The price of diligence is high, but its reward is the kind of success that never fades.

Chapter 1
Ashes Before Dawn:
The first scream tore through the quiet village of Nkozo before the sun even thought of rising. It wasn’t a scream of fear—it was grief. Heavy, raw, and clawing through the air like a wounded thing. By the time the rooster crowed, half the village was already gathered in front of the round mud hut belonging to Mama Ireen, the mother of Tunde, the young man whose diligence had always been a thing of wonder.
But on this morning, diligence had no meaning. Hope had no meaning.
Nothing had meaning.
For Mama Ireen knelt in the dirt, her wrapper half–slipped from her shoulder, shaking uncontrollably as she clutched the lifeless body of her husband, Pa Olu, who lay cold as river stone in her arms.
Tunde stood still, unmoving—his breath shallow, his throat locked. His father’s silent form didn’t feel real. It felt like one of those nightmares the village elders warned young men about—dreams sent by wandering spirits to test their courage. But the weight in his chest reminded him this was no dream.
He swallowed hard, his eyes red but dry. Tears were too heavy to fall.
“Ewooo! Olu is gone!” a woman wailed.
Another chest-beating cry followed.
Then another.
Soon the morning was no longer quiet. It was a storm of sorrow.
Tunde finally knelt beside his mother. His hands trembled as he placed them on Pa Olu’s chest. The skin was cold. Unnaturally cold. And that was when the truth began to seep in fully. His father, the strongest man he knew, the one who taught him how to fish in low tide seasons, how to thatch a roof with dignity, how to greet elders with respect—was gone.
Just like that.
The previous night replayed in his mind, sharp and unforgiving.
His father had complained of a strange pain in the chest. Something tight. Something burning. Mama Ireen had fetched herbs. The village healer, Baba Ekon, had been summoned. But the old man was treating another family across the river. He promised to come before dawn.
Dawn had come—but Pa Olu did not cross into it.
Tunde clenched his jaw as the distant hum of mourning voices carried across Nkozo. The village was built on low red soil, dotted with baobab and palm trees, with narrow pathways linking compound to compound. Smoke from cooking fires usually drifted lazily in the morning, but that day, the air held only the smoke of heartbreak.
Suddenly, a firm hand touched Tunde’s shoulder.
He turned to see Ayo, his childhood friend, who had run to the scene after the cries woke him.
“Tunde… my brother…” Ayo’s voice cracked. He had always looked up to Pa Olu too.
For a moment, neither spoke. They just knelt there—one grieving, one supporting.
Then the crowd parted as Baba Ekon hurried in, panting heavily, carrying his calabash bag of herbs. But his face shifted when he saw Pa Olu’s body.
He sighed deeply.
“I should have come sooner.”
Mama Ireen rose sharply, her eyes burning with despair and anger.
“You should have come last night! My husband might still be alive!”
The healer bowed his head, shame covering him like a heavy cloth.
“I was too far, Mama Ireen. The river waters rose… the canoe master delayed…”
She slapped the ground in agony. “My husband died waiting! He died before your medicine arrived!”
Tunde placed a hand around her shoulder, pulling her close. He knew her pain needed a place to land—even if it was unfair.
Baba Ekon knelt beside Pa Olu, touched him gently, then whispered the traditional farewell chant.
“May your spirit walk in light… may your journey home be guided… may your feet find rest.”
The crowd echoed the chant in soft, trembling voices.
But as the ritual ended, something else began—quiet murmurs.
Conversations carried in low tones.
“What will happen to the farm now?”
“Who will repair the irrigation channels Pa Olu started?”
“And Tunde… he is barely a man. Will he manage alone?”
Though the words were whispered, Tunde heard every one.
He felt his mother’s body leaning weakly against him. She was a strong woman, one of the finest weavers in the region, but grief had carved through her strength.
“Tunde,” she whispered softly, “your father believed you would lead this household. You must not let the world swallow you.”
He nodded, though fear crawled up his spine.
The world felt too heavy for one man.
But he said nothing.
Later that day, the sun hovered high, casting long shadows as men prepared Pa Olu’s burial. The women gathered water, shaved their hair in mourning patterns, and sang dirges that pierced the heart.
Tunde stood by the mango tree near their compound, staring at the farmland that stretched behind the village. His father had poured thirty years into that soil—tilling, planting, harvesting, and teaching Tunde every skill he knew.
A soft rustling sound broke his thoughts.
Mama Ireen approached, her swollen eyes fixed on him.
“My son… look at me.”
He turned.
She placed her rough palms on his cheeks. “Your father died in pain, but he lived in diligence. You must stand where he stood. You must rise where he fell.”
“I don’t know if I can,” Tunde whispered. “It is too much.”
“You will,” she said firmly. “The world does not ask permission before testing you. It simply asks if you will break.”
She stepped back and forced a small, trembling smile. “And you, my son—you are not one who breaks.”
Her faith in him struck a deep chord.
Ayo joined them moments later.
“Let me help you with the farm, brother.”
Tunde inhaled sharply. “You have your own father’s work—”
“And today, you have none,” Ayo replied. “Let our strength become your strength.”
Those words planted something in Tunde—a spark.
Maybe he could rebuild.
Maybe he could rise.
But for now, the shadow of tragedy still clung to everything.
That night, after the burial, Tunde sat alone behind their hut. The moon hung low, wrapped in gray clouds. A cricket chirped nearby. Somewhere far off, a hyena laughed—mocking grief, mocking fragile humanity.
Tunde stared at his calloused hands.
The same hands his father guided when he was a boy learning to plant maize.
The same hands that had fed their family.
Now they felt empty.
But just as despair began to settle again, a gust of wind passed through the trees, and in it, Tunde almost heard his father’s voice.
“Diligence is the path. Rise, my son.”
He straightened slowly.
Maybe this was the beginning—painful, sharp, terrifying.
But beginnings often were.
And in the ashes of tragedy, the seeds of destiny were sometimes planted.
With a long breath, he whispered to the night sky:
“I will rise, Papa. I will carry your name. I will not fail.”
The moon slipped out of the clouds, shining on his face as if in approval.
The first ember of victory, still far away, flickered quietly in the darkness.
CHAPTER TWO
When the Soil Fights Back:
The first morning after Pa Olu’s burial was unsettlingly quiet. No mourners came. No footsteps shuffled on the red, dusty paths. No condolences lingered in the air. For Nkozo village, grief was communal, yes—but life never paused for long. People had farms to tend, goats to chase, water to fetch.
But for Tunde, life felt suspended in a strange haze.
He stood at the doorway of their round mud house as the sun climbed steadily. His mother was inside, preparing pap she hadn’t eaten. He knew she was moving only so he wouldn’t worry. The weight of the previous day still hung on both of them like a thick cloth.
Tunde inhaled sharply.
Today would be different.
Today he had to face the farm.
Ayo appeared moments later, carrying a hoe over his shoulder.
“My brother,” his friend greeted solemnly. “Are you ready?”
Tunde nodded, though his heart thudded painfully.
The farm lay on the eastern side of the village—a wide stretch of land that had fed the family for generations. To reach it, they walked through narrow paths lined with hibiscus bushes and old mango trees. Birds called out from branches. Dust rose gently with each step.
But Tunde’s mind was far away.
He remembered his father’s voice:
“The land does not reward laziness. You must greet it with sweat, and it will greet you with harvest.”
When they finally reached the field, Tunde stopped in place.
The land looked different without Pa Olu standing in the middle, hands on his hips, inspecting every corner. Now, the field seemed too wide. Too wild. Too demanding. The furrows were uneven, unfinished. The dry season winds had blown sand across some ridges, erasing the work his father had started.
Tunde’s throat tightened.
Ayo nudged him gently. “We start from the northern bed, the one your father was preparing.”
Tunde didn’t speak. Instead, he walked toward the plot and gripped his hoe. The familiar wooden handle felt heavier than usual. He raised it—and brought it down into the soil.
Thud.
Again.
Thud.
But the soil resisted him. It was hard, compacted from days without watering. Tunde’s arms strained. Sweat formed quickly on his forehead.
Ayo joined him. Together they dug. But the earth fought back, stubborn and unyielding.
Minutes stretched into hours.
By midday, Tunde’s muscles burned. His palms blistered. His shirt stuck to his skin with sweat. He wanted to stop. He wanted to scream. He wanted to throw the hoe and walk away.
At one point, he collapsed onto a wooden stool under the shade of a cashew tree. His breaths were sharp and uneven.
Ayo sat beside him.
“You’re pushing yourself too hard,” he said gently.
Tunde wiped his face. “If I don’t work hard, who will? If this farm dies, we die. Mama dies.”
“That is true,” Ayo said softly. “But breaking yourself won’t bring your father back either.”
Tunde looked away.
His father’s absence hung in the air, heavy and suffocating.
Later that afternoon, a group of village men passed by carrying baskets of cassava. One of them, Kola the fisherman, stopped and greeted them.
“Ah, Tunde,” he said, inspecting the half–prepared ridges. “Your father would be proud you came back to the land quickly.”
Tunde forced a small smile. Compliments felt strange on a heart that still bled.
“But,” Kola continued, “you have to be cautious. This season, the land has been strange. Many farms across the valley have refused to take water. Some ridges collapse the next day. Even the yams by the river are behaving like stubborn children.”
Another man nodded. “Yes, the soil is fighting everyone this year.”
Tunde frowned. “Why?”
They all shrugged.
Kola sighed. “No one knows. The elders think the spirits are unhappy. Baba Ekon thinks it’s the unusual wind patterns. But either way, farming has become war.”
Tunde’s heart sank further.
War.
That was what the land felt like—an enemy wearing the face of a friend.
The men offered a few encouraging words before continuing on their way.
Once they were gone, Ayo placed a hand on Tunde’s shoulder.
“You see? It’s not just you. The whole village is struggling. Don’t let your mind lie to you.”
But Tunde didn’t respond.
He stood up, gripped his hoe again, and resumed digging.
Thud. Thud. Thud.
Each strike felt like he was fighting for air.
After hours of battling the stubborn earth, Tunde finally dropped the hoe. His hands were shaking uncontrollably.
“I can’t do this,” he whispered to himself. “I can’t replace him.”
Ayo walked over quietly. “You don’t have to replace him. You only have to be you.”
Those words were meant to comfort, but Tunde felt them like a challenge he wasn’t sure he could meet.
As the sun began to set, casting long orange shadows across the land, Tunde and Ayo walked home. The village children ran about, chasing one another, unaware of the world’s burdens. Women carried firewood on their heads. Smoke rose gently from cooking huts. Drums played softly somewhere far off.
Life moved on with or without grief.
Mama Ireen sat in front of their house weaving a basket, but her hands were slower than usual.
“You are back,” she said softly.
Tunde nodded without lifting his eyes.
Her gaze drifted to the blisters on his palms. Her heart clenched, but she didn’t show it.
“Come,” she said. “Sit. Eat something.”
But Tunde barely tasted the food. His mind was weighed down by failure. By fear. By the soil that refused him.
He slept late that night, tossing and turning. When he finally drifted off, he dreamed of his father standing at the edge of the field.
“Tunde,” his father said calmly, “why do you fight the earth with fear?”
“I’m trying,” Tunde replied. “But the soil doesn’t listen.”
“It listens,” Pa Olu said, “but it listens to courage, not sorrow.”
Tunde reached for him, but his father slowly faded with the wind.
He woke up drenched in sweat.
The next day, before the sun rose, Tunde returned to the farm. Alone.
A cool breeze whispered through the trees. Dew glistened on the leaves. Birds called from branches, welcoming the morning.
He stood before the field, clutching the hoe.
“Courage,” he murmured. “I will try again.”
The first strike pierced the soil.
The second broke it open.
The third loosened the ridge.
Slowly, the earth began to give way—not easily, but steadily.
With every motion, Tunde felt his father’s teachings return.
He adjusted his posture.
He changed his grip.
He reminded himself of every small trick Pa Olu embedded in him over the years.
And the soil, once resisting, began to soften.
Hours later, Ayo arrived to find Tunde covered in dust—but smiling faintly.
“My brother!” Ayo exclaimed. “You started without me?”
Tunde nodded. “The land is slow, but it listens.”
Ayo burst into laughter. “Good! Then let the stubborn soil meet two stubborn men!”
Together they worked.
Together they fought.
Together they reclaimed the northern section of the field.
It was far from complete, but for the first time since his father’s death, Tunde felt something heavy lift from his chest.
He was not defeated.
Not yet.
He looked at the land with new eyes.
“This is only the beginning,” he whispered.
And somewhere above, the wind carried the faint echo of his father’s voice—approving, guiding.
The soil had fought back.
But Tunde was learning how to fight too.
CHAPTER THREE
The Burden of a Name:
Morning in Nkozo arrived with a gentle hush, the kind that often followed a night of heavy thinking. Tunde woke before the rooster crowed. He had barely slept—his mind churned with questions, fears, and the weight of a future he had not asked for. Yet the dawn brought a strange clarity to him. Today he would do more than work the soil. He needed guidance—real guidance.
But guidance in Nkozo came from few places, and one of them was the palace.
After washing his face with cold water from the clay pot outside the hut, he dressed quietly. His mother wasn’t awake yet. Her recent sorrow made sleep her only escape, and Tunde didn’t want to disturb that fragile peace. He stepped into the early light and headed toward the palace of Chief Oladeni, the elderly leader of Nkozo, a man respected for both wisdom and stubborn honesty.
Along the way, the village slowly stirred. Hens scratched the dusty ground. Smoke curled from cooking huts. Women tied their wrappers firmly as they fetched water. Men tightened their sandals as they prepared for the day’s work.
Tunde walked quickly, thoughts swirling.
My father left a legacy I’m not sure I can carry.
What if the land defeats me? What if I fail Mama?
The chief’s palace—an open courtyard surrounded by mud walls, with wooden carvings of ancestral stories—came into view. Two palace guards sat at the entrance, wide awake and alert.
“Ah, Tunde,” one of them greeted. “Why are you here this early?”
“I wish to speak to the chief.”
They exchanged glances before nodding. They knew of Pa Olu’s passing. Everyone did.
“You may enter.”
Tunde stepped into the courtyard where Chief Oladeni sat beneath a sprawling iroko tree. The chief was a man of calm presence and piercing eyes. He wore a simple cotton wrapper and leaned on a staff carved with the symbols of generations.
He looked up slowly.
“Tunde Olu,” the chief said in a voice as steady as river stone. “I knew you would come.”
Tunde bowed respectfully. “Good morning, father of the land.”
“Sit, my son. Grief has visited your home, and when grief visits, we must sit slowly.”
Tunde obeyed and sat on a low stool opposite the chief.
For a long moment, neither spoke. The wind rustled the leaves above them. A bird hopped across the courtyard. The land inhaled and exhaled around them.
Finally, the chief tapped the ground lightly with his staff.
“Tunde, your father was a man of diligence. The kind you don’t see often. He built respect with his hands, sweat, and honor.”
Tunde swallowed hard. “Yes, sir.”
“You look like a man carrying a mountain on his shoulders.”
“I feel like it,” Tunde whispered.
The chief leaned closer. “Tell me everything.”
And Tunde did.
He spoke of the soil refusing him.
Of the weight of expectations.
Of the whispers in the village.
Of the fear of failing his mother.
Of the nightmares.
Of the burden of the farm.
Of waking up each morning with the memory of his father’s absence pressing on him like a stone.
When he finished, the chief closed his eyes for a moment.
“Tunde,” he began slowly, “you are not your father—but you carry his name.”
Tunde lowered his head. “And that name feels heavy, sir.”
Chief Oladeni nodded. “As it should. Good names are not feathers—they are stones polished by generations. But even stones, when embraced correctly, become pillars.”
Tunde looked up.
“You think the land is fighting you,” the chief continued, “but the land is only testing you. Nkozo’s soil has always tested the one who takes leadership of a household. Your father faced such seasons too.”
The chief then held his staff firmly. “Let me tell you a truth your father never shared.”
Tunde leaned closer.
“Before you were born,” the chief said, “your father nearly lost that farm. The soil dried. Crops failed. He came here just like you, thinking he had reached his end. But he rose because he embraced both humility and strength. That is how diligence is born.”
Tunde blinked in surprise. “He never told me.”
“Good men rarely boast of their battles. They simply rise.”
Silence hung between them—silence heavy with memory and meaning.
Chief Oladeni continued, “You cannot farm by strength alone. You must farm with wisdom. And wisdom begins with listening—not only to people, but to the land.”
Tunde frowned slightly. “Listening to the land?”
“Yes,” the chief said, his voice firm. “The soil has a voice. A stubborn one. When you force it, it resists you. But when you work with it, water it well, time your planting, and watch the winds—it will open itself to you.”
Tunde let the words sink in.
Perhaps diligence wasn’t just hard work.
Perhaps it was patience, strategy, and humility too.
“And one more thing,” the chief added. “You will not do this alone. Allow your friend Ayo to assist you. Allow the village to support you. Strength does not belong to one man; it belongs to a community.”
Tunde exhaled shakily. “I hear you, father of the land.”
The chief smiled. “Good. Then rise from your grief and begin your journey. You will stumble, but stumbling is not falling. Begin again.”
Tunde stood slowly, bowed, and felt something lighten inside him—not gone, but shifting.
As he turned to leave, the chief called out, “And Tunde…”
“Yes, sir?”
“Your diligence will be tested again. Harder than this. But if you endure, one day people will look to you the way they looked to your father.”
Tunde nodded. “I pray I am worthy.”
“You will be—if you keep rising.”
On his way home, the village seemed different. Or perhaps Tunde was the one changing. His steps were steadier. His breathing calmer.
But when he reached home, the stillness inside reminded him that grief was still living with them. Mama Ireen sat beside her weaving loom, staring blankly at the half–finished basket.
She looked up slowly.
“Tunde, where have you been?”
“To the chief,” he replied honestly.
She paused. “Why?”
“I needed wisdom.”
Her lips trembled. “And what wisdom did you find?”
“That diligence is not only about strength. It is also about humility… and community.”
She studied him for a moment. Then she nodded, a soft sorrow lingering behind gratitude.
“You are becoming a man quickly, my son.”
“Because the world is pushing me quickly.”
They shared a quiet moment—mother and son, wounded but rebuilding.
Later that afternoon, Ayo arrived carrying palm wine and roasted plantain.
“You didn’t tell me you went to see the chief!” he shouted playfully as he approached.
Tunde smirked. “You were still snoring when I left.”
“Ah! This boy!” Ayo laughed. “So what did the old man say?”
“That we must listen to the land.”
Ayo blinked. “Listen to the land? Does the soil speak?”
Tunde shrugged. “Maybe not with words. But with signs.”
Ayo grinned. “Then we must learn its language quickly.”
The boys ate together, speaking of plans—how they would rebuild the ridges, how they’d fetch water earlier, how they would time the planting with the winds. Their childish laughter returned for the first time in days.
But evening brought new challenges.
As they walked to inspect the southern plot, they noticed something strange.
The ridges they had shaped two days ago…
were collapsing.
At first, Tunde thought his eyes deceived him. But as he drew closer, his chest tightened.
The earth had sunk in several places. Loose soil had spilled over the mounds. Some furrows looked as though an animal had walked through them.
“What happened?” Ayo whispered.
Tunde knelt and ran his fingers over the soil. It wasn’t just wind damage. It was deeper.
Something—or someone—had tampered with the farm.
Suddenly Ayo’s face hardened. “Tunde… this wasn’t done by nature.”
“Then who?” Tunde whispered, anger flickering like sparks.
In the quiet evening air, far across the ridge, they heard faint footsteps.
Someone fled into the bushes.
The boys exchanged looks.
The land was not their only enemy.
Humans were too.
Tunde rose slowly, fists clenched.
“It seems the soil is not the only thing we must fight,” he said.
“But you will not fight alone,” Ayo replied firmly.
Tunde stared at the broken ridges, rage and determination entwining inside him.
The burden of his father’s name was heavier than he thought.
But he would carry it.
Even if the world fought him from all sides.
CHAPTER FOUR
The Silent Saboteur:
The next morning tasted of unease. Even before the sun stretched its rays across Nkozo, Tunde’s chest felt tight with suspicion. He had barely slept, replaying the footsteps he and Ayo heard the previous evening—the shadow slipping away into the bushes, quick and guilty.
Who would sabotage his father’s farm?
Why would anyone target him at his lowest?
The questions gnawed at him.
As he stepped outside, he found Mama Ireen already awake, sweeping the compound with slow, rhythmic motions. The broom’s bristles scraped softly against the red earth.
“You are up early,” she said quietly.
“So are you,” he replied.
She paused. “Grief rarely lets one sleep.”
Tunde nodded. “I’m going to the farm.”
She studied him—hard, motherly, knowing. “Your eyes look troubled.”
“There is… something I need to check.”
She didn’t push him. Mothers often know when silence speaks louder than explanations.
“Go well,” she whispered.
On the farm, the damage looked worse under the morning light.
Ridges that had been perfectly shaped were now sunken. Loose soil had spilled like someone had kicked through them deliberately. And near the edge of the field, footprints led into the bush—footprints too large to belong to children.
Ayo arrived minutes later, panting.
“Tunde! I told my father what happened. He said we should be careful. He also said—”
He stopped mid-sentence when he saw the footprints.
“Ah! Someone did this intentionally!”
Tunde said nothing, his jaw tightening.
“For what reason?” Ayo asked. “Who benefits if your farm collapses?”
Tunde clenched his fists. “Someone who wants us to fail. Someone who thinks diligence is weakness.”
They surveyed the damaged area carefully. Tunde knelt and examined the depth of the footprints.
“This was done by a grown man,” he observed.
Ayo exhaled sharply. “Then we must tell the chief.”
Tunde shook his head. “Not yet. I want to know who first.”
“Why?”
“Because I don’t want to accuse the wrong person.”
Ayo frowned. “You are thinking too much.”
“I must,” Tunde replied firmly. “This farm is all we have. I cannot let fear or anger rule me.”
Ayo nodded reluctantly.
They began repairing the ridges—but something felt off. As they worked, Tunde kept glancing toward the bush line, half expecting someone to emerge.
But no one came.
Hours passed. Sweat poured. Muscles ached.
Still, the damage was too widespread. By afternoon they had only repaired half of it.
“We need help,” Ayo said at last.
Tunde knew he was right, but pride cornered him.
He looked over the field—his father’s pride, now shattered.
Asking for help felt like admitting defeat.
Ayo saw the hesitation and stepped closer. “Tunde, listen. Even your father—strong as he was—worked with men from the village when the planting season came. You cannot carry this alone.”
Tunde sighed heavily. “Then who do we ask?”
“I’ll speak to the men in my father’s compound. They liked your father. They will help.”
Tunde nodded slowly. “Thank you.”
But even with help on the way, his mind stayed fixed on the saboteur.
Someone wanted them to fail.
Someone had come in the dark.
Someone was watching.
By evening, several men from the village arrived with hoes, cutlasses, and calabashes of water.
“Ah, Tunde!” one of them said warmly. “Your father was a brother to us. We cannot let his land die.”
Another clapped him on the back. “Show us where to begin.”
Their presence lifted something heavy off Tunde’s chest. For the first time in days, he felt the power of community. The field buzzed with energy—men digging, shaping, carrying water, cracking jokes. Even in hardship, laughter found a way.
Ayo worked with renewed vigor.
The land gradually regained its shape.
But as they worked, one of the older men—Bolu, known for his sharp tongue—called out suddenly:
“Hmm! Look at this!”
Everyone turned.
He was holding up a broken piece of cloth, snagged on the thorny branches near the bush line.
It was dark blue. Thick. Familiar.
Tunde’s stomach tightened.
He knew that fabric.
It belonged to Boma.
Boma—the village carpenter’s son.
Boma—who always compared himself to Tunde.
Boma—who resented Pa Olu for choosing Tunde to inherit his farmland knowledge.
Boma—who once told Tunde,
“You think you’re better than the rest of us because your father was skilled.”
Bolu waved the cloth. “It seems a careless thief passed here.”
Ayo turned to Tunde slowly.
“Tunde… is it who I think it is?”
Tunde’s lips pressed into a thin line. “We will go to Boma’s house tonight.”
Nightfall in Nkozo brought a humid silence. Crickets chirped. Palm trees rustled. Fires glowed inside family compounds. Children had long retired.
Tunde and Ayo walked quietly toward the carpenter’s compound.
As they approached, they saw Boma sitting outside sharpening a blade under the moonlight. He looked up as the boys arrived—first confused, then suspicious.
“What do you want?”
Tunde stepped forward. “We found something on my farm.”
Boma’s eyes flickered nervously—just for a heartbeat—but Tunde saw it.
“What concern of mine is your farm?” Boma snapped.
Ayo pulled out the torn cloth piece and held it up.
“This was found near the broken ridges.”
Boma’s eyes widened before he quickly forced a scowl. “That could belong to anyone.”
“No,” Tunde said calmly. “Only you have a wrapper made from this fabric. Everyone knows it.”
Silence stretched between them.
A long, tense silence.
Finally, Boma dropped the blade. His shoulders sagged, and his voice cracked.
“So what if it’s mine?”
Ayo’s fists tightened. “So you admit it!”
Boma glared. “What if I do? What will you do—fight me?”
Tunde stepped closer, anger simmering—but he kept his voice steady.
“Why, Boma? My father just died. My family is struggling. Why would you add this to our grief?”
Boma’s jaw clenched. Then, unexpectedly, his eyes softened—hurt, jealousy, and frustration swirling inside.
“Because,” he said bitterly, “your father was praised for everything. People compared me to you. They said, ‘Why can’t you be diligent like Olu’s son?’ They mocked my work. And when your father died, people said you would take his place. I couldn’t stand it.”
Ayo spit on the ground. “So you decided to destroy their farm?”
Boma turned away, shame creeping across his expression. “I wanted to prove that you’re not as strong as they think. That without your father, you would fail.”
The confession stung deeper than Tunde expected. Betrayal always felt sharper when it came from someone you once broke bread with.
But Tunde inhaled slowly. The chief’s words echoed in his mind:
Strength is not only in your hands—it is in your restraint.
He stepped back. “Boma… you didn’t only attack me. You attacked my mother. You attacked our survival.”
Boma bowed his head.
Tunde continued, “But I will not fight you. I will not drag you to the chief. Your heart will judge you more harshly than any punishment.”
Ayo turned sharply. “Tunde, are you mad? He destroyed your father’s work!”
Tunde raised a hand. “His guilt will destroy him more than anything we do. Let him carry the shame he has created.”
Boma’s eyes widened. In that moment, mercy felt like a heavier blow than revenge.
Without another word, Tunde and Ayo walked away.
Behind them, Boma sank to the ground, covering his face.
Back home, Ayo confronted Tunde fiercely.
“You should have reported him! You should have let the village punish him!”
Tunde sat on a wooden stool, exhausted.
“Revenge will not fix our farm,” he said quietly. “But focus will.”
Ayo paced angrily. “Still—”
“Ayo,” Tunde said gently, “we cannot plant anger and expect to harvest peace.”
Ayo stopped, processing the words.
“We rebuild tomorrow at dawn,” Tunde added. “That is all that matters.”
Ayo exhaled, finally calmer. “You are becoming too wise for your age.”
“Maybe grief trains the mind faster,” Tunde murmured.
Later that night, as the moon cast soft light on the village, Tunde sat outside, listening to the wind whisper through the trees.
He thought about Boma.
About envy.
About how easily bitterness destroys.
He thought about diligence—not as work alone but as character, patience, and restraint.
The saboteur had been exposed.
The first true battle was behind him.
But the journey was far from over.
Victory still lived somewhere far ahead.
And tomorrow, the soil would test him again.
CHAPTER FIVE
THE TRIUMPH OF SHINING HANDS
The sun rose with a strange brightness that morning—too golden, too alive, almost as though the heavens themselves waited for something to unfold in Mba River Village. A breeze swept through the compound of Nna Ekwenugo and carried with it the faint scent of hope, that elusive fragrance the family had not breathed in years.
Inside the compound, old Nna Ekwenugo struggled to sit upright on the bamboo bed outside his hut. His illness still clung to him like an unwelcome shadow, but something had shifted. His breathing was less heavy. The tightness around his chest had loosened. He looked stronger, not healed, but steadier than before.
The villagers whispered among themselves.
“Is this not the same man who was dying last week?”
“Has his son performed wonders?”
“What power did Uzoma bring back from the city?”
But the truth was simpler, purer, and far more powerful.
It was diligence—unyielding, sacrificial diligence—that had brought the change.
Uzoma’s footsteps sounded behind his father. “Papa, how are you?” he asked softly.
Nna Ekwenugo smiled, a slow, tired smile that ached with emotion.
“My son… you have done what I never dreamed possible.” His voice trembled. “You left with nothing but determination. And you returned with medicine, food, and life.”
But Uzoma shook his head slowly. “I have not yet done enough, Papa. The struggle is not over.”
THE GATHERING STORM
By the third week after Uzoma’s return, the village experienced something it had not witnessed in years—a severe drought. The river shrank until its banks cracked open like old wounds. Farms dried up prematurely. The yam leaves curled in thirst. Even the great palm trees standing at the edge of the village bowed their heads under the weight of the scorching heat.
The people panicked.
For Mba River Village depended on the river for everything—for cooking, drinking, washing, farming, survival. Without water, what hope did they have?
The elders gathered and shook their heads sorrowfully.
“Our fathers never saw such heat,” one lamented.
“Even the spirits seem angry,” another muttered.
Uzoma stood outside the circle, his hands folded behind him. He listened. Observed. Calculated. The storm approaching was not one of rain—it was one of hunger, fear, and collapse. And he knew that his father’s health would not survive the consequences.
That evening, as darkness crept slowly across the village, Uzoma made a decision that would once again test the full weight of his diligence.
He gathered a few young men—strong, able-bodied, and trusted.
“My brothers,” he began, “we are in trouble. If the river dries completely, the entire village may perish. But there is a spring in the forest of Obodo-Nta. My mother told me of it before she died. A hidden water source. If we can reach it, we can dig trenches and divert part of it back to the river.”
The young men exchanged uneasy glances.
“Obodo-Nta?” one whispered in fear.
“That forest is dangerous,” another protested.
“People who wander too far do not return.”
Uzoma nodded. “I know. But diligence has a price. And sometimes, the price is courage.”
THE DARING JOURNEY
Before dawn the next morning, Uzoma and the young men armed themselves with machetes, ropes, digging tools and a clay pot for water collection. The villagers watched them with wide eyes as they headed into the heart of the forest.
The forest of Obodo-Nta was alive with ancient sounds—rustling leaves, distant howls, the chattering of unseen creatures. The air was thick, humid, and heavy with the scent of moss and forgotten secrets. But Uzoma kept moving, guided only by his mother’s stories and the conviction that diligence without action was merely a dream.
They hacked through vines that clung to their ankles and fought against thorny branches that tore at their skin. Several times they paused, panting, sweating, trembling—but Uzoma would not stop. The others followed because they saw something in his eyes that even fear could not conquer.
After hours deep inside the forest, they reached a steep slope covered with massive stones. The earth beneath shook faintly with each step. Something roared in the distance—a thunderous, rumbling noise like a great beast stirring.
“What is that sound?” one of the young men whispered.
Uzoma’s heart pounded. But then he recognized it—the powerful surge of underground water moving with force.
They climbed the slope, gripping roots and stones until their fingers bled. At the top, a sight of unimaginable beauty stretched before them.
A hidden spring.
Water gushed from a crack in the mountain, flowing in clear, sparkling torrents that danced over rocks and disappeared into the belly of the earth.
The young men gasped. Uzoma fell to his knees.
“This,” he whispered, “is our salvation.”
THE WORK OF RESTORATION
Finding the spring was only the beginning.
They needed to dig, shape trenches, and redirect part of the flow toward the dying river. It was labor that demanded strength beyond muscle—strength of spirit, patience, and unity.
Day after day they returned.
They dug under the harsh sun.
They carved channels through hard soil.
They carried stones, logs, and clay.
They worked until calluses formed and their backs screamed in pain.
Villagers soon joined when they saw what Uzoma was doing. Even children helped carry small buckets of water. Women cooked for the workers. Elders offered blessings. The entire village became a living testament to collective diligence.
Slowly—first in trickles, then in flowing strands—the diverted water began returning to the river.
One morning, a shout tore through the village.
“Water! Water is coming back!”
People rushed toward the riverbank where a growing stream of fresh water flowed into the river like a miracle. The villagers cried, laughed, danced, and hugged one another.
And Uzoma stood in the crowd, hands muddy, face dusty, heart full.
He had paid the price of diligence.
And now, the harvest was beginning.
THE FATHER’S REDEMPTION
As the river revived, so did Nna Ekwenugo.
His fever subsided. His breathing stabilized. He could walk again—slowly, but with a strength that surprised even the elders. People said the restored river must have restored him as well.
One warm evening, as the sun set behind the palm trees, Nna Ekwenugo gathered the villagers in front of his compound. The orange glow bathed the village in a gentle radiance, like a blessing.
He called Uzoma forward.
“My son,” he said, his voice filled with pride, “you have shown this village what true diligence means—not merely working hard, but standing firm in trials, sacrificing for others, and holding hope when all hope seems gone.”
Uzoma lowered his head humbly.
The old man turned to the villagers. “From today onward, Uzoma shall be recognized as Omeiheukwu—the one who brings solutions.”
A roar of applause thundered through the village.
Uzoma felt tears sting his eyes. He had never sought honor. Only purpose.
THE VICTORY
Months passed.
Rains returned, blessing the land with abundance.
Crops flourished again.
The village prospered.
And Uzoma, once a struggling boy overshadowed by poverty, became a leader who earned respect not by title but by action.
One night, as he sat by the river that now glowed peacefully under the moonlight, his father walked to him slowly and placed a hand on his shoulder.
“Uzoma,” he said, “you turned tragedy into triumph. You proved that diligence, though costly, always yields a powerful reward.”
Uzoma looked at the flowing river and breathed deeply, the cool night air filling his chest.
The tragedy that once threatened to destroy his family had indeed shaped him into the man he was meant to become.
The price of diligence was heavy.
But the victory was greater.
And Mba River Village would forever remember the young man who refused to give up—even when the world around him seemed determined to break.