Scared black man. Image: Naijaloaded |
This is based on real events...
Bashir jutted out of bed!
2:46am.
He stilled himself and listened.
There it was again! There was no mistaking the sharp grating
noise of someone trying to open his gate. His instinct was to jump out of bed
and confront the person, but common sense (mixed with a healthy dose of
fear) prevented him from doing so. He tip-toed to his window instead. Heart in
mouth, he raised the curtain slightly.
Four men. All holding sticks and machetes. Not too burly, but
with those weapons, they looked like giants.
Bashir turned back. In the darkness of his room, he couldn't
really see much but he was acutely aware of the sleeping form of Aisha – his
fiancée – who had come over for a sleep-over. His heart leaped into his mouth. What would they do to her? He
couldn't bear to picture it...them...over her...holding her down...NO! Now he knew real fear!
'Who is there?!' His father shouted.
Like most Muslim Northerners, Bashir lived in the same
compound as his family; living in a separate apartment to give his family
space, but close enough to protect them if the need arose. The need had risen!
'Who is there I said?' His father hollered at the intruders.
'Your Father!' One of the men hollered. 'You in for
it!'
At that, Aisha jumped out of bed.
'Go down
baby.' Bashir
whispered before drawing up air into his lungs for a good ole scream. His
sisters beat him to the punch.
'Thieves! Thieves! Thieves!'
Bashir quickly joined in the shouts as Aisha dove straight
for the tiles. Though all the men were heading to the main house, one turned
towards Bashir's apartment, with his upraised machete.
Bashir ran to the spot beneath his clothes hanger and coiled
up in a ball, not knowing if the assailant had any fire power. He didn't make
the slightest sound, though the thumping of his heart was deafening. He hoped
it wouldn't give his location away to his assailant.
The robber opened the window of his sitting room and flashed
his torchlight.
'No one
is here.' he
shouted to his colleagues. He tried the bedroom window but it was firmly bolted
from within.
All the while, Bashir's sisters, mother and father kept
shouting that there were thieves in the house. The shouts reached a crescendo
when neighbors in other compounds joined in the screams.
Bashir got up and started towards the curtain again, only to
be plumped down by Aisha.
'Don't go
there baby!' She whispered hoarsely, her fear palpable.
He pried her off him, trying very hard not to be rough.
'I just need to find out if they are still here.'
Aisha wouldn't listen to anything. She kept pulling him down
when he tried to get up, refusing to let him put himself in harm's way.
Bashir's phone rang.
There was that moment of frozen silence just before Aisha
grabbed the device in a fear-frenzy, trying all her best to end the call.
Bashir grabbed the phone from her hand and answered it. The look Aisha gave him
(as reflected by the soft glow of the phone) could have quelled a lesser man. He
turned away from her and...
'Hello?' he all but croaked.
Aisha was beyond livid. How could he receive a call in the
middle of a robbery? She wanted to slap the sense into him, but she was
powerless to do anything.
'Did they
enter your house too?' he asked the caller, whom Aisha was really beginning to
loathe.
Bashir listened a bit.
'Okay...I think they have gone but please, keep calling the
police men.'
He listened again.
'Okay.
Thanks man. I owe you one.' he said as he ended the call.
This time, he got up and went to the curtain. He looked
through and couldn't find anyone. He stood at different angles, using the
moon's guide to search the length and breadth of the compound. Still no one. He
knew that it would be fallacy to think they had gone. He remained in his room
and listened for any foot falls. There were none.
Bashir went back to Aisha. He touched her and felt her jump a
bit.
'It is okay baby. I think they are gone.'
'How can
you know that?'
'I don't. But I've checked all around and I can’t seem to
find them. They cannot afford to still be around, especially with the community
shouts for help. The police have got to be on their way soon. So...let's hope
for the best.'
Aisha was still skeptical, but she allowed herself to be
pulled into his arms as he pulled her into bed. As they laid together, they
could both hear their hearts thumping in their respective cages and that seemed
to pull them closer. They held each other, urging the other to sleep but not
dispelling the adrenaline fast enough to allow that. They were scared, but they
at least had each other.
***
The ruckus outside jolted Bashir from his sleep.
3:52am.
He heard a slight scuffle. Aisha was up like a lightning
bolt. She had not slept, listening for the slightest sound and worrying to no
end.
It seemed like the robbers had returned with reinforcements.
The gate was kicked in and five men in the Nigerian army
uniform bust into the house. One quickly went into the recesses of the
compound, while the others placed themselves strategically around. Though Aisha
couldn't see all that, she quickly went to the floor.
'Come out.'
One of the men bellowed. Aisha started praying. She felt like
this was going to be her last day on earth. It wasn’t surprising when no one
responded. One of the men went up the stairs and banged the door.
'Come out!'
Bashir had already made up his mind that he wasn't going to
respond when he heard his father open the door. He quickly went to his own door
and opened it. He had to protect his father, especially as he was not sure that
they were truly soldiers.
His father and all his sisters came out. The soldiers started
questioning them. They responded to the questions. Bashir only came out of the
shadows and joined in the conversation when he saw that the soldiers’ guns were
all pointed away from his family. After about ten minutes of the questioning,
they circled the perimeter and carried out their own investigation and left as
soon as they were done.
Bashir came back to the room and saw Aisha shaking. He
gathered her in his arm as he tried to comfort her.
'I
thought they were fake soldiers or worse, members of the Boko Haram sect.' she said as she buried
her head in his chest.
'I thought so too.'
He kept rocking her until she finally slept off. As sleep
started pulling him into her vortex, he couldn't help but ponder on the fact
that it took an hour for any assistance to come: an hour where a more
sophisticated team (like the Boko Haram sect) could have raped, abducted,
plundered or killed his entire family and even his entire neighborhood. His
last thought before he succumbed to sleep was how a coordinated robbery session
could have been carried out in a town that was under curfew because of the issues
of insurgency. Was the curfew really ensuring the protection of citizens or
turning them into sitting ducks?
He slept off.
***
In the morning, it was revealed that the robbers couldn't
have been less than 20-strong. Some of them were armed with fire power and
others with sticks and machetes. They had gained entrance into most of the
houses by claiming they were drug law enforcement agents carrying out security
searches. They hadn't hurt anyone, though they held a boy at gun point so
they could access the main house and threatened to have a girl raped by a
member who was infected with HIV. They stole laptops, phones, other
electronics, food stuff and in one instance, cuff links and shoes. They kept
telling every house they robbed that the economy was hard and that they just
wanted to get by. If Bashir's family had not shouted, they could have continued
their operation and afterwards, disappeared into thin air.
In their words, they were average dudes who just wanted to
get by. What kind of nation has her citizens under curfew and is still unable
to check petty theft and armed robbery? What sort of evil minds cook up stories
of being drug law enforcement agents just so that they can wreak havoc? Why is
the response to distress calls so slow and in most cases, highly ineffective?
Bashir knew he could have died that night. That thought,
above all, haunted him all through the next day. That was the beginning of his
insomnia.
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