Picture credit: thestudentroom.com
The silence
echoed. Only to be interrupted by the dancing sounds of the printer. It was
calibrating again. Actually this was the twelfth time it had done that since
morning. I can’t quite recall what Segun had said during his last maintenance visit
about why it needed to do that. He had been grinning sheepishly at me again on
that day. Nneoma had coined an absurd theory that I had faked a faulty printer
call as an excuse to see him. She hadn’t thought that was my intention. However,
she was certain that was what Segun thought. How delusional of him. How can he
even begin to assume I’d ever date his type?
I picked up
the control and turned up the heat by two degrees. It has finally stopped drizzling
but the weather was still chilled. I took another sip of my tea, and listened
for my boss’ movement. I picked up on Nneoma’s muffled giggles coming from her
cubicle across the wing. That chic hath no worries in the world so long as she
has her phone loaded with airtime and in hand. “At what time?” and then thunderous
giggles followed as her voice echoed through the silence of the empty wing. All
the other staff had been compelled to attend the ongoing sales training
scheduled for the Fridays of this month.
Nneoma and I
are scheduled to attend next week Friday’s with the ACC wing staff. I stared
blankly at the spreadsheet of inventories, on my desktop screen that I needed
to balance. I listened for my boss’ movement, realizing Nneoma was no longer in
her seat. I glanced quickly at the wall clock. She must have gone out for one
of her numerous lunch dates. Those are the only times she never bothered to
enquire about my skipping lunch.
I reclined
my seat until I was within earshot and could now hear the sound of shuffling
papers coming from his office. He is so fond of skipping his lunch. I pondered
for a second whether to call in and remind him it was lunch break but stopped
myself instead and dropped the receiver. I am not sure what mood he is in right
now. He yelled a lot especially in the mornings and then some afternoons. I
have barely ever found him yelling at anyone in the evenings, however, and have
never understood this. A lot of times I wonder what makes him so grouchy. It
must be that girlfriend of his. I hissed. He hasn’t screamed at me this morning
for resuming an hour late. I deliberately avoided him all morning. He hasn’t
called in to yell either which is panning out as a good sign. My phone beeped
with an incoming message but I ignored it. My ears remained concentrated at
spying on my boss. The printer started to dance again as it recalibrated. A
deafening silence followed. Most of staff must have gone for their lunch
breaks, my tummy churned at the thought of food. I stared blankly at my desktop
screen. Today was one of those days when my brain refused to process. Maybe it
was because of the difficulty I had experienced getting to work this morning.
“That useless bus conductor”, I cursed under my breath and hissed.
I let my
right palm fall faced-up to my chin as my elbow rested at the edge of my desk.
I retained this position and allowed my mind spiral towards the sounds of
footsteps coming from my boss’ office. He must be pacing around on a call. It
must be that his girlfriend. I rolled my eyes. What was a hunk of a man like
him doing being worked up by a bonga fish of a female? The things I have seen
in this Lagos, since arriving it last year from Ife. Tiny skinny over-bleached girls riding Range
Rovers, controlling big men and boys of Lekki. I sighed. Whatever happened to
men’s desire for real meat and an original ebony reserve? I’m not even saying I’m
all that fine but at least I have everything a guy would want in a woman; round
firm buttock, average height, glowing chocolate skin and a C-cup firm breasts. Severally,
I had caught Segun staring at them longingly. Even Akin that likes to form he
can never be engaged in office romance can’t take his eyes off them. If he
thinks I believe for one minute all his mean façade towards me then he is as
dumb as I’d initially thought about him.
Good thing
we are placed on different schedules for the training, I can’t deal with all
that ego drive on free time. The pacing had stopped. I wonder what he is up to
now. He’s probably viewing the news with those brown glassy eyes of his that
reflected each time the light fell on his face. Unconsciously I sighed, bracing
myself. He has the strongest and finely defined set of jaws I have ever seen in
my whole twenty six years of living. I wish he could smile more often. He
probably would if bonga fish told him more often how much his cute pink lips
fitted finely with his face. I bet she
doesn’t even realise how his hair curls up whenever he forgets to groom over
the weekend or how he smells of sweet tidings [grape vines] in the mornings and
aired cornfields in the afternoons. Does she even fathom how alluring he is;
born and dressed only to walk the covers of every prestigious magazine? I gave
off a heavy sigh.
Am I the
only one who sees these things? I let my eyes travel around the empty desks
until it fell flatly on the wall clock. It’s past 3’o clock, Nneoma hasn’t
returned. I guess she noticed he wasn’t his usual active self today and has
taken it as a good sign to extend her break. I bet she has noticed other things
too. Sometimes I wonder what she stares at whenever she looks at him with those
pale unreadable eyes of hers. He can never be attracted to her type; she’s way
bulkier than I am and he seems to prefer bonga fish. I rolled my eyes and
sighed for the umpteenth time. Oh how I would do all the nicest things to him
without a second thought.
I had not
heard his footsteps until he was standing over my desk, his eyes shining at me
with exasperation. I quickly adjusted myself. Oh crap, it was too late to act
on busy, I thought as I stopped the disoriented mouse shuffling. He was
observing me with a quiet disposition, one of our Client’s proposals at hand.
“Adun, your lateness of recent is unacceptable” he seemed mildly irritated by
something else. “Chief Koku just called in complaining that the proposal hasn’t
reached him. What the hell were you occupied with that you failed to remind me
of the deadline?” he stared at me quizzically. His brown eyes shun diamonds. I got
lost as my heart caught at a million emotions at a time. He called me by my
first name. He has never called me by my first name. I have always been Miss
Ajayi until now. I cleared my throat, “I am so sorry Mr. Adio-Moses”. He hasn’t
stopped staring at me as I responded with a plea. I can’t tell his mood or what
is running through his mind. He seems
distracted by a distant thought. “I am off to a meeting and I shall close work from
there” the proposal hit my desk with a hard and loud slap.
“I am so
sorry Wale,” I mumbled under my breath as I watched him exit the room. Something
is very off about him today. I dashed quickly at him and stopped him abruptly
in his steps. He stared at me solemnly surprised. A few seconds passed while I
allowed myself settle into my new found boldness. “Sir, are you okay. Do you need
anything I can do for you?”. “Err....” He paused, in a struggle fit on what
angle of response he should take. “Oyinkan… er.. Miss Dawodu has left me.” He
was gauging my reaction. “She… I found out this morning that she is getting
married to an old acquaintance of mine” We stared at each other, his despair
now glaring. I want to hug him but I took his left hand into mine and gave his
palm a gentle squeeze. He hadn’t taken his eyes off me, observing me, a glint
of a smile in his eyes. Oh God! We dropped each other’s hands almost at the
same time. He cleared his throat. “Have a lovely weekend, Adun”. He was off.
Bonga fish
has left him. I thought repeatedly as I watched him leave. Bonga fish is gone! We
just had a moment alone and he called me Adun. I wished I had hugged him instead. Tight
enough until he realizes it that he doesn’t need her. That she’s not the girl
for him. I braced my heart with my mind suddenly feeling an urge to dance or
faint or do both.
.....Watch-Out for a Sequel.....
.....Watch-Out for a Sequel.....