Fatima Escaped Usman’s Locked Car, Then Fought for 2 Million Naira-thuyhien

Fatima had learned early that some homes are houses only because people sleep inside them. Love was never guaranteed there. Her mother was gone, her father existed mostly in absence, and kindness came from only one steady place: Farouk.

Farouk was thirteen, young enough for people to dismiss, but old enough to see when his sister carried pain behind a calm face. He called her Adda with the softness of someone who still believed family could mean safety.

That evening began after Fatima stepped out of the estate. The air was quiet, but not peaceful. It had the heavy stillness that arrives before a storm, and the first warning came as a smell before it came as a sight.

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Cigarette smoke drifted through the night. Fatima frowned, because Usman was standing beside his car with a cigarette between his fingers. In all the months they had been together, she had never seen him smoke.

He did not explain. He did not smile. He finished the cigarette in silence, crushed it under his shoe, and told her, “Get into the car,” in a voice that sounded stripped of affection.

Fatima hesitated, but the habit of trust is not easy to kill. Usman had promised to marry her. He had appeared around her school, acted concerned, and slowly made himself look like part of her future.

So she entered the car. Almost immediately, something in her stomach tightened. He drove away from their usual route and toward a quieter area, the same place where she had seen Farzan and Aisha about four years ago.

The roads thinned out. Shops disappeared. Voices disappeared. Fatima’s hand closed around her bag as Usman pulled beneath a tree and parked. “Why did you park here?” she asked, but he gave no answer.

Then he turned, eyes red and unreadable, and said he wanted to tell her something. Before Fatima could understand what he meant, his hand moved toward her chest with a confidence that made her whole body recoil.

“Are you crazy?” she shouted. “What are you doing?” His answer was worse than the action. He laughed and said it was not as if he would be the first to touch her.

The accusation that followed came like a prepared script. He said she had been sleeping around, aborting pregnancies, and pretending to be innocent. He even twisted her menstrual cramp that had once landed her in the hospital.

Fatima stared at him, trying to recognize the man inside the insult. The words were too specific to be random. Someone had fed him poison, but he had swallowed it willingly.

He said if that was the kind of girl she was, he might as well have his turn. That was the moment fear stopped being only fear. It became rage, cold enough to guide her hand.

The slap landed hard across his face. Fatima told him if he believed that about her, she regretted the day she said yes to his proposal. Usman’s anger darkened immediately, but she did not shrink.

When he refused to open the door, she tried the handle and discovered the central lock was engaged. The car became smaller in an instant. Air, distance, and safety all belonged to him unless she took them back.

For one second, she imagined screaming until the night tore open. Then she remembered her self-defense training, one advantage of the prestigious school she had attended. Usman moved closer, assuming she was helpless.

He was wrong. Fatima struck him hard where it hurt the most. His scream broke the hold of the moment, and she used that single opening to unlock the door and run.

She ran until the estate appeared again. Even then, she could not enter at once. She found a quiet corner, sank to the ground, and cried into her knees like someone whose heart had been ambushed.

Her questions came one after another. Why was life so unfair? What had she done to deserve this? Why did people close to her keep becoming the source of her deepest pain?

She thought of her mother gone, her father present but absent, and the man she had trusted with her future. The words hurt nearly as much as the danger itself: pregnancies, abortions, prostitute, diseases.

Fatima had never even known what those things felt like, yet Usman believed them so easily. That truth began cutting through the heartbreak. If love needed only a rumor to become violence, it was not love.

Not love. Control. Not confusion. A test she had survived.

Her breathing steadied. She wiped her face and stood. Her eyes were swollen, but her posture changed. She told herself she would never forgive what he had tried to do and never return to him.

Then another thought surfaced: her money. Usman had taken almost all of what she had saved, and the amount that mattered most now was 2 million naira. Fatima’s grief became sharper.

She had saved that money through years of discipline. It was not vanity money. It was not money for showing off. It was her future, Farouk’s education, and the little bridge she had built toward escape.

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