Stepmother Made Her Sleep With The Dogs Every Night — 10 Years Later, She Walked Back Into…

The last time she had seen Adai, the girl was a skinny shadow in a torn dress crawling into a dog kennel.

But when the woman walked through the broken gate and into the yard, and Blessing finally saw those eyes—those quiet, steady, unblinking eyes that had once stared up at her from a concrete floor—the recognition hit like cold water on a sleeping body.

Blessing’s hand went to her chest.

Her mouth opened.

“Adai,” she whispered.

The woman did not smile.

She did not shout.

She did not accuse.

She walked past Blessing without a single word, through the compound to the backyard, and stood where the kennel used to be.

The chain-link wire was gone.

The concrete slab was still there, cracked and overgrown with weeds.

 

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The dogs were gone too.

All 3 had died within a year after Adai left because nobody in the house had bothered to feed them.

She knelt on the cracked concrete.

She reached into her bag, took out the rusted padlock, and placed it gently on the ground where she used to sleep.

Then she stood up.

She walked to the front of the compound, opened a brown leather folder, and laid its contents on the veranda table.

Blessing looked down and recognized the documents immediately because she had spent years trying to forge copies of them.

The original property deed for the house, the title certificates for all 3 plots of land, and her mother’s will, now verified and stamped by the High Court.

Everything was in Adai’s name.

Everything had always been in Adai’s name.

 

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The woman looked at Blessing and spoke in the same quiet, level voice she had learned to use inside that kennel.

“You kept me alive because you needed my signature. You starved me. You froze me. You humiliated me in front of the family. You called me a witch in front of the church. You burned my books. You destroyed the reputation of the only woman who ever helped me. You did all of this because you wanted my mother’s land. You waited for me to turn 18 so I would be broken enough to sign anything you put in front of me. But I left at 16, and I have spent 9 years making sure that you will never touch a single thing my mother left for me.”

She placed one final sheet of paper on the table.

A court-issued eviction notice.

Legal.

Certified.

Final.

30 days.

Blessing’s legs gave out.

 

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She dropped into the veranda chair and stared at the eviction notice like it was a death sentence.

Her mouth opened and closed, but no sound came out.

Toba came running from the yard, shouting threats, waving his fists in the air, his face twisted with the kind of anger that comes from a man who has never earned anything and is watching the last thing he has being taken away.

One of Adai’s lawyers stepped calmly out of the second vehicle, handed Toba a certified copy of the court order, and said in a voice as flat as a judge’s gavel, “If you interfere with the legal execution of this notice, you will be arrested today.”

Toba went silent.

By now, the neighbors had gathered at the gate and along the fence.

The same neighbors who had crossed the road to avoid Adai.

The same neighbors who had believed she was a witch.

The same people who had praised Blessing for being a strong, godly woman.

They stood there in the afternoon heat and watched the girl they had thrown stones at hand an eviction notice to the woman they had celebrated.

 

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And not one of them said a single word.

Because the truth was standing right in front of them, dressed in a navy-blue suit, and it did not need their permission or their approval.

Chief Okafor sent a message from inside the house through Toba’s mouth.

He wanted to see his daughter.

Adai walked inside.

The house smelled like old medicine and unwashed sheets.

Her father was lying on a thin mattress on the floor, frail, with yellowed eyes and trembling hands.

He looked up at the woman standing at the foot of his bed and started crying.

Weak, shaking tears rolled down his sunken face.

“Adai,” he said. “Please, I am begging you. Forgive me. I am your father. I am still your father.”

She looked at him for a very long time.

The room was silent except for his breathing and the distant sound of Blessing weeping on the veranda.

Then Adai spoke.

“You told me something once. You said that if I were a better child, she would treat me better. I have thought about those words every single day for 9 years. Every night before I slept, every morning when I woke up. And I want you to hear something now.”

She paused.

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