By Vigil Chime
STORY SYNOPSIS
MY SONGBIRD CAN DANCE is a story written in three parts. Book 1 tells the
story of a Nigerian family living in New York City in the present day.
Nathaniel and Anne Ofordilli came to America to pursue the American
Dream. However, after the couple was blessed with two daughters – Ada
and Rachel – the dream turned into a virtual nightmare. The stresses of
being immigrants in a foreign country soon overwhelmed them and the
marriage collapsed.
Nathaniel immediately remarried, to a
white woman who bore him four sons. His joy of sons eclipsed his two
daughters and in time, he learned to forget about the girls. Anne, on
the other hand, did not remarry, and because her daughters’ father
abandoned them, she went out of her way to spoil her children, in
particular Rachel who was only 6 years old when her father left the
family.
The psychological trauma of her father’s
abandonment has crippled Rachel’s emotional development, to the point
she only dates older men who are in essence her sugar daddies. To make
matters worse, she dropped out of Columbia University, one of the most
prestigious schools in America. She prefers to hang out in nightclubs
then returns late at night to sleep all day. At 25 years old, she has
held no job in her life because her mother and her sugar daddies support
her.
The story, then, almost
exclusively focuses on Rachel. An irresponsible life can only go so far,
so hers begins its downward spiral when she walks in on her man with
another woman. Rachel nearly kills the woman if not that her boyfriend
intervenes. Despondent, she returns home to find that her mother has
changed the locks on the door. Anne has finally had it with her useless
and lazy daughter and implores Rachel to go out into the world and make
something of herself.
Hurt to be cast out on the same
day she caught her man cheating, Rachel ends up at her best friend’s
home. Because the best friend is worried about Rachel messing with her
own boyfriend, she eventually asks Rachel to leave. Hurt again, Rachel
has nowhere else to go but her father’s house. She asks him if she can
stay with him and his family, but Nathaniel categorically refuses to let
her in.
Feeling unwanted and unloved, Rachel determines
to commit suicide by jumping off a cliff. Standing on that cliff and
thinking about the mess she’s made of her life, Marcus Peyton, a 42-year
old black American, comes upon her and is immediately smitten with the
gorgeous dark chocolate beauty. Marcus does not know if he should
comfort her or leave her be. In the end, he decides to intervene and ask
her what’s wrong. This will prove the worst mistake of his life.
He
assumes she is African because she looks like one. Rachel allows him to
believe this – going so far as to make up a story of being from a poor
village in Nigeria. Now in America, she is poor and wretched and an
illegal alien. In fact, she was fired from her job and now has no place
to go. Marcus invites her to be the nanny of his two small children.
Rachel accepts the job offer on the spot since she has nowhere else to
go. But Marcus’ motive for bringing her under his roof is to take
advantage of her sexually. His wife, Yvette, is too distracted by her
addiction to drugs to be mindful of her husband’s lust over the young
nanny.
Rachel soon discovers Yvette’s drug problem and
tries to help the woman kick the habit for the sake of her marriage and
her children. In the meantime, Marcus is still making advances towards
Rachel and Rachel is doing her best to ignore him. She is trying to be
responsible and do the right thing, just like her mother wanted.
Since
Marcus will still not leave her alone, however, Rachel decides to leave
the household. She informs the family she is quitting, effective
immediately. She is trying to locate her suitcase in the basement of the
house the night before she is to leave when Marcus enters to help. He
discovers drug items beside the suitcase and well assumes the filthy
material belong to Rachel.
Rachel has no choice but to admit to
him the drugs are not hers but his wife’s property. Angered she would be
lying about his wife, Marcus snaps and attacks Rachel. Hearing all the
noise, Yvette enters to see Marcus beating the girl to near death. She
does not intervene to rescue Rachel, believing her husband would beat
her too if she confesses to the drugs. Yvette walks out, leaving Marcus
to continue assaulting Rachel. He does not stop with just the beating.
He stands over her and urinates on her. Rachel feels the slime of his
urine pouring all over her head and face before she blacks out into
unconsciousness. This is the end of Book 1.
After she
recovers from her injuries, now in Book 2, Rachel determines to destroy
Marcus and Yvette, too. But it’s how she does it that proves without a
doubt certain individuals on this earth should never be crossed. You the
reader cannot anticipate how she does it. You will not see it coming.
But at the end of Book 3, you will be left stunned and horrified.
Here’s
how she does it. Marcus is remorseful for how he treated her and begs
her forgiveness. She agrees to forgive him on one condition – he has to
believe her that Yvette is a drug addict. They set a trap where Yvette
is caught by Marcus about to inject herself with heroin. Angered that
his wife would lie about her drug use, which led to him beating up
Rachel in the first place, Marcus sends Yvette to a drug program to
clean up. This is Rachel’s first plan of vengeance against Yvette –
remove her from the house. Next, she takes over the woman’s husband by
beginning an affair with her. Marcus, foolishly, believes Rachel has
truly forgiven him. She has not.
The biggest challenge
for Rachel is Marcus’ destruction, both professionally and emotionally.
He is a theater director, and has written the greatest play of his
career. He originally cast Yvette his wife in the lead role. In fact,
the theater in which the play will be produced is the couple’s. They
liquidated their savings to purchase the theater. But Since Yvette is
now a drug-user, Marcus has to find someone else to take her place.
Because she is already sleeping with him, Rachel convinces Marcus to
cast her in the role. Against all sensible advise by everyone near him,
Marcus does this.
When Yvette returns from drug
treatment, now Book 3, she discovers that Marcus has given her role to
their nanny and that the nanny is now sleeping with her man! Yvette
cannot take these realities and goes mad. She runs away from her family
and relapses into hardcore drug use. She will not be heard from again.
On
opening night of the play, Rachel sets into motion the greatest role of
her life. Instead of performing like a true and brilliant actress, she
performs like an inexperienced one – this in full view of New York
City’s finest people and politicians. The critics cannot believe how bad
she is and destroy Marcus’ career in scathing reviews that will be
published the next day.
Rachel does not stop there. She
burns down the theater by literary setting it on fire. She corners
Marcus in a room and confesses everything she has done to him ever since
he nearly killed her by beating her. Worst, she says to him, it was his
literary pissing on her that really drove her to madness. Incensed
beyond reason to have been so duped, Marcus resorts to kill her on the
spot.
He chases her down a very busy street. Rachel
dashes across the street. Marcus is not mindful of the speeding cars as
he attempts to equally cross. He is hit by a car, and is rendered a
cripple. He will spend the rest of his life in a wheelchair, without his
wife and kids, wondering why in the world he ever stopped that day to
find out why that stupid girl was crying on that cliff in the first
place. He should have minded his business and left her there.
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