The husband flung his wife and children out, but his lover followed them, gave the wife 10 million naira, and whispered in her ear, “Come back in three days… there will be a surprise for you…”
Espiode 3.
The first night in the empty house was strange.
No furniture. No curtains. No sounds of a television or the hum of a ceiling fan. Just the soft breathing of Kelechi and Chiamaka, curled up on a foam mattress that a kind neighbor, Mama Bose, had lent them.
Adaeze lay awake, staring at the cracks in the ceiling.
She kept touching the keys in her pocket. Her keys.
The house was hers.
But what did that mean without a bed to sleep on? Without a pot to cook with? Without knowing if Chukwudi would return from London and find a way to take it all back?
She prayed.
Not for revenge. Not for money.
She prayed for strength.
The next morning, she walked to the market in Ojuelegba with the ten million naira still tucked safely in her bra. She didn’t touch most of it. She bought only what was necessary: a secondhand mattress, a kerosene stove, some plates, a bucket, and food that would last two weeks.
Fifty-two thousand naira.
She held onto the rest like a lifeline.
By evening, the house felt less like a tomb and more like a shelter.
Kelechi helped her sweep. Chiamaka arranged the plates on a wooden crate. They ate jollof rice by candlelight, and for the first time since the rain, Chiamaka laughed.
“Mummy, is this our new house?”
Adaeze nodded slowly.
“Yes, my love. This is our new house.”
—
Three days later, a letter arrived.
No stamp. No return address. Just her name in careful handwriting: Adaeze, No. 14 Oluwole Street.
She opened it with trembling hands.
Inside was a single page.
I saw what he did to you. I know you have the house now. But there is something else you should know. Chukwudi didn’t just leave you. He left debts. Big ones. The men he borrowed from in Onitsha will come looking for him. When they find out he’s gone, they will come to the last address they have. Your address. Leave before they arrive. I’m sorry.
No name.
Adaeze read the letter three times.
Her first instinct was fear. Pure, cold fear.
Then anger.
Then something else.
She thought about Amara’s words: I was just the hammer. He was the one swinging it.
Chukwudi had built nothing. He had borrowed, lied, taken, and left behind a trail of destruction. And now, those debts had her address.
She looked at her children playing on the floor.
Then she looked at the remaining money.
Nine million, nine hundred and forty-eight thousand naira.
She made a decision.
—
That night, she called her friend Nneka, the one who had let them sleep on her couch.
“Nneka, I need a lawyer. Not Amara. Someone else. Someone who knows about debt and property.”
Nneka was silent for a moment.
“I know someone. Barrister Femi. He’s tough. But he’s honest.”
“Can you arrange a meeting tomorrow?”
“Consider it done.”
Adaeze hung up and stared out the window.
The streets of Lagos were alive as always—hawkers calling out, danfo buses honking, generators growling. Somewhere in that chaos, she had to find a way to protect what was hers.
She thought about running.
But running was what Chukwudi did.
She was done running.
—
The next morning, she dressed in her best clothes—a faded but clean Ankara gown—and left the children with Mama Bose. She took a danfo to Yaba, where Barrister Femi’s office sat above a pharmacy.
He was a large man with kind eyes and a voice that rumbled like thunder.
“Sit down, my sister. Nneka told me everything.”
For two hours, he explained her options.
The house was legally hers—Amara had done that much correctly. But the debt collectors had a claim against Chukwudi, and if they could prove he owned the house at the time of the debt, they could try to seize it.
“However,” Barrister Femi said, leaning back, “there is a way. If you can show that the house was transferred to you before the debts were incurred—and Amara backdated the documents to the day before Chukwudi took the loans—then you are safe.”
Adaeze’s heart pounded.
“Can Amara do that?”
Barrister Femi smiled slowly.
“Amara is the one who sent you that letter, didn’t she? She’s trying to warn you because she knows what’s coming. I think she will help. But you have to ask her.”
Adaeze left his office with a plan.
She didn’t have Amara’s number. But she knew where Amara worked—a law firm in Ikeja.
The next morning, she went there.
The receptionist was cold until Adaeze said, “Tell Amara that the woman from the rain is here.”
Five minutes later, Amara walked out.
She looked thinner. Her eyes were red.
“You shouldn’t be here,” Amara whispered.
“You sent me that letter.”
Amara’s face crumbled.
“I didn’t know what else to do. I couldn’t let them hurt you. Not after everything.”
Adaeze took a breath.
“I don’t forgive you for what you did. But I need your help. Barrister Femi said you can backdate the transfer documents.”
Amara stared at her.
“That’s illegal.”
“So was helping a married man destroy his family. But you did that anyway.” Adaeze’s voice was calm, but sharp. “Now you have a chance to do something illegal that saves two innocent children. Which person are you now, Amara?”
The silence stretched.
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