03/06/2025
ADAORA THE MAID
Chapter Three
The next morning came with a blaring car horn and the sharp voice of Madam Ronke shouting instructions from the kitchen.
“Adaora! Wake up! Come and boil water!”
Adaora jumped up from her narrow mattress, her joints sore from the unfamiliar bed and the strain of the previous day. She quickly wrapped her wrapper around her chest and dashed into the main house, rubbing the sleep from her eyes.
“Where is the girl?” Madam snapped, arms folded across her chest. “You want to start acting lazy already? This is not your village, o. Wake up before me next time, do you hear?”
“Yes, ma. I’m sorry, ma,” Adaora muttered, bowing slightly.
The house was already stirring to life. The two children, Timi and Debbie, had just woken up and were glued to their tablets, still in their pajamas. The air smelled of fried eggs and toast. Adaora’s stomach rumbled, but she said nothing. She boiled water, ironed school uniforms, and laid out breakfast plates while Madam gave sharp instructions.
By 7:00 a.m., the house was buzzing. A sleek black SUV arrived to take the children to school. Madam Ronke wore a fitted dress, high heels, and a perfume so strong it lingered in every room she entered. Her husband had not yet returned from his trip, and Adaora began to settle into a rhythm—work, clean, listen, and learn.
But everything was different from home.
The television had more channels than she had ever imagined. The kitchen was filled with machines that beeped and hummed. There were gadgets for grinding, blending, chopping even toasting bread. And yet, Adaora was not allowed to touch most of them. Her job, Madam made clear, was manual.
“You're here to clean, not to play with appliances,” she said when Adaora reached for the microwave one afternoon.
“Yes, ma,” she answered quietly, her pride swallowing each word.
Still, she worked hard. She cleaned the glass windows until they gleamed, arranged Madam’s shoe collection in color order, and scrubbed the children’s bathroom every day.
Despite the long hours and the stiffness in her back, she held on to hope. Florence had said Madam would enroll her in evening classes after a few months. She pictured herself walking into a classroom, a book in her arms, sitting beside others and writing with a pen again. The dream gave her strength.
But as days turned into weeks, Adaora noticed something unsettling: the children were rude and spoiled. Debbie, the younger one, once slapped Adaora for accidentally stepping on her doll. Timi threw his cereal at her one morning because it was “too soggy.” Madam said nothing.
“She’s just a maid,” she told them. “If she annoys you, tell me.”
Adaora swallowed her hurt. In her village, elders were respected. Here, she was treated as a thing, less than human.
One Sunday morning, she stood at the gate, watching the family drive off to church without her. She had dressed up, thinking she would join them. She wore her best blouse and even applied a little lip balm. But when Madam saw her, she laughed.
“Who told you you’re going to church with us? Who will cook lunch? Abeg, go and clean the fish.”
The gate closed behind them, and Adaora stood still for a moment, blinking back tears. A lump formed in her throat as she returned to the kitchen.
The loneliness grew heavier each day. The only people she interacted with were the other domestic staff, Uncle Kunle, the driver, who was kind but distant; and Mama Sade, the old cook, who mostly kept to herself.
One night, while scrubbing the marble floor of the main hallway, Kunle approached her and crouched beside her.
“You dey try, Ada,” he said in a low voice. “Just shine your eyes, okay? City no be village. No trust too quick.”
Adaora paused, looking up. “What do you mean?”
He hesitated, then shook his head. “Nothing. Just be careful. People no be who them dey show.”
With that, he stood and walked away, leaving Adaora confused and unsettled.
That night, she lay on her narrow bed, staring at the ceiling fan spinning slowly above her. For the first time, she began to wonder: was she really safe here?
Her dream of Lagos was still alive—but a dark cloud had begun to creep around its edges.
TBC...
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