Foreword:
With no forewarning, or accompanying apology, the elements have introduced me
to a plethora of amazing writers. I kid you not when I say I discover new ones
every day. Regardless of the painful realization that they make me
self-conscious, doubt the purpose of my existence, and cower in a corner
beneath a rock, with no desire for sunlight, I’ll post the link of one before I
start my blog posts, at least till I run out (or forget)—and I doubt I’ll run
out.
So… Grey Mural.
I’ve spoken to him like, twice, and the first time I just accosted him
outright, with: ‘Why are you so intelligent?’ I may have added a please; I’m
polite like that. And, always in character, he gave me an intelligent answer. Check him
out. He’s too wise. It’s almost annoying. Without the almost.
On our side of the table, everyone had
nicknames.
It wasn’t my fault. It wasn’t the
girls’ fault. The boys, mainly (because I want to give them a level of anonymity,
let me use their initials. Before I branch out to their nicknames. Ei. Branch
out. Why?). S and K, and their female buddy, who was also at the table, V,
would return from class and come for dining with laughter-laden renditions of
the day’s antics. And the rest of us would talk about it. Albeit in whispers.
And while huddling closer together. And, perhaps, accompanying our cover of the
same song with a few sporadic chuckles. Or a lot of sporadic chuckles. But,
point remained, it was not our fault. They brought the news.
We just…built on it. We reacted. Good news gets people to react.
But K said we were gossiping.
So he decided to give us girls
nicknames, after the three wickedest women in Bible history he could find.
Because he’s such a problem solver.
But of course, with the entrance of
monikers for the lasses, meant we girls, sweet, equality-seeking girls, had to
give the lads some. *shrug*
Eve
That’s definitely Eve’s picture.
To be fair, I think K was on to
something when he said we were gossiping. Eve was the chief gossip. And what
pride she wore her role with! There’s an art to gossiping, you know, that not a
lot of people have mastered. The few who have, understand that there’s a
science to the delivery of their rumour, so that even if the news is
lacklustre, their audience are hanging on to their every word. Eve had that
down pat. From her affectionate tap on my arm to get my attention, to her
meaningful face distortions, and the giggles that leapt out in perfect
punctuation (chai I think I’m doing spoken word), she was a master of the craft.
She also had something of a dbee stomach.
It probably came with belonging to the House she did. The rest of us were
as kankpe as they came. When we were nom-nom-nomming on the
life-saving delicacy that’s beans and plantain, she would just nibble her
plantain small, or not at all, and stare at us, a queen watching her hapless
subjects.
She was an athlete, and not just on
the tracks. We used to play Uno at our table. Yes, we were amateurishly
non-school like that. And she used to slay. We should’ve told her it was just
for laughs, and there would be no surprise trophy at the end (I mean, if
there’d been a surprise trophy, we likely would’ve just done the big boy and
girl thing and given it to Weng—somebody who needed it more), so that she’d
relax small. But auntie said, no, like it was Wimbledon.
Eve used to chug that pint-size
paper wine called Apple & Eve, too, so… Eve was digging her nickie.
Adam
That’s an obvious nickname, no?
We didn’t give it to him though, now
that I remember. This was K again, as he…observed the natural flow of things.
You see, Adam nursed something of a crush on Eve.
And that’s why I leave him anonymous
so that if he wants to sue me for defamation, he’s got no case.
Besides being the occasional
supplier of Eve’s Apple & Eve, Adam was a brainy one. (Come to think of it,
our table—our side of the table; no disrespect to the guys on the other half,
but we didn’t interact that much for me to know—had a healthy serving of smart
people. They probably just threw me in to balance things out.) Like, brainy oh.
I would know. I was in his class. First dierr, he got it aah, he was tired (all of us were tired!) and
one day he threw it away. That was the only chance someone else got to be first,
when he pulled a JK Rowling and opted out of the race. He used to go for
competitions to represent our school and all. Ei.
He was also on like, every team.
Debaters Club… Debaters Club is all I remember.
I refuse to think that I’m growing
old.
I was tired of him kraa. And it’s
not like he’s stopped too. I’ll not mention what he had in WASSCE, because,
well, someone might ask me to mention mine, and…I mean, who cares about WASSCE
anyway? We’ve grown past that. Yup. Definitely.
Delilah
Yes, K named one of the girls this.
I don’t know how Delilah justified
her name though. I don’t think she did. She was demure, pure, always had a book
in her hand—James Patterson, Dean Koontz, sketchbook, cheque book—minded her
own business. Pretty much.
Ha!
Delilah was one of those weirdly
smart-alecky ones, who, if you were arguing with her, would watch you lay out
all your arguments, brag about how you’d already won, observe with masked
interest as you caught your foot in a tiny loophole, tripped, tried to stand up
but only dug yourself into a bigger hole. And then she’d bury you.
She used to do things, magic things.
With a pencil, and a pen. Mostly she’d hide them, but we curious minds always
dug out the newest thing she wrote, or drew, and pleased ourselves by ripping
her ideas to shreds. Or praising them, where appropriate. Balance, Michael
Dapaah advocates.
And, no, she did not deceive
men.
She deceived everyone.
More on that later.
Or, never. *delivers another shrug*
Samson
Things are coming back to me in
digestible, coherent fragments. We did not give him the
nickname either. Samson picked it for himself.
Yes. After Delilah had received her
knighthood, by our eventual table-head, K, Samson decided he wanted to be
called that. Samson.
Why? The world will never know.
The thing that strikes you most
about Samson is his intelligence. (I know, I’m saying intelligent a lot in this
post, but, trust, it’s not because I want to. It’s because
it’s there.) It’s not the first thing that hits you, but it’s the one that
stays.
Because the first
thing that hits you is his too-knownness. He wasn’t a
typical braggart, throwing his weight about, moving with a swagger and a chip
on his shoulder (Googles chip on his shoulder to be sure it’s contextually
correct—okay, it’s wrong; take two!)…
He wasn’t a typical braggart,
throwing his weight about, moving with a swagger, full stop. To be honest he
looked like a quintessential gentleman. In which case I guess that was
the first thing you noticed about him. His gentlemanliness. Crisply ironed
shirt and trousers, slow, self-assured gait, occasional glasses. It was when
you got to know him small that you saw he was too-known. Herh.
I want to blame it on the House he
was in, because they were possibly the richest in the school, but even if
Samson had been a day student, I know he’d have been too-known still.
Sometime, Eve and Delilah decided to
ask him for money for water. It’s water. They expected coins. Dude gave them
five cedis. They thought they were doing something when they said they won’t
give him change. Samson looked at them and said with a lift of his shoulders,
‘It’s you who need money. Not me.’
Oh.
There’s a lot more to say—and a lot
more people to cover—but I know how internet attentions spans are. So, I shall
truncate this.
Although, truth be told, it’s not so
much for your “too long, I didn’t read” tendencies, as for my hunger that has got to
be sated.
Again, check out Grey Mural.
Peace.
I’m tempted to say Hyde.
wow very interesting
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Thanks! :)
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