A Twist in the Tale: Angst


 With perfect poise and a soothing voice, Teleola..

ANGST

It’s June again. The rain never stops. It just keeps pouring and pouring relentlessly out of the sky, cloaking daylight with sombre greyness. Money had been missing in the bank today and no one had left till it was found, resulting in my arrival at 10:30pm. Wole wouldn’t be angry, he wasn’t that kind of man, but he wouldn’t be happy either. I had made him promise to be home early today and look where I was. I parked my car infront of the gate and sprinted into the house. The brightly glowing electric bulbs were a miracle, the TV was on in the living room but Wole wasn’t there.
  

“Wole” I called, dumping my handbag on the floor and kicking off my shoes. The tiles were cold and goosepimples covered my skin instantly.
   “Wole” I called again, climbing the stairs and unfastening my shirt buttons. God, please, let him not be sulking, I prayed silently. He couldn’t be angry. He knew I was looking forward to our being together this evening as much as he was. I got to the head of the stairs and launched into a full apology as I walked towards our bedroom and opened the door.
   “Wole, i’m sorry. Money got missing and I…”
He wasn’t on the bed. Where could he have gone and left the TV on? I decided to change into dry clothes and as I entered the room, the lights began to flicker. Of course, they had to interrupt power when I was looking for my husband. But instead of complete darkness, the lights dimmed. Sounds from the TV stopped as it went off because the voltage was too low.
 

 “Wole baby, please, do not scare me right now. You know you’ll regret it”

The last time Wole pulled a scary prank on me in the dark, I had slept with a long knife for a whole week, not trusting him, and he had been truly sorry because his testosterone levels had soared during the time. I walked to my panty drawer for fresh underwear as I dumped my shirt in the laundry basket beside the bed but what I saw on the floor made me freeze.
   My husband was sprawled on the floor on his back, a dark stain spread on the front of his shirt and already seeping into the rug. A naked baby with the same dark stain smeared across its mouth was sitting on the floor beside him. We did not have a baby. The light was too dim and I couldn’t see clearly. If Wole’s chest was rising and falling, I couldn’t see it. The baby took in my appearance and as if it knew who I was, it smiled a toothy smile. More dark coloured stains in its mouth.

   “Wole” I whispered, “Baby”
No answer.

Slowly, I took a step back in an endeavour to leave the room and the baby stood. I paused and tried again and it took two tiny steps towards me. I turned and ran out of the room, jamming the door behind me. As I fled down the stairs, I heard the tiny patter of small hands beating on the door followed by whimpering and then crying. I ran through the living room to the kitchen and felt around till I found my trusted knife, then decided to call my friend, Bisi, and tell her something was wrong.
   Dashing back to the living room to get my mobile phone, the voltage rose and the bulbs brightened for a few seconds but my heart fell. There were tiny bright red footprints on the brown tiles, leading to the kitchen I was coming from. The lights dimmed again and thunder roared and that was when I was sure that Wole was dead and that this baby would kill me. Our baby. The baby I had aborted when Wole didn’t have money to marry me.

   A sniffle near me caught my ears and I looked down at the same time that lightening streaked across the sky. The baby was looking up at me, raising its hands up for me to carry it, tears streaming down its face. It had a nice head of hair, large eyes, brown skin; couldn’t be more than eighteen months. I wouldn’t kill my baby a second time and if it would kill me, it should be beside my husband. 
   I dropped my knife, swerved swiftly towards the stairs and in my haste, I slammed my upper abdomen into the sharp edge of the bannister. The one whose wood had broken off the top and left a keen edge. The one Wole was always fixing tomorrow. The pain was immediate and intense, blood began pouring from the hole and my mouth. I had punctured my lung. Gasping for air with red spittle flying from my mouth, I crawled up the stairs to the bedroom wearing a bloody bra and a bloody skirt. How I didn’t die on the stairs, I don’t know.

   Wole promised to die before me. Promise fulfilled, baby. I dragged myself to his side and my head began to spin. I wanted to sleep. This was the end. I would die on Thursday. A cold wet Thursday when money had gone miss… Wait a minute!
   Thursday. Bisi had asked to drop her nephew off so she could run some errands and we were to pretend he was ours. The lights flickered and the voltage became full. I saw fries scattered all over the floor and under the bed. No. No. Wait. Is that ketchup? 
Then I remembered:
   Wole, the man I love, is a terribly deep sleeper.

angst

@teleolaonifade

________________________________________________________________________________________________________

But Tele scares the shit out of me. Long knife?!

My sincere apologies for putting this up late. We continue on Saturday with the absolutely ridiculous @OluwaWanaBaba

Follow on Twitter @janus_aneni

Peace.

Author: Christopher Aneni

Histrionic| Creator| god.

36 thoughts on “A Twist in the Tale: Angst”

  1. Okay, okay, without further ado… I was rili frightened at first then confused, then …hmmmm. Its an interesting story with some ridiculous insinuations. I liked it. *wink*

    Like

  2. Wait… So she really died? And what sort of creepy baby does such things explained above. Yes, it seemed scary, but the end didn’t justify my fright. Now I’m angry that I was afraid.

    Like

  3. Wait! Pause… What is this? :s

    This was very beautifully woven and scary but……

    The insinuations were far fetched…

    Aha! Ketchup? A nephew? A deep sleeping husband? Aha! Respect your readers na.. 🙂

    You are a great storyteller, a beautiful and articulate one, but… Nah

    Like

  4. Clever twist but ….eh to the believable part. I was happily frightened and scared till I got to the end and instead slapping myself on the forehead to say ‘fear fear’ I was more of really? 😀

    Like

  5. Oh Lord…she died? No. No. No.

    Paranoia plus guilt equals delusional hallucination.

    Well done, Teleola! I don’t know you but this sure wouldn’t be the last time I read from you…

    Like

    1. You might just be the only one to truly understand and have an open mind. For this, I am happy and grateful and fulfilled.

      Like

  6. Far fetched in the sense that the woman conveniently forgot about the nephew’s existence and her husband’s sleeping habits.

    Then u never explained how and why the baby may have crept down from the room and tormented the woman after she’d ‘supposedly’ locked it.. Or is she delusional?

    Then she crept back bloodied and dying to discover the truth?

    Aha! Please give ur tale credibility na… 🙂

    Your imagination is beautiful but give it substance.. That is all 😉

    Like

  7. Jeez! Fear haff wan 2 catch me finish oo *phew*. dis post’s reli scary, buh altogether….cool $ full of intrigue. Nice one

    Like

  8. Teleola!! Okk..this one is captivating and suspense-filled! Choki came to my mind @ some point, but I told myself to calm down. Let me help ppl point out d morals of d story: 1) do not work in a bank. 2) marry a light sleeper who does not procastinate. 3) do not agree to take care of someone’s creepy child. 4) do not commit abortion. I’l stop here. X0xo

    Like

  9. I’ve read this awesome story countless times with a smile on my face… Of course it was pretty scary at first… I’ve run out of superlatives for this piece… Guess who has to sleep next to a long knife 😦

    Like

What do you think? Leave a reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

%d bloggers like this: