Words could not possibly describe the way I felt, while thinking about my mother that Friday morning. It had been two days since the ‘revelation’ about Marine Brothers Society, as thoughts about my sister’s arrival crept into my mind. I removed the second button from the hole on my blue long sleeved shirt, while waiting for a taxi at the tail end of Sani Abacha Road. Four or five minutes later, a taxi cab stopped with three other passengers, and opened its front passenger door for me to get in. My wristwatch showed ten-thirty in the morning as the taxi cab sped to my destination – Agip Junction. The moment I came down from the taxi cab, I walked a few metres to where some bus conductors were shouting ‘Rumuokoro’, ‘Rumuokoro,’ and stepped into the passenger seat of a blue Mitsubushi L300 fifteen seater bus.
I sat beside a fair lady who suddenly reminded me of my sick mother’s complexion. The bus kept stopping to pick and drop passengers until it finally reached my destination – Federal Government College, Rumuokoro, where my mother once taught English language. She always behaved and ‘acted’ in a different way, which made even her enemies to admire her. No one could ever believe that someone like her who had a very wealthy husband, would stoop so low to work in a place where the salary that was being paid to her was not even up to the amount she spent monthly on beauty treatments. A selfless woman sacrificed by her selfish husband…so horrible. I thought to myself as I crossed the road to reach my destination on the other side.
Inside the vast school compound, I had no specific place, office or staff in mind, but rather wanted to feel the aura of the place where my mother always said she found…fulfilment. It was ‘stressful’ carrying out my task, because the school was vast and the buildings were scattered everywhere in it. I walked briskly, trying to avoid some poodles, which resulted from the rainfall last night. My first point of call was the administrative block which was painted with a colour that one could describe as ‘deep orange’. I walked to the car park beside it, and looked over the lush green fields around the block. I stood and watched the large assembly auditorium which could comfortably take up to four hundred students inside it. As I walked past it, nobody seemed to notice me because I resembled one of the academic staff in a fitting blue long-sleeve shirt and a pair of black trousers. I also maintained a stern countenance till I left the premises.
I walked through a roofed passage towards the classroom section, where the JSS1-3 and SSS1-3 classrooms were located. I looked around like a tourist (without a camera), while the cold breeze swept past the grass. After a ‘tour’ which lasted for about half an hour, I walked back to the administrative block, which housed my mother’s department – English department. While walking to the second floor, my heart kept beating rapidly, and I kept imagining her walking past me. Standing in front of the staff room some seconds later, I leaned on the balcony as I faced the staff room, trying to maintain a look devoid of emotion.
I didn’t realise how long I leaned on the balcony until an elderly fellow, not more than five feet tall asked me what the time was. The moment he thanked me and left, I walked briskly downstairs, looked outside once more and strode to the main gate without looking back, as perspiration flowed down my back.
The moment I stepped quietly into Boma’s apartment, I took a shot of her vodka and went inside my room. I had a dMarine Brothers Societyiled plan of every action I was going to take for the purpose of carrying out my plan. I pulled off the blue long-sleeved shirt I wore and put on a black long-sleeved shirt, knotted a black neck tie and a black suit. I checked my outfit in the mirror in the sitting room, while I buttoned my suit. I stepped into the kitchen and took a small, but very sharp knife, and concealed it inside the left pocket of the suit. The knife was for anyone who would try to stand in my way.
Wearing a pair of black sunshades as I rode in a cab, I headed for MOTHY MARITIME SERVICES INTERNATIONAL, otherwise known as MMSI. The maritime company was owned by my old course mate - Timothy Ihonvbere, whom I was going to meet. It was 4:15 in the afternoon, the time when most offices would be closing for the day, and workers preparing to go home. The taxi cab sped through Aba road to the twelve storey building which served as the international headquarters of MOTHY MARITIME SERVICES INTERNATIONAL. The driver stopped at the wide entrance, and I literally jumped out immediately I paid the driver. The number of security personnel which were scattered around the main lobby did not deter me, as I headed towards the reception.
“Good afternoon sir,” a beautiful lady of about five feet eight inches smiled at me.
“Good afternoon, I’m here to see the President -”
“Oh, you mean the CEO?” she cut in.
“Yes, I came to deliver a gold bar to him,” I responded, while presenting the well-wrapped Bible my mother had instructed one of the nurses to give me. She clicked rapidly on the computer beside her, as I admired the beautiful lighting facilities in the hall.
“Sir, I’m very sorry, I’m afraid your name’s not on the appointment list…the appointment list of the Chief Executive Officer is filled for the next three weeks.” She spoke eloquently with a reassuring smile that didn’t seem to have any effect on me. With my left elbow on the marble desk, and the wrapped ‘gold bar’ in my right hand, I cleared my throat while forcing a smile which was, and would never be a part of my personality.
“Listen Miss…Aniefiok,” I called her name, looking at her identity card.
“One thousand six hundred dollars, that’s the price of an ounce of gold, if you do not know. I’m better off dead than walking around with this ‘rock’ in my possession.” I told her while trying to control the anger I’d been concealing.
“Sir, I’m sorry…” I cut her short while I stretched my hand and pushed the red desk phone nearer to her.
“Give him a call and tell him I’m here, tell him it’s urgent, tell him one Tamunotonye Abbey-Hart needs to see him urgently.”
“Sir, please try to understand…” She’d barely finished her last sentence when a tall looking brother, dark in complexion walked up to the marble desk and asked what the problem was. I noticed Miss Aniefok seemed somewhat relieved, though I knew that wasn’t going to last. I thought of my athletic physique, while I waited for him to finish.
“Young man your type isn’t needed around here, besides its closing time, so you better hit the road…” The security guard spoke and stared at me as if I was some piece of crap. He placed his left hand on my shoulder and tried to shove me away from the reception, when all the skill and knowledge I possessed in martial arts, kept running inside me like a tank filling up with water. I stepped backwards, looked at him, and unbuttoned my one button suit, as I moved my head sideways. I looked in the direction of the elevator and faced the security guard who seemed to hate everything about my presence in the building. Slowly, I removed the black sunglasses and placed them on the marble surface, beside the wrapped ‘gold bar,’ while I prepared for a showdown.
As this was going on, the receptionist guessed what was about to happen and soon pulled a small device beside the telephone and spoke quickly into it in a panic stricken voice. The SOS from her soon brought six other security guards to the reception. I always took things to the extreme, especially when learning how to fight. When other students practiced with punching bags, I ‘practiced’ my fists on the walls in and around my late father’s house, until they were ‘hard as steel.’ The first security guard, who seemed to be the superior, kept ordering me to leave the building, while the others around him looked eager to beat me up.
When he realised his entire warnings fell on deaf ears, he rushed towards me in a rage trying to hit me with his right fist. I held the punch with my left arm, turned to look at the frightened receptionist, then ‘responded’ my assailant with my right fist on his face, which caused blood to flow freely from his nose. He staggered backwards in a daze with a surprised look, as I turned my attention to the other men who launched towards me. The next moment I clenched my fists and stopped a punch from a guard, while I made another pass out with a ‘chop’ at the back of his neck. The men seemed untrained as I kept hitting, breaking, dislocating and drawing blood for over fifteen minutes, like a man suffering from ataxia. Soon, an unfortunate guard held me from behind, and struggled with me, as if the entire exercise was a local wrestling championship.
I managed to loosen my right hand as I drove my right elbow into his ribs. As he writhed in pain, I jumped up and kicked his head. While the last guard rolled on the floor, I began to walk towards Miss Aniefiok, with heavy breathing, when the Chief Security Officer pulled out a knife from inside his suit and rushed towards me in anger. I leapt backwards as the knife cut through the front part of my suit. I smiled at the angry man wielding a knife in front of me, while begging him to put it away, as we kept moving around in a circle. He suddenly launched forward again, as I ducked and grabbed his right hand which held the knife. The next moment, I landed several blows on his face, neck and chest with my right fist, while the knife was still in his grip. The bleeding from his nose seemed to increase the rage within him, as we both struggled with the knife, while I had my back to his face.
One of the guards, whom I’d beaten up earlier, stood up with a wooden chair over his head and began to come toward me. I twisted the wrist of the Chief Security Officer as he shouted in pain, pulled the knife from his grip and drove its point into the left shoulder of the man with the chair. Another punch to the Chief Security Officer’s temple made him slump to the ground.
“If you call the police, which I believe you haven’t, I’ll slit your throat,” I told Miss Aniefiok calmly while breathing heavily. I brought out the knife that had been concealed inside my suit, walked up to her, pointed to her cleavage and promised to cut her heart out if she went against my instructions. I stood beside her as we watched several employees coming out of the elevator and heading for the exit. They were surprised at the sprawling bodies on the ground, while the receptionist, on my ‘orders’ kept smiling all through.
“It’s time we went up to see the C.E.O,” I whispered in a voice that sounded as if nothing had happened. Had she known my mind, she wouldn’t have attempted to be ‘foolish.’ A small red button in a milk-coloured box lay beside the computer keyboard, which as I later learnt, was an alarm connected to the State Police Headquarters at Moscow road. I pretended not to see it as I stood by her right side, pretending to arrange papers. Another batch of employees soon trooped out of the elevators, headed towards the exit and to the car park. Miss Aniefok’s right forefinger was two inches from the red button when she screamed in pain, unable to move her entire hand backward or forward.
“I’m not very nice to disobedient ladies,” I turned, looking at the blood flowing over the keyboard as I twisted the knife right and left.
“Please, please, I’m sorry…” She screamed and pleaded, with tears streaming down her face.
“Sorry about what?” She mumbled something in a tear-laden voice, while I looked around. I thought of Miss Aniefiok as unintelligent for not alerting the Police before now.
“Anyway, I hope everything here was insured?” She used her left hand to wipe off the tears on her face, as an elderly man with a briefcase walked towards the door, while I resumed ‘arrangement’ of some papers that were before me.
“What was the red button for?” I bent down to disconnect the wire, with my eyes still trained on her.
“It’s connected to the State Police Headquarters”, she mumbled. My eyes went to the pair of black high-heeled shoes she wore, as I chuckled. I peered at the computer screen, and the wallpaper showed the logo of Timothy’s maritime company, moving at random on the screen. I pulled out the knife from where it was stuck on her right palm, atop the keyboard, cleaned the blade on the sleeve of my suit and returned it back inside my suit. Seconds later, I buttoned my suit, put on my sunglasses and retrieved my ‘bar of gold’ with my right hand.
“Ladies first,” I told her as she kept trembling like a leaf in the harmattan. She was about to say something when I suddenly grabbed her hair with my left hand and shoved her head into the computer screen. Afterwards, I dragged her by her left arm towards the elevator and pushed her inside.
“What floor is the C.E.O’s office located?”
“It’s on the twelfth floor,” she replied, almost in a whisper, as she pulled out a splinter of glass from the monitor and other electronic bits from her face. I pressed the No. 12 button and waited inside with my eyes closed, while humming to a music which was not playing. When it stopped at the twelfth floor, and the elevator doors opened, I felt like exclaiming in surprise as I beheld my eyes. The entire passage seemed to be made of diamonds, as the glass and silvery lighting seemed to ‘concur’ in the beauty they radiated. I pulled the once happy receptionist, while I walked through the hall like a sprinter running on television, viewed in slow motion. After what seemed like forever, I stopped with my gaze on a golden panel, which bore in block letters: TIMOTHY IYONVBERE Ph.D. Underneath it, another bore: C.E.O MOTHY MARITIME SERVICES INTERNATIONAL.
I sighed deeply, paused and knocked three times on the door, which was smoother than the lens of my sunglasses.
“Come in,” a soft voice sounded from inside. I pulled the receptionist along, entered into the office and saw a young lady occupying a glass desk, which resembled polished glass. She looked exhausted as she filed and arranged all sorts of papers and documents in a small cabinet beside her. Suddenly, a sober feeling took over me as I remembered how I was in a similar office two years ago, living in wealth and splendour.
“Miss Aniefiok, what happened to your face?” Timothy’s secrMarine Brothers Societyry asked her, while standing up at the same time.
“She had an accident in the lobby…it was caused by my carelessness with some of the glass antiques.” I cut in, and removed my sunglasses, while Miss Aniefiok nodded. I could feel her trembling as I held her hand. “Anyway, Miss-”
“Florence, Miss Florence”, she snapped.
“I came here to deliver a gold bar to your C.E.O from the Shanghai Chamber of Commerce…” I couldn’t believe myself as those words came out of my mouth, such smooth lies.
“Okay, just give it to me and I’ll make sure he gets it. Who should I say delivered it?”
“I’m afraid I have to give it to him personally,” I began, once again unbuttoning my suit as I approached her desk.
“With all due respect sir, I can’t waive protocol…” She soon stopped when I pushed the receptionist onto a black armchair and pulled out my knife.
“I insist,” I said slowly, with the knife’s points near her smooth cheeks.
“I wouldn’t want a beautiful lady like you to end up like that.” I warned her, as I pointed to the receptionist’s battered face. I smiled at both of them as Miss Aniefiok sat quietly like a mouse on the chair, wiping off blood from several cuts and bruises on her face.
“Then you’ll have to kill me, because I can’t let you see the C.E.O.” She said slowly as her smile soon disappeared.
“What’s the C.E.O doing that you feel is more important than your life?” I asked while I admired her fair skin.
“He’s in there…fornicating,” she replied with a frown. I looked at the receptionist on the armchair, while I ordered Miss Florence to sit down beside her and avoid doing anything ‘stupid.’ Before walking into Timothy’s office, I checked around Miss Florence’s desk for any red button, and locked the door through which I and Miss Aniefok had come in. The next moment, I pocketed my knife and placed my ear to Timothy’s door, while the women kept their eyes on me. Although I knew Timothy to be a chronic womaniser right from the university, what I was about to see was definitely not going to surprise me for a very long time.
“Can’t you show some courtesy by knocking?” Miss Florence managed to ask in a voice mixed with fear and courage. Turning slowly to her, I warned her to shut up or else she wouldn’t be able to use her computer monitor, while her face might end up like her colleague’s. I paused and thought about Timothy’s concupiscence, before turning the door knob to open the door. The passage from the elevator was nothing compared to Timothy’s office, as the floor of his office seemed to illuminate the entire room. There was a marble statue of a naked woman carrying a baby, some metres from the window. At the head of his swivel chair, a large painting of Marine Brothers Society in purple hung significantly. It seemed to be the only inanimate object in the office, which was not white or silvery in colour. The main office desk was designed in the form of a large ice block, with smaller blocks protruding from its sides. I shut the door behind me, as I walked some few steps, sat on the desk and watched the duo on a large white sofa close to the second window. They both looked shocked as I concentrated my gaze on them and the marble statue intermittently, while rubbing my knuckles.
Timothy hadn’t changed much, except that he looked fresher now that he was in a lot of money. He had a stylish haircut and was dressed in an expensive suit. The farthest part of the room where he’d been having fun with his girl, looked as if it was designed for that ‘purpose.’ It contained a large futon, a big white bar near the window, three white armchairs and a centre table made of glass. There was a white custom made sofa on which the duo now occupied.“More grease to your elbow, but can you guys please pause…Timothy and I got some important chit-chat to do.”“Tonye, what are you doing here?” he stammered at me.“I’ll start by apologising for what I did to your guards, furniture and…” I paused while staring at the door. “…and also your receptionist.” I picked up the gold coloured necktie on the ‘ice’ table and threw it at him, when my hand suddenly became suspended in the air, the moment I saw the face of the girl who’d been panting under Timothy’s ‘torture.’ Timothy walked u
“Tonye, Tonye, I’m at Omagwa airport, please just wait…I’m on my way.” Boma’s voice was a mixture of fear and confusion, while I didn’t bother to respond, when she called again an hour later. Immediately she ended the call, I put down the phone and continued staring blankly at the television screen.That particular day was a Saturday, followed by Sunday…by Monday the countdown to the initiation would begin…just a matter of time.Less than an hour after I spoke with Boma, there was a knock on the front door, and I could guess who it was.“Calm down, just calm down…everything’s okay…stop crying…sit down.” It took me more than twenty minutes to pacify her, before she stopped crying and sat down with a wet handkerchief.“Mum is dead and gone Boma…she won’t be buried, nor would any party, wake-keeping or church service be done for her. I had her cremated.” I’d barely finished my last sentence, when she shouted me down like someone in frenzy.“She’s been what…do you know what you’ve done?”
The ‘big day’ had finally arrived for me as I sat on the edge of the bed. I thought about everything that had taken place from my father’s death to the revelation by my mother.A minute later, I saw my sister at my door with a pink toothbrush between her lips, mumbling a word of greeting to me. I waited patiently for her to prepare for work, as I sat quietly in the dining room.Everywhere was quiet except the drizzling on the roof. The entire compound was so quiet in this new place. Everyone kept to him or herself and the security was tight. Moments later, I beheld my sister in a bright red suit.“Security here is as tight as your skirt.” I mumbled while Boma drank a cup of water from the water dispenser, near where I sat. She soon put the cup away and sat opposite me. She fixed her gaze on me like a suspect in the middle of a criminal investigation. I looked outside the window as the drizzling continued on the window, grass, flowers and cars outside.“Boma,” I began in a very soft vo
It was seven-thirty in the evening the moment Timothy stepped out of his limousine and dialled my number on his mobile phone. He had just returned from a nearby restaurant where he had gone to have an early dinner, before rounding up the work piled up in his office.There was no response from my phone, until he dialled the third time. A ‘sweet’ female voice he knew so well answered the phone and informed him that his friend was almost at the final stage of ‘perfecting’ his life.The line went dead shortly afterwards, leaving Timothy feeling amused at the possibility of a mobile phone to pick up signals in a place such as the silvery orb. He gave a deep sigh as he entered the main lobby and headed for the elevator.“He’d soon get what he wants ... very soon”.As soon as the elevator shut gently and ferried Timothy upward, Deaconess Esther Amadi was rounding up the Faith Clinic for the week in Abraham’s Villa, a parish in the Redeemed Christian Church of God. If my late mother were to b
The phone rang the second time before Boma answered it drowsily with her eyes barely opened.“Who …who’s on the line?”“I’m sorry to wake you up at his time, it’s me…its Tamunotonye.”She immediately sat up on the bed, rubbing her eyes and pushing away her blanket.“How was it, what happened…you’ve been on my mind since you left.”“Listen, I’m not ready to answer all your questions, but the freaky initiation went on well. ‘Stage one’ is complete, that’s all I can say.”“So where are you now?”“I’ll see you when the time’s right…”“What do you mean when the time’s right, can’t you come over to my office?”“Even if I came to your office, you won’t be able to see me.”The line went dead, while Boma stared at the phone screen, which displayed the time duration of our conversation. The time on my wristwatch showed sixteen minutes past six in the morning. The initiation had taken the whole night and the entire morning.Strangely enough, I neither felt tired nor drowsy, while I kept walking
I walked confidently with every stride, before stopping at the end of the car park. Students were nowhere in sight, as some of the non-academic staff could be seen walking to their posts and offices to resume duty for the last working day of the week.Almost ten minutes later, a blue SUV slowly rolled into the last space in the car park. On closer observation, I realised it was a Ford product, big, stylish with tinted glasses and definitely expensive.I couldn’t say this was part of the initiation ceremony, since the initiation had been concluded with congratulations from the goddess of perfection herself. I looked at the ring on my right hand as I brought the katana closer to my left side. Some moments later, I realised it was rather unnecessary as a lady came down from the driver’s seat in the SUV, came round and faced me after removing her sunglasses.“Good morning your…your utmost perfection…”“Good morning Mr Tamunoonye. A wonderful day it is… or would I say, a perfect morning?”
The goddess looked sober as she stood akimbo, while scanning the entire compound.“From the moment an initiate joins Marine Brothers Society, he or she is to ‘deliver’ persons of certain categories whenever the ‘need’ arises.”“What are you talking about, your utmost perfection?”“What I mean is that an initiate does not ‘deliver’ any kind of person and expect the right results. The person to be delivered must conform to the category the initiate has been assigned to.”She soon turned and faced me like an elementary school teacher, explaining an important point to a confused pupil.“Take for instance your friend Timothy – he has been assigned to ‘deliver’ only single ladies, whether they’ve had children or not.”I smiled at her last statement, because as someone who knew Timothy very well, I didn’t need anyone to tell me that he’d been assigned to a befitting category…“You… since you are a new initiate and possess an age which is not a multiple of perfection…you’ll be assigned to del
Pastor Frederick Alozie Ph.D was a man in his late forties, heavily built and in possession of an aura of cheerfulness, almost on a twenty-four hour basis. When he wasn’t lecturing at the Rivers State University of Science and Technology, he devoted most of his time to the work of God as a Parish Pastor, at the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Abraham’s Villa Parish.In the thirteen years of being a member and ‘worker’ at the Redeemed Christian Church of God, he’d never heard of anything concerning mermaids drinking blood or partying on the Atlantic Ocean. Sitting in his office that fateful Saturday morning, he watched Deaconess Esther Amadi narrate everything she had seen in her vision, with the prayer band leader seated beside her.When she was through, he knew the ‘battle’ in the spiritual realm was drawn, as far as he and all the ‘workers’ in the Parish were concerned.He wasn’t a man who loved to beat about the bush; rather he was one who believed in taking the bull by the horns
Timothy knew sleeping was the least of his worries as he brought the bottle of McDonnell’s to his mouth the fifth time. It was three o’clock in the morning and he also knew most Marine Brothers Society initiates would be doing something similar to what he was presently doing, wherever they were.His apprehension seemed to escalate when he noticed his Marine Brothers Society katana was not on the wooden rack, after his invisible double had returned from the silvery orb. He wished drunkenness would lull him to sleep, so he wouldn’t think about the consequences of what had just happened.He brought the bottle to his mouth the sixth time and cursed himself for contracting only one assassin to get rid of me. He thought about his money, cars, company, girlfriends, investments and stocks, but didn’t think about penury.I woke up on the altar the next morning to see Boma kneeling beside me, peering into my face like a nurse.“Hope you’re better?” she whispered.“Let’s go home…it’s all over,”
Inside the church, despite the fading pains on my body from the accident, I knew I had no choice but to maintain that sedentary position, until my invisible double successfully concluded his ‘mission.’I ignored the heated prayers around me, while my buttocks remained ‘stuck’ upon a white plastic chair. It was a good thing the weather was cold and the mosquitoes were at bay, else we all would have been soaked in our perspiration before daybreak.I closed my eyes and opened them again, trying to imagine what was going on in the mind of my invisible double. Although I knew what he was presently doing, I knew there was nothing like the feeling of being there personally. Slowly, I turned my head towards Boma and saw her praying like her late mother.“You will die the same way you made my dragon die,” the goddess screamed at my invisible double before she slumped backwards onto the surface of the silvery altar and melted on the flat surface. All eyes were now on my invisible double as he r
At that moment, I felt sorry for Boma – for having to put her through the entire stress, knowing fully well she had to be at her desk tomorrow morning in the bank. Samuel Adefarasin had started praying in whispers, while Pastor Alozie opened his large leather Holy Bible.I never intended for anyone to get hurt in the process of carrying out my late mother’s wish. This was why I felt the weight of guilt, as thoughts of all the people I’d delivered since joining Marine Brothers Society, began to race into my mind.My eyes were still on the door which had since been shut. The circles of prayer warriors had just been formed, and Pastor Alozie looked like a ready medieval General for a much anticipated battle, he was sure he’d win. I only took my gaze from the door after Boma’s right hand held mine.She bent down and looked at me affectionately, while the other hand stroked my face.“It’ll soon be over Tonye…very soon,” she whispered to me in a soothing voice. I nodded as an usher went aro
I swore never to allow myself to be bothered by a woman again, when I was finally discharged from the specialist hospital, that fateful tenth day of July 2013, with a truckload of medication. Boma’s magnanimous branch manager had offered her official car and driver to take me home.I said goodbye to the Nigerian, Syrian and Indian doctors and nurses, who’d taken their time to cut and stitch me for more than three months. I was amused at Boma’s tears of joy, as we journeyed to her apartment that afternoon.“Please drive us to the church….” The driver looked surprised, while he stared at the traffic lights ahead.“Madam said I should drive you home from the hospital, not…”“I want to go to the church and thank God.”“Okay, just drop us and we’ll use a taxi to church-” Boma cut in. The driver seemed not to hear us until I made one last statement.“If you don’t take me to the church before going to her apartment Mr Kennedy, I’ll come to her bank tomorrow and tell the manager you drove us
After an intensive massage one afternoon, I thought about the other Marine Brothers Society initiates and wished they could witness everything I’d witnessed, especially Doris Onakposeba, in her present state. She was the least of my worries, since one of them had even tried to kill me, by procuring an assassin. Staying in the hospital was frustrating, due to the healing and recovery process, which went on at a snail-speed.Many things had improved in my daily routine, especially my feeding pattern. I now fed myself, though salty, spicy and fried foods were still disallowed from my diet. My body, especially my blood needed sugar, so I indulged in ice creams and sweets on several occasions.As for the portrait, I looked at it at every available moment. Sometimes, I imagined me and Boma as orphans who were running away from the goddess and dying in the process of surviving Marine Brothers Society’s pangs, while the time rapidly ticked away.It was the third Sunday in June as he itched fo
God had never failed or disappointed him ever since he became born-again two decades ago, and he knew he wouldn’t start now. As far as Pastor Alozie was concerned, the major battle at hand was the ‘third stage’ of the Marine Brothers Society saga he was now faced with. The ‘first stage’ was the attack by the naked demons in my house.The ‘second stage’ was the accident which incapacitated me and the ‘third and final stage’ was the proposed face-off between me, Pastor Alozie (any other ‘interested’ party and the goddess. On the day the last surgical operation was to take place, Boma and Pastor Alozie were given fifteen minutes to talk with me before I was reeled to the theatre.“I’ll come around immediately I’m through from work,” Boma whispered as she held my hands.I looked at her smooth face and thought of how my abdomen had been scarred with stitches. The psychologist had advised me to keep recollecting happy thoughts and memories before the surgical operation commenced.This made
If anybody had told me that my invisible double was still ‘alive’ and ‘functional,’ I’d laughed heartily at such a person. The door to my room opened slowly and I stopped laughing at the cartoon on the television. I thought it was a nurse and tried to prepare my buttocks for another round of morning injections.Instead of a cheerful feminine face in a white uniform, I was surprised at the huge, six feet figure carrying a hamper, while entering the room with a smiling face. He looked satisfied with the occupant he’d just met, as his right hand began to reach for the back of his waist.“Are you Tamunoonye?” he asked in a friendly tone. Before I opened my mouth to answer, I watched in surprise as his smile soon turned into a painful, ugly grimace. He began to stagger towards my bed, while the hamper and dagger dropped from his hands.The next moment, I saw his white silk shirt become soaked with blood, flowing from his mouth and nostrils. He began to gasp for breath as the shiny blade w
While Boma’s imaginary kiss landed on my forehead, Ibeabuchi put finishing touches to his ‘tools’ of work. As a former mobile policeman, he knew the modus operandi of the Police and Mobile Police respectively in the State. He was conversant with their nature and more importantly, how long they usually took to respond to a distress call.On the small table beside the window, two oiled pistols lay with a well sharpened service dagger between them. At that moment, he wasn’t concerned with the instruments of death before him, rather he marvelled at my picture, taken by a special camera inside the silvery orb.He tried to wonder why a handsome and suave gentleman deserved to die. Four hours ago, he’d received a message alert on his mobile phone.It informed him of his savings bank account with Union Bank, which had just been credited with Seven Hundred and Fifty Thousand Naira, by one Florence Adetuyi.. Upon completion of the assignment, he would receive the remaining half.Examining the p
The goddess sat on one of the chairs near the pool of ash, while she kept observing the portrait, which was now held by three ‘perfect assistants.’ It depicted her utmost perfection in a ceremonial military uniform, inspecting the corpses of six men tied to six wooden posts. Their heads were bowed and blood was flowing from their ripped abdomens.“Tonye, Tonye, Tonye…you were going to make me proud by being an exceptional Marine Brothers Society initiate, but your foolishness will now lead to your painful ascension.”The three naked women remained stone-faced as the goddess gave out a loud cackle which shook the entire orb.“A new initiate would find this very useful…see to that.” She rose up and made for the silvery altar, with the three women walking silently behind her. They overtook her when they were a metre to the silvery altar, before placing the portrait gingerly atop it.“Tonye, you disappointed me terribly,” she whispered to herself as the portrait was slowly absorbed by the