A short story for children, and youths on child abuse, child trafficking and societal ills. The book is a tribute to all Adults who are guardian and protector of children. The names and characters in the story are imaginations of the authors. God willing I hope to post the French Version of the Story.
A DREAM COME TRUE
THE ANGEL FROM GOD
She opened the shopping bag she was carrying and brought out a beautiful dress and a nice pair of shoes. She asked me to get dressed. She said that I was going with her and she would take care of me since I had no one. She told me she was moved to tears the morning she saw me and that my story reminded her of her childhood experience. She was grateful to God for being able to come out of that situation.
Aunt Agatha wondered how many children were being subjected to the same conditions as myself daily. Only God knows how many might have died in a mysterious manner and how many were still being maltreated by their uncles, aunts and relatives, after assuring their parents that the children were in good hands and had a promising future. My adopted aunt was obviously talking aloud to herself. I was watching every expression on her face. I could see some anger burning in her. She seemed a wealthy lady. The car she drove was very beautiful. She was equally a pretty lady. She seemed nice.
Children have their guardian angels. I do pray to my guardian angel.
Aunty Agatha looked nice to me but I still felt a little uncomfortable with her. I
could not really describe how I felt. I did not feel any sign of danger or feel
threatened yet my past experience with my mother’s relative, Aunt Nene, was
still fresh on my mind and I wanted to be sure this Aunt Agatha was not going
to be like her.
A BEAUTIFUL STRANGER
David was
arrested on Saturday night. On Sunday
evening around 8p.m, a beautiful lady was passing by when she saw me sitting
all by myself. I did not know that she had been watching me for a while. She
came to me and greeted me. She asked why I was alone and enquired about my
family. I told her I had none. She asked where I was staying. I told her that I have lived under the bridge for the past two years, and I have nowhere to go.
She felt sorry for me. She asked if I have eaten. I told her I
had not, and I equally told her about my adopted brother’s arrest. I could see
that she felt sorry for me and she meant it. She brought out some money and
asked me to look for something to eat. She said she would come back to see me
the next day. She asked what my name was. I told her my name was Nkem, which
means ‘mine’.
I heartily thanked her. Then I remembered my dream. I felt my mother was
watching over me. The meal for the next day was assured by the benevolence of
this beautiful stranger. I did not remember to ask her who she was, what her
name was. I got carried away because of the assurance she gave me to come
looking for me the next day. I bought some bread and the normal bean cake. I
felt I needed to save some money for other needs. I knelt down and thanked God
for his providence, I thanked my spiritual Mother the Blessed Virgin Mary.
When I spoke out loudly to my
biological mother whose presence I always feel, saying “Mother, I know you are
nearby and always with me. You assured me of your guidance for a mother never
abandons her child. Ma, I feel your presence, your smile and your guiding
spirit. Please, mother, do not leave me. Be with me in every journey I make.” Before laying down to sleep, I prayed Psalm 23
‘The Lord is my Shepherd’, and I asked our Blessed Mother, the Virgin Mary to
watch over me. I learnt to befriend my guardian Angel. I prayed to my Angel for
protection and guidance. I used my mother’s wrapper to cover myself, and I
slept with the assurance that tomorrow would be a better day.
Suddenly, someone was calling my name, shaking me to wake up. I did not know I was crying in my sleep, pleading that my mother should stay with me. “Nkem, Nkem”, I heard my name. I opened my eyes, the lady who gave me money yesterday kept her word, she came visiting as she promised. It was day break, about 9a.m. It was very unusual. I normally wake up early. This very day, I was woken up by this ‘aunty’.
LIFE ON THE STREETS IN LAGOS
He said he too ran away from his cruel aunt that promised his mother on her death bed that she would look after him. The aunt gave his dying mother the assurance that she would take care of him but the opposite was the case. The aunt subjected him to inhuman treatments. He would go out selling things for her. If certain amount of money were missing she would beat him and lock him outside without food. She equally denied him education. He showed me his back revealing marks of a cane. I felt sorry for him. Both of us had similar stories.
David could read and write because he attended one of the best primary
schools in his hometown. He lost his father at the age of ten. Life had been so
cruel to him. His ambition was to be an engineer, to take up his father’s line
of work and build the family’s company, but all that was gone. All their properties
were grabbed by his greedy relatives.
According to him, some street children got into stealing because of the
situations in which they found themselves. Some girls slept around in order to
get money to feed. He did some menial jobs to survive. He was often lucky
because people saw him as a brilliant young chap. I guess his parent’s guiding
spirits were with him.
Sometimes we went begging to get money to enable us buy our usual akara, akamu or rice. Sometimes we went washing plates for food vendors in exchange for food. David was the brother I was deprived of. He protected me from the other street children. My street life, though uncomfortable, was more secure than the home life I left in Victoria Island.
Sleeping under Lagos Island bridge was a big risk. Children were often harassed there. They were in danger of being kidnapped by ritualists or of being initiated into armed robbery, drugs and child prostitution. Some were in danger of being sold into slavery and were vulnerable to child trafficking syndicates. David, my adopted elder brother, was always around to protect me. He was an angel sent to me. I do not know how I could have survived in such an environment without him.
MY NEW HOME
True aunty Nene and her husband were very rich and highly respected in the society. Their house was in Victoria Island an area in Lagos largely occupied by the elite and middle class- and it had a servants’ quarters. They had two drivers and a cook, because my aunt and her husband were very busy people. Most of the time they were not at home. One would have imagined that with such opulence, I would have had my own room in the main house. Surprisingly, I was asked to share a room in the boys’ quarters with the cook who was a young lady called Betty. I was scheduled to work as one of the housemaids and as such the left over food was the meal I was entitled to. The cloths bought for me were taken away, and I was made to wear fitted adult cloths that my aunty did not need.
One day I was summoned by aunt Nene’s husband to help in the house because Betty took ill. My aunt was away on her usual long trips. She was sometimes away for a week or more. Betty and I made sure things were alright before we retired to our quarters. I followed him to the main house. To my surprise he invited me to the bedroom. I tried to decline for I felt I had no right to be there. Moreover, the bedroom was strictly under Betty’s care. She was responsible for the cleaning and making sure everything there was in place. So I really did not have any business being in this restricted area and I believed it was wrong of him to have invited into the bedroom at that hour, and in the absence of any adult, especially my aunt.
I stood by the door. He ordered me to come in. I tried to obey while silently praying because I was afraid and I felt insecure. He told me not to be afraid, that he would not harm me. He tried to be friendly and apologized for abusing me and all the maltreatment that he subjected me to in order to make me feel at ease. In my heart I was looking for an escape route because he was touching me in a manner that I did not like. The fright in me was so intense I could almost imagine what his next move would be. Paralyzed by fright I was unable to move because I could not imagine that behind this so called respected man, was a devil, having no respect for a child’s innocence. He pulled me closer to him, I was rigid with fright. He kept touching me in an uncomfortable way and he wanted to undress me. I could not stand the humiliation, and I remembered mother’s instruction that I should never allow anyone touch me in a way that made me feel uncomfortable.
AUNTY FROM HELL
Betty, besides being the cook, was in charge of cleaning the main house and she would often bring to our room old journals, newspaper and magazines for me to read. She understood my longing to go to school and since I could read at eight years of age, I took the opportunity to go through them after the daily chores. Most times I did not understand what I read, but I kept reading. This I discovered helped in my later years of studies, because some of the difficult words that I came across were not strange to me.
THE REALITY OF DEATH
I lost my father at the age of eight, his properties was shared among his relations. Mother was left with nothing but a small house out of many houses and landed properties my father owned. As I mentioned earlier, my brothers and sisters were shared among our relatives. I being the youngest and the last, was left with my mother who saw to my education. She went through financially challenging times, which meant that there was a threat to my education. Her health deteriorated quite fast due to so much thinking and depression. However, she managed to mask it with some bravely and motherly love. She reassured me that I would realise my dream to become a neuro-surgeon, with God’s help. I would often played with her by saying to her, ‘Mummy, may I take your temperature? You know as a doctor I do not want you to be sick. I need to give you the medicine you need.’ She would smile and give me a hug.
I lost my father at the age of eight, his properties was shared among his relations. Mother was left with nothing but a small house out of many houses and landed properties my father owned. As I mentioned earlier, my brothers and sisters were shared among our relatives. I being the youngest and the last, was left with my mother who saw to my education. She went through financially challenging times, which meant that there was a threat to my education. Her health deteriorated quite fast due to so much thinking and depression. However, she managed to mask it with some bravely and motherly love. She reassured me that I would realise my dream to become a neuro-surgeon, with God’s help. I would often played with her by saying to her, ‘Mummy, may I take your temperature? You know as a doctor I do not want you to be sick. I need to give you the medicine you need.’ She would smile and give me a hug.
I lost my father at the age of eight, his properties was shared among his relations. Mother was left with nothing but a small house out of many houses and landed properties my father owned. As I mentioned earlier, my brothers and sisters were shared among our relatives. I being the youngest and the last, was left with my mother who saw to my education. She went through financially challenging times, which meant that there was a threat to my education. Her health deteriorated quite fast due to so much thinking and depression. However, she managed to mask it with some bravely and motherly love. She reassured me that I would realise my dream to become a neuro-surgeon, with God’s help. I would often played with her by saying to her, ‘Mummy, may I take your temperature? You know as a doctor I do not want you to be sick. I need to give you the medicine you need.’ She would smile and give me a hug.
On the evening we left my mother, we spent the night in a beautiful hotel in Enugu. My aunty, to impress my mother, brought new clothes and shoes and gave them to me in her presence. She gave my mother some money and bought her some food items. I never knew that this was to hoodwink my mother’s judgement.
On the evening we left my mother, we spent the night in a beautiful hotel in Enugu. My aunty, to impress my mother, brought new clothes and shoes and gave them to me in her presence. She gave my mother some money and bought her some food items. I never knew that this was to hoodwink my mother’s judgement.
NKEM THE VICTRIOUS ONE
-
Dedication: This book is specially dedicated to all parents, especially those who spend time and resources to raise up those who are not ...
-
INTRODUCTION My father often said to me, “Nkem my daughter, you will be victorious in life if you remain determined.” These word...
-
The current economic situation in the country has given birth to an increase in various social ills.These ills are plaguing our society tha...
-
Life on the Streets I had no idea of where to go, neither did I have any idea on how to travel back to my home town and be with my mo...
-
Abducted for Rituals and Prostitution M other’s most trusted friend, Mrs Laraba, was a very rich and sophisticated lady. She was loved by a...
-
Den of Prostitutes: Mrs Laraba figured out that if she let me go I would tarnish her image. Therefore she thought of another plan to dispos...