Six months passed.
The rains came again, but this time, when the water drummed on the roof of No. 14 Oluwole Street, it sounded like music. Adaeze had patched the leaks herself—a small triumph she celebrated with beans and plantain.
Kelechi was now in primary three. Chiamaka had learned to write her name. The house had slowly filled with things: a secondhand television, a refrigerator that hummed more than it cooled, plastic chairs arranged around a small table where they ate every evening.
Adaeze had started a business.
She remembered her mother’s words: If you know how to cook, no one can starve you. So she began selling rice and stew at the junction near the market. Just a small pot at first. Then two pots. Then three.
Nneka helped her get a permit. Mama Bose sent customers. Even Barrister Femi stopped by once, bought five packs of jollof rice, and said, “This is better than my wife’s.” (Adaeze later found out his wife didn’t cook.)
The money from Amara remained mostly untouched—a safety net, a shield. But the money from the food business paid the school fees. Bought the uniforms. Put gas in the stove.
Adaeze was learning to stand on her own.
—
One Tuesday afternoon, a familiar car parked outside.
A black sedan. Tinted windows.
Adaeze’s hands froze over the pot of stew.
She watched as the back door opened. A man stepped out.
Chukwudi.
He looked nothing like the man who had flung them out six months ago. He was thinner. His clothes were wrinkled. His once-sharp beard was patchy and unkempt. He walked with a limp.
He stood at the gate and looked at the house—her house—with something like hunger.
Adaeze walked out slowly. She did not run. She did not scream.
She stood at the gate, arms crossed.
“Go away, Chukwudi.”
He tried to smile. It came out like a wound.
“Adaeze, please. I have nowhere else to go. London didn’t work out. The men in Onitsha found me. They took everything. My car. My phone. They broke my leg.” He touched his left knee. “I came back because… because this is my home.”
“This is not your home. You gave it to me. Remember?”
Chukwudi’s face twisted.
“Amara tricked me. I was angry. I didn’t know what I was signing.”
Adaeze laughed. It was a cold sound, one she didn’t recognize as her own.
“You knew. You just didn’t care. You threw your children into the rain like garbage. And now you want to come back because you’re the one who’s wet?”
Kelechi appeared at the door. He stared at his father with wide eyes.
Chukwudi reached out a hand.
“My son…”
Kelechi stepped back.
Chukwudi’s hand fell.
Adaeze opened the gate just wide enough to step through. She stood face to face with the man who had broken her.
“Listen to me carefully,” she said. “You will not come here again. You will not speak to my children. You will not call this your home. If you want to be a father, you can send money for school fees. You can write letters. But you will not step inside that gate.”
Chukwudi’s eyes glistened.
“Adaeze, I am begging you…”
“Begging is for people who have something to offer. You have nothing. You are nothing. You made sure of that yourself.”
She turned and walked back inside.
She closed the gate.
She locked it.
Behind her, she heard him call her name once. Twice. Then the sound of the sedan driving away.
She leaned against the door and pressed her forehead to the wood.
Kelechi touched her arm.
“Mummy, is Daddy gone?”
“Yes, my love.”
“Are you sad?”
Adaeze thought about it.
“No,” she said. “I’m not sad. I’m just… tired. But that’s okay. Tired means I’m still here.”
—
That night, she called Nneka.
“He came back,” Adaeze said.
“Who?”
“Chukwudi.”
The silence on the phone was sharp.
“What did he want?”
“To come home.”
“God forbid,” Nneka whispered. “What did you do?”
“Sent him away.”
“Good. You hear me? Good. Don’t let that man near you again. He will drain you like a dry well.”
Adaeze smiled into the darkness.
“I know.”
She hung up and looked at her children sleeping on the bed—the real bed, the one with a proper frame. Chiamaka had kicked off her blanket. Kelechi had his hand on his sister’s head, as if protecting her even in sleep.
Adaeze pulled the blanket over them both.
Then she sat on the plastic chair by the window and watched the street.
The hawkers were gone now. The danfo buses had stopped. Only a few night cars passed, their headlights sweeping across her walls like searchlights.
She thought about the ten million naira. Most of it was still in the bank, but she had started using a little to expand her business. A second burner. More pots. A sign with her name: Adaeze’s Kitchen.
She thought about Amara, somewhere in Port Harcourt, baking bread and trying to become a different person.
She thought about Barrister Femi’s words: You don’t have to forgive. You just have to live.
And she thought about Chukwudi, broken and limping, driven away from the gate of a house he once owned.
She felt something.
Not pity. Not joy.
Just… distance.
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