[This story was inspired by a sex crime case reported in a Nigerian paper]
*****
An almost imperceptible head gesture from the bartender sent the woman in the tight red dress veering away from me as I perched at the bar and took a pull on my second bottle of Star Lager. Alhaji—that would be the bartender—had told me I had to start with Star Lager as it was the first local beer to be brewed in Nigeria. I had told him I'd be going through all of the brands before my thirst was quenched from having come in for a few days of R&R from weeks in the scrub around Kaduna.
Alhaji and I had become fast friends already, thanks to no more than an extra $20 U.S. passed across the bar top. He already knew all of my secrets. It had been this knowledge that had warned off the prostitute in the red dress. She didn't seem to mind. The pickings were good in the bar this evening in the Obalande district of north Kaduna—north being the area of the city north of the Kaduna River. She'd already latched onto another European. There weren't many of those in the bar and the red-dress brigade was honing in on them. Not that I was European—but I was of the color that identified me as that here. It was better to say European than American. As a European I'd be gauged as too cheap and hard to get anything out of. Americans were considered rich and needy of love and approval—pushovers.
I did feel the need for love at the moment. It had been a shortcut measure to let Alhaji know what kind of love. Plus I could tell from the way he'd looked at me from the beginning that he'd both figured me out and was on my wavelength.
I'd picked the Obalande district to land in, and specifically near the intersections of Bonny and Maiduguri roads because I'd been told this was the city's red light district, and that was the sort of comfort I was looking for this evening. Alhaji hadn't batted an eye when I told him what I was looking for. He must have made a phone call when I wasn't looking because when I followed his gaze to the door of the bar, I saw him. The nod Alhaji then gave me told me what I needed to know. The black beauty at the door was young looking, but surely was of age or Alhaji wouldn't have summoned him. I'd had my choices and I hadn't gone for the risky—but sometimes I'd done the near risky.
He was maybe a foot shorter than I was and half my weight. Berry brown, in baggy khaki shorts and a riotous-hued tie-dyed T-shirt that hung on his thin frame and ended below his crotch. He was wearing sandals. Thus he wasn't much different from any other young man I'd seen in Nigeria for the past two months, other than being sweet looking, not world weary already like so many here were much too young. The main difference was that I hoped to use him, so I took a good look. He'd obviously never been an overeater—which wasn't unusual here in central Nigeria either. But he was a handsome young man, with large, luminous eyes. He was thin in a lithe way but with nice enough muscle tone showing on his arms and legs.
He had an aura of innocence about him. I liked that. I liked to break young men who had that aura before they met me.
At the signal from Alhaji, the young man's eyes slid to me, he took a moment for an assessment, and then smiled and walked over and mounted the stool beside me at the bar. Alhaji looked expectantly at me.
"Whatever he wants," I said.
He said he wanted a Guinness Foreign Extra Stout, which, naturally, was the most expensive beer on the board. I knew he was testing me. He wasn't completely settled on the stool. I nodded to Alhaji and I could almost hear the sigh from both of them as we settled in.
"I am Diji," he said in a tenor voice, turning his face and a smile to me. He smelled slightly of All Spice and his well-controlled head of kinky-black hair was damp. It had been nearly a half hour since Alhaji and I had had a meeting of the minds and sharing of my deep, dark secrets, so it was a professional operation they had here. He'd come clean.
"Jim. I'm Jim," I answered as his beer arrived and he took a swig, never taking his eyes from mine, though. I wasn't really Jim, of course. I doubted that he expected me to be. But there was little expectation that he was Diji either.
"English?"
"No. Canadian." I still wasn't ready to own up to being an American, but Canada was closer to the truth than England was.
"Do you live in Nigeria or are you just visiting?" He probably was checking out the sugar daddy possibility.
Does one "just visit" Kaduna, in Central Nigeria, I wondered—especially now with the Boko Haram terrorists roaming around. Hadn't he noticed the gun holster at my waist? "Something in between," I answered. "I work for UNESCO. We're here drilling wells in villages in the region. Wells for water."
"Ah, you drill. And do you drill well?" He asked, not only giving me a smile but also putting a small hand on my thigh, at the knee.
So we were getting right down to it. He had no idea how vigorously I drilled.
"Yes, I drill wells," I said, and I laughed. Just so he'd know this wasn't going over my head, though, I placed a hand on the small of his back, with my middle finger running down to where his crack started. A few more inches and I'd be inside him. I felt him shudder at my touch. Might as well assert dominance early, I thought. "And it's backbreaking work," I continued. "I come away needing a good massage."
"And that's why Alhaji called me—because I give good . . . massages."
"Yes, I am in the need of a good . . . massage. Are you available?"
"Maybe, maybe not," he answered. "I haven't checked my messages in a while. I may have a regular customer in need of me."
"Perhaps if I gave you $20 U.S. not to check your phone. Right here and now. And then another $50 for the . . . massage. In my hotel room."
"Is your hotel room near here?"
"Yes. I'm staying at the One Nigeria Hotel over on Muri. Room 210."
"That's not a very good hotel," he said.