Chapter 5

If Tiara had known what Tuesday would bring, she might have stayed in the attic longer, hidden among the relics of the past. At least there she was safe, but Tuesdays were like every other day - a series of tasks to be accomplished, a series of small indignities to be endured.

It started ordinarily enough. Aunt Jola was hosting a bridge game in the evening-four women who came monthly to play cards, drink wine, and gossip. This meant Tiara had to prepare the house, clean the sitting room, arrange the 'fine china', prepare light snacks and listen to endless chatter and loud laughters.

She worked carefully, moving through the routines she'd perfected over the past two years. The porcelain dishes were the ones they used only for company-delicate, expensive, each one painted with a design of golden birds and vines. Tiara handled them with reverence, knowing that these were the kinds of things that mattered to people like Aunt Jola.

The snacks were arranged on platters: chin-chin, puff puffs, small cakes. Aunt Jola inspected her work and nodded curtly. "At least you're good for something."

By evening, the guests had arrived and the game was underway. Tiara was supposed to remain invisible-serving drinks when called upon, clearing empty glasses, fading into the background. She was good at this by now, the choreography of being present but unremarkable.

It was her cousins who destroyed it.

~~~~~

Tayo and Tobi were roughhousing in the corridor leading to the sitting room-a game of chase that had grown too wild. They were screaming, laughing, completely oblivious to the dangerous proximity between their bodies and Tiara's carefully balanced stack of dishes.

"Boys! Go outside!" Aunt Jola called out, but her attention was on her cards, on the game, on the wine warming in her glass.

Tiara tried to move out of their path. She pressed herself against the wall, cradling the stack of plates more carefully. But Tobi, running at full speed, didn't see her until it was too late. His shoulder caught hers and the plates-five or six of them-tumbled from her hands.

For one frozen moment, Tiara watched them fall. Time seemed to stretch: she saw each plate separate from its neighbor, watched them arc through the air, caught the flash of golden birds as they rotated. Then they hit the tile floor and shattered.

The sound was enormous. The crash echoed through the house, and every conversation stopped. Every head turned.

Aunt Jola stood slowly, her face a careful mask of calm that was somehow more terrifying than immediate anger. She walked toward the scene of destruction, stepped carefully over the broken porcelain, and looked at Tiara.

"Tell me", she said quietly, "that you did not just break our fine dishes."

"The boys were playing and-" Tiara began, but her aunt's hand came up.

"I don't want excuses. I asked a simple question: did you break these dishes?"

The truthful answer would have invoked Tobi-pointed out that he was the one who knocked into her, that her cousins were at fault. But Tiara had learned by now that truth was less valuable than obedience in this household.

"Yes," she said quietly. "I'm sorry."

Aunt Jola's eyes were cold as winter. "You should be sorry. Do you have any idea what these cost? Do you understand that we are feeding you, housing you, out of our own pockets, and this is how you repay us?"

"I didn't mean-"

"Didn't mean," Aunt Jola repeated, her voice dripping with contempt. She turned to her guests, offering them a tight smile. "Please, forgive the interruption. Girls like this need constant supervision." Then, turning back to Tiara with her voice lowered: "Clean this up, and then move your things to the servants' quarters. You'd be sleeping there henceforth and you'd have no supper tonight. Consider it payment toward what you've destroyed."

Tiara thought for a moment she was hearing wrong."Breaking dishes should have nothing to do with where I sleep Aunt Jola", she said very softly. She immediately wished she hadn't as Aunt Jola pierced her with a look that could kill.

"Oh yes, it does. I cannot trust a careless person sharing the same space with my daughter, especially at night. What if something were to happen to her?". She said, walking out of the room.

'These people must think the world revolves around them'. Tiara thought to herself

As she knelt to gather the broken pieces, Tobi passed by her and he whispered, "Good luck," as if this was a game, as if his actions and her consequences were all equally amusing.

~~~~~

Tiara swept up the porcelain silently, her movements mechanically precise. She was very good at hiding now-at keeping her face blank, her emotions contained. No one watching would have known that something inside her was fracturing.

She worked until every piece was gone, every shard cleared. Then she washed the floor, making sure no one would cut themselves on fragments she'd missed. The work took hours, and by the time she finished, her hands were raw and bleeding from multiple small cuts from porcelain shards.

She moved her things out of the room she shared with Tola, 'her room' and into the servants' quarters. Better to go on her own, than with force. She was seventeen now meaning she had endured two extra years in this house. Years of servitude, of invisibility, of being blamed for things that weren't her fault and thanked for nothing that was.

She thought about what Mrs. Okafor had said: One day you'll be old enough to fight back.

But what if she wasn't? What if she was old enough but still powerless? What if this was all life had to offer - an endless cycle of breaking, cleaning, and starting again?

The despair was almost physical. It sat on her chest and made breathing difficult. She reached under the mattress where she kept her most precious possession and pulled out her diary. She turned to a blank page and began to write.

'I broke dishes today. Or rather, I was blamed for breaking dishes. The truth doesn't matter here. Only obedience matters. Only compliance. Only the ability to disappear and reappear on command.

I'm tired. I'm so tired I can barely remember what it felt like to be happy. I'm seventeen and I feel ancient. I'm seventeen and I feel like I've already lived a hundred years.

Why should I keep fighting? What is the point of holding out if this is all it leads to-endless work, endless humiliation, endless erasure?

Maybe it would be easier to just give up. To stop writing, stop dreaming, stop believing that anything better exists. To become what they say I am: a servant, a burden, a mistake they have to tolerate.'

She stared at the words, shocked by their darkness. This wasn't like her. Her diary was usually full of resistance, of future planning, of stubborn hope. Not tonight though, that hope felt paper-thin.

~~~~~

Hours later, when the whole house had settled into a deep sleep, Tiara did something she hadn't done since she was eight years old: she snuck out into the garden in the middle of the night.

The lemon tree was vast now, older and stronger. She pressed her palms against its bark and let herself cry-not silent tears, but deep, wrenching sobs that came from somewhere primal inside her.

"I can't do this anymore," she whispered to the tree. "I can't keep pretending. I can't keep surviving. It's too hard."

The tree, of course, didn't answer. But as her tears fell, something shifted. A breeze moved through the branches, and a single lemon fell at her feet. She picked it up-perfectly ripe, glowing faintly in the moonlight.

She thought about what her father had said: Bitterness grows in the fruit, sweetness in the heart.

The lemon's taste was harsh, overwhelming, exactly as bitter as despair. She sucked on it anyway, letting the juice coat her throat, burn her tongue, remind her that she was still alive.

And then she understood something that changed everything: the bitterness wasn't punishment. It was data. It was information. It was the flavor of the world telling her exactly how much she needed to change herself.

She returned to her new room and to her diary. But this time, she wrote something different:

I was wrong to think about giving up. Not because I'm strong-I don't feel strong. But because giving up would mean they win. It would mean my parents' sacrifice meant nothing. It would mean every moment of suffering was wasted.

I don't have to be okay with this. I don't have to accept it. But I do have to endure it-not because it's right, but because the only alternative is complete destruction. And I refuse to be destroyed by people so small and petty and cruel.

Therefore, here's my new vow: I will use their cruelty as a propellant. I will let my anger become my teacher. I will transform this bitterness into something useful. And one day-I don't know when, but one day-I will leave this place. And when I do, I will have learned things they could never teach me. I will be someone they never dared to imagine I could become.

They broke a few dishes. But I am not porcelain. I cannot be shattered by their hands. And that, I think, is worth surviving for.

~~~~~

The next morning, Tiara woke early as always. She performed her duties, answered questions in monosyllables, and remained invisible. But something inside her had shifted. The despair had morphed into something sharper-purpose.

She began to plan more deliberately. She saved every naira she could earn or was paid, hiding money in a small tin buried beneath a loose floorboard. She studied harder and borrowed more books. After all, there was no such thing as too much knowledge. She made notes of places that existed beyond her uncle's house, jobs that were possible, opportunities that were waiting.

Mrs. Okafor noticed the change. One afternoon, as they worked in the kitchen, she said quietly, "You're different. Harder somehow. Less like a girl, more like a young woman."

"I have to be," Tiara replied.

"Yes," Mrs. Okafor agreed. "Yes, I suppose you do."

Chapter 6

The rain came without warning that August, arriving as they often did in Ibadan-sudden, violent, as if the sky itself had fractured. Tiara had learned to read weather by then, to sense the pressure changes that preceded storms, but this one was different. This one felt personal, as if the universe had decided to test her one more time.

It started in the evening, around six o'clock. The servants' quarters where Tiara slept-a cramped, damp room with walls that sweated in humidity-began to show signs of what was coming. A small leak appeared in the corner, just a trickle at first. Tiara watched it, knowing from experience what it meant.

By midnight, the trickle had become a stream.

The room Tiara occupied was partially underground, built into the foundation of the main house to save money on construction. It was the coldest room in the compound in harmattan season and the wettest during the rains. Her cot-a thin mattress on a wooden frame-was positioned as far from the walls as possible, but geography was no protection against rising water.

When it was one in the morning, the floor was covered in an inch of murky water. Her possessions-the few clothes she owned, her precious diary-were at risk. She moved frantically, gathering what she could, piling things onto the highest shelf, trying to salvage what mattered most.

Her diary she pressed to her chest, wrapping it in the plastic bag she'd been saving. Her mother's diary she tucked inside her dress, against her skin. The money she'd saved was in a tin that she kept on the shelf-thankfully high enough to be safe.

But there was nowhere for her to sleep.

Desperate, soaked and shivering, Tiara made her way to the back door of the main house. It was locked-of course it was locked. They locked her out at night as a matter of principle, a physical manifestation of her new status as non-family.

She knocked softly. "Please," she called. "The servants' quarters is flooded. I need somewhere dry."

No one answered. She knocked again, more insistently. "Please, just the kitchen floor. I just need to stay dry until morning."

She heard footsteps-Aunt Jola, roused from sleep. The door opened a crack, and her aunt's face appeared, slack with sleep but immediately hardening into cruelty.

"Go back to your room."

"It's flooded. Everything is underwater. I can't-"

"Not my problem," Aunt Jola said flatly. "This is what happens when you're careless. You should have been watching for leaks. Go back and deal with it."

"But I-"

The door slammed shut. Tiara heard the lock engage.

She stood there in the rain, water streaming down her face-impossible to tell what was tears and what was storm. She knocked again, more desperately. "Please. I'll clean it up. I'll fix it. Just please let me inside."

From somewhere upstairs, she heard Uncle Bidemi's muffled voice: "Let her learn to fend for herself. She needs to understand consequences."

~~~~~

With the main house sealed to her, Tiara ran. There was nowhere else to go but the lemon tree.

She pressed herself against the trunk, arms wrapped around the bark she'd embraced so many times before. The tree provided some shelter-its dense canopy blocked much of the rain, though water still streamed down her face and soaked through her thin dress.

The night was terrifyingly long. Thunder cracked so close she could feel it in her bones. Lightning illuminated the garden in white flashes, making everything look strange and apocalyptic. The lemon tree swayed in the wind, and Tiara held on, certain at moments that they would both be blown away.

She thought about dying. The thought arrived without drama-simply as a possibility, a way this could end. She was cold, weak, terrified. It would be easy to let go, to stop fighting, to surrender to the storm. Her parents were dead. The world had taken everything from her. What was the point of continuing?

But something in her refused, something she couldn't name or explain.

She began to recite her mother's diary entries from memory; words she'd read so many times they were burned into her consciousness:

"Bravery isn't the absence of fear. It's the decision to move forward anyway."

"Strength isn't given. It's grown, in the hardest soil, through the longest seasons."

"If we die tomorrow, I hope Tiara becomes someone extraordinary."

The words became a prayer, a lifeline, a reason to hold on.

Hours passed. At some point, Tiara stopped shivering, which she later understood was dangerous-the body giving up, surrendering to cold. She was numb, drifting between consciousness and something deeper, when she heard a voice.

"Child! Child, are you mad?"

It was a neighbor-an old man named Mr. Adeyemi who lived beyond the compound fence. He was standing in the rain with a lamp, staring at her with something between anger and concern.

"Come," he called. "Get away from there. You'll be struck by lightning."

Tiara was too cold to argue. She stumbled after him to a small shelter he'd built-a covered walkway where vendors sometimes waited out rain. It was barely more protection than the tree, but it was something.

He gave her a cloth to dry herself with and sat with her, saying nothing, just bearing witness to her survival.

"Why didn't you go to the house?" he finally asked.

"They locked the doors."

Mr. Adeyemi's expression darkened. "That woman. That woman is a curse. I remember when your father lived here. The tree was small then, and he was always in the garden, talking to it. He told me once that the tree was growing faster than his business, and he was grateful for that-at least something was thriving." The old man shook his head. "Your father would be ashamed of what's happening in that house."

~~~~~

When the rain finally stopped-around four in the morning-Tiara returned to the servants' quarters. Water still covered the floor, but it had stopped rising. The worst had passed.

She spent the remaining hours before dawn salvaging what she could. Her mattress was soaked beyond rescue, so she hung it on the line to dry, though she knew it would be ruined. Her clothes she wrung out and spread on the only dry surface-the shelf high on the wall.

By the time the household woke, she had already cleaned as much as she could. She moved quietly through the morning, completing her chores with mechanical precision, saying nothing about the night. But something had broken in her-not her will, but her fear. She had faced the worst her relatives could do: lock her out during a storm, refuse her shelter, let her nearly die in the rain. And she had survived.

Aunt Jola found her working in the kitchen around mid-morning and simply said, "The servants' quarters needs to be repaired. You'll have to help coordinate the workers."

"Yes, Aunty," Tiara replied, her voice steady.

She did not mention the night. She did not ask for apology or explanation. But as she worked, she made a decision that crystallized something in her: she would never again ask these people for safety. She would find her own shelter. She would become her own refuge.

That evening, after she finished her work, she returned to the lemon tree and sat beneath it as the sun set. She opened her diary with slightly damp hands and wrote:

The night of the flood, I learned that this house is not my home. It never was. Home was something I lost when my parents died. What remains here is only obligation, hierarchy, cruelty disguised as necessity.

But I also learned something else: I can survive worse than this. I can hold onto myself even when the world tries to drown me. I can choose to live, not because I'm happy, but because giving up would be the final victory of those who hate me.

The lemon tree sheltered me. The storm couldn't destroy me. And tomorrow, I will wake and work and endure, because I am building something: I'm building a self that no one can take away.

That will have to be enough.

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