The first public humiliation came at a family gathering 3 months later.
Chief Okafor’s relatives came from the village for Christmas. Blessing cooked a feast: jollof rice, fried plantain, goat meat, pepper soup, chin-chin, pounded yam, and egusi. She set the table beautifully. Every chair had a plate. Every plate had a napkin folded beside it.
And then she placed one plate on the floor next to the dogs’ bowl and called Adai in from the backyard.
“Come and eat,” Blessing said, smiling wide so the relatives could see how generous she was being.
Adai stood in the doorway, looking at the plate on the floor.
Every relative looked at her.
Nobody spoke. Nobody objected.
Toba laughed so hard he choked on his rice, and Blessing patted his back and laughed with him.
And Chief Okafor looked at his daughter kneeling on the floor beside the dog bowl, picking rice from a plate with her bare hands, and reached for another piece of goat meat.
He chewed slowly.
He said nothing.
He did absolutely nothing.
And from that day, everyone in that family understood the rules.
Adai was not a child in that house.
She was something less.
After that Christmas, things accelerated.
Blessing pulled Adai out of school halfway through Primary 3. She told the teachers the girl was not intelligent enough to continue. She told the neighbors Adai was stubborn, slow, and wasting school fees.
But the truth was much simpler than that.
Blessing needed a full-time servant.
Someone to wake up before dawn to sweep the compound.
Someone to wash Toba’s school uniform by hand and iron it before he woke up.
Someone to fetch water from the borehole 3 streets away, carrying the yellow jerry can on her head while other children walked past in their uniforms.
Someone to cook, clean, scrub the bathroom, wash the dishes, and carry bags from the market.
And at night, someone to disappear quietly into the dog kennel so Blessing could close the back door and pretend the girl did not exist.
Adai was 7 years old, and her childhood was already finished.
But something inside that girl refused to die.
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.