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  • The Hollow Clock

    He kissed his wife at half-past eight,
    A ghost kiss, brief and cold as slate.
    "I work late, love," the practiced lie
    Fell softly, meeting her distant eye.
    He drove to where the streetlights bloomed,
    A different threshold, different roomed,
    Where Nnenna waited, warm and bright,
    A stolen sliver of the night.
    Her perfume drowned the scent of home,
    In tangled sheets, no need to roam
    Beyond this urgent, fevered touch –
    He craved the fire, forgot the hutch
    Where vows like dusty heirlooms lay.
    He whispered things he'd never say
    To Ada, stitching by the lamp,
    Her quiet strength a steadying damp
    On his own restless, seeking flame.
    He thought her life a placid game
    Of household rhythms, calm and deep,
    Unknowing while the city slept,
    John came – his friend from club and bar –
    Bearing not whisky, but a star
    Of jasmine blooms. Helen would rise,
    Surprise a softness in her eyes.
    John knew the cracks within the glass,
    Knew where the weary hours would pass
    For Ada, waiting, patient, still,
    A vessel needing warmth to fill.
    He offered laughter, shared complaint,
    Then more, where moonlight made no saint.
    Her touch, to John, was not a theft,
    But solace, tenderly bereft
    Of her own husband's absent care.
    They moved together on the stair,
    A silent dance the clockwork missed,
    Sealing their pact with murmured tryst
    While he traced patterns on her skin
    (That other her), deep lost within
    The thrill of secrets closely kept,
    Believing Ada soundly slept
    Or read, or dreamed of nothing more
    Than duties knocking at the door.

    Time spun its fragile, brittle thread.
    One afternoon, suspicion led
    Him home too soon – a nagging doubt,
    A sense of something wrong about
    A phrase John dropped, a glance too swift.
    He turned the key, a gentle drift
    Of foreign scent – not Nnenna's musk –
    Hung in the hall. A shadowed dusk
    Filled the front room. He heard a sound,
    A stifled gasp, abrupt, unbound,
    Then footsteps rushing soft, unseen,
    A side door clicking shut, serene.
    He found his wife beside the hearth,
    Her cheeks flushed with a second birth
    Of color, hair escaping neat.
    A book lay tumbled at her feet.
    "John called," she offered, voice too light,
    "Just borrowed back that fishing light
    He'd lent you months ago." Her gaze
    Slipped sideways through the dying haze
    Of afternoon. A thread of fear,
    So fine, hung trembling in the air.

    Then, near the couch, his sharp eye caught
    A gleam of silk, a pattern wrought
    In blues he knew. He stooped, heart slow,
    And lifted it. A scarf. And so,
    It wasn't Anna's, bold and red...
    This fragile thing, blue-threaded, led
    Back to a gift he'd given John
    Last birthday dawn. His thoughts were gone,
    Swept clean by cold, cascading dread.
    He held the evidence, soft thread
    By damning thread. He saw it clear –
    The hurried step, the scent, the fear
    In Ada's eyes... not for his sin,
    But for the lover ushered in
    And out the side. His trusted friend.
    The careful world he sought to mend
    With secret fires now buckled, broke.
    The accusations choked, unspoke.
    He stared at Helen, mute, undone,
    Holding the scarf beneath the sun
    That slanted through the windowpane,
    Illuminating all the pain
    He'd sown, and she, in silent rage,
    Had harvested on this stark stage.
    The clock upon the mantel chimed,
    Marking the hollow, empty time.

    -Ogangan Emmanuel Udugba
    The Hollow Clock He kissed his wife at half-past eight, A ghost kiss, brief and cold as slate. "I work late, love," the practiced lie Fell softly, meeting her distant eye. He drove to where the streetlights bloomed, A different threshold, different roomed, Where Nnenna waited, warm and bright, A stolen sliver of the night. Her perfume drowned the scent of home, In tangled sheets, no need to roam Beyond this urgent, fevered touch – He craved the fire, forgot the hutch Where vows like dusty heirlooms lay. He whispered things he'd never say To Ada, stitching by the lamp, Her quiet strength a steadying damp On his own restless, seeking flame. He thought her life a placid game Of household rhythms, calm and deep, Unknowing while the city slept, John came – his friend from club and bar – Bearing not whisky, but a star Of jasmine blooms. Helen would rise, Surprise a softness in her eyes. John knew the cracks within the glass, Knew where the weary hours would pass For Ada, waiting, patient, still, A vessel needing warmth to fill. He offered laughter, shared complaint, Then more, where moonlight made no saint. Her touch, to John, was not a theft, But solace, tenderly bereft Of her own husband's absent care. They moved together on the stair, A silent dance the clockwork missed, Sealing their pact with murmured tryst While he traced patterns on her skin (That other her), deep lost within The thrill of secrets closely kept, Believing Ada soundly slept Or read, or dreamed of nothing more Than duties knocking at the door. Time spun its fragile, brittle thread. One afternoon, suspicion led Him home too soon – a nagging doubt, A sense of something wrong about A phrase John dropped, a glance too swift. He turned the key, a gentle drift Of foreign scent – not Nnenna's musk – Hung in the hall. A shadowed dusk Filled the front room. He heard a sound, A stifled gasp, abrupt, unbound, Then footsteps rushing soft, unseen, A side door clicking shut, serene. He found his wife beside the hearth, Her cheeks flushed with a second birth Of color, hair escaping neat. A book lay tumbled at her feet. "John called," she offered, voice too light, "Just borrowed back that fishing light He'd lent you months ago." Her gaze Slipped sideways through the dying haze Of afternoon. A thread of fear, So fine, hung trembling in the air. Then, near the couch, his sharp eye caught A gleam of silk, a pattern wrought In blues he knew. He stooped, heart slow, And lifted it. A scarf. And so, It wasn't Anna's, bold and red... This fragile thing, blue-threaded, led Back to a gift he'd given John Last birthday dawn. His thoughts were gone, Swept clean by cold, cascading dread. He held the evidence, soft thread By damning thread. He saw it clear – The hurried step, the scent, the fear In Ada's eyes... not for his sin, But for the lover ushered in And out the side. His trusted friend. The careful world he sought to mend With secret fires now buckled, broke. The accusations choked, unspoke. He stared at Helen, mute, undone, Holding the scarf beneath the sun That slanted through the windowpane, Illuminating all the pain He'd sown, and she, in silent rage, Had harvested on this stark stage. The clock upon the mantel chimed, Marking the hollow, empty time. -Ogangan Emmanuel Udugba
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  • Good morning friends n happy Sunday . Yesterday was my birthday if u know u wished me well let me see ur hand up cos Diaz what the spirit is saying #myngul #birthday
    Good morning friends n happy Sunday 💝. Yesterday was my birthday 🎉 if u know u wished me well let me see ur hand up cos Diaz what the spirit is saying 👌 #myngul #birthday
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  • Birthday in 3 days. Same as myngul. Ain't that beautiful
    Birthday in 3 days. Same as myngul. Ain't that beautiful
    Wow
    1
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