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Beneath the sugar vail

Halimat_Oluwaseun
21
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 21 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Zainab Adebayo is a twenty-one-year-old girl from a modest family in Ijebu, Ogun State. Her mother, once a market woman, now lies bedridden after a stroke. Her father died years ago, leaving Zainab and her two younger siblings to survive on the edge of poverty. Despite her struggles, Zainab remains hopeful, taking small jobs and saving for her dream of attending university. Her life changes when she reconnects with Tomiwa, her childhood best friend, now living in Lagos. Tomiwa dazzles her with a world Zainab has only seen in movies—designer bags, fine restaurants, luxury apartments, and expensive cars. When Zainab asks how she affords it all, Tomiwa simply laughs and says, “Connections, babe. You need to learn to play the game.” At first, Zainab thinks Tomiwa is joking when she hints that rich men can “sponsor” young women for companionship. But as her mother’s medical bills pile up and her family faces eviction, desperation pushes Zainab closer to the line she swore she’d never cross. Tomiwa’s words echo in her mind: “Nobody gives you pity in this city—only opportunity.” Zainab reluctantly agrees to meet some of Tomiwa’s “clients,” hoping for easy money. But she soon discovers the world behind the glitter — a dark network of exploitation, power, and manipulation. The men are not only rich but ruthless, using wealth to buy silence and obedience. What begins as “sugar” quickly turns into control, coercion, and psychological abuse. When one encounter ends violently, Zainab realizes Tomiwa is not just complicit — she’s part of a deeper operation that recruits and manipulates vulnerable girls. Heartbroken and trapped, Zainab tries to escape, but she learns that the “sugar life” has chains stronger than any prison. Her reputation is ruined, and her family’s safety is threatened. After a devastating tragedy — her mother’s death and Tomiwa’s betrayal — Zainab hits rock bottom. Yet from the ruins of her life, she finds strength in a small act of defiance. With the help of Inspector Bode, a weary but kind-hearted officer, she exposes the trafficking network and its wealthy patrons. Her testimony costs her everything — her safety, her freedom, and eventually, her life. But her courage sparks an investigation that saves other girls like her. The final chapters show her legacy living on through a community foundation established in her name, helping young women escape poverty without exploitation. The story ends not with victory, but redemption — Zainab’s name becomes a quiet symbol of resistance in a world where the innocent are often forgotten.
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Chapter 1 - CHAPTER THREE: THE DINNER

CHAPTER THREE: THE DINNER

Zainab had never seen so many lights in one place.

The restaurant was in Victoria Island — all glass walls and velvet chairs, the kind of place where waiters whispered and champagne flowed like water. Outside, sleek cars pulled up one after another; inside, laughter and perfume filled the air like smoke.

Tomiwa had spent the entire afternoon preparing her.

"Wear this," she'd said, tossing a silky red dress onto the bed. "You can't look like a village girl here. And let me do your makeup, abeg."

Zainab had protested — "Tomiwa, this one is too tight!" — but Tomiwa only laughed.

"That's the point. You want them to notice you, not pity you."

Now, standing beside her in the soft glow of chandeliers, Zainab felt the weight of every curious eye. Men in suits. Women with diamonds. Conversations that sounded like another language — one spoken only by those who'd never known hunger.

A waiter appeared with a tray of champagne. Zainab shook her head, but Tomiwa nudged her.

"Just take it. Sip small. You need to look relaxed."

Zainab obeyed, taking a cautious sip. The bubbles stung her tongue.

Moments later, Tomiwa whispered, "Our table is over there. Don't talk too much, just smile."

They walked toward a corner table where three men sat — all older, all radiating the kind of confidence that comes with power. One of them rose to greet them.

"Ah, Tomiwa the troublemaker!" he said, grinning. "Who is your beautiful friend?"

"Her name is Zainab," Tomiwa replied smoothly. "She's new in Lagos."

The man's eyes lingered on Zainab a moment too long. "Zainab," he repeated, rolling the name on his tongue. "You are most welcome. Please, sit."

Zainab murmured a polite thank you, lowering herself into the chair beside Tomiwa. She kept her eyes on her plate, pretending to read the menu she couldn't afford. The table talk rolled around her — business deals, politics, oil contracts. She didn't understand any of it.

Tomiwa laughed easily, tossing her hair, slipping into the rhythm of the evening as if she belonged there. Zainab, meanwhile, felt invisible and exposed at once.

Then the man beside her — the one called Chief Adewale — leaned closer. His voice was smooth, his cologne strong.

"So, Zainab," he said, "what do you do?"

"I—I just came to Lagos," she stammered. "Still looking for work."

"Work?" He smiled faintly. "A girl like you doesn't need work. You need the right company."

Tomiwa giggled and raised her glass. "Chief, don't start your wahala tonight."

Chief Adewale chuckled, but his gaze never left Zainab. "I only appreciate beauty when I see it. Lagos can be hard for newcomers. I could… help you find your way."

Zainab forced a smile. "Thank you, sir."

"Call me Chief," he corrected gently. "All my friends do."

The dinner went on — laughter, wine, and talk that blurred together. By the end of the night, Zainab's head was spinning. She wasn't sure if it was from the champagne or the weight of all the newness pressing in on her.

When they got back to Tomiwa's apartment, she collapsed onto the couch.

"Tomiwa," she said quietly, "what do these men really want?"

Tomiwa was removing her heels, her tone casual. "They want what all men want — power, attention, pleasure. You just decide how much of yourself you're willing to trade."

Zainab frowned. "Trade? That sounds wrong."

Tomiwa looked up sharply. "And what's right, Zee? Selling oranges under the sun? Begging landlords? Lagos doesn't care about your morals. You either play the game or the game plays you."

Zainab said nothing. Her stomach twisted. She remembered Mama's voice, the note she had folded carefully in her bag — Don't forget where you come from.

But that night, staring out at the city lights, she couldn't shake the feeling that she was already forgetting.