroad, been in and out of a marriage and had arrived at that stage where all that mattered to him was his immersion in his work. “To fail in one area of life is excusable,” he would say; “to fail in two is regrettable; to fail in all is unforgivable.” Although he had already lived in
But he was right about the church. It was the
iii
I moved into a one-room apartment and started work in the acquisitions department of the
My job in the bookstore kept me occupied during the day. It was towards the beginning of another semester and I was involved in acquiring both required and recommended texts for students’ courses. It was a job that I liked, sourcing and discussing books. I worried though that I had not made any friends, not for want of trying. Maybe, I told myself, I was trying too hard. I had a number of male acquaintances, but our relationship usually stagnated at the level of greeting each other whenever we met and inquiring about this and that, sometimes discussing the world as if we did not live in it. But almost every time I opened my mouth, my audience would suffer a hysteria of partial deafness. Since I was not inclined to relearn how to talk, I began to speak mostly to those who spoke to me – as long as they did not keep forcing me into the lane of repetitions or begin to repeat every other word I said in their own prized accent.