Maryjane and Annette were two peas in a pod. The
twins were identical in every way. Aside from their mother, it was very
difficult for other people, including friends, to identify one from the other.
Maryjane and Annette took advantage of this
feature and got away with numerous pranks. Their mother, Arden, had
enrolled them in the same secondary school but an incident made her separate
them. One day, Annette was caught when she tried to impersonate and write an
impromptu test for Maryjane! Her sister had broken the hostel rules and gone
for a friend’s birthday party in a neighbouring city. Unknown to her, the
mathematics teacher organised an impromptu test at the end of the
class. When she got wind of the test, Annette quickly sneaked into
the class when she taught the teacher was not watching. At the end of the
exercise, the teacher informed her that he was aware of what she had done.
The matter was brought to the notice of the
principal, who immediately summoned their mother. The principal
threatened to expel Annette and gave their mother an ultimatum— she either
withdrew Annette from the school or have the twins expelled. As a result, the
girls were separated from each other for the first time since birth.
Maryjane could not face being separated
from Annette. She wept bitterly and fell ill. Annette assured her that they
would always visit each other in school. Their mother ensured that Annette was
enrolled in a nearby school.
The incident sobered Maryjane and she became more
serious with her studies. She never played pranks in school again. Her
sister visited her whenever she had time between classes and they hung out at
the school cafeteria together. At the end of the school year, Maryjane emerged
top of her class. Annette also took top position in her class.
That year, their mother took them on a summer
vacation abroad. Although she had raised them as a single mother,
Arden took great pride in the way her twins turned out. She was not ashamed of
the fact that they were a product of a casual fling with a visiting diplomat
from the Caribbean Island.
The man, Peter Thompson, was married and
Elizabeth did not think it would be proper to break another woman’s home since
he only spent one month in Nigeria on official duty.
When the children sought to know about their
father, she came up with this explanation: “Your father was a visiting sailor.
Unfortunately, by the time you were born, I lost touch with him.’’ Since then,
however, Maryjane and Annette had secretly tried to locate their father. They
gathered data, asked questions and looked up every Peter Thompson in phone
books and other records. Their mother had no idea that they were looking for
their father.
One day, they were able to locate a man by that
name on the yellow pages but the man was listed as a diplomat from the
Caribbean Island and not a sailor as their mother made them to believe. They
eventually gave up the search and continued with their lives.
Arden worked in an advertising and public
relations agency. As one of the top managers, she was entitled to a lot of
privileges including foreign trips once a year. The company also made provision
for scholarship scheme for children of senior staff. After their secondary
education, Maryjane and Annette were placed on the company’s list of
beneficiaries. Both had wanted to study law but their mother kicked against the
idea. “Both of you cannot be in the same discipline. You have to be separated
at a certain point in your life, no matter how dreadful that sounds. That
is the only way you can grow up as independent women,’’ she advised them.
So, while Maryjane chose medicine, Annette
settled for law in different universities.
“One thing I would not have you do is board the
same flight home whenever you are on holidays. When we travel out of the
country we can afford to board the same flight. When you are on vacation, don’t
wait for each other. I am not saying something bad would happen but it is
better to take precautions,” their mother also advised.
But the two tried as much as possible to stay
close. They went to each other’s school whenever they could get away. In
her third year in school, Annette met and fell in love with George, a 400 level
medical student. George was from the Niger Delta region and his family
was very influential. He was head over heels in love with Annette and always
said he could not wait for the semester to end in order to take her home and
introduce her to his parents.
The semester finally ended and Annette and George
started making preparations to travel to Delta State to visit his parents.
George knew Annette had a twin sister but he had not met her. Each time
Maryjane came around, George was either busy or out of campus.
Annette had insisted, however, that for the trip
to Delta State, Maryjane would have to accompany them. George was excited at
the prospect. He would finally get to meet Annette’s twin. They fixed the trip
for the Christmas holidays.
Arden knew about the whole arrangement because
her daughter had told her so much about the young man. She had also spoken to
him several times on phone and he sounded like a responsible man. She was the
one who suggested that Maryjane accompany her sister to Delta State. The idea
was for them to look after each other.
They travelled a week after their semester exams
and Maryjane came to school to join them. George saw her for the first time and
to him the resemblance was uncanny. “I would never be able to tell them apart
in a million years,” he told himself.
They boarded the morning flight and in 30
minutes, they arrived in Delta State. The parents and relations of George were
awed by the twins and could not stop fussing over them.
Maryjane and Annette spent three days in Delta
State. They were to spend one week and then leave for Lagos to see their
mother. But things went horribly wrong.
*All names and events are fictitious
To be continued.
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