Out now--Schemes ‘N Love by Jomi Oyel is a light-hearted, romantic tale of playful revenge and unexpected love featuring a sassy, female lead. Read chapter one here
BLURB
Iyawa Jaseth, the life of every wild party and the queen of tipsy Instagram escapades, finds herself in a sticky situation. She’s roped into a fake engagement with none other than the guy she can’t stand, Matthias Bade.
Matthias only agrees to the sham to settle a debt, and Iyawa hatches a plan. She will make him fall head-over-heels for her, and then she’ll shatter his heart. It becomes a wild challenge between the two.
But as the heat rises between them, the carefully constructed walls around Iyawa’s heart begin to crumble. Could Matthias be the one to offer her the love she secretly craves? Or will her wild past be too much for him to handle?
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Chapter One
Iyawa Jaseth had to agree with entrepreneur and financier Mitch Thrower when he said someone wasting your time was far worse than someone wasting your money.
And she was sure this man sitting in front of her was only going to waste her time. Was this the consequences of her rebelling? Ten minutes after she got her food, and she was already getting irritated.
“Hmm.” He gave her a wink. “What do you say? Can I have your number?”
She puffed out as her gaze darted around the restaurant. Not much to see: red chairs and white tables, staff taking orders, people exiting the restaurant with white nylon bags.
The man leaned in. She turned her face to meet him and saw his hand land on hers.
Why in the world did he smell like he didn’t use cologne? She withdrew her hand as fast as possible.
“Yeah, baby. You can pretend you can’t hear me, but I’m not leaving ‘til I get your number.”
Her eyebrows set into a straight line as she had a sudden onset of nausea. No, actually, she didn’t hear him.
The man reached for her other hand.
Iyawa rolled her eyes as she pushed it away. “Okay. Okay. Enough. Oh, I have had enough. Who are you again?”
The man shifted in his seat like he hadn’t expected her to talk.
She studied him again. He’d dressed up like he was in a rock-and-roll band with metallic chains draped over his neck. How could this guy, who she didn’t even know, walk over to her seat and ask for her number like this? What made him think they were compatible or something? She hated jewellery on men.
“The name is Paul. What happened, baby?” he asked, chewing his gum.
Iyawa frowned. Where in Ikeja did this man come up again? How couldn’t he see she wasn’t interested? How can he be this desperate?
“Okay, Peter. Just so you know, I’m not interested. I don’t even know you. I just want to eat my jollof rice in peace, abeg.”
The man’s face pulled into a scowl. “The name is Paul. And I’m sorry if you couldn’t eat because of me. I can’t just leave yet.”
She held her hand up. “I’m trying to be nice. I don’t know you, and I don’t want to. I don’t do one-night-stands or whatever, so please, no number is coming from me. Please leave my table.”
Paul’s forehead creased. “Excuse me? I…I didn’t say I’m interested in one-night-stands. I just want your number.”
“And I said there is no need for it. I don’t want to know you. Is that a problem?” Her voice was getting louder now.
Paul looked at the other diners who were now looking at him. “But... But I am—”
Iyawa shook her head. “You just came here expecting me to give you my number. Just like that. What effrontery? Do I look cheap?”
Paul rubbed his palms together and then—it seemed like he just couldn’t contain it—he smirked.
“Oh, I know you well. You are that Iyawa Jaseth everyone is always seeing on the news. Aren’t you the one who likes going to party and all?” he said with a wink.
Iyawa glared at him. She knew people in Ikeja wouldn’t forget her past. She was naïve then. It’d been a year since she’d stopped her delinquent lifestyle, but people still liked to tag her to it.
“Leave my table before I shout. I can shout pretty well.”
Paul scoffed, rising from the seat. “Whatever.”
When he had left her table, she brought out a spray bottle from her purse and sprayed the content all in front of her, not paying attention to her food. Paul had been smoking, and she wasn’t about to have his lingering scent remind her of what he’d just said about her past.
Good riddance to rubbish. What even was that, Iyawa?
Just then, her phone dinged with a text.
She reached for her reading glasses in her bag and put them on. She had been using reading glasses ever since she was eighteen. She was used to it but sometimes didn’t like the weight on her nose.
Are you okay, Iyawa? Should I come to get you? It’s almost 10 pm.
She contemplated whether she should reply. Her sister, Jadesola, would rush here any moment after the passionate argument she’d witnessed back at home.
She supported her head with her palm. This was all her father’s fault. That man would seize any moment to cause an argument.
Iyawa switched off her phone. “Sorry, Jadesola. But this is my night. No distractions. I just want to have dinner.”
She glanced around the restaurant. Some people were still looking at her. By now, she was sure they were beginning to recognize her. The celebrity who once got drunk, went live, and puked.
She tried to take a spoon out of her jollof rice but now, it smelled of her perfume.
Ah, what a waste. This is all Paul’s fault.
The restaurant had looked so promising. One of the reasons why she loved Ikeja. Being the capital of Lagos and a popular city, it had beautiful restaurants and quite some views.
Maybe she’d made a good decision coming here, but now, she needed to get home. As they say, being alone at times isn’t good for the mind.
Iyawa took a breath, staring at the entrance of the restaurant. Was she ready to go back home? She wanted to stay out late today, but her father would get angry. What kind of parent said such things to their child?
Her father had said she was acting like an unserious child just because she’d once had an addiction to partying and drinking. Iyawa birthed the headlines back in those days. Media tagged her the black sheep of her well-known tech family while her sister, Jadesola, was called the successful one.
They had been in the car in the parking lot at home, all three of them—her, Jadesola, her father—and her father had been complaining to his driver about how Iyawa’s past would one day come to haunt him and leave him with shame.
She had been so embarrassed. They had just been coming from the office. Why did he have to bring her up after the long day at work? She wanted to rest, not to deal with this.
With the driver listening, she couldn’t just let it go. Her Popsi had to stop airing her dirty laundry in the public. When the driver made the mistake of glimpsing at her through the mirror, she hadn’t known what got into her to shout back at her father. She didn’t even remember what she had said, but it sure got her father angry.
“Don’t you dare use that tone when speaking to me!” he had said when he’d climbed out of the car.
“Tell me something, Popsi. How do you expect me to behave when you keep talking about me in front of our staff? What do you want from me? Don’t you ever give up? Leave me alone. I don’t even drink and party anymore.”
Her Popsi never liked it when she raised her voice, but she wasn’t even prepared for what came next.
“You never listen. God, you are such an unserious, stupid child. Not like your sister!”
Iyawa had stared at him in shock. She couldn’t believe her ears.
Yes, there were so many things about her mother he wasn’t so glad about. Something he made sure to always tell her while growing up.
But it wasn’t like things weren’t mutual between them both, so how dare he? Only her mother had a right to say this, since she was the one who’d carried her for nine months. He didn’t.
He had no right at all. Even when Jadesola stood up to their father, she couldn’t still believe he saw her as a mistake.
Iyawa might not remember so much about her mother, but she was sure they didn’t view her as a mistake.
Her father’s expression had relaxed a bit, but the old man had still gone on.
“I don’t know why you make me say things. Why can’t you just be like Jadesola?”
Those familiar words haunted her. I am not Jadesola. I’m a different, Popsi. You just can’t see it, she’d wanted to say, but her mouth couldn’t form any words. Her feet glued to the spot, she could only stare at her father.
All her life, she’d stayed away from arguments with her father. She didn’t even know why he had brought up her issue. She had silently prayed to God not to let her die from a broken heart.
“Popsi, that is just too cruel. I don’t like how you talk to my sister. Can you just let her be?” Jadesola had replied, her eyes twitching with annoyance.
That image of Jadesola and the maids looking at her with so much pity made her tummy clench and her blood boil. She hated that look. No one was to look at her with such empathy. She knew she might be a disappointment to him, and maybe she would never be like Jadesola, but no one should give her such a look.
Those words he said to her that night? Something a parent should never say. He’d crossed the line.
It wasn’t like she really enjoyed her past coming to haunt her. Yes, she was once wild. But that was all gone now. Then, it had just been the only thing to make her feel good. The only thing to make her feel better about herself.
But no one had the right to call her a mistake. God didn’t view her as one.
“You know what, Popsi? I’m out.” Those were the words she’d managed to say before she’d stormed off.
She hung her head and sighed. The only thing he could do was shut her bank account like he always did. Fair punishment.
Her phone would be filled with messages from Jadesola assuring her their father meant nothing he’d said. Iyawa loved her half-sister. They might not have been on good terms—sisters with different mothers could be pitted against one another; Iyawa knew this from seeing her college friends’ strained relationship with their half-sisters. But she couldn’t hate Jadesola, even if she had wanted to. They had been best friends since they were young. Where Iyawa had been the stubborn, reckless child, Jadesola was just the sweetest. Jadesola, when she was younger, had once cried because she didn’t like the way Iyawa and her father argued. She had always had this dream of a perfect family. Poor girl.
Sometimes, Iyawa agreed with her father. Jadesola was really the perfect, gentle, and brilliant child, and she was a mess. She wasn’t really surprised when he named her the company’s president. Something that should have been Iyawa’s position. The first-born’s job.
Her father hadn’t really given her a position yet. She just worked for the betterment of the company.
Jadesola. Her sister would be so worried if she came late. Right. No point wallowing here all night. She got up from her seat and sashayed her way to the counter, her hips swaying with grace, her black high-heeled shoes completing her signature look.
She could hear some men arguing over the last Champion’s League match and some ladies laughing in another corner of the restaurant.
And as soon as they noticed she was looking, they all stared at her. Her dark hair stood out in long waves over her shoulder, with loose curls caressing her face.
At the counter, a staff came up to her.
“Can I pay my bill now?”
The female staff placed a neat glass back into the arranged glass rack and turned to Iyawa with a smile. “Yes, of course. Cash or card?”
Iyawa returned her smile. “Card, please. That would be POS, right?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
As soon as she had gotten her receipt, she turned to go but was stopped by the staff.
“Sorry, but you look really familiar, and I can’t place where I’ve seen you.”
Iyawa tried smiling.. “I am Iyawa Jaseth.. My father’s company make those popular phones everyone call TeleSparks. You must have seen me on the television.”
Her Popsi’s telecommunications company, TeleInc, was a Nigerian electronics and mobile company in Ikeja. TeleInc had expanded to over twenty countries so she was a little surprised this woman didn’t quite know her.
The woman shook her head as her eyes widened. “Yeah. Your video, I am sorry about it. Trust me, I know it’s not easy to vomit in public.”
Iyawa managed a smile. Everyone knew the story now. She really was the black sheep of the family. It was everywhere. Social media never forgets.
At a wedding she attended once, two women were gossiping about her wasting her life.
Maybe one day, she will learn to get over it.
***
Five hours later, Iyawa got out of her Jeep Wrangler and threw her keys to a guard standing in front of the house.
She took a deep breath, her heels echoing in the silence as she walked on the long pathway widening out to the front entrance of her father’s magnificent building, one of the biggest on Kling’s Avenue.
The old man quite liked luxury. One could tell by the angel fountains at each corner. The white stucco walls of the mansion loomed five stories high, with many lights enclosed along, casting a distant gleam over its surface.
A silent prayer tugged at her heart as she approached an expansive entryway with double doors. Please, let Popsi be asleep. I can’t deal with him tonight.
Iyawa didn’t know why her father was always worried about her. She was happy with her life. If he hadn’t banned her from having her own house, she wouldn’t even be here.
Being a Yoruba lady wasn’t easy. It was forbidden for a lady to leave her father’s house except if she was getting married. To be honest, Iyawa couldn’t stand Yoruba culture and their rules. And the thing she hated most was the mockery given to men or women of marriageable age who refused to tie the knot.
Why can’t I just do what I want?
When she got inside, an artificial floral fragrance hit her nose. Iyawa sniffed it in. Her sister was so obsessed with the house smelling nice, she had potpourri in every niche of the dwelling.
If anyone thought the exterior of the mansion was deluxe, they needed to get inside. Everything was high-end décor. From the valuable and famous artworks and paintings on the white walls to the arched antique windows and chandeliers, her father showed how rich he was.
Iyawa halted in her steps and threw her gaze to the decorated high-ceiling. Oh, no.
When she got to the sitting room, she found her father seated on the cushioned cream seat. He was a bald, short man with a white beard and icy eyes that showed no emotion.
On the table in front of him was a white envelope, and her curiosity got the better of her.
Why is he sitting here staring into space? This is not good.
She stood frozen in the middle of the room. “Popsi? W… what are you doing here late in the night? You should be asleep by now.”
His expression was tight with strain. “What is the time, Iyawa? Just this evening, you walked out on me when I was talking to you, and now, you are just coming back from who knows where.”
“What? I—”
“Do not let me repeat myself. What is the time? Soro Soke!”
Iyawa glanced at her gold wristwatch. She knew when he spoke in Yoruba, he was very angry. “Three-thirty.”
Her father placed his hand underneath his chin like he was trying to think. “Three-thirty. Nibo lo lo? I told Jadesola to send texts, but you didn’t reply. There was no reason for you to think you can scare us like that.”
Iyawa didn’t respond. How could he ask about her whereabouts when he was the reason she’d turned off her phone? And why was he acting like he cared?
“Do you know how worried your sister was? Should a responsible lady be out by this time?” His voice was now high. “Couldn’t you at least check your phone?”
She rolled her eyes.
“No lady should be out by this time, and definitely not one of the Jaseths.”
Her sense of humour took over, and she couldn’t help but let out a sharp laugh. “But I am not out. It’s three-thirty, and I am home. Home with you.”
Her father’s frown went deeper. “Would you ever be serious about your life, Iyawa? I told you you needed to straighten out, and I am certain you went out to do nothing of the sort.”
“Popsi, you can’t just accuse me with no evidence. I did nothing wrong. I didn’t party this time. If you are wondering why I am coming home this time, I went out to have dinner. You can try to avoid the truth, but you said things a parent should never say to a child.”
Playing those words in her mind again made her feel something born of shame and anger.
It was typical of her father to use words to attack her. She didn’t remember when their relationship got like this, but she was sure she had not much memory of him ever speaking to her kindly, the way he did to her younger sister. When she was really little, he’d not really taken an interest, but they’d managed to make few conversations about how she was faring in school and the sort.
But as she grew older, they began arguing about different things. If it wasn’t about wearing decent clothes or getting a boyfriend at eighteen, it was always something else. There was a time when she was about to graduate from high school and he locked her in her room because he didn’t want her to go to prom. He claimed there were boys ready to devour young girls like her back then.
Releasing a harsh breath, her father reached for the white envelope, rose from his seat, and walked forward with stiff dignity, stopping in front of her.
He handed it to her. “Take these. Gba lowo mi.”
“What is this?” Her brows furrowed.
Her father let his glare do the talking.
She sighed and grabbed the envelope. There were newspaper cut-outs of headlines talking about something new. Below was a blurred screenshot of her Instagram Live.
Iyawa inhaled a deep breath, her mouth thinning with displeasure. She recognized the video. It had been a year since the live video of her drunkenly mimicking her father got out. Popsi was mad when he had first saw it. Why was it resurfacing again?
“Haba! When will people stop this? It is my life.”
“When will they stop? Maybe when you grow up and act like a woman your age should. Look at your sister, for example. Never once have I stressed over Jadesola. You should be thinking of a bright future, a husband, and not all this macho woman you are forming,” he said, his voice raw and harsh. “Why did you even make this video? Now, it’s out there again. The web never forgets. Everyone still follow your stories, and with new development in the company, this is bad for business.”
Iyawa raised her chin, trying hard not to show any emotion. Every day, she dealt with this. Maybe her father didn’t know he did this often. Comparing a child to her sister was so wrong. It was like Jadesola was so much better than her.
“I am sorry, Popsi. I can fix this.”
“Fix? You can’t even help yourself. I am the one helping you out here. Look, if you were still with your mother—”
She released a burst of choked laughter. “Don’t bring my mother into this.”
Her father exhaled angrily. “I am just a father who is tired of trying to see to it that his daughter grows up. Don’t you see I am trying so hard to get you a better future? I shouldn’t have let you off for a long time. Now, I think I need to do something.”
“Popsi, maybe you should stop trying. I’m tired of making you see I am no longer that lady,” she replied in a low, tormented voice.
Tears threatening, she spun around and stormed out of the sitting room. Her father didn’t even bother to call after her. So it was anytime they fought. They would pass altercations until one was ready to give up—usually her. She hurtled up the curved stairs to the hallway leading to her room.
When she got there, she slammed the door so hard, the frame on the wall crashed on the marble tiles.
She fell flat on the king-size bed, screaming into the pillow.
Her lungs were constricting, making it hard for her to breathe. She didn’t like arguing with her father, but no matter how much she tried to show her true self to him, he never understood her. Although Iyawa was plagued by her father’s words, there was still a stab of guilt buried in her chest.
Just then, the door opened, and she heard light footsteps. She pinched her lips tight to keep them from trembling.
A weight sank into the bed next to her, and she felt the warmth of a hand caressing her hair.
“Iyawa, Dad is not in his right senses now. He is just mad the video would get in hands of investors coming to the company. You know I love you. I am so sorry.”
Swallowing the sob rising in her throat, she looked up at her sister. Jadesola was averagely tall and caramel-skinned, just like their father. Unlike Iyawa, who had brown skin the colour of espresso. Her mother had always compared her skin to Lupita Nyong’o’s, but even so, Iyawa couldn’t help but notice how different she was from her family members.
Her sister was dressed in blue pyjamas, and with her on the bed was a brown tray containing a plate of apples and a black knife.
“Jadesola,” Iyawa croaked.
A tear fell from her eye. Even with their father’s excessive comparison between her and her sister, Iyawa loved her deeply. She couldn’t bring herself to hate Jadesola, even if she wanted to. She was just seven when Jadesola was born. She’d been the happiest to know she had a baby sister and would draw both of them in her drawing book.
When Jadesola’s mother died of cancer two years after giving birth to her, Iyawa made sure she lacked nothing. Jadesola’s mother was a very nice woman who treated Iyawa as her child so her death devastated her—and their father, who then had to raise two girls on his own. Well, with the help of nannies.
But while growing up, Iyawa had vowed to be the best sister to Jadesola, and it seemed like Jadesola had made the same vow.
Jadesola shifted the tray on the bed and hugged Iyawa, caressing her back. “I don’t know why Popsi keeps doing this. I have to talk to him. This is not cool.”
Wiping her tears, she looked at her sister. “No. No. You can’t tell him anything, please. It’ll only make it worse.”
Jadesola frowned. “Iyawa, he treats you badly. I won’t take this from him. I don’t care about your ego. Something needs to be done.”
“No, Jadesola. Please, just let him be.”
“He talks about what you do, yet he doesn’t know you. Who fought for me back in high school when everyone laughed at me for my braces?” Jadesola sighed. “Who was there for me, all those nights I cried about my mother being dead? It was all you.”
Iyawa gave a small smile. “Hey, you looked good with braces. Those boys were spewing nonsense.”
“Everyone knew my braces phase made me look horrible.” Jadesola cupped Iyawa’s cheeks with her hands. “Please, cheer up. You know I don’t like seeing you sad.”
“Did you bring these apples for me? How did you know I have not taken anything?”
Jadesola chuckled. “You don’t really eat when you go out to bars. And besides, I didn’t hear you replying Popsi as you used to so I figured you were hungry.”
“Ah, you know me better than anyone else.” Iyawa grabbed one of the apples and took a bite. “Thanks for this.”
For a moment, silence enveloped the room. It suddenly seemed like her big room wasn’t so big again. She knew the next words her sister was going to say.
Iyawa chewed slowly. “Jadesola, don’t ask me that.”
Jadesola raised her hand in surrender. “But I am curious. You know I support anything you do, but I just want to know why you go live every time you get drunk.”
Iyawa gave her a look. “I also don’t know. At least, you guys have nothing to worry about. I haven’t partied in months now.”
“I thank God for you, though.”
Thank you, Sis. I wish Popsi can just see this new me and not effects of the past.”
“He will. Just give him time.”
Iyawa sank back into the bed and reached for another apple. It was like with every apple, her hunger was increasing.
It was times like this she was most grateful for her sister. Sometimes, Jadesola didn’t understand her, but at least, she showed Iyawa she was willing to try.
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