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Chapter 1 - When Home Becomes a Battlefield”

He sat by the window, staring into nothing, while inside his

mind, the past returned uninvited. His body trembled with

weakness, his chest rising and falling like a tired bellows, but

his thoughts were restless, clawing their way back into the

shadows of yesterday. The evening light spilled across the floor in broken stripes, but

all he saw was the house of his childhood, the place where

fists spoke louder than words. The childhood that felt like

punishment. The years that dragged him toward a body too

tired for life. It began as it always did, with the sound of

shouting. He remembered the slam of doors, the quick shuffle

of his younger siblings hiding beneath the bed, and the sting of

his father's voice, sharp and merciless. He remembered being

the firstborn, the one expected to stand tall to protect, to

endure. But a ten years old, endurance only meant silence, and

silence cut deeper than bruises. He looked outside the window and saw a small boy chasing

after his father in the orange glow of the setting sun. The man

bent down, lifted the child onto his shoulders, and the boy's

laughter rang through the air, clear and unbroken. For a moment, Umondi's chest tightened. He imagined what it

would feel like to laugh that freely, to be carried without fear of

being dropped, to belong to a father whose hands were made

for lifting instead of striking. The sight stung, because it pulled him back to back to nights

when his father's rage filled the small house like smoke, choking every corner. Back to his mother's cries muffled

behind a locked door, her defiance always answered with fists. Back to the sound of things breaking, utensils, promises, bones of trust that never healed. His father was not just harsh, he was a storm, unpredictable and merciless. He drank his

bitterness, then poured it out on the family until the walls

themselves seemed to tremble. His mother bore the weight of it, but her strength was twisted

into silence and hardness. She rarely showed tenderness, for

life had beaten it out of her. Instead, she carried scars invisible

to the eye, scars that spilled into her voice, into her eyes, into

the way she raised Umondi and his siblings. And the children

learned too early that love was fragile, fragile enough to

shatter under the heel of anger. That was the shape of his

childhood: instability woven into every day, fear disguised as

discipline, and survival mistaken for living. Even now, staring

out the window in his frailty, he wondered what it might have been like to have a father whose voice soothed instead of

scarred, whose presence meant safety instead of dread. Umondi's mind kept circling the memories, each one sharper

than the last. The blows, the screams, the nights when the

small house quivered under the weight of his father's rage. He

remembered how his mother, Jane, would sometimes stare at

the wall long after the violence was over, her silence saying

what her lips could not, this cannot be life. In 2008, the breaking point came. That night, the violence was

rawer, the shouting deeper, the blows heavier. Jane decided

enough was enough. She gathered her strength like scraps of

cloth and told her children they would leave. With only a few

belongings bundled together, Jane, little Umondi, and his

younger brother walked away, their small feet carrying them

back to Jane's mother's home. It was the first time the storm

had been escaped, the first time they breathed air that was not

thick with fear. But broken cycles have a way of pulling people

back. After a few months, Jane returned to her husband's

house, perhaps believing promises, perhaps clinging to the

thin hope that peace was possible. For two months, it seemed

almost true. A fragile calm settled in. Umondi watched his

parents laugh once or twice, watched meals pass without fists, and wondered if maybe life could steady itself. But the storm was only gathering strength. Soon, the shouting came back. The bruises returned. The walls shook again, and Jane's

silence became louder than ever. This time, when she said

enough, the word had roots. By 2011, Jane's resolve had hardened into a plan. Her

husband's suspicion shadowed every move, his eyes always

watching, always expecting escape. To slip away unnoticed

seemed impossible. But Jane was clever, and she leaned on

the one person who could pass under his radar, her son. Every

morning, on his way to school, Jane entrusted Umondi with a

small bundle of clothes. Nothing too heavy, nothing too

obvious. Just enough to seem ordinary. He would carry them

to a church nearby and leave them there, piece by piece, day

after day, until the church itself became a secret storeroom of

their survival. Umondi never said a word at school, never

hinted at what he carried. The mission weighed more than his

small shoulders, but he bore it like a soldier. That was the shape of his childhood: instability woven into

every day, fear disguised as discipline, and survival mistaken

for living. Even now, staring out the window in his frailty, he

wondered what it might have been like to have a father whose

voice soothed instead of scarred, whose presence meant

safety instead of dread. But memory was cruel, it never stopped where it hurt less. It dragged him back deeper, to the

days when his mother's silence had become a shield and her

tenderness a rare luxury. Jane bore her scars in her eyes, in

the way her laughter had thinned into something brittle, in the

way her hands trembled when his father's footsteps echoed

outside. And yet, amid the ruins of her endurance, she was the

one who whispered the plan. At first, it felt impossible. His father was everywhere, his

shadow in the yard, his voice in the air, his anger waiting at the

smallest provocation. Yet Umondi also knew another side of

him: the man who sometimes called him "my boy," who taught

him how to fix broken radios at the workshop, who placed a

rough hand on his shoulder as if they were comrades in a

secret world of men. Those moments confused him, because

they made the monster look like a father. It was this fragile

rapport that gave Umondi the courage and the cover to

become his mother's accomplice. The plan was delicate, piece by piece, shirt by shirt, life by life, they would smuggle themselves out. Jane trusted only

Umondi, for he could move close to his father without raising

suspicion. He was "the good son," the one his father joked

with, the one allowed to hover near the toolshed, to ask

questions no one else dared. The first trial came sooner than expected. One evening, as

Umondi slid a folded shirt into his schoolbag, his father

stepped into the room, wiping grease from his hands. His eyes

landed on the bulging bag. "What's this?" he asked, voice

casual but edged. Blood rushed to Umondi's ears. He felt his

throat dry up. "Books," he managed, forcing his tone steady. "We have a lot of homework." His father's stare lingered, sharp

and calculating. Then, with a grunt, he reached for the bag. Umondi's heart stopped. But instead of opening it, the man

only ruffled his son's head, a strange tenderness that almost

felt cruel. "Study hard, my boy. Don't be lazy like your uncles." He let the bag drop back with a thud, and for the rest of the

evening, Umondi could not unclench his fists. Another close call followed days later. On his way to the

church, he stumbled upon his father unexpectedly along the

path. The man was returning early from the workshop, carrying a toolbox, his face drawn with fatigue and irritation. "Where are you going?" he asked sharply. "To school," Umondi said, though the sun was already leaning

toward afternoon. His father squinted at him, then at the bag. "Bring it here." The world seemed to tilt. If he opened the bag, he would find the small bundle of clothes rolled tight between

exercise books. Umondi's chest locked. He wanted to run, but

his father's eyes pinned him in place. Slowly, with trembling

hands, he handed over the bag. The man weighed it, opened it halfway, then stopped at the

sight of a math book on top. He shoved it back into Umondi's

arms. "Don't waste your time. Education is the only inheritance

I'll ever give you. Go." That reprieve felt like the mercy of God himself. Still, each success fed their resolve. Each hidden cloth at the

church was another step toward freedom, though the risk

grew heavier with every secret carried. Jane would sometimes

grip his hand too tightly at night, whispering, "Just a little

longer, my son. Just a little longer." By 2011, the church held their second life, stitched together

from the fabric of their escape. The night finally came. Jane's

voice was steady, though her hands trembled as she gathered

the children. "Tonight, we don't come back," she said. And for

the first time in years, Umondi felt a flicker of something

almost forgotten hope, raw and dangerous, beating in his

chest like a second heart.

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