PART 2

My sister’s face turned the color of ash. She slowly rose from my chair, her hands trembling as she pulled the little girl behind her skirts.

The festive music from the stereo suddenly felt deafening in the heavy silence that followed. My husband, Kenneth, stood frozen near the doorway, his eyes darting frantically from me to the shattered pieces of the ceramic cup on the floor.

“Amara…” Kenneth stammered, his voice cracking. “You… you weren’t supposed to be back until next year.”

“Whose child is she, Kenneth?” I repeated, my voice dropping to a terrifying whisper. The heavy suitcase in my right hand—packed to the brim with clothes, electronics, and toys I had spent a decade and a half breaking my back to afford—slipped from my numb fingers, hitting the tiled floor with a dull thud.

My sister, Chika, couldn’t look me in the eye. She kept her head bowed, staring at the floorboards of the very house my sweat and tears had paid for.

“She’s mine, big sister,” Chika whispered, her voice barely audible over the music. “She’s five years old. She’s… she’s Kenneth’s daughter.”

The room spun. The walls of the beautiful modern house I had built from across an ocean seemed to close in on me. For fifteen years, I had starved myself in a foreign land. I had scrubbed the toilets of wealthy families, tolerated the insults of cruel employers, and slept on cold floors, all while sending every single dollar back to this village.

Every time I wept from loneliness, I comforted myself by thinking of my husband and my three beautiful children enjoying the fruits of my labor.

“Five years old,” I breathed, the math cutting through my chest like a rusty blade. “You’ve been living as husband and wife in my house. While I was scrubbing floors, you were sleeping in my bed.”

“Amara, listen to me!” Kenneth finally found his feet, rushing forward and trying to grab my shoulders. “It wasn’t like that! You were gone for so long… a man has needs, and Chika was here helping with the children. It just happened! But we still respect you. Look at the house! Look at the farm! I managed everything just like you asked!”

“You managed nothing!” a sharp voice suddenly boomed from the hallway.

I turned around. Standing at the entrance of the kitchen were my two eldest children, now teenagers. My son, Obinna, who was only three when I left, was now eighteen. Next to him stood my seventeen-year-old daughter, Ada.

They didn’t look at Kenneth or Chika with respect. They looked at them with pure disgust.

“Mom?” Ada choked out, tears instantly streaming down her face. She ran past her father, throwing her arms around my neck. “Mom, you’re finally home! Please don’t let them lie to you!”

Obinna stepped forward, his fists clenched, his eyes locked on his father. “He didn’t manage anything, Mom. The moment you built this house eight years ago, he moved Auntie Chika in. They told us that if we ever told you the truth on the phone, they would stop paying our school fees and kick us out. They used your money to build Chika’s family a compound in the next village!”

I held my daughter tight, my heart breaking into a million pieces, but a cold, hard rage began to take over the sorrow.

I looked at Kenneth. I looked at the gold watch on his wrist—a watch I had sent him for his birthday two years ago. I looked at Chika, wearing a lace wrapper that I had purchased with my hard-earned savings.

“Get out,” I said, my voice dead and cold.

Kenneth forced a laugh, trying to regain his footing as the man of the house. “Amara, be reasonable. You can’t just throw me out. I am your husband. This is my village, and this house belongs to this family.”

“This house belongs to me,” I corrected him, stepping forward until he had to back away. “Every brick, every tile, and every piece of furniture was paid for by the wire transfers under my legal name. The farmland you bought? The deed is in my name because I insisted on it before I sent the final payment. I trusted you to hold the papers, Kenneth, but I never signed them over to you.”

Chika stepped forward, tears finally spilling from her eyes. “Big sister, please, where will we go? We have nowhere to take the baby!”

“You should have thought about that before you put on my clothes and sat in my chair,” I hissed, pointing a trembling finger toward the open gate. “Take your child. Take your things. If both of you are not out of my property by sunset, I will call the village elders and the police. I have fifteen years of bank receipts proving exactly who owns every blade of grass on this compound. Let’s see how the village looks at a thief and a traitor when they have no money left to bribe them.”….