BN Prose: He Calls You Muffin Too by Titilayo Olurin

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6 Min Read

There’s a din in the next flat. Loud music blares from the speakers, and an amateur has chosen today of all days to practise his poor carpentry skills on the wall.

Your head begins to throb, and you squeeze your eyes shut, willing away the noise and the monstrous headache you feel coming.

“You don work, you don try try,” Kizz Daniel’s voice over the speakers competes with the nail-hammering. “You suppose to dey j’aiye j’aiye.”

You hear the lyrics clearly as if the sound system is right in your bedroom. You want to crawl under the bed, or maybe even a rock. You want to bury yourself in a tub full of water. You want to shut your eyes and slip into a never-ending sleep. You want to disappear or cease to exist. You want to …

“You are stupid!” someone screams suddenly over the music and nail-hammering before you can think of anything else you want to do.

You soon hear the unmistakable sound of open palm against flesh, which is immediately followed by a yelp, “Yee!” You know it is the twins. The neighbour’s twins. Teenage boys who look and sound so identical that you have stopped trying to tell them apart.

You roll your eyes. This singular act takes all the strength you can muster. It now feels like an invisible hand is boring holes in your brain and sticking hot needles in your eyes.

“Let me see you, go low low low, buga wan,” Kizz Daniel sings on, oblivious to the commotion around you, in your head.

Just when you are sure you cannot take anymore, someone decides to belt out the chorus with the singer. Perhaps it is the amateur carpenter now imagining that he is also a musician. You don’t know which is worse, the sound of his singing or nail hammering.

Arrgh! You scream in your head, because you are too weak to scream out loud.

The sound of palm against flesh morphs into a clashing of fists. Ugh, the twins! The last time they were at each other’s throats, one of them had ended up in the emergency ward, rushed by their mother who had returned from wherever to find one pummeling the other as their younger brother stood watching helplessly.

You grab the pillow strewn on the floor and squeeze it tight over your face, hoping that it does one of two things – chokes the air out of you or drowns out the noise. It does neither.

This is my punishment, you feel yourself saying, even feel your lips move, but you do not hear the words, because again, you have only spoken in your head.

You recall your mother’s words to you before leaving for church earlier: “Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is, but encouraging one another.” She recited this bible verse to you as she sat uninvited at the edge of your bed. Your mother has a bible verse for every situation. If she catches you in a lie, she is sure to recite the verse, “Lying lips are an abomination to the Lord.” If you repeat the neighbour’s gossip to her, she reminds you that “a troublemaker plants seeds of strife, and gossip separates the best of friends.” You don’t know how she does it, but she does it.

Now, with the pounding in your head threatening to explode, you wish you had followed her to church. But the church is where Osadolo will be, leading the choir and singing his lungs out, his strong, rich voice blending perfectly with the voices of the other choir members. You cannot stand the thought of seeing him, not now, not ever again, because he is responsible for how you feel.

“I don’t feel too well,” you had told your mother when she asked why you were not dressed for church, after barging into your bedroom, just before quoting that bible verse.

It is true. You do not feel well. Your body aches just as much as your head does. Your mind is also in turmoil, and it is worse than the body and head aches. You sigh, then hiss, before throwing the pillow still in your grasp across the room. It lands with a light thud and in a heap on the floor, right next to your phone. Your phone! You had forgotten all about it. But now, you take a look at it, and you are promptly reminded of the reason you are in this state, the reason your phone is on the floor, where you threw it earlier.

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