Demola
stood in the small speedboat, his legs spread, his knees loose and both hands
holding on to the windshield as they sped over the choppy waves of the Sea. At
the moment the only thing of importance was getting to the Sea Breeze, the boat the Angels were using for the shark-feeding
expedition.
He'd
missed the press conference in the hotel. His plane hadn't been late,
thankfully, but the only flight he'd been able to snag on such late notice had
put him in Lagos fifteen minutes after the press conference had ended. Now he
was playing catch-up, hoping to hell he made it to the boat before the girls
went overboard.
His
heart pounding, his palms could and sweaty, he glanced over at the man whose
services and boat he'd hired. The islander's attention was focused on the Sea Breeze. The throttle was full-bore.
Little point in pushing the boat driver to go faster. He couldn't. He was eking
out every bit of speed his small boat had.
As
they got closer to the Sea Breeze, Demola
noticed she was fairly big, around eighty feet. A tall cabin with deck space on
top took mist of the center portion of the boat. There was a small deck area
aft, with a narrow walkway that ran along the side to a larger deck area the
prow.
Almost
everyone was at the prow. He imagined they were gathered around the big TV
screen that was always present at the Angel events. No doubt little Martha and
her family would be there, along with several news reporters, representatives
from the corporations and other people who'd pledged smaller money donations.
He
desperately searched for the girls. Four bright pink wet suits with brown heads
topping them caught his eye. The girls were still on board.
Thank God.
His
boat powered down as they approached. As his driver got them snuggled up next
to the Sea Breeze, Demola quickly
took in the party going on up front. A big shark swarm by on the large screen,
its open jaw displaying its sharp, deadly teeth. Demola's gut jerked into a
tight knot and he pulled his gaze from the deadly predator. He spotted Martha.
She was sitting front and center in a lounge chair. She looked to be about six.
Her long, dark hair trailed over her shoulder accenting her unnaturally pale
complexion.
Angelic.
That
was the word that came to mind as he stared at the little girl. He was glad
Tomilola and the other Angels were helping her. But, not in the manner they'd
chosen. They had other ways to make money now. Safer ways.
With
the small boat bobbing beneath the Sea
Breeze's ladder, Demola grabbed hold of the metal rungs and climbed onto
the big boat's gently rocking deck. He started up the narrow walkway that led
to the prow, looking for Tomilola. He picked her out of the crowd fairly
quickly. She was talking to a gray-haired man in a business suit, an animated
smile on her lips.
She spotted Demola making his way to her. Triumph chased across her face as she realized her little ploy to get him here had worked. She quickly passed the businessman off to Rosie, whispered something in her friend's ear and headed his way.
He
drank in the sight of her. The way her hair spilled in brown curls from the
ponytail fixed on top of her head. The way the tight, bright pink wet suit
hugged her every tantalizing curve. The way her hips kicked in seductive
invitation as she made her way to him. She looked good. Damned good.
But
he wasn't here to admire her beauty.
He
was here to wrung her neck. He stopped at the end of the walkway, waited for
her to close the distance between them and pinned her with a hard gaze.
"What the hell do you think you're doing?"
She
winced at his words and peeked over her shoulder, obviously worrying if anyone
had heard. But no one was paying attention to them. Rosie had dragged the
businessman in front of the big screen and was addressing the crowd, keeping
their attention there. Tomilola took his elbow and started pulling him toward
the back of the boat.
He
followed because the last thing Martha and her family needed was more strife in
their lives. But as soon as he and Tomilola reached the back of the boat, he
pulled her around to face him. "Answer my question, dammit. What the hell
do you think you're doing?"
She
batted her lashes innocently. "Isn't that evident? We're holding another
Angels' event."
"Don't
jerk my chain, Tomilola. You won't like the result. This event wasn't designed
to save that little girl. It was designed to bring me running."
She squared her shoulders and met his gaze head on. "This is absolutely about making sure Martha gets the medical treatments she needs. But was the specific event chosen to get your cute little butt here? You bet."
He
narrowed his gaze on her. "And getting me here is worth risking your
friends' safety?"
"No,
it isn't." she spat. "That's your fault."
"Excuse
me?" he asked incredulously.
"Look,
I came up with this idea because I knew you'd come running when you heard we were
going to feed sharks. But that's all we were going to do originally. Feed the
sharks. No big deal."
"No
big deal?" he asked pointedly. "They're sharks, Tomilola. Big,
deadly, eating machines with monster jaws and row after row of razor-sharp
teeth. They're not a bunch of trained poodles."
"And
we weren't going to try to make them to jump through hoops. We were just going
to throw them a few tasty morsels of fish. That was my idea. You and I talked
about this, remember? I want to keep my friends around for a long, long time. I
want to start making these events safer. And the shark psychologists. . ."
"Shark
psychologists?" For crying out loud, don't tell me you listened to people
who call themselves shark psychologists. You think those animals come in and
lie on couches?"
She
shot him a disparaging look. "Fine. Call them whatever you want. The point
is these guys study sharks. They know how the animals think. They assured me
feeding them is perfectly safe. In fact, they feed them here all the time. It's
no biggie. They even let the tourists do it."
"Stupid,
foolish tourists, maybe."
She
waved away his words. "Nobody's ever been hurt doing it, so it's obviously
safe. It just sounds and looks dangerous, which made it the perfect stunt to
get the corporations to pledge their money and. . ."
"Get
me to come running. Yeah, I got that part."
She
jutted her chin into the air. "Good. Anyway, then Yemi got it in her head
that we could up the corporate pledges if we rode the beasts." She tossed
her hands in exasperation, shaking her head. "A shark rodeo. What the heck
was she thinking?"
"You
expect me to believe your girls don't talk about these decisions?"
"I
expect you to be astute enough to realize if I went to all this trouble to get
you here, I'm not going to waste my time lying to you. As for the decision bit,
yes, we usually decide on the event details together. But since you left, I've
been a little. . .distracted. Yemi thought she was doing me a favor by making
the decision herself. By the time she let me in on her plans, she'd already
talked to the corporations and the press. It was a done deal, nothing I could
do about it."
"You
could have put a stop to it."
She
shook her head. "Not without hurting this fundraiser. We've built our
reputation on wild, dangerous stunts. Putting an end to the rodeo part of the
event would have made us look like scaredy-cats. No way would the corporations
have pledged money for that. And Martha is counting on that money for the
treatment she needs. I'm not going to let her down."
The
knot in his gut pulled tighter. Of course they couldn't let her down. He
stabbed his fingers through his hair. "Dammit. Everything was fine when I
left. What the hell happened?"
"What
do you mean everything was fine? I wasn't fine." She pointed at her chest
with an angry finger.
"You
would have been. In time, you would have been." He couldn't stand the pain
he saw in her face. Couldn't stand that he'd put it there. He paced away,
curling his fingers into tight fists.
"Promising Wole I'd bring you home was stupid. I'd already screwed up one
family. What the hell made me think I could help his?"
"Don't
tell me I would have been fine. You don't get to make that call. And what does
that mean? You'd already screwed up one family?"
"It
doesn't mean anything." He paced away. That was the last road he wanted to
go down.
"Oh,
no. You can't back out of that statement now. I think it's important." She
strode over and pulled him around, her gaze sharp and intense. "Do you
blame yourself for your sister's rape?"
Panic
nipped at his heels. "Don't be ridiculous. How the hell could I have been
responsible for my sister's rape? She was at a school event. My dad dropped her
at the school's doors. She was there with a hundred other kids. She should have
been perfectly safe. No one could have known he would drag her out the back
door and rape her."
She
shuddered at the harsh reality of his words, but her gaze didn't waver.
"What about what happened after? Her death? Do you blame yourself for
that?"
He
couldn't breathe. Couldn't think. It was as if a giant hand was squeezing the
life out of him.
"Answer me."
"Yes."
The word was out of his mouth before he could stop it. "Yes, I blame
myself. If I hadn't gone after that bastard, if I hadn't been so intent on
proving how big a man I was, I wouldn't have been in jail the night my sister
ran her car off the bridge. I might have been around to take the keys from her.
And if I'd done that, maybe my parents wouldn't have had to bury their
daughter."
"Oh,
God." She closed her eyes momentarily. When she opened them, empathy
spiked with determination glistened there. "I'm not going to tell you
you're wrong. If you hadn't gone after the rapist, if you'd been at home, maybe
you would have saved your sister that night. But you might not have, either.
Teenage girls are sneaky. And innovative. I can't tell you how many times I
told my mom I was going over to a friends to study when my real destination was
to a club. And even if you'd saved her that night, it doesn't mean you would
have saved her the next time. She's not blameless for what happened to
her."
"She
was a nineteen year old girl who'd been brutally raped."
"Yes,
she was. She was young and hurt and, like you, she made some bad choices."
"She's
not responsible for those choices, she was hurting too badly. I, on the other
hand, was simply trying to stoke my ego, prove how big a man I was." And
he hated himself for it.
She
shook her head. "You're not going to sell me that. And if you've been
selling it to yourself all these years, you're obviously still trying to hang
on to all that male pride."
"You
can hardly compare my anger to the pain she was going through. If she made
mistakes it was hardly her fault, but me. . ."
"Don't."
She pinned him with a steely glare. "Don't you dare belittle the emotions
you were feeling then. Were you angry someone had hurt your sister? I'm sure
you were. Livid. But don't pretend it was the only emotion you felt. Or even
the strongest one. You forget, I know what it's like to see someone you love
hurting. . .physically, mentally. I stood over my mother's bed and watched a
nightmarish disease ravage her. I saw her pain every minute of everyday. And it
hurt like hell. Don't try telling me your sister's pain didn't hurt you."
"Even
if it did, it was no excuse for going after him."
"No,
it wasn't. But it would certainly have been one heck of an impetus. God knows,
there were days if I'd thought killing someone would make my mom feel better, I
might have pounded someone to a bloody pulp myself."
"No,
you wouldn't have."
"Don't
count on it. There were some black days back then."
One
look at the shadows in her eyes and he knew there had been. But he couldn't let
that sway him.
"You're
talking theories. I'm talking reality. You didn't go after anyone. I did. And I
not only sealed my sister's fate by doing that, I destroyed my parents' lives
as well. Do you have any idea what it was like for them to have one child dead
and the other locked up as an attempted murderer?" He shook his head, pain
washing over him. "All their hopes, all their dreams, flushed down the
toilet. And I did it. I won't risk ruining another family."
Her
eyes went wide. "Oh, my God. That's why you left. The real reason you
left. Not because you were afraid I couldn't handle a few bigots. But because.
. ."
"It's
not the reason." He stalked away, panic stampeding after him. "It's
just another reason. I can give you a dozen more if you've got an hour or so
and a sofa. I could lie down for you and you could psychoanalyze me all day
long if you like."
"If
I get you prone, psychoanalzying you will be the last thing on my mind."
Her voice was low, husky.
Desire
slammed through him, hot and hard and powerful. He had to put an end to this
conversation before it completely ambushed him. And then find a way to stop her
and the others from riding those sharks.
"Tomilola,
it's time to go." The female voice broke into their argument.
Startled,
they both turned to find Rosie peeking around the corner.
The tall lady tipped her head toward the front of the boat. "It's time."
Tomilola
gave her head a quick nod. "I'll be right there. You guys head on
down." She turned back to him. "I don't have time to pussyfoot around
here, so I'll get right to the point. You made a mistake once. A big one. One
that affected people's lives. But you've paid for that mistake. More
importantly, you've learned from it. Does that mean you'll never make another
one? Probably not. Fallibility is part of the human condition. But. . ."
"I
don't need a lecture on mistakes. I. . ."
"You're
going to get one, anyway. You told me once you thought of all the mistakes my
folks made, my mother made the biggest one when she walked away without giving
herself and my dad the chance to make things right. How is what you're doing
any different?"
"Oh,
for crying out. . .it's completely different."
She
shook her head. "No, actually, it's not. You might be running for
different reasons. But you're still running, Demola. The question you have to
ask yourself is do you want to behave like my mother? Or my father? Dad made as
big a mistake as Mom did twenty-two years ago. The difference was, he dug in
and did what he could to rectify the situation. And he didn't do it just for
himself and his family; he did it for others, too. He did it for the workers
that work on the estate. He did it for you. He gave you a second chance,
Demola. Don't throw that back in his face."
She
turned from him and started back toward the aisle that led to the front of the
boat, but she turned on her heel and came back to him. "I love you, Demola
Adenuga."
The
words hit him like a sucker punch.
She
chuckled softly and shook her head. "I'm not going to take it back, so
live with it. I love you. And I'm not willing to let the best thing that's ever
wandered into my life wander out. So do us both a favor. Make the right
decision here. Screw up some courage and give us a chance." She raised on
her toes and kissed him, hard and deep. Then she turned on her heel and strode
away.
He
watched her go, his world spinning around him.
She
loved him?
He
swallowed hard, her words about her mother and father echoing in his head. Was
she right? Was he running?
He
stared at her as she donned her diving gear and stepped off the side of the
boat. Her image appeared on the giant screen as she slowly sank toward the
bottom of the sea. Big, sleek, torpedo-shaped animals appeared in the
background.
Sharks.
Damn.
She
settled on the bottom of the sea and took a spear from a diver already kneeling
there, a big fish skewered on the end. A shark darted her way, his sleek body
racing through the water, his deadly jaws gaping.
Why
did he get the feeling if he didn't want to spend the rest of his life watching
Tomilola go from one hair-raising stunt after the next, he'd better come to
terms with his past.
**********************************************************************
Her
heart pounding like a frantic tattoo. Tomilola held on to the shark's dorsal
fin as it thrashed through the water, trying to dislodge her.
One
thousand one.
One
thousand two.
Eight
seconds. Like the bull riders in the rodeo, she had to stay with the shark for
eight seconds. She gritted her teeth and held on for dear life as the sharp
edged, sandpapery hide bit into her skin.
One
thousand four.
One
thousand five.
The
shark jerked toward her, its jaws opened wide, its sharp, jagged teeth a clear
warning as the shark tried to make her let go. Oh, God. She closed her eyes and
held on tighter. As long as she snuggled up to his side and he couldn't reach
her.
One
thousand seven.
One
thousand eight.
She
let go as the shark jerked in the other direction - away from her - and held
her breath to see if the angry fish would turn back toward her to bite her in
half or swim away.
It
darted into the murky depths.
Thank God.
She sucked in a deep breath of compressed air and looked for the other girls, praying they were okay. Praying she wouldn't find body parts and a trail of blood floating through the water. She found them together, elbows linked not far away. They all waved heartily. Relief poured through her. They were okay.
It
had been a successful event. They'd made money on all but one of the fish the
dive masters had brought down for them to feed. And they'd all ridden their
sharks. Martha's parents wouldn't have to worry about what they could and
couldn't afford for their daughter. Ashley would get every medical treatment
she needed.
Now
all they had to do was get out of the sea without one of sharks wandering back
for a last tasty bite. Tomilola pointed toward the surface with her thumb,
signaling it was time to head up. But first, the four of them turned to the
underwater cameramen, took their regulators out of their mouths, smiled widely
and waved to the people on the boat. Then they were all heading up.
As
Tomilola swam toward the surface, keeping a sharp eye on the few sharks that
still swam around looking for another handout, her thoughts shifted to Demola.
Would he still be there when she got back on board? Or would he be gone? Her
stomach tied in a thousand knots.
Let
him be there.
Please,
let him be there.
She hit the surface, handed her vest with the heavy air tank and her fins off to a helper and scampered up the ladder to the Sea Breeze's deck, hoping the first face she'd see would be his. But he wasn't in the crowd that greeted her. Her heart sank and she searched deeper into the layers of people crowding around her, but he was nowhere to be seen. Tears stung her eyes. She did her best to blink them back, glad for the camouflaging effect of the sea's wetness.
"Aunty
Tomi, Aunty Tomi." The small voice belonged to Martha. The crowd in front
of Tomilola parted and the wraithlike child made her way through.
Tomilola forced her lips into a big smile. "Hey, sweetie, what do you think?"
Martha
giggled. "I think I'm never going to get into that sea. Those sharks would
swallow me whole."
Tomilola
laughed with her. "I think you're right. We'll have to think of something
else fun for you to do when you get through with all your treatments. How
about. . .I know, a trip to Obudu Ranch in Calabar?"
"Yea!"
Martha jumped up and down. "Mummy has told me a lot about the place."
"I
bet she has. You can say hi for me."
Martha's
parents had moved in behind her. Worried frowns furrowed their brows. Tomilola
moved quickly to reassure them. "The trip is compliments of the Angels, of
course. Your only job is to make sure she gets healthy so she can enjoy the
trip."
Martha's
mom smiled, tears springing to her eyes. "We can do that. And we wanted to
thank you girls. You've truly been angels to us. If you hadn't done this. .
." She swiped at her tears, doing her best to hang on to her composure.
"No
thanks necessary. You just take care of this little girl." Tomilola gave
the woman's arm a reassuring squeeze and stepped away, giving the parents time
to compose themselves.
That's when she saw him.
He
was standing in the alcove that led down below, his boots looking a bit out of
place on the boat, his intense gaze tracking her every move.
He'd
stayed.
A little bubble of hope pushed at her throat. Did his presence mean he'd decided to give them a chance? Or just that he'd stayed to say goodbye? Hope and fear pounding through her, she made her way across the deck. She wanted to throw herself into his arms, but she stopped a few feet away, giving him a little breathing room. "You're still here."
The
corners of his lips quirked. "So it appears."
"Does
that mean . . ." She plowed her fingers through her hair. She was afraid
to ask the question. But she was more afraid not to. "Does that mean
you're going to give us a chance?"
He
looked away, the tiny smile disappearing as he gazed out at the vast expanse of
water. "It means I think you're right about why I left. It scares me to
death to think of starting a relationship, a family, and then making a big
mistake down the road that would tear it apart."
Was
that an I'm-leaving or I'm-staying comment? Afraid to tip the scale the wrong
way, she stuck to a true, but unavoidable, observation. "Life is scary
sometimes."
He
laughed humorlessly. "If the last twenty minutes is any indication, it can
be damned terrifying."
Since
there wasn't one single bone in her body that disagreed with that, she kept her
mouth closed.
He
looked at her, his brown-eyed gaze piercing. "I'm never going through that
again, Tomilola. Ever. Which means running is no longer an option. You
obviously need someone around to rein you in."
She
stilled. That kind of sounded like an I'm-staying. "Are you by any chance
thinking you might do the reining-in?'
"I'm
sure as hell not going to let any other guy do it."
That
was definitely an I'm-staying. The bubble of hope burst into joy. But she held
herself in check. He'd made her work too hard getting him here for her to let
him off too easy. She raised a brow. "Is that right?"
"Absolutely
right." He pulled her to him and lowered his lips to hers.
The
kiss was hot and deep and left no doubt in her mind that he was staking his
claim.
Her
knees went weak. Her every nerve ending short-circuited.
Finally,
he pulled his lips from hers. "I love you."
She
held on to him, gasping for air, the words ringing like sweet chimes in her
ears. "In that case, I can live with the macho reining-in thing."
He
chuckled, low and sexy. "Glad to hear it. How do you feel about getting
married?"
What?
She leaned back in his arms to get a good look at his face. He looked down at
her, his expression dead serious.
"Man,"
she said. "When you screw up your courage, you don't stop halfway, do
you?"
"In
case you haven't noticed, I'm not a man of half measures. If I'm going to do
something, I don't play at it. I do it." He tucked a wet curl behind her
ear. "And your father wouldn't like his daughter playing house. If you
were sleeping with a man, he'd want you married. And I fully intend to be sleeping
with you."
Desire
shot through her. Hot and wild. She pulled his lips back to hers and did a
little claiming of her own.
Several
minutes later, he pulled his lips from hers again, his gaze delving into hers. "Is
that a yes, Tomilola Adeyemi?"
She
smiled up at him, tears of joy filling her eyes. "It's a yes, Ademola
Adenuga, Yes, yes, yes."
hey lola,lovely story keep it up,a great fan of urs all the way from nairaland.
ReplyDeleteThanks sweetz
ReplyDelete