“Men? What
good is any of you? Half the time you are all hanging limp, the only time you
look any purposeful is when you are erect and even then you aren’t the type to
give a top performance barely beyond two minutes before reverting to being
almost lifeless. What good is any of you?
Heh? That is why you are so quick to start wars and be assholes. That is
why you need to build muscles, and act tough. You can’t stand that it is always
so limp, like a tail between your legs. It drives you crazy-it drives you all
crazy, so you go displaying machismo all the time to not only deceive the world
but deceive yourselves too. Coward men! Coward! After all it shrinks when you
are intimidated; your cowardly 'manhood' shrinks when confronted!”
She paused
now as if composing her thoughts, then started again, her voice an octave lower but not fully hiding the
anger behind it. If anything, she sounded more intense, the venom dripping
purposefully, calculated to do the maximum damage. She pointed a finger at him
and said;
“Now you
want me to pound your Foo-Foo, I will pound that and even take your drunken
pounding. It is the woman in me that can take a pounding, you can only give a
pounding not take one. I’d dare say, if I, woman is any judge, you men don’t
know how to give a satisfying pounding.......!”
He rushed at
her then, having latched on to the venom of her words but caught himself
halfway, his raised fist suspended in mid air, a great looming tool of his
anger, towering over all in its path. Then the fist dropped, slowly, a
shrinking tool becoming....limp. She stood looking at him, a faint bored look
in her eyes. She wasn’t flinching, she just did not care.
He sighed
and walked out of the room, he thought he could hear her calling after him;
coward! Coward! Coward! And could hear it as he got on his scooter rode off. He
was tired of the fights, for what? He could not remember what led to this one;
the eruption of putrid pus from a long festering sore.
He rode the
bike to nowhere really, feeling the breeze blow his robes into a billow; he
throttled the little Vespa harder, seeking to get away from the familiarity of his
surroundings. It gnawed at him- everything, everyone, everywhere- and his only
reprieve was to get away. By the time he got to Giwa, it was dark and he had
tears streaming out his eyes but only because of the breeze against his
unprotected eyes than due to any peculiar occasion. His friend, Tamuno James,
lived in this part of town and Tamuno was crazy. Everyone said basically the
same thing of him; CRAZY. Tamuno James drank like a fish, smoked a lot of grass
and popped a fearsome quantity of Tramol pills. Then he would talk a lot, the
things that people said made him crazy. But for now, crazy was good. He needed
the unfamiliar, the crazy, and the different; from the constant suffocating
mundane his life reflected. He saw Tamuno James sitting outside his house,
reading a book. Tamuno read a lot of books too. Plenty odd stuff, he had some
smarts no doubt, interesting how the crazy ones probably had it up there than
everyone else.
He parked by
the side of the house and climbed up the Veranda stairs to meet his friend.
Tamuno until then only looked up from his book, putting it away and reaching
out for a hand shake. Then he burst into a long hard laugh as if only seeing
the curio before him for the first time.
“DO you want
to use my toilet man?”
Apparently
something was very funny to him or was it the regular crazy?
“You look
like you could take a shit, man” he continued, ”Why, you even come up here
crying. What is the matter? Who died again? Wait, she finally poisoned you
heh?”
More
laughter.
Classic
Tamuno James. Always, he hit you with words before you could say anything. With
him, you could not go with the flow, you had to go with his flow. One time, as
the legend went, Tam-James was sitting in an uncompleted building smoking some
grass. Some nosey busy-body had noticed and reported to the police. When the
men of the NPF came, Tam-James coolly told them he had no qualms following them
to the station. In fact, he would be grateful if before getting to the station,
they shot him in the head and dumped his body in the nearest gutter. He told
them in no uncertain terms the plans to end his own life-as soon as he was done
smoking this joint-he was going to jump off the community bridge. They had dared
not interrupt his plans or he would commit to taking one of them along-he did
not care! The bewildered men of the NPF naturally thought they were up against
some regular stoner who would cower in dread before their black uniforms, not
this. According to some narrations of the legend, one of them even offered his
Calidon’s Varga gin tonic and some words of sympathy. Suicide, even if
pretended was not the NPF’s forte.
“you got a
drink?” he asked Tam-James.
“Sure,
sure...”came Tammy....”some Alomo and Red Rose man”...he reached behind his
seat and brought out two bottles. “So, what is the problem? If you are going to
share my drinks you might as well share your problems. I don’t care.”
A few hours
later, there is nothing left in the bottles, only the intermittent glow of a
joint. Tam-James takes a long drag before passing it.
He says to
his friend;
“look man, you shouldn’t hit your woman. Am sure she loves you very
much.”
“She has a
big mouth”. Came the reply.” She just pisses me off so bad, and I can’t imagine
why I love her so. Why can’t we just chill and talk, make love and smoke a
reefer like all the other couples? Is that too much to ask? “
“That won’t
happen because you beat her. You are always beating her. She is your partner
man...”
“Oh please! Don’t
give me that shit, Tamuno! You beat your woman too....”
“No, I fight
with my woman not beat her. There is a major difference my friend.”
“You are
drunk.”
“Yes, seeing
as we have both been drinking, you are factually correct. Also, drunken people
tell the truth so look here man, when my woman and I have a disagreement; we
sit down and sort things out. I do not go beating her because she is a woman,
she is my equal, or so she says. So, we have ourselves a good fight. Sometimes I
win, sometimes she wins. Fair and square as they say.”
“You are
crazy.”
“Crazy is
not as bad as people make it seem.”
“You fight
because she is obviously bigger than you are.”
“Of
course....”
“Wait a
minute, that time you broke your jaw and had to be at the hospital that was her
right? “
“Shut up
man! Look at this, you’ve gone and wet the joint butt. I should roll another
and let this dry.”
Pause.
“She is
smaller and softer, we couldn’t really fight you see. I’d run her over every
time.”
“Then you shouldn’t
beat her anymore. Hell hath no fury like a woman they say. One day, she’ll
douse you in petrol and set you on fire while you sleep.”
Longer
pause.
“If it makes
you feel any better, I don’t enjoy beating her. I would rather she fights back
even. Every time I hit her I feel like I lose.”
“It does not
make me feel any better that you do not enjoy beating her. And who told you
she doesn’t fight back? She doesn’t hit you and you are off on your scooter
crying into the night. You’ve lost the fight and she knows it. She knows you
hit her because you cannot win otherwise.”
“Hey easy
man, I wasn’t crying.”
“Whatever.
Pass me the lighter man, this Lamidi grass is some good stuff.
He lights up
the joint he has just rolled then reaches for his cup to drain it. The cup is
empty and he flings it away. It crashes in the corner; the sudden noise gets
the neighborhood dogs barking furiously. A female voice from indoors,
obviously angry cries out;
“Tamuno! You
don shack again abi? You noh go compose yer sef? Noh make I kon buss bottle for
your head o! You dey craze?”
Tam-James
grins and calls out; “sorry babe”. “You see”, he continues in a whisper, “that’s
a woman that fights back man. You have gotta apologise or else it could get
messy. I remember when she broke my jaw. I couldn’t feed properly for weeks. Just
fluids and smashed bananas man, mean left hook. We’d be in bed and I’d have to
take it slow. Couldn’t eat it.”
It took a
minute or more-with all the alcohol and reefer in his system but he finally
figured out what Tammy James meant by “couldn’t
eat it”. He broke into laughter. Tammy James was laughing too. They both
laughed hard. He felt lightheaded now, for a while he felt good.
He got home
past midnight. Used his key and let himself in. The room was partially dark and
he did not put the light on, there was no need. She was on the bed, turned away
from him. Her body partly covered her figure defiantly sensual, alive, yet so resentful
of him. Her figure rose with her breathing, almost imperceptibly, you had to
look long enough to be sure she was breathing. There was a slight sheen from
the humid air, forming around her neck and back and in the soft pale moonlight
glow that poured through the open windows, as she lay there; bearer of fury and
desire.
She must
have felt him watching at some point because she turned and pointed to the
table where a dying candle flickered.
“I have
pounded your foo-foo.” She said simply, then turned back to sleep.
He wanted
her, badly; he wanted to tell her that he was sorry and maybe more. But his jaw
would not move to form the words. Or was he too drunk? She could probably see
his desire, the desire of her animal, woman-a-thumping husband. The one she had
crushed completely without raising a finger, she who took his pounding and pounded
his foo-foo.
He looked at
the table where the covered meal was, no, he could not eat that he realised. He
looked at her for longer, reaching unconsciously for his jaw as he did so. What
was the point? To what purpose? In two minutes he was over, Alomo be dammed.
He sighed
softly, took off his robes and climbed into bed beside her.
The candle
had long since burned out.
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