Read Parts 1,2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 of the Pristine series herehere  Here Here here here

It was the coldest January she had ever experienced in all her twenty years and seven months, and Dara usually didn’t handle cold so well. As if it wasn’t hard enough to have to travel so far from home only a day after the New Year to allow her settle in for a few days before work resumed, the cold shocked her—puzzled her, even. It blew like wind, numbing the face, fingers, every part of the body left uncovered, and threatening to whirl one off to freezing point.

Dara’s plan the past four years had been all about graduating top of her class. To do that, she had studied hard, kept distractions at bay, mixed with like-minded people, and had had a four-pointer CGPA in Biochemistry to show for it.  Now school was over, real life had begun, and her new plan was to live it. This meant staying strong. Strong enough to get out of bed every morning no matter how tempting it was to just lie under the duvet. Strong enough to endure the lousy accommodation her PPA had gotten her in a nearby compound with poor drainage. Strong enough to face the school children with a bright smile everyday because it was her duty for the next ten months. Strong enough to protect herself from the extremely harsh weather with the thickest clothing items she laid her hands on. Strong enough to enjoy Gombe, no matter what, because she had had a chance to leave but had chosen to stay and so had no right to utter a single word of complaint.

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“Good morning, fellow corps members. Hope everyone had a fun holiday, especially those who travelled home even though there was no official permission to do so”—there were mumbled jokes and laughter—“To all batch A and B corpers, it’s a new year and CDS has fully resumed. I urge us all to endeavour to make meaningful contributions to the group this year for better results than ever. To the batch Cs that have newly joined us, this is environmental sanitation community development service group, where we try to enlighten ourselves and the community at large on how to maintain proper hygiene in our surroundings. We hold our meetings every Thursday between ten a.m. to twelve p.m. You are all very welcome, and your contributions and full participation in this CDS will be highly appreciated.”

After the president’s speech, the group secretary read out the minutes of the last meeting they had held, and plans for batch C welcome party/batch A send forth party were discussed. Dara observed quietly from the back row of the old building they used as classroom, wanting to form an objective opinion as opposed to the ‘waste of time’ she had heard CDS popularly being described as.

Before the close of the meeting, a slim, fair guy that sat in front of Dara got up to speak. “I think it’s important to let the new members introduce themselves briefly so we can at least get to know their names, schools they graduated from, disciplines, PPAs, etc.”

There were only two other new guys, and after they had spoken, Dara got on her feet too. Smiling, she said, “My name is Oluwasarasimi Adegbite—Dara, for short. I’m from Kwara State, I studied Biochemistry at the University of Ilorin, and my PPA is Amazing Grace Primary School.”

“Status?”

“What?”

The guy that had spoken earlier turned to look at her, and repeated himself with a straight face, “Your marital status. Single and seriously searching? Engaged without a ring? Married but left ring at home?”

Everyone laughed. Dara replied with a grin, “Single but not desperate.”
Later when he walked up to her where she was waiting by the road for a bike to take her home, his opening line was, “I’m not desperate either, but I think you might want to know me.”
“Really? Why?” she asked, amused.
He shrugged. “’Cause I’m cool and you need someone to show you around town.”

“I’m settling in just fine, thanks,” Dara smiled at him.

He sighed. “I’m trying to be not-so-desperate here but you’re desperately trying to prove me desperate. Not cool.”

“What’s your name?” she asked him, squinting under the sun. It was amazing how the sun was up and yet the air was cold.

“I’m Chika. And you have a lovely name. Dara. Means something good, right?”

Dara nodded. “I’m sorry I have no idea what yours means.”

“That’s alright. I was born and bred in Lagos, so I probably speak better Yoruba than Igbo,” he told her, smiling. He noticed she was shifting from one leg to the other, so he said, “I realize I might have held you here for abit longer than I should have, so I’ll just stop the next bike that comes around for you while I desperately ask for your number.”

“Okay, that’s enough desperation for one day,” she laughed as she punched her number on his phone before getting on the bike.
                                                           ************

The following Thursday, Dara woke up with a headache. She had a pack of pain relievers, so she took two tablets during breakfast, before she left for CDS. She got to the venue right on time, but Chika had already saved her a seat next to his at the middle row.

“I would have given you a call since last week, but I had to make an urgent trip oer the weekend and got back last night,” he said, leaning towards her as she sat, after he had motioned her over.

Dara nodded and smiled politely. She had actually not given him any thought till she had seen him again. Writing lecture plans and notes and marking assignments for two different subjects kept her busier than she thought she’d be as a teaching corper. She liked it though, how the days gradually passed without her realizing because she had been absorbed with work.

She must have lost concentration at some point, because suddenly there was a general laughter and she didn’t know what it was about. What she felt instead was body pain and an impending fever.
Chika leaned towards her again and asked, “Are you alright?”

“I feel really hot.”

“You’re burning up,” he confirmed by placing the back of his hand against her neck. “Did it just start?”

She winced in reply as the headache returned.

“Damn mosquitoes,” he muttered. Then he walked over to the front to have a word with the president, and soon came back to tell her, “Maybe you should go home, Dara. You shouldn’t stress yourself if you aren’t feeling well.”

She tried to argue, but the headache intensified. He followed her when she got up to leave. “I-I’ll be fine. I’ll just go and rest at home,” she said as they walked to the road.

“Alright. But you should see a doctor or at least get drugs to take. I’m guessing it’s malaria. Has this ever happened to you before?”

“Yeah. Curse of an AA. I’ll stop at a pharmacy on my way home, I think there’s one on my street,” she replied, trying not to alarm him any more than he already was, but actually feeling worse.
“How about I come with you?” he offered.

She managed a smile. “Thanks, but that shouldn’t be necessary.”

“I want to. That way I’ll be sure you’re going to be okay.”

“I will be—“ She stopped talking and groaned, holding her head in her hands.
“I insist.”

He waited outside her one-room apartment so she could change from the khaki uniform into something more comfortable, then watched her take the physician’s prescription. She soon fell asleep on her slim mattress, and when she woke up forty minutes later, he was lying on the carpet with his head beside her legs on the mattress.

“You’re still here.”

She watched him, confused, as he walked towards her hotplate to uncover the pot on it. Even with the delicious aroma of noodles that filled the room, she still had to ask to be sure. “You’re cooking?”

He shrugged, squatting to stir the pot’s content with a fork. “I figured you might have to eat something when you woke up. I wasn’t so sure you didn’t take the drugs on an empty stomach.”

“I ate before leaving home in the morning. But it’s really thoughtful of you to do this. Thanks,” she told him, touched.

He grinned. “Actually I’m not the gentleman you’re thinking I am. I’m just a hungry man who discovered your carton of noodles. Didn’t want you staring at my mouth so I made enough for two. How’re you feeling by the way? Any better?”

“Yeah…fine. But you’re something else, Chika,” she replied, trying not to laugh for fear of the headache returning.

…Eating together on her carpeted floor that early Thursday afternoon marked the beginning of a friendship, without either of them realizing it.




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Morountodun is a writer and a microbiology ‎ graduate of University of Ilorin.
Twitter: @Morountosweet




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