2016 The burial is a quiet one, mum made sure. Only 7 people are in attendance—dad, mum, Iye (dad’s mother), Tochi (Olivia’s husband), our parish priest, Aituari (Olivia’s best friend) and me. Sadness sags loosely around all of us, in our eyes, from our black clothes. Dad is holding my mum tightly around her waist […]
“They came from behind, I didn’t see their face” Olivia muttered as she sobbed. “My thing and bum bum hurt mum” she added. With tears in her eyes threatening to trickle down anytime, mum delicately wrapped her hands around her as if she would break if she held on too tightly. “Animals. Animals. Animals” she babbled. I took the torch from her, switched it off, then I sat next to Olivia and like mum, I too wrapped my hands around her delicately. That was when I saw what they’ve been staring at in the dark—stillness. When there’s pain, there are no words. People are kinsmen in pain.
Olivia went to school on Monday, dad said it was important that she appeared normal. He said we should go on as if it never happened. I bought my JAMB form again and started attending Standard Lectures again. Dad went to work. Mummy went to her business. Things got back to normal or so it appeared. We never talked about that night. The days that followed taught me there are not two sides to a coin, but three—the head, the tail and the edge. But nobody talks about the edge of a coin, and like the elephant in the room; pretend it’s not there long enough and it will seem so. Nobody flipped a coin expecting the edge, nobody bet on the edge. The edge was not supposed to turn up, that night was not supposed to happen. Olivia grew quieter by the day, answering almost all questions in monosyllables. There was an empty look on Olivia eyes now, the kind that you find in the eyes of people who knew too much pain. The kind some women in my area had.
Some days, silence dripped from everywhere in our house, from the lips of everyone. On such days, I knew how to go mute, speaking only when it’s absolutely necessary, not to ask stupid questions, any questions. I knew just like everybody else that things were different.
2004
One evening in January, I had just finished watching a soap opera and I was going to the storeroom to fetch the note I wrote the TV schedule. As I was passing my parents room when I overheard them talking about my sister. Olivia was still on holiday from school and was sleeping in our shared room. She had recently started to sleep a lot, too much on some days. She had also begun to glow. Mum told him how Olivia told her she had not seen blood in two cycles. Mum had always been graceful with her words and how she said it, never saying too much but always saying enough. She spoke that evening with a tone that wobbled with worry in such slow manner like her words could break if she went any faster. She mentioned how she observed that Olivia had grown fatter since that night, that she feared Olivia is pregnant. A chill ran through my body that made my hairs stand, my breathing stopped, it could only have been for a few second but it felt like hours. I did not hear anything for a while. I imagine darkness swallowing the red sun outside, the cricket waiting anxiously to take over the reign of the night while the frogs connive to drown the chirping choir with their croaking songs. “You know what that means Bisola? We will have to remove it” daddy finally said in hushed tone like he feared the wall will hear. Remove it like Olivia was a fridge with a spoilt meat that must be removed. “My daughter cannot bear a devil’s child, awua. I’ll go see Philip tomorrow morning“.
We were Catholics, mum was a part of group of women in our parish that taught young girls that virginity was virtue and abortion was murder. But she didn’t argue with daddy, instead there was a conforming silence, the kind that came when daddy gave any order. A silence that said mum agreed.
Two days later, mum came to our room to announce that we will all be going to the hospital the following day.
We left the house very early before dawn brought its light and our neighbours saw us, neighbours who had started peddling conjectures. We left by 5am. My father was driving that Saturday morning in his green Mercedes Benz 200 with mum at the front seat. I sat at the back with Olivia, her hands in mine lifeless like a mannequin. We never drove together except on Sunday. Dad drove through the bushy Igbesamwan street, we rarely passed by other cars as very few people had vehicles. The silence in the car grew and soon started to suck the tense air in the car, I plastered my face to the glass on the window like I was sucking for air. Outside the car the sun had not come up, durst formed brown firmaments behind as we thread the untarred road and the deciduous leaves swamped weightlessly at the gushy nudge of the merciless wind. It was still too early for the scorching hold of harmattan to loosen its mean grip. Harmattan did not agree with me, my chapped lips, snowy skin and cracked sole bore proof to it. But it had nothing on Olivia. Her oily skin didn’t not seem to be affected by the fierce dryness that heralded harmattan. My mother said she took after her mother. “We are here” dad said speaking for the first time since we left the house.
We were ushered into stuffy examination room of the Ebenezer Clinic by a nurse. It was my father who went in first followed by my mother. Olivia and I that got in last, she held on so tightly to my hand as we walked in like she was silently telling me to take her far away from here. I saw the dread on her face, the face that once knew nothing but sheer mischievous smile. The nurse asked us to sit down and wait for the doctor. If it was a normal Saturday, dad would have been sitting in our sitting room in his crisp caftan reading his newspaper. Mum would be making moi moi and akamu in the kitchen while Olivia and I would probably be arguing about which novelist was the worst or which girl I had crush on as we ran errands for our mother. But it was not a normal Saturday, nothing was normal. “Victor howfar? Mrs. Erhabor, it’s good to see you. I’ll see you guys now” Dr. Philip spoke to my parents. He was my father’s friend from secondary school, his small feature surprised me, I thought for a doctor he should be bigger. He was wearing a black tailored suit with a red pinstripe shirt and a black tie. He had a smile on his face that oozed confidence and comfort. He looked at Olivia like an artist will look on a work they are to replicate and asked “is she the one?”. “Yes”, dad answered as they walked into his office.
It was just I and Olivia in the room, her hand still in mine. That’s how she spoke to me most of the time, with her hands. As I looked at her, I remember almost a year ago when she was suspended from her girls only school. Mr. Kalu, her social studies teacher had advised her class that if they took their studies seriously, they could become the wives of presidents, governors, ministers, and rich men. He told Olivia that they were just girls when she asked why they couldn’t be those he mentioned instead of the wives. She had called him a sexist. I helped her write the letter of apology.
“Don’t look so sad Olivia, it will be fine again, soon” I finally said to her. She turned to me with a look that bothered on pity, “sadness is not a look Osagie” she said, “it is a feeling”. There was always this simple sophistication about her anytime she spoke.
Some children grew up quicker than others, Olivia had grown and it bothered me if it was a good thing.
Our parents came out a few minutes later, dad told Olivia to follow mum into the examination room. Nothing in that hospital that day would have made anyone suspect that it was a subtle commercial hub for abortion. Hours later, Mummy propped Olivia as they came out with Dr. Philip trailing them with a grin shabbily smeared on his face. “It went well” my mother quietly told my father looking apologetically at Olivia, as if such a thing could ever be said to have gone well. Olivia took my hand and smiled tiredly at me. In that moment, I knew this was another thing we will never talk about, another edge of a coin we had to pretend never turned up. Our drive home was quiet.
2016
After dropping off my parents back at home, I drive home. My girlfriend Ufuoma is sleeping on the sofa in the sitting room, her pitch-black hair dancing to the sway of the standing fan, I plant a kiss on her cheek lightly enough not to wake her. I walk to the dining table where my laptop is sited and open the email again.
Osagie,
When you hear about it Osagie, don’t beat yourself up. It is not your fault, it’s life that has cursed me. Tell mummy and daddy that I know they did all they did because they love me. Tell them I forgive them. Tell them to forgive themselves too.
Osagie, my doctor said I can’t have children because I don’t have a womb. A woman without womb is half dead and half alive and I cannot live a half life anymore. Tell everyone I’m Sorry.I’m sorry Osagie. Be my brother again in another life. Tell your children about me. I love you.
PS: Ufuoma is a good girl, put a ring it. I read all the books you sent last Month, THE ATONEMENT CHILD by FRANCINE RIVERS was my favourite.
2016 The burial is a quiet one, mum made sure. Only 7 people are in attendance—dad, mum, Iye (dad’s mother), Tochi (Olivia’s husband), our parish priest, Aituari (Olivia’s best friend) and me. Sadness sags loosely around all of us, in our eyes, from our black clothes. Dad is holding my mum tightly around her waist […]
2016 The burial is a quiet one, mum made sure. Only 7 people are in attendance—dad, mum, Iye (dad’s mother), Tochi (Olivia’s husband), our parish priest, Aituari (Olivia’s best friend) and me. Sadness sags loosely around all of us, in our eyes, from our black clothes. Dad is holding my mum tightly around her waist […]
2016 The burial is a quiet one, mum made sure. Only 7 people are in attendance—dad, mum, Iye (dad’s mother), Tochi (Olivia’s husband), our parish priest, Aituari (Olivia’s best friend) and me. Sadness sags loosely around all of us, in our eyes, from our black clothes. Dad is holding my mum tightly around her waist […]