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"Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie - Literature - Nairaland

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"Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by lalasticlala(m): 6:42pm On Oct 24, 2017
‘Janelle Asked to the Bedroom,’ a Micronovel by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
By CHIMAMANDA NGOZI ADICHIE

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is one of seven cover stars of T Magazine’s Oct. 22nd Greats issue. Here, she writes a micronovel which debuted exclusively on our Instagram account, @tmagazine, and on tmagazine.com.

Janelle was surprised when the butler asked her to come up to the bedroom. He looked disapproving, stiffly leading the way upstairs, as though he thought her unworthy to be allowed anywhere farther than the lowest floor where the gym was.

Janelle followed him through the apartment; there was gold everywhere, on the floors and armchairs and edges of walls, that gave the décor a sallow ugliness. It felt to Janelle like an oblivious person’s idea of a wealthy home. She knew the butler expected her to be impressed — he had the sly arrogance of a blindly loyal servant — and for a moment she wanted to burst into laughter. She would not live here if she were paid to. Imagine waking everyday to such crass cheerlessness.

With a sigh in his manner, clearly wishing Mrs. T had not made this unusual request, he knocked on the bedroom door. It, too, was edged in gold. He waited to hear “come in” before ushering Janelle in, and then he lingered a moment, as if he might need to protect Mrs. T.

But Mrs. T waved him away. She was propped against a hundred pillows cradling her laptop.


Credit Illustration Konstantin Kakanias

“Hi Janelle, sit down here,” she said, patting the bed, and Janelle knew right away that something was off.

Mrs. T had changed after her husband won the election. A great lonely sadness had settled on her, stiffening her shoulders and spine. Her Pilates suffered. Simple moves she had fluidly done before failed her: Her back would not flatten doing the hundreds, her legs would not point to the sky. Week after week, Janelle saw the heaviness of her spirit, the purplish bags under her eyes, the way her English worsened and slurred from fatigue.

But today was different. Mrs. T had, until now, never let go of that carefulness that seemed to Janelle a product of being the wrong kind of European, a knowingness, a determination never to be found out. Which perhaps was why she hardly drank and why she spoke of drugs with disdain. But today she looked disheveled, her manner distracted. Was she on something? Had she cracked and taken pills? She seemed like a ravaged flightless bird, and the bed’s carved gold headboard part of an open cage that she inexplicably could not leave.

“Is everything O.K.?” Janelle asked, still standing, her professional face pleasantly blank, her voice even. “If you don’t feel up to it today, we can reschedule for tomorrow.”

“Please sit down,” Mrs. T said.

Janelle remained standing. Of course she had noticed Mrs. T’s overtures over the past months, the lost longing in Mrs. T’s eyes, the tentative invitations. Would you like a glass of juice, Janelle? Do you know a person good in massage, Janelle? You are always in a rush to leave, Janelle. But they had happened less and less since her husband won, as though her sadness had overpowered her longing. And Janelle wasn’t sure what this was about, being asked into this room with its dense carpet and wide bed, but she would entertain no crap.


“I don’t feel comfortable sitting down,” she said. “Is everything O.K.?”

“Please sit down,” Mrs. T said. “Please.”

Her voice was shaky. Janelle walked over and sat on the edge of the bed. How was it that these white people were so powerful and yet she often felt sorry for them?

“This weekend I was by myself and I was thinking about many things,” Mrs. T said.

Janelle said nothing.

“How was your weekend?” Mrs. T asked.

“It was good, thanks.”

“You do anything?”

“No, not really. It was quiet.” Janelle had in fact been at a rally on Saturday, holding a placard her son had made for her, pale blue cardboard, edges sealed with tape, bold words colored in: HEALTH CARE = HUMAN RIGHT.

“Look, I am watching this,” Mrs. T said, and turned her laptop around. A YouTube video of Michelle Obama visiting a class. Even from her quick glance, Janelle noticed the elegant ease of her manner, the glow of her beautiful brown legs.

“We all miss her,” Janelle said, and only after the words had left her mouth did she wish she could take them back. It had come so quickly, those words that she and everyone she knew said whenever Michelle Obama came up, that she had forgotten to whom she was speaking. But Mrs. T seemed not to have heard. She gestured to Janelle to come closer.

“Look at this. I always look at them for the inspiration.”

She clicked on a folder and launched a series of photos of Michelle Obama, each filling the screen, from the early years of her high-placed belt, to the later years of the subtly swingy weave. Mrs. T watched with concentration, as though seeing them for the first time. Minutes passed. Mrs. T seemed to expect Janelle to get into this strange photo-viewing exercise.

“That’s a lot of pictures,” Janelle said.

Mrs. T pushed the laptop away. Her silk robe fell open to reveal the delicate beige lace of her nightdress.

“Today I feel that I cannot do Pilates.”

“That’s okay. We can reschedule,” Janelle said and got up.

“Stay, stay please. Do you know that feeling that somebody hates you but also he wants you?”

Janelle stopped, curious. “Yes, I think so. Why?”

“There is somebody in my husband’s administration who is like this.”

“Who?” Janelle asked.

Mrs. T ran a hand through her hair, a gesture that Janelle had never before seen her do. Her eyes darted around unnaturally. She seemed as if she forgot things almost as soon as they came to her mind.

“Sometimes you have this dream and you get this dream and then one day… one day everything changes and it can never again be the same. It changes forever!” She said and abruptly clapped her hands, a gesture that might have been forceful had it not been so limp. Her cellphone rang and she looked at it and her gloom briefly lifted. “Barron,” she said. She spoke Slovenian, the words mellifluous in Janelle’s ears. Sometimes Barron came down to the gym during their sessions, sweetly shy and polite, dependent on his mother for his sense of self. There was a delicacy about him that reminded Janelle of her son.


“Janelle, do you have children?” Mrs. T asked after the call.

“Yes, I have a son,” Janelle said. She would not have done so before, but because of the fleeting intimacy of this moment in this room with this woman whose sadness and strangeness had loosened in Janelle something usually tightly bound, she said, “He’s going to Harvard this fall.” And she remembered again the blinding pride of the day the letter came, her son delighted by her screaming, but telling he still wanted to consider the other acceptances from Williams and Yale. And later, she and Marvin had held each other and reminisced about the difficult years, the moving for better schools, the scraping to go private, the dreams and fears they had for their dark, tall, muscular son, so intelligent, so earnest, so sensitive.

“Harvard?” Mrs. T said. “The school?”

Janelle’s body tensed. “Yes, Harvard the school.”

“He got scholarship to go?” Mrs. T said, more statement than question.

How automatic, this assumption of a scholarship, and Janelle knew she meant a scholarship not of smarts but of skin.

The sudden force of Janelle’s rage shook her. She stood up from the bed and faced Mrs. T.

“People like you think we never earn anything, we never achieve anything,” Janelle said.

Mrs. T looked confused. “I am sorry. I think you misunderstand me.”

“You never finished college but you kept lying about it.”

Now there were tears in Mrs. T’s eyes. “I am sorry, this is not what I mean. Please do not go.”

Janelle disliked losing control. She so rarely did, and wished she had been able to rein it in today, as she did so often when her clients, both private and those at the studio classes, when they let loose their words that stung even more for being well meaning. She took the slow breaths she had long used for control. Mrs. T was trying to get up, her face pale and gaunt. Janelle had never seen a face so utterly joyless and in her anger, she felt also a pitying contempt and a contemptuous pity.

“If you would like to reschedule please text and let me know. And I’ll meet you in the home gym downstairs.”

She walked to the door and opened it.

Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/20/t-magazine/chimamanda-ngozi-adichie-micronovel.html

[img]https://qzprod.files./2017/10/rts1gdjr-e1508692417723.jpg?quality=80&strip=all&w=1600[/img]Fiction about the US first lady. (Reuters/Kevin Lamarque)

11 Likes

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by HungerBAD: 6:43pm On Oct 24, 2017
Ok

2 Likes

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by TheHistorian(m): 6:51pm On Oct 24, 2017
I am not idle.

24 Likes 1 Share

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by toyzeal(m): 6:53pm On Oct 24, 2017
d person below me may have much time reading dis long story

1 Like

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by GREATESTPIANIST: 6:53pm On Oct 24, 2017
I dnt get what the hullabaloo is all about! Its only fiction!!!!!!!!

20 Likes

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by BornnAgainChild(f): 6:53pm On Oct 24, 2017
Just hear to read comment

4 Likes

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Iscoalarcon: 6:53pm On Oct 24, 2017
When I am ready to marry I will find a beautiful and brilliant woman like this womqn kiss

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Koolking(m): 6:53pm On Oct 24, 2017
Similar topic has already been moved to front page. Lala this is duplication unless you are fighting for a spot on frontpage.

I think Adichie is a low self esteem racist

45 Likes 5 Shares

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Nobody: 6:54pm On Oct 24, 2017
bull crap, is it only me i don't give a hoot

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by emeijeh(m): 6:54pm On Oct 24, 2017
What do I think?



Me: It is fiction
Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by hotspec(m): 6:54pm On Oct 24, 2017
Kudos. Young woman.

1 Like

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by FreshShavedBalls(m): 6:54pm On Oct 24, 2017
It is always either the race card or the feminist card with this one.

62 Likes 4 Shares

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Bibors(m): 6:54pm On Oct 24, 2017
Not settled to read this novel now.
Make I book space, the poster below me has something to say.

1 Like

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Nobody: 6:54pm On Oct 24, 2017
undecided i think nothing... I am a black man, I don't like reading ...

22 Likes

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Nobody: 6:55pm On Oct 24, 2017
Shït.

1 Like

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by tstx(m): 6:55pm On Oct 24, 2017
Beautifully Written

3 Likes

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Nobody: 6:56pm On Oct 24, 2017
Can't read dis long epistle. D pesin below me might have sometin to say angry
Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by sirjentul05(m): 6:56pm On Oct 24, 2017
How the Bleep did I even get here?

3 Likes

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by kay29000(m): 6:56pm On Oct 24, 2017
I think it is channeling talent and energy in the wrong direction.

12 Likes 1 Share

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Lordcenturion2(m): 6:57pm On Oct 24, 2017
A beautiful written by suppose biafra daughter who always thinks like an educated afonja.... cheesy cheesy

2 Likes

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by delugajackson: 6:57pm On Oct 24, 2017
Since its fiction, its not meant to make one feel offended. So, I guess its just a nice piece.

I really wish I could write like this though, but I just keep losing the flow.

4 Likes

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by BornAgainMay: 6:57pm On Oct 24, 2017
sad
Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by kay29000(m): 6:57pm On Oct 24, 2017
FreshShavedBalls:
It is always either the race card or the feminist card with this one.

Exactly!

14 Likes

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Nobody: 6:58pm On Oct 24, 2017
it was absolutely unnecessary and disrespectful..
all these liberal leftists its either they are playing the race card or feminism.
imagine if a white writer had written some negative fiction about Michelle Obama, I'm sure chimamanda will be one of those crying racism and oppression...

why openly mock trump's wife and daughter because u dislike his administration..
.
.
addendum: although published this year, this novel was actually written in 2016.
that doesn't change my opinion, it is still a useless and unnecessary novel.art is not an excuse to be stupid.
you can't hide under the cover of fiction to launch veiled digs at the trumps.

59 Likes 7 Shares

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by olasaad(f): 6:59pm On Oct 24, 2017
Chai!!! Lazy people full nairaland. See them above na only ftc they sabi
Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Flexherbal(m): 6:59pm On Oct 24, 2017
Nice piece!
Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Robbin7(m): 7:00pm On Oct 24, 2017
Nothing!

2 Likes

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Nobody: 7:01pm On Oct 24, 2017
Still reading it.....
Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Cyberdroid: 7:01pm On Oct 24, 2017
Iscoalarcon:
When I am ready to marry I will find a beautiful and brilliant woman like this womqn kiss
Start by becoming a "handsome and intelligent man".

3 Likes

Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by introvertme: 7:02pm On Oct 24, 2017
Victim card grin
Re: "Janelle Asked To The Bedroom" By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Mrkumareze(m): 7:02pm On Oct 24, 2017
Who read the story should give me a summary of it

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