
10/09/2025
**ADAORA THE MAID**
**Episode 9 (Written by Ozavize)**
The women’s shelter gave Adaora a brief taste of calm, but in Lagos, peace is fragile especially when a powerful man wants you erased.
For two weeks, she tried to blend in: attending counseling sessions, helping in the kitchen, and staying quiet. But whispers traveled faster than the Harmattan wind.
And then… the whispers stopped.
That was when she truly became afraid.
One afternoon, the shelter’s manager, Mrs. Bello, called Adaora into her office.
“Adaora, sit down,” she said, smiling thinly. “We’ve arranged something for you. A doctor will take care of your… condition. It’s for the best. You’re too young to carry such a burden.”
Adaora’s chest tightened. “Doctor? What do you mean by ‘take care’?”
Mrs. Bello leaned forward. “There are safe ways to remove such… complications. It’s better now than later.”
Adaora shook her head quickly. “No, ma. I can’t do that. It’s not the baby’s fault.”
The woman’s smile faded. “Don’t be foolish. You think you can raise a child alone, in Lagos? With no money, no family? You’ll end up on the street again.”
Adaora’s eyes filled with tears. “Who told you to send me there?”
Mrs. Bello’s gaze turned cold. “A concerned sponsor. Someone who doesn’t want your life and his—ruined.”
She didn’t need to hear the name. She already knew.
The next day, a woman in a white coat arrived with a small black bag.
“Adaora, come with me,” she said gently. “We’ll give you medicine to help you feel better.”
Adaora clutched her stomach protectively. “What medicine?”
The woman’s smile didn’t reach her eyes. “Just vitamins. Something to make the nausea go away.”
But Adaora saw the needle. Saw the pills. Felt the pressure in the room, the way two staff members stood by the door, watching.
Her heart raced.
“No,” she said firmly. “I don’t want it.”
One of the staff frowned. “Don’t be stubborn, girl. Do you think you know better than doctors?”
“I said no!” Adaora cried, backing away.
The nurse sighed. “We can do this the easy way or the hard way.”
That night, Adaora didn’t sleep. She packed her few belongings into her bag and crept out of the dormitory. The gate was locked, but she had watched the security guard hide the spare key under a flowerpot days earlier.
By dawn, she was gone.
She didn’t know where to go, only that she had to keep moving before they caught her again.
Back at his office, Tade slammed his fist against his desk when he received the news.
“She escaped?” he barked at the man on the phone.
“Yes, sir. The shelter said she disappeared this morning. No one knows where.”
Tade’s jaw tightened. “Find her. I don’t care what it takes. That girl is not giving birth to that child.”
He ended the call, staring out the window at the bustling city below.
“She thinks Lagos is big,” he muttered to himself. “But there’s no corner she can hide from me.”
Adaora found herself on the streets again, clutching her bag and the growing life inside her. Each passing day, her belly swelled slightly more. Each passing night, danger lurked closer.
She thought about going to the police, but what proof did she have? A slap? Tears? Words against a wealthy man’s reputation?
She thought about going home to the village but what would she tell her mother?
As she sat under the shade of a mango tree in a quiet neighborhood, a young woman selling puff-puff approached her.
“Sister, are you okay?” she asked softly.
Adaora looked up, and for the first time in a long while, she didn’t lie. “No… I’m not.”
The girl frowned. “Come. You can’t sit here forever. People like us must stick together.”
Adaora followed her, unaware that her biggest battle was still ahead and that Tade’s next move would not be persuasion.
To be continued...