It was small, quiet, hidden so deep that even Blessing could not reach it.
Every evening when Toba came home from school, he would toss his notebooks onto the parlor table and run outside to play football with his friends. He never opened them again until the next morning.
And every evening, while Blessing watched Nollywood films in the bedroom with the volume turned up loud, Adai would creep into the parlor on bare feet, pick up those notebooks one by one, and read.
She could not write well because she had no pencil and no paper.
But she could read.
And she read everything.
Mathematics. English Language. Basic Science. Social Studies.
She memorized whole pages. She repeated formulas under her breath. Then she would put the notebooks back exactly where Toba had left them, in the exact same order, and slip back to the kennel before anyone noticed she had been inside the house.
A woman named Mama Nneka saved her life without even knowing it.
Mama Nneka was an old widow who sold groundnuts and garden eggs at a market stall down the road. She had been watching Adai carry water past her stall every morning since the girl was 7 years old.
A tiny girl with a heavy jerry can on her head.
Never complaining. Never stopping. Never asking for help.
One afternoon, out of curiosity, Mama Nneka stopped the girl and asked her a question from a Primary 4 mathematics textbook just to see what would happen.
Adai answered perfectly without hesitation.
Mama Nneka stared at her for a long time.
Then she asked another question.
And another.
And each time, the girl answered correctly.
The old woman leaned forward and said quietly, “Come to my stall every evening after your chores. I will teach you what I can.”
And from that day, behind the market, between stacks of groundnut bags and the smell of roasted corn, Adai got an education.
Mama Nneka gave her old textbooks, pencils, exercise books, and something far more important.
She gave the girl belief.
She held Adai’s face in her wrinkled hands one evening and said, “Your mind is not a kennel. Nobody can lock it.”
For 2 years, this secret arrangement worked.
Adai would finish her chores, walk to the market with the excuse of buying something for the house, sit with Mama Nneka for 1 hour, and return before Blessing noticed anything.
She covered Primary 4, 5, and 6 material. She moved into junior secondary textbooks that Mama Nneka borrowed from a retired teacher on the next street.
Her mind was fast.
Her memory was terrifying.
And for the first time since her mother died, something inside her chest felt warm again.
Something that felt like hope.
But hope inside that compound was always a dangerous thing to carry, because Blessing had a gift—a dark, cruel gift for finding anything that made Adai happy and ripping it out of her hands.
It happened on a Tuesday evening.
Blessing had sent Toba outside to fetch a bucket from the backyard, and the lazy boy wandered toward the kennel looking for trouble.
He saw something under the torn sack where Adai slept.
Books.
Four of them.
He pulled them out and ran to his mother, screaming, “Mama! Mama! The dog girl has books!”
Blessing came outside with her face twisted in a kind of rage Adai had learned to fear more than cold water.
She grabbed every book.
She tore the pages out one by one while Adai watched.
Then she dropped them into a metal bucket, poured kerosene over the pile, and set it on fire right there in the yard while the girl stood 3 feet away with tears running silently down her face.
Blessing leaned close enough for Adai to smell the shea butter on her skin and said, “Dogs do not read. Dogs do not think. Dogs obey. And if I ever find another book near you, I will burn something more than paper.”
The girl did not cry out loud.
She had learned that lesson in the first 3 weeks.
That night in the kennel, Adai lay with her face pressed into Ease’s fur. The old dog had a scar across his left eye from a fight years ago, and his breathing was loud and heavy, but his heartbeat was steady, warm, reliable—more reliable than any human being inside that compound.
Adai whispered to him in the dark, her voice barely louder than his breathing.
“They burned the books, but they cannot burn what is already inside my head.”
And she was right.
From that night forward, Adai changed her method completely.
She stopped keeping any physical books. Instead, she memorized everything Mama Nneka taught her during their market sessions. Whole chapters. Whole formulas. Whole passages of English comprehension.
She built a library inside her mind, organized, detailed, and locked behind a door that no one in that house had the key to.
Let them burn paper.
The knowledge was hers.
But then something happened that almost destroyed everything she had built.
Toba sat for his Junior WAEC examination at the end of that school year.
And he failed.
Not by a small margin.
He failed every single subject.
Mathematics. English. Integrated Science. All of them.
Blessing was humiliated beyond words. Her son, the one she had invested everything in, the one who wore the finest uniforms and attended the most expensive school in town, had failed completely.
And Blessing was not the kind of woman who accepted blame.
She needed someone to carry it for her.
So she looked across the compound at the only person who had no voice, no protector, and no way to fight back.
She pointed her finger at Adai and said words that would follow the girl for years.
“This witch has cursed my son.”
The following Sunday, Blessing dragged Adai to church.
Not for prayers.
Not for worship.
She dragged her to the front of the entire congregation for what the pastor called a deliverance session.
The pastor, a man named Apostle Fidelis, who wore white suits and gold rings, placed his heavy hand on Adai’s forehead and shouted prayers while 300 people watched.
Blessing stood beside him, weeping dramatically, dabbing her eyes with a handkerchief, telling the whole church that this girl had been practicing witchcraft inside the compound, that she had used dark powers to curse Toba, that she was possessed by spirits from her dead mother.
The congregation stared at the thin, silent girl in her torn dress and dirty feet, and they believed every word.
Nobody asked for proof.
Nobody asked Adai what she had to say.
They watched a 12-year-old child be called a witch in front of the entire community, and they said, “Amen.”
And when it was over, Blessing walked out of that church with her head high and her reputation polished, while Adai walked behind her, carrying the weight of a lie she could never wash off.
The witch label changed everything in the community.
Neighbors who had once looked at Adai with pity now crossed to the other side of the road when they saw her coming.
Market women whispered behind her back and covered their children’s eyes.
Boys in the street threw small stones at her when she carried water to the borehole.
Mothers warned their daughters to stay away from that possessed girl.
The entire town turned against a child because one woman told one lie inside a church.
And Blessing used the label perfectly.
She used it as permission to do anything she wanted.
“I am living with a witch in my house,” she told visitors. “Pray for me. I am suffering.”
And they prayed for her.
They brought her food and gifts.
They told her she was a brave, strong woman of God.
And nobody—not a single person in that entire community—ever walked to the backyard and asked why a child was sleeping in a dog kennel.
Then came the stolen necklace.
Blessing owned a gold chain she wore to every wedding, every church service, every burial ceremony.
One Monday morning, she screamed that it was missing.
She tore through the house, throwing cushions off chairs, slamming cupboard doors, pulling out drawers.
Then she stopped.
She turned slowly and looked directly at Adai.
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