A chance for love episode 2
đA CHANCE FOR LOVEđ
Episode two
đSickbed
âWhat happens in this house stays in this house. Do you understand?â
***
Eyes closed, I lay in bed, waiting for a horrendous lump in my throat to dissipate. Stella probably thought I had fallen asleep. But then I sneezed, and in that moment I feared the pills Iâd swallowed would pop out of my mouth.
I knew it would only be a moment before she engaged me in a conversation. I couldnât blame her though. The boredom in the air had enough intensity to sicken the heart of an average person.
âSo, youâre sick with fever, headache and catarrh?â Stellaâs voice cut through the silence.
Did she need me to answer that? Obviously not, for she went on, âFever isnât necessarily a bad guy. It is your bodyâs natural reaction to the real bad guys. It is your bodyâs response to an untreated sickness or a hidden infection. This could be anything from a urinary tract infection to tuberculosis.â
âMine is just malaria,â I said.
âCare to tell me which doctor gave you that diagnosis, Victoria know it all?â
I looked away sheepishly. âIâm sorry, I just thoughtââ
âDo you know how dangerous what youâve just done is?â she asked.
My thoughts hovered over her choice of words. Dangerous? When did it become life threatening to look away from someone when offering an apology?
Knitting my brows in concentration, I tried to put two and two together. And then it occurred to me she hadnât questioned my diverting my gaze, but my self-diagnosis. I knew self-diagnosis didnât count as a good idea. I knew the risks involved. But what could I do?
Mistaking my silence for ignorance, she lectured, âIt has led many down the wrong path. By self-diagnosing, you would be wrongly assuming you are well informed about your current health condition. What if a more intense sickness masquerades as a trivial one, or a trivial one as a more intense one? What would happen?
âYou would be misdirecting any clinician who attends to you into prescribing drugs that donât see your situation as a wh0le. Even worse, he could administer drugs that are way too high for what youâre experiencing. Side effects are always around the corner, waiting to strike. Is this what you want for yourself?â
I sighed. âNo.â
âGood,â she said. âNow thatâs a start. Goodness! I should get Sir Amadi to let me address you students about this issue. I really should. Anyway, once school is over, go see a doctor to get a blood test done ASAP. You should find out the root cause before you start taking treatment. Do you understand me?â
If she awaited an answer, she would never get one. Her lecture had just erupted painful memories. Embracing myself, I turned to lay on my side. Hot tears blistered my eyes. I knew it would only be a moment before they spilled onto my cheeks.
If I had a mother, she would always be there for me. My health and happiness would be her priority, and I would never have any reason to cry.
But I never had a chance to meet my mum. Dad told me sheâd suffered from amniotic-fluid embolism and died two days after my birth. If I hadnât been born, perhaps she would still be alive.
As much as dad had always told me never to think like this, I could not stop nursing these thoughts. For me to exist, mum had to go. I wished this tragedy had never struck. My life would have been different if I had her with me. Although we had never met, I missed her. The tears I tried to fight spilled out of my eyes and plopped onto the bed.
I missed my dad. He had always been there for me, trying hĂŚrd to bridge the gap of not having a mum. And he had been exceptionally good at it. I would only have to cough to find myself at a hospital. Several tests would be run to detect any hidden sicknesses. And each time, I would try to resist. I would cry and try to talk him out of it because I feared needles. But he never succ-mbed. He would hold me through the tests and afterward he would take me shopping to make up for the discomfort he had caused me.
Now I would give anything to feel the sting of a syringe. I wanted things to go back to the way they used to be. I wanted my dad. But some prayers could never be answered. And I just had to deal with reality.
My thoughts settled on how Stella had mistaken my silence for ignorance. I wished I could tell her how much she had hurt me with her little lecture. I knew the health implications of self-diagnosis. But what could I do?
At home, they didnât care if I existed or not. Nobody paid more attention to me than they would a stray dog roaming the streets. While dad still lived, they had treated me as their own. Or so Iâd thought. But in the blink of an eye, it all came crashing down. I watched them toss the very essence of my existence into the gutter. How could I have known they would change dramatically?
A few weeks after dadâs death, my deteriorating health had knocked me off my feet. Shivering with fever, I had approached my stepmother with the news. I could remember vividly the words she told me.
âYou have fever. You have cough. You have catarrh. So what should I do? I should throw myself in front of a train abi?â
She had also said, âIt seems youâre forgetting your place in this house. You are no child of mine. So why should you worry me with your problems? Even the Bible says each one will carry his own load. Look here my dear, your well-being is no responsibility of mine. It was solely your parentsâ duty, and since they have decided to leave you, well, thereâs nothing left for you.â
Although she had said those words four years ago, it still stung when I reflected on them. My stepmotherâs cruelty remained a mystery I could never decipher.
My dad. Why did he have to leave me? He had been more than a father to me. He had been my mother, my best friend, the glue holding my side of the family and my stepmotherâs side together. He had assured me he would always be there for me. But life never gave him a chance to keep his promise.
Why me? Why did all the bad things happen to me? Had my birth been a crime? Why then had I been born in the first place? Why should anyone be born to suffer like this? First, my mum left without even knowing me. She had only been allowed to cradle me for a few hours, after which death snatched her away.
But no, mum alone could not satisfy its hellish blood thirst. It had to take dad as well. Why did it end there? Why hadnât it taken me along?
Why should some people be happy and satisfied with life, and others miserable, having despair where joy should be? Maybe life was a game and the privileged used a cheat the rest of the world didnât know of.
Each morning I would awaken with a sigh because my suffering continued. Living compared to a race and I didnât know how to hit the finish line. I did not even know the direction of the finish line to start with. No, I wouldnât call this living, but survival.
Years ago, I had plenty to eat and drink. I would stay cuddled in dadâs arms and fall asleep watching TV. Twice a year I would visit the orphanage, giving help to the less privileged. And most importantly, I had dad, my reason for joy. But now Iâd been stripped of everything I ever had. Now I had close to nothing.
My thoughts rested on the stillborn children who never had a chance to see the world and all its depravity. They had left this cruel world for somewhere safe, somewhere peaceful. They had faded into nothingness, where no one could ever hurt them or make them feel worthless. They would never have to gulp down the spicy dish of cruelty the world had to offer. Why hadnât I shared with them in their fate?
I peered toward the future, aiming to catch a glimpse of my life a few years from now, but the darkness of my present, a mass of black smoke, filled my vision. Could there be any truth to my stepmotherâs words that nothing good could ever come out of me?
If I didnât live to see the next day, would anyone notice? Would anyone even remember a girl like me existed? Surely their lives would go on as though nothing happened. They would look to where I used to be, and would barely even remember my name. Only Amarachi would grieve.
As much as I wanted death to put me out of my misery, I didnât want to give my haters the satisfaction of driving me to my grave. For them I would be strong. For them I would cut off my ears to spite my face. I would survive.
âVictoria,â Stellaâs voice severed my thoughts.
I lowered my head and wiped my tears with the back of my palms. She couldnât see me cry.
âTake care of yourself,â she said. âIâm out to get recharge card. Will be back in five.â
Letting down my guard, I raised my face and watched her advance to the door. And when I least expected, she turned around, her eyes catching the glister in mine.
She dashed to my side, her eyes searching mine. âAre you alright?â
âYes.â If I said more, my voice would wobble, giving me away more than my puffy eyes already had.
Stella sat beside me, the additional weight causing the bed to gro-n. âWhatâs wrong? Do you feel worse?â
âItâs notâŚthe fever.â And like I feared, my voice betrayed me. It sounded too brittle, I almost didnât recognize it.
âWhatâs wrong?â she asked. Her eyes told me she cared. The softness of her gaze assured me I could trust her. âHow am I to help you when you wonât even speak about it? When you told me about your headache, did I not give you pills to subdue both the headache and the fever?â
âItâs not about my health,â I said.
âSo whatâs wrong?â she pressed on.
I stared at her, conflicted about what to do. How could I tell her about my despair? Where would I start from? Would I not be betraying my family by speaking to an outsider about our problems?
âDo you want me to call your sister?â she asked. Wounded by her suggestion, I shook my head with a questionable vigor.
Silence lingered in the air. But it only lasted as long as I let it. âHave you ever lost a loved one?â
I had thought by asking that question I would chase the silence. But no. More silence ensued and I realized I had chosen the wrong start for our conversation.
With a voice as tiny as a miceâs, Stella spoke, âYes.â
âWho was it?â Raising myself to sit, I leaned against the bedâs backrest.
âSomeone special,â she said. I waited for more details, but they never came.
Someone special. A reply as simple as that, but weighing so much that it knocked her emotionally off balance. Her rue-cheerlessness mirrored mine. Whoever had died must have meant a lot to her. At this point I had no idea what to do or say to make up for awakening memories she had put to sleep. Guilt clawed at me for transferring my broken spirit to her.
âIâm sorry,â I said.
âItâs fine,â she said. A little white lie. It would never be fine. Deep down, she knew. Just as I hadnât been able to get over my dadâs death, she hadnât been able to get over hers either.
Silence stretched between us, so thick that if I reached out to touch it I just might find something tangible.
âYou were going to get recharge card?â My voice sliced through the silence I had brought upon the room, sounding weirdly thin amidst the awkwardness between Stella and I.
âActually, that can wait. Thereâs plenty of time to do that. Now is story time.â She punctuated her statement with a wiggle of her fingers.
Wearing a serious look, she said, âHave you ever heard of Miriam Adewale?â
Of course. I had heard that name more times than I could remember. But where?
I gave up on trying to remember. âIt rings a bell.â
âOf course,â she said.
âWho is she?â I asked.
âWas,â she corrected.
Was. That only meant she no longer existed. I put the facts together. Miriam Adewale. Dead. And suddenly, I remembered. I had read an article of her in one of our school yearbooks.
Sheâd been among the first set of students to study in Western High. She died on the 24th of May 1996.
A shocking realization dawned on me. âShe was your sister.â
How had this never occurred to me? Other than sharing the same surname, they possessed similar facial features. I regarded Stella with my empathetic eye. It must have been hĂŚrd watching her sisterâs health deteriorate, and even h-rder accepting her powerlessness in saving her sisterâs life. It must be hĂŚrd confining herself to a place brimming with bitter memories. During idle times, would she not be tempted to relive painful experiences? Didnât she feel smothered by those memories? Did they not fight to steal the air from her lungs?
âIâm sorry about your sister,â I said.
âThat was her junior year,â Stella said. âI was two classes behind her. We lived in Ondo state, so we had to stay in the dormitory. Schooling so far away from home gave me the creeps. I wanted to be close to home. But I didnât stand a chance. All Mimiâs friends were going to this school, and she wanted to be in the same school with them. At that time, Western High was the newest and most popular school in Nigeria.
âFrom our childhood, Mimi and I schooled together, so it was totally expected I was sent to the same school as her. Things were going great. I loved the school. My new friends. The atmosphere. The infrastructure. The teachers. And then I was proud to actually be a student of this school. Students of Western High were recognized as one of the best students nationwide. And till date, this hasnât changed.
âOne evening, Mimi had a very high fever. Her friends and I rushed her to the sickbay. And the nurseâŚshe was eating.â Her face contorted grotesquely as she mentioned the nurse. Narrowing her eyes to slits, she clenched her teeth. âShe whined on and on about how sheâd been extra busy all day and was in no mood to attend to anyone. She said sheâd been attending to others at the expense of her own stomach. She asked us to leave with Mimi and return in the morning, but we didnât. We placed Mimi on a bed and I assured her she would be fine. My sister lay in one of these beds.â
She pointed to the bed adjacent ours. Sadness clouded her features as she stared at the bed and through it, reliving the moment she had just described. In my mindâs eye, I could see a picture of what that day possibly looked like. Thinking back to the photo of Miriam in the school archives, I conjured an image of a sick version of her lying in that bed, hoping the nurse attended to her.
âIt was all too late when the nurse attended to my sister. All she gave her was a lazy dose of Paracetamol. There was more she could have done. But she didnât. My sister lay there for six wh0le hours before receiving proper treatment. Couldnât a test have been carried out during that period to know the underlying cause of the fever? But no. The only thing she did was force three stupid Paracetamol tablets down my sisterâs throat! That woman did close to nothing to save my sisterâs life. She barely even paid her any attention. Instead she said she was only pretending so she wouldnât have to participate in the inter-house sports.â
âGod!â I gasped, shaking my head in horror. How could someone think that?
âHorrible, right? Thatâs what you get when you hire staff who donât have the right motive. Her motive for being a nurse was purely financial. Totally wrong. A nurse is someone who must make saving lives a priority. Money making and any other thing must only come after it. Not before. For two days, my sister lay in this bed, getting worse by the second, dying slowly. When the news reached our parents, they hit the road at once. My sister was transferred to St. Martinâs hospital. That was the last time I ever saw her again.â
It broke my heart to hear her voice become a lifeless monotone. If I could I would take away her sorrow and mine. But wanting to do something was one thing, and having the power to do it another.
âIâm sorry.â I had just said sorry for the third time. It served to comfort, but did it? In my case, I would be a liar if I answered in the affirmative. No amount of sorry could make me feel better over my fatherâs death.
Apparently, Stella shared my feeling toward the word âsorryâ, for she said, âSorry is an empty word, Victoria. It does nothing but make us feel sorry for ourselves over and over again. Have you not already realized that for yourself?â
âPlease forgive me. I didnât mean toââ
âYouâre always sorry. Donât you ever get tired of being sorry over nothing?â Mimicking my voice, and failing dreadfully at it, she said, âSorry. Please. Forgive me. Are those the only words you know?â
Driven by a sudden urge to share my story with her, I said, âThose are the only words they make me say.â