LIVING A LIFE OF DEEP SECRECY – Episode 8
Justina: βErm, erm, my name is Justina. I just came in from the Statesβ
Amaka: βHi, which states? Oh, you mean United States? You are welcome, how was your flight?β
Justina: βYesssβ¦ No ooo .. I mean Ekiti State. She stammeredβ.
Justina: βI am looking forβ¦β
Amaka: βEkiti state? You are looking for who now? Abeg jor, if you donβt know where you are going, commot from my doorpostβ. She turned and made to lock the door but Justina grabbed her hand and stopped her.
Amaka: βShoo, sontin dey worry you for head? Why you hold my hand like that? Who gave you the guts to touch me? I mean, how dare you? Where did you get the temerity, the effrontery to touch me? Do you know how much my cream costs?β
Justina: βI am very sorry, please. I want to see Vicky, Vicky Linus, she was my friend in secondary schoolβ.
Amaka: βReally? Stay here and wait, I will be backβ.
She entered the room and walked to the bathroom where Vicky is bathing.
Amaka: βBabe, you never baff finish? Person dey outside dey look for you oβ.
Vicky: βWho be that? Abeg, I dey baff. Make the person go come another timeβ
Amaka: βNa one village champion like that o. She said she was your secondary school mateβ.
Vicky: βMy classmate? Na where she from come na?β
Amaka: βShe say she just dey enter from the States oβ.
Vicky: βWow! You mean I have a friend who now lives in the United States? Abeg tell her to come inβ.
Amaka: βYou hear me add united join the state? Na Ekiti state she commot from oβ
Vicky: βAh, Ekiti ke. Anyway, allow her inβ.
Amaka went out and opened the door for Justina who dragged her bag along.
Amaka: βDonβt tell me you are taking this dirty bag into our room madam βStatesβ. Biko keep it there. Canβt you perceive the odor coming from it?β
βOkay, maβ. Justina replied sheepishly.
Vicky came out of the bathroom and hugged her. βI didnβt know that you are in Abuja. How far naβ.
Justina: βI just came in from the States β¦. I mean village this nightβ.
Vicky: βReally? You and this states sha. Is that the new slang that is reigning in the village? How was your trip? What did you come to do in the city?β
Justina: βI had to run away from the house. My parents wanted to force me into marrying someone that I donβt loveβ.
Vicky: βEyah, thatβs bad o. All these parents, self. It is well sha o. So, where will you now stay in Abuja? You know the costs of houses are very expensive hereβ.
Justina: βI want to stay with you until I find a job to doβ.
Vicky: βWhat! You canβt be serious. How can you just come in from the village and say that you want to stay with me? Where is it done like that? Listen, I donβt live alone and we contribute to pay the rent here. You canβt live with usβ.
Justina: βPlease, Vicky. You are the only one that I know in this city. As soon as I get a job, I will start contributing for the rent tooβ.
Vicky: βDid I hear you say job? Where are the jobs? Which job are you talking about? Do you know what I do to survive in this town? Please, let me make noodles for you to eat, looks like hunger is making you talk anyhowβ.
After Justina ate, she began to doze off on the rug carpet where she had eaten until Amakaβs voice jerked her up.
Amaka: βVicky, what kind of compulsory guest is this now? Itβs almost 10pm and she doesnβt want to leave yet. I am going out, I donβt want to meet her when I return. You know how much I hate people intruding into my privacyβ. She hissed and left the house.
Vicky: βJustina, come and go now. Do you want to put me into trouble with my roommate?β
Justina: βWhere do you want me to go? It is late already and I have no other place hereβ.
Vicky: βHow is that my business now? You should have thought of all these things before leaving the village. Please, come and goβ. She began to drag Justina who is already on her knees pleading.
Justina: βPlease just let me spend the night here, I will think of what to do tomorrow. I beg you in the name of Godβ.
Vicky: βOoooo, what kind wahala is this now? Okay. Just tonight, after which you will leave here and never returnβ.
====
Justina succeeded in convincing Vicky and Amaka to allow her live with them for a while and they in turn promised to introduce her to the jobs they do. She was looking forward to working as she was already tired of staying at home. She had been in the city for one month and her friends have kept her indoors, feeding and pampering her with different lotions and cosmetics so that she will look good before she follows them out. She was enjoying every bit of their attention but her growing stomach was a source of worry too her. For one month she had succeeded in hiding her pregnancy from her friends but she knew that she couldnβt hold on any longer. She thought of how her friends will react when they find out that she is pregnant and she decided to damn the consequences and tell them herself.
Justina: βBabes, something has been bothering me o, I need to open up to you girls since we are friends nowβ.
Vicky: βIs it about the job? Donβt worry, by the time you finish using that toning cream ehn, you will follow us out. Canβt you see that your skin is now radiating?β
Justina: βThat is not what I am talking aboutβ.
Amaka: βOya now, talk. Na wetin dey your mind? Abi you want make we beg you before you talk?β
Justina: βI am pregnant!β
Amaka: βChineke meh!β
Vicky: βHoly Vicky mother of God! How did it happen? Ee never pass one month wey you come Abuja naim you don carry belle so?β
Justina: βIt didnβt happen in Abuja. It happened in the states β¦ sorry I mean village and that is why I ran awayβ.
Vicky: βMehn, this is bad. You canβt work in this condition nowβ.
Justina: βWhy canβt I? I am strong even with the pregnancy. What kind of jobs do you do that I canβt do?β
Vicky: βYou want to know the kind of jobs that we do? We are ABUJA Ambassadors!
Justina: Ambassadors? I donβt understand. Whereβs your consulate office?
Vicky: Okay, we are prostitutes; we sleep with men for moneyβ.
Justina: βBlood of Jesus. Vicky!β
Amaka: βListen, we donβt have any choice than to flush that bastard in your womb out. No customer will want to sleep with a pregnant woman. Itβs either you flush it or you go back to the village. You cannot come and spoil our business for usβ.
Justina: βI even want to get rid of it. I didnβt plan for it. But I am afraid of having a D & C abortionβ.
Amaka: βWho is talking about D & C? Mr dear, na strong agbo we go use flush that thing trowey. No worry, I go contact my Yoruba woman friend, she go mix agbo for you, after seven days like this, everything go waka commot.
====
Justina emptied the content of the bottle into her mouth as the woman had instructed. She felt a strong bitter taste in her throat and she had to cover her nose from the stench that oozed out of the bottle. She clutched her stomach and began to wait for the concoction to start working.
Justina: βYou little thing, let me see how you will survive this Yoruba womanβs medicine. Shebi you refused to die when I had that accident, I will see how you will survive this one. This will flush you out and I will be free to live my life the way I want it. Next time, make sure you go to families that need childrenβ, she soliloquized after she drank the local medicine.
Question: What will be the effects of the concoction that her friends gave her to drink? Do her friends mean well for her or are they trying to get rid of her?


