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Moonchild Nigeria
Student @ Gombe State University
In Content Creators 8 min read
The Ache Of Farida (part three)
<p>Farida froze.</p><p>Not fear.</p><p>Not surprise.</p><p>Realization.</p><p>The words settled into her like something inevitable, something that had always been there, waiting to be understood.</p><p>Slowly, she set her cup down. The café continued around her—soft laughter, clinking cups, life moving as though nothing had shifted.</p><p>But everything had.</p><p><br/></p><p>She did not move immediately. She gave herself time. Time to breathe. Time to think. Time to decide.</p><p>Five minutes later Farida walked to his table </p><p>“Can I sit?”</p><p>He glanced up, slightly surprised, then nodded. “Sure.”</p><p>"I'm Farida" she said</p><p>"Tunde....my name is Tunde" he replied.</p><p>The silence.</p><p>The first conversation meant nothing.</p><p>Coffee. The weather. Small talk. Silence that was not uncomfortable.</p><p>She left.</p><p>The next day, she returned.</p><p>And the next.</p><p>A pattern formed—quiet, unspoken. She would sit. They would talk lightly. Nothing heavy. Nothing revealing.</p><p>She did not rush it.</p><p>A week passed.</p><p>And that was when she finally spoke.</p><p>“I heard you,” she said quietly.</p><p>Tunde paused. “Heard… what?”</p><p>“That day,” she continued. “Your call. About Basike. About Bobo.”</p><p>Silence.</p><p>His expression changed. Careful now. Watching her.</p><p>Farida held his gaze. “They are your enemies.”</p><p>A slight pause.</p><p>“Mine too.”</p><p>He did not respond immediately.</p><p>“Be careful,” he said finally.</p><p>“I always am,” she replied.</p><p>They said nothing more about it that day.</p><p>But something had shifted.</p><p>That evening, he escorted her out of the café to the cold outside breeze</p><p>He stopped beside her. “You shouldn’t say things like that lightly.”</p><p>“You should be more careful,” she said.</p><p>A pause.</p><p>Then she added—</p><p>“I live with them.”</p><p>Tunde blinked. “What?”</p><p>Farida looked ahead, not at him.</p><p>“Bobo… he’s my husband.”</p><p>Silence fell heavily.</p><p>“And Basike…” she let out a dry, hollow laugh, “he’s been… well. That’s something for another day.”</p><p>Tunde stared at her. “How are you even—”</p><p>“I’ve learned to survive,” she said simply.</p><p>She reached into her bag.</p><p>He stated at her intently </p><p>Carefully, she wiped it away.</p><p>Layer by layer.</p><p>Until nothing remained.</p><p>He saw her.</p><p>Fully.</p><p>And for a moment, he said nothing.</p><p>"…you’re still alive,” he said quietly.</p><p>Farida’s lips curved faintly. “Barely.”</p><p>She picked up her bag. “Goodnight, Tunde.”</p><p>She returned the next day.</p><p>And the next.</p><p>Nothing dramatic.</p><p>Just presence.</p><p><br/></p><p>Weeks later, he introduced her to Amaka.</p><p>"This is Amaka. She’s someone I trust,” he said.</p><p>Farida studied her. “Amaka?”</p><p>Amaka nodded.</p><p>Then she really looked—</p><p>“You’re… still alive?”</p><p>Farida gave the same faint smile. “I’ve learned to be.”</p><p>Amaka exhaled slowly. “And Basike’s cruelty? That man needs to rot in hell.”</p><p>Farida let out a quiet, humorless laugh. “He will face what is meant for him.”</p><p>Tunde glanced between them. “We do this your way....carefully.”</p><p>Farida nodded. “Always.”</p><p>It was the beginning of an alliance </p><p>Life resumed its rhythm.</p><p>Work.</p><p>Home.</p><p>Endurance.</p><p>Things remained the same at home. Basike still came,not as always,but he still comes. Chief Bobo had become more cruel. Hitting her at every slight mistake, calling her names. </p><p>"Do you know how much I paid to marry you? You're meant to be the perfect and supportive wife,do you get me?!!!" He yelled</p><p>"Yes,sir" she replied,voice trembling.</p><p>At the company, Farida remained unnoticed.</p><p>But now she listened with intention.</p><p>One morning, she stood near the printer, sorting papers no one cared about. Two men spoke behind her.</p><p>“…the shipment isn’t on the system.”</p><p>“It was never meant to be.”</p><p>A pause.</p><p>“And the inspection?”</p><p>A quiet scoff. “Paid for.”</p><p>Farida did not turn.</p><p><br/></p><p>Another day, near the loading schedules—</p><p>“…why is that container marked ‘damaged’?”</p><p>“So it doesn’t get opened.”</p><p>A pause.</p><p>"But it's not really damaged,is it?”</p><p>Silence.</p><p>Then, low—</p><p>“Do you really want to know?”</p><p>Farida walked away before the answer came.</p><p><br/></p><p>Later that week, a visitor arrived.</p><p>Not loud. Not important-looking.</p><p>But the way the manager straightened when he saw him— </p><p>that mattered.</p><p>Farida lingered just enough.</p><p>“…and inform Bobo that the next batch moves tonight.”</p><p>“And Basike?”</p><p>A brief pause.</p><p>“He’ll handle distribution himself.”</p><p>Her fingers tightened around the file she held.</p><p>At home, the fragments were heavier.</p><p>More deliberate.</p><p>More dangerous.</p><p><br/></p><p>One evening, she passed the study. The door was not fully closed.</p><p>Basike’s voice.</p><p>“…she tried to run last time.”</p><p>Bobo’s tone was calm. “And now?”</p><p>“She won’t. Not after what we did.”</p><p>A pause.</p><p>Then—</p><p>“But someone else is asking questions.”</p><p>Silence.</p><p>“Who?”</p><p>“I don’t know yet. But I will.”</p><p>Farida moved before the silence stretched.</p><p><br/></p><p>Another night.</p><p>A call. Clear this time.</p><p>"No, we don’t keep them long. That’s the mistake others make.”</p><p>A faint laugh.</p><p>“Move them fast. No attachments. No names.”</p><p>Farida stood still in the hallway.</p><p>Then kept walking.</p><p>The discoveries came slowly.</p><p>Small pieces.</p><p>But together—</p><p>they formed something undeniable.</p><p>She adapted.</p><p><br/></p><p>Late nights, watching crime documentaries. Learning patterns. Mistakes. Exposure.</p><p><br/></p><p>At work, her phone stayed ready. Quick pictures. Careful angles. Nothing obvious.</p><p>At home, a small recording device. Hidden. Used only when safe.</p><p>She lingered when visitors came. Not close enough to be seen. Just enough to hear.</p><p>Warehouses. Routes. Transfers.</p><p>Not everything made sense.</p><p>But enough did.</p><p>Tunde and Amaka became constants.</p><p>She told them little by little.</p><p>Never everything at once.</p><p>They listened. Connected pieces. Asked the right questions.</p><p>Slowly—</p><p>Something began to form.</p><p><br/></p><p>One afternoon, Chief Bobo told Farida he would be traveling to Italy for a business meeting. Basike, he said, would “check on her” from time to time.</p><p>She wanted to protest. But she knew better than to.</p><p>The next morning, Basike came.</p><p>Like a predator that had been waiting too long, he went straight to her room.</p><p>And just as he always did,he made her go through hell.</p><p>But she was used to it now.</p><p>So she did not fight.</p><p>“I know you’ve always liked this,” he said with a twisted smile. “You just love being feisty. And I love feisty.”</p><p>Farida said nothing.</p><p>But something burned quietly within her.</p><p>Basike came every day.</p><p>It became routine.</p><p>With Chief Bobo out of the country, there was nothing to interrupt it.</p><p>Days passed into weeks. Weeks into months.</p><p>Farida would go to work, return home—</p><p>And meet him in her room. Every night.</p><p>Yet, every move she made remained deliberate. Careful.</p><p>The café became constant. She meets Tunde and Amaka there every Friday.</p><p>Quiet. Almost safe.</p><p>But danger always comes lurking,they say. </p><p>It happened without warning.</p><p>She was on the phone with a colleague one weekend.</p><p>Basike was watching.</p><p>“Who are you talking to?”</p><p>“Work,” she answered.</p><p>The slap came fast.</p><p>“You think I don’t see? You’re a whore.”</p><p>Her phone was snatched from her hand.</p><p>“From today,” he said coldly, “you are not going anywhere.”</p><p>The door shut.</p><p>Locked.</p><p>No work.</p><p>No movement.</p><p>Her job—gone.</p><p>For the first time in months, Farida allowed the tears to fall.</p><p>The silence pressed in.</p><p>For the first time—</p><p>It felt like everything had collapsed.</p><p>Then she remembered.</p><p>Her real phone.</p><p>Hidden and untouched.</p><p>Her fingers trembled slightly as she typed.</p><p>Tunde.</p><p>A pause.</p><p><br/></p><p><em>Basike locked me up</em></p><p>Another pause.</p><p><em>But this isn’t over yet</em></p><p>She stared at the message for a long moment before sending it.</p><p>Then she let the phone fall beside her.</p><p>Closed her eyes.</p><p>The tears slipped quietly—again.</p><p>For now—</p><p>She had been stopped.</p><p>But not ended.</p>

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