Life Story: Battered!

by Staff writer

Sometime in 2012, little Mary came to live with her Aunty in Somolu.

Mummy just died and there was no other person to stay with than Aunty Esther.

But the real truth is that little Mary wouldn’t have needed to make the long journey from Ekiti, her birthplace, to Aunty Esther’s house in Lagos if Daddy hadn’t taken up drinking.

Most nights he came home very drunk, and when Mary complained of hunger, he’d pass her a sachet of dry gin.

Feeding only on gin and water and fruits nearby trees were generous enough to share, 9-year-old Mary grew thinner and thinner by the day.

At Aunty Esther’s house that late evening she arrived Lagos, confused and tired, thick-bodied and fair-skinned Esther stared at her, expressionless.

Mary bowed again and repeated, ‘Good evening, Aunty.’

Esther was silent still, just staring.

Mary made to sit on the couch.

Finally Esther came alive, harsh and mean. ‘Joko sile nle—sit down on the floor!’

Mary, startled, dropped to the carpet at once. ‘Epele, Aunty,’ she said.

Luckily, her cousins weren’t as cold. They welcomed her well, played with her, and even called her sister.

Because they were older and all boys, it had been easy for them to take to her.

She was an adorable young girl, after all.

Malnourished, yet very pretty.

Deprived, yet so gentle.

Full of smiles even in her shabby clothes.

She ate last, after the rest of the family had all eaten, and she had washed all their plates.

Esther always served her food herself, a single spoon of whatever that was made.

Whatever she made.

At 9, there was nothing she couldn’t cook.

There was no type of clothing she couldn’t wash.

She was perfect at scrubbing too.

Yet Esther hardly found any of these satisfactory. She barked often at her, called her stupid girl, foolish girl and nonsense girl.

Most nights, you’d find Mary folded up beside the kitchen cabinet, crying.

Her tears come not from Aunty Esther’s harsh voice or name-calling, but because of a precious time long ago that she so very missed.

The time Mummy was still alive and called her Ayomipo. The times she ate apple and wafers and meat.

The times she could ask for more food if she wasn’t full.

Luckily, the sadness usually went away with the night and mornings were calm and better.

Often, she sang and hummed to a popular poem she loved as she washed, scrubbed and cooked.

Once, she’d finished all chores by early afternoon, the fastest she’d ever finished before.

She spread an old carton in the corridor to sleep.

But Esther returned earlier than usual that day, and the next minute Mary was outside again with a new bundle of clothes to wash.

Sometimes, she found some that had not been used since their last washing.

Once, she’d taken in a green wrapper and in quiet, fear-hushed voice, said to Esther, ‘Aunty, this one is still clean.’

Esther held her by the ear and pulled her out of the room. ‘Wash them all!’ she barked.

It was a bright Saturday morning, that kind of morning you wake up to blinding sunlight and wonder if the clock is deceiving you.

Esther handed Mary a bowl. It contained meat— uncooked, bloody lumps of beef.

She’d use them to make soup in the afternoon when she returned with the boys, she told Mary.

Little Mary might have wondered why Aunty suddenly wanted to prepare soup herself.

She walked into the kitchen with the bowl.

All she needed to do with the meat was boil them in salt and onions to keep them good till Aunty returned.

This she did before moving outside to finish with the laundry.

It was now almost 3 in the afternoon; neither Esther nor any of her three sons had returned.

There was not a single thing to eat in the house.

At around 4, her stomach churning badly from worm attack, Mary walked into the kitchen and took a lump of boiled meat from the pot.

She cut a piece from it and then dropped back the bigger piece.

But she still came later and ate the other part too.

Esther returned at around 7.

Still in her iro and buba, she walked straight into the kitchen. She opened the pot of boiled meat and brought a spoon.

One by one, with great attention, she counted the boiled lumps of meat.

Unknown to little Mary, Aunty Esther had counted the meat in the morning before handing her the bowl.

Discovering a lump has gone missing, Esther swallowed a huge amount of air and let it out.

She clenched her fists, fighting the urge to throw things.

‘Mary!’ Her voice resounded round the house.

‘Mary!’ She came out to the sitting room a raging mess.

‘Maaary!!!’

‘Yes, Aunty!’ Mary appeared from the adjacent door.

‘How many pieces of meat did you remove from the pot?’

Mary’s heart began to pound.

‘Answer me!’

‘Ju…jus…just one, Aunty.’

Esther’s right palm crashed into the little girl’s face.

Mary clutched her warm cheek.

Esther untied her wrapper to retie it well. Then she descended on the little girl.

‘Aunty please! Aunty please!’ Mary struggled underneath the raging woman.

Esther was unrelenting.

She kept on slapping, knocking, scratching, till Mary’s scream turned into a muffled groaning.

Finally she freed the girl.

Bruised and battered, little Mary squirmed round on the carpet.

Esther opened the door and kicked her out of the house.

When her sons came back, they asked her where their young sister was.

She said nothing.

Two days gone, nobody has heard a word about little Mary.

A concerned neighbour reported.

It wasn’t till the uniformed men came to her shop to arrest her that Esther realized the gravity of the evil she had committed.

Incarcerated for over four months now, she had finally came to understand the other part of life.

The part that isn’t so smooth and blissful.

The pain and anguish she so generously showed a little girl that once came to live with her she now lives with day and night.

__based on a real life story.

Share this post with your friends:

14 Comments on “Life Story: Battered!”

  1. This is terrible. No matter what you don't have to maltreat a child. cus u don't know the child that will surely take care of you when u grow old.
    I have a girl who has been with my family since when she was 1year and 3 months. today she is 6 years old. she knows no other person except we tat she has been with.

    I feel for little Mary hope she is not dead.

  2. Hot mum said it all. Once u no u cant treat her/him like ur child, u live such child with her parents.

  3. Awwww this is just sooo sad, to think that stuffs like this happen everyday,really sad,abeg let them torture her jare,, first time commenting got the link from alifediary and am loving the stories I've been reading some far

  4. She should have treated her like a daughter since she has only boys in the house especially as Mary lost her mum.

    She bear a wonderful name & has an evil heart.

  5. Uhm !mum you are indeed a great mother,when things was so tough and nothing to eat you refuse to send us to any of your rich families and dad is alive!uhm.you single handedly train and send us to school,you always say you won't allow us live with any other family because of your experiences.thank God you didn't die while we were young.oluwaseun,continue to rest in peace.I love you. I KNOW God will really bless me that I will ggive back to society.

  6. wow Daniel is this a story or real life experience..this is heart breaking for me to read there is so much wickedness in this world..I love my mum she treats other people's kids d same way she treats hers..we ave had different houseboys n girls over d years n dey always cry wen dey re leaving why? cos my mum shows them love n treat them like her own I expect everyone to follow this..sad tho

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.