Sitting in the university library, minding my own business. Just like a good student. That's what I was doing until she came along. Who am I talking about? Ajooni Patil, or AJ, as I call her. Hello boo, she said, wrapping her arms around me, and gently kissing me on the cheek. Her lips pressed against my cheek sent a thrill down my spine, in the most pleasurable way possible. Good to see mamas, I said, looking her up and down and grinning wolfishly, as is my custom. What are you looking at? AJ asked, and grabbed the mouse from my hand, clicking on my Facebook page.
I recently 'liked' a picture a lady friend posted. AJ's eyes narrowed, and she pointed to the picture of a big-bottomed, dark-skinned Jamaican chick in a White bikini. My former high school classmate Jacqueline Vermont. We went to Prom together. She lives in Winnipeg now. Um I can explain, I said sheepishly, a bit troubled by the smoldering anger in Ajooni's eyes. Unlike her picture right now, AJ said through gritted teeth. Gulping, I did as she asked. This isn't what this looks like, I told AJ as she rolled her eyes. My name is Marcel Charles, M.C. to my friends, and I'm an MBA student at Carleton University in the City of Ottawa, Ontario. I'm dating the most wonderful gal in the world, Ajooni Patil. Indian girls don't usually go for brothers, except in that movie with Denzel.
When I met AJ at a basketball game pitting Carleton University against the University of Ottawa, sparks flew between us. Truth be told, she made the first move. Hello fan-boy, she said, looking at my Marvel Comics Blade T-shirt. I'm a fan of Wesley Snipes, I said bashfully, blushing as the pretty Indian gal smiled at me. Damn she's smoking hot! Five-foot-nine, curvy and busty, with long Black hair, light brown eyes and dark bronze skin. And she looked awesome in a blue T-shirt and Black jeans. Grinning at me, she told me that I looked good with my superhero T-shirt. Damn, this chick knew how to make a brother blush. I've always been shy when it comes to women. I'm six-foot-one, dark-skinned and somewhat chubby, and I speak with a thick French accent. An accent I would do anything to get rid of, for it marks me as 'other'.
Before we get going, here's a little about me. I was born on January 31, 1990 and raised in the town of Jacmel, Republic Haiti, and moved to Ontario, Canada, with my parents, James and Leanne Charles in the summer of 2006. Eight years later, I still sound like a foreigner, though I've become a Canadian citizen. Although AJ and I are both immigrants, we're from radically different backgrounds. She was born in the City of Toronto, Ontario, to immigrant parents from the region of Goa, Republic of India. This gal is Canadian through and true. AJ played hockey in high school, loves the Toronto Maple Leafs and considers Prime Minister Stephen Harper one of her heroes. AJ's parents, Dhaliwal and Amina Patil practices the religion of Sikhism originally but AJ considers herself an atheist. Me? I believe in only two things, the Lord Jesus Christ and the beautiful game, which is soccer. As a recent immigrant whose family went through hell before we got our citizenship rights, I'm not in love with the conservative government and its anti-immigration stance. As you can see, we're very different people.
Our first dates were awkward, but charming, now that I think about it. AJ was new to metropolitan Ottawa, and I delighted in showing her all the hot spots, few that they are. I took her dancing at Mansion Night Club downtown, and the Silver City movie theater and the nearby Gloucester Mall became our favorite hangout. For the life of me, I can't imagine why someone from a lively, racially diverse and fun place like Toronto would move to boring little Ottawa. Whenever possible, I like to escape to either Toronto or Montreal. What can I say? I love big cities. AJ and I began chilling together, and got to know each other better.
I considered myself lucky that AJ took an interest in me. A few months before I met AJ, I got dumped by my Haitian ex-girlfriend Nadine Toussaint. We'd been together for eleven months when she dumped me out of the blue. Apparently, she considered me boring and dull, and felt like our relationship was going nowhere. A week after she dumped me, I saw her at the Saint Laurent Mall with an Italian dude. Shock of a lifetime for me, that's for damn sure. I'll be honest with you, I didn't see it coming. Nadine's betrayal shattered a part of me. I've always been a nice, friendly and easygoing guy. To women, a nice guy is useless and safe. They prefer the bad boy type. Well, I'm a Black male. I can't behave like the roughneck, thuggish type simply to impress females. It might get me shot. I'm a minority in a town full of trigger-happy cops.
Like every couple, AJ and I have our ups and downs. I do wish she'd stop with her jealousy and hissy fits whenever she seems me talk to another female. I was invisible to the ladies at my university and at my church in Nepean until I began dating Ajooni Patil. Seriously, university-educated Black men who are gentlemanly and God-fearing are not what most women in our communities are looking for. We're considered safe and boring by them. The moment I had AJ in my life and we started showing up places together, all of a sudden a lot of girls noticed I existed. The young Black women in my church took notice of me for the first time ever. See how that works? I was thrilled to be dating someone as beautiful, unique and intelligent as Ajooni. Seriously, I practically worshipped the ground she walked on. So why was she tripping?