The rain
fell...regardless, as if it has not heard, no! It had definitely not seen. The
rain that would normally bring joy was now disrespectful. The rain fell on the
pieces of flesh scattered below it, it fell on lifeless bodies of people who
were bubbling with life just few minutes ago; Hassan, his younger brother
Kareem, Emeka and his longtime customer Pam and a couple of other people who
will just make up another news headline; ''31 die in Monday afternoon bomb
blast''
Few minutes ago
Hassan and Kareem were eating lunch when the weather made a dramatic twist, the
hitherto bright and sunny afternoon had given way for the cloud and rumbles in
the sky, quintessential Jos weather.
“kai...ka beri
wanchan abinchi mu kwashe wannan kaya” Hassan commanded Kareem, the two left
their happy meal to prepare for the rain, that would be their last happy meal,
no, that would be their last meal ever. In the next assemblage of wood and tarpaulin
that they called their ‘shop’, Pam was trying to convince Emeka to let go of the
rechargeable lamp for a price Emeka considered impossible, the arrangement of
the ‘shops’ indicated that it was temporal, it had to be, they had to
reconstruct after every visit by the task force. The government said they were
trying to decongest the area...but the will also be decongesting the stomach of
the traders since they had provided them with no alternative.
“No be today I
start dey come your place, just leave am for me like that, I no even plan to
buy am seff, na this light wey nepa no dey bring” Pam pressed.
“Lai
lai...dollar don put money, you want make I carry empty hand go house?
Pam pauses for a
while and said in agreement;
''Ok, I go buy
am like that, but I go bring your balance tomorrow''
''Tor, no
problem'' replied Emeka.
It was that tomorrow
he will not see...the events of the next second made sure of that; a deafening
sound and then moments of static motion followed by a loud silence.
Davou on the
other side of the road staggered to his feet after a moment of blankness...it
was the bag, the bag he had refused the fine looking gentleman to drop in his
shop; “you no fit trust anybody nowadays, Abeg just carry the bag dey go'' he
politely told the guy just few minutes ago, but Ade in his usual benevolence
agreed to look after the bag for the harmless looking lad, after all he just
wanted to dash into the bank by the corner. He's hospitality was now his bane.
The explosion
terminated every life within 30 meter radius, but a lot of people's will definitely
have to be hospitalized. In the midst of the chaos and confusion, then came the
‘innocent’ rain, dropping with its normal flow and elegance from the high
heavens, but when it reached the ground it imbibed a reckless disregard, a
pause at that moment would have been perfect, a pause for the grieving to grief
and the confused to comprehend.
To some, the
rain that fell that day washed off the memories of their loved ones into the
drains;
and to others,
it washed away their sorrow, their grief and their pains
…but none of
them can be said to be wrong because the same rain that fell on the bitter leaf
tree also fell on the sugarcane plant.

want to stop reading because I know the end would be heart breaking, but can not stop, because it was well written. what I call an interesting tragedy.
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