The Spare Chair

in Freewriters6 days ago

Emeka and Kunle met in JSS1. Emeka was the one with the jokes, the one who could make the whole class laugh without getting a detention. Kunle was quiet, sharp, the one teachers called “serious-minded.” Different, but they fit.

For 15 years they were that pair. Shared textbooks, shared apartments in UNILAG, shared heartbreaks. When Emeka’s dad died, Kunle handled the burial arrangements. When Kunle failed his first ICAN exam, Emeka showed up at 2am with beer and no lecture.

Then Kunle got the job. Senior Analyst at a fintech in Victoria Island. Six figures. Company car. His name in TechCabal.

Emeka was still freelancing. Graphic design. Some months were good. Most weren’t. He’d started dodging Kunle’s calls because “bro, let me call you back” was easier than saying “I can’t afford to meet at that restaurant.”

The jealousy didn’t start as jealousy. It started as a weight.

It was in the way Kunle would say, “Just apply na, I can refer you,” like Emeka hadn’t sent 60 applications that month. It was in the way Kunle paid for everything without asking, then forgot his wallet the one time Emeka wanted to treat him. It was in the silence after Kunle talked about his new apartment in Lekki Phase 1.

Emeka told himself he was happy for his friend. He was. But he also started counting.

Kunle posted his promotion on LinkedIn. Emeka liked it. Then muted him for 30 days.
Kunle bought a new iPhone. Emeka’s screen was cracked, but he said “battery life is all hype anyway.”
Kunle started dating Ife, a product manager. Beautiful, smart. Emeka said “she’s good for you” and went home to delete her number after she followed him.

The crack became a break on Kunle’s birthday.

Kunle rented a small rooftop in Ikeja. Just close friends. Emeka came late, wearing his best shirt. The one with the frayed collar. Everyone was already there, laughing at something Kunle said. Ife was leaning on his shoulder.

“Emmy!” Kunle shouted. “We kept a chair for you.”

There it was. The spare chair. At the edge of the table.

Emeka sat. Drank. Laughed at the right times. When it was time for speeches, he stood up.

He meant to say “You’ve always been my brother.”
What came out was: “Some of us are still trying to find our feet while others are running marathons.”

The table went quiet. Kunle’s smile dropped. Ife looked at her plate.

Emeka sat down. The spare chair felt like the only honest thing in the room.

They didn’t talk for three months. Not a fight. Just… nothing. The kind of silence that confirms what you were afraid of.

It was Mama who fixed it. She called Emeka on a random Tuesday. “Kunle said you’re not picking his calls. Did you people fight? Because I didn’t raise you to be stupid.”

Emeka went to Kunle’s office. No appointment. The receptionist said “Oga is in a meeting.” Emeka waited two hours.

Kunle came out, saw him, and just sighed. “Let’s go.”

They ended up at a buka in Yaba. The kind with plastic chairs and no spare anything.

“You think I don’t know?” Kunle said, after the food came. “You think I didn’t see it?”

“See what?”

“That I became someone you couldn’t look at.” Kunle didn’t sound angry. Just tired. “Do you know I rewrote your CV three times and sent it to my HR without telling you? They said you needed 2 more years experience. I didn’t tell you because I knew how it would sound.”

Emeka looked down. “I’m sorry. For the birthday thing.”

“I’m not angry about the birthday,” Kunle said. “I’m angry that you’ve been alone in this. That you’d rather be jealous than let me be your friend.”

Emeka finally looked up. “I didn’t want your help. I wanted your life.”

“Then take it,” Kunle said. “Because my life without you in it is empty. I got the job, Emmy. But you’re the reason I didn’t quit in year one. You think I don’t need you anymore?”

They didn’t hug. They were Nigerian men. They just finished their food.

On the way out, Kunle pulled Emeka’s cracked phone from his pocket. “Give me this.”
“Why?”
“Because you’re too proud to ask, and I’m too stubborn to stop giving.” He handed Emeka his own phone, the new one. “Take mine. I’ll use this one till it dies.”

Emeka held it. It was still warm. “You sure?”
Kunle opened his car door. “There are no spare chairs with me, Emeka. There’s just the seat next to me. You either take it, or we both stand.”

Emeka got in.

Jealousy doesn’t end when one person wins. It ends when both friends remember they’re not opponents. When they decide the friendship is the prize, not the job, the money, or the girl.

They still aren’t the same. Emeka launched his agency last year. Kunle invested. Quietly. No LinkedIn post.

But the spare chair is gone. Now they pull up an extra one.

Want a different ending — maybe where the friendship doesn’t survive?

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