Suddenly, I heard footsteps. In the darkness,I could
make out a figure moving a few feet from me
Another passenger? One of the robbers?
The figure kept moving further away into the forest. I
followed. The figure ran. I pursued, using both hands
to clear the twigs and branches in my path. I heard a loud thud. And a female shriek pierced the night.
The figure now lay before me, writhing in pains. As I
approached, she was screaming,'No! No!' 'Quiet!' I
said, trying to keep my voice down. She stopped
screaming,but her tearful sniffs were still audible.
'Were you in the bus?' I asked.
'Yes.'
She broke into
sobs.
'Are you hurt?'
'Slightly,'she replied,trying to get up.
'We must keep running,'I told her,helping her up.
'They
may be coming after us.'
We must have ran for another two hours before
succumbing to weariness.
I was awoken by the blinding noonday sun. My whole
body ached terribly. My throat was dry. I struggled up,
looked around and despair set in. For all I could see
were cassava plants. Covering hectares from where I stood. I heard some rustling and turned.
Then,I saw
her. Lanky. Dark-skinned. Torn clothes. A frown
distorting her pretty face.
'Nothing,'she said.
'What?'I
asked, confused.
'Nothing to eat. Nothing to drink. I woke up early and
went to search. Nothing but cassava roots.' 'Then let's get going. I hope we reach a village or
something,'I said, looking around in disbelief.
Her name was Lola. She was going back to Lagos for
the Christmas holidays. She had entered Onitsha
from her school in Owerri that evening and decided to
take the night bus. And she was sitting directly in
front of me. Third row.
'How did you manage to slip into the bush?'I asked her,albeit rhetorically.
'The robbers could have shot
you!'
'Or me...'I softly added.
It was night before we got to a settlement. An array of
mud huts with light emanating from some windows.
We approached the first hut. A woman sat in front,
plaiting her daughter's hair. On seeing us, she froze.
She called her husband who came out, cutlass in
hand. We struggled to narrate our story.
Hungry. Thirsty.
Delirious.
Only four words in our story made sense.
'Bus'. 'Lagos'. 'Thieves'. 'Run'.
Maybe they understood. I could hear them embracing
us in sympathy.
My legs felt too heavy.
I fell.
As I lay
on the cool sandy soil, my parched lips contorted in
gratitude, only one thought was on my mind:
Water.
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