The Son I Never Expected
Chike Okafor had lived most of his adult life in Lagos with a quiet emptiness. At 47, he had built a respectable career, owned a modest duplex in Surulere, and was the reliable uncle at weddings who gave advice but went home alone. His only regret was Ifeoma—the woman he once loved deeply in his twenties. She had chosen another man, leaving Chike to swallow heartbreak and bury his feelings under work.
One humid afternoon, while stuck in traffic at Ojuelegba, Chike rolled down his car window to buy a cold bottle of water. That was when he saw him. A young man with sharp cheekbones, sunburned skin, and tired eyes, balancing a tray of gala and drinks.
“Tobi?” The name escaped his lips before he could stop it.
The boy froze, recognition flickering across his face. “Uncle Chike?”
The world tilted.
That evening, they sat by a roadside buka, plates of smoky jollof rice between them. Over the clatter of spoons and hiss of suya smoke, Tobi’s story spilled out.
His mother, Ifeoma, had remarried years ago. She now had two children with her new husband, a banker in Abuja. Somewhere along the line, she had decided Tobi was too much “baggage.” At sixteen, she sent him to live with a distant aunt in Mushin, who eventually chased him out. He survived by hustling: selling bottled water, loading buses at the park, and sometimes sleeping under shop corridors.
“My father died before I was born,” Tobi said quietly, staring into his food. “I never even saw his face. And now my mother… she has her new family. I don’t fit there.”
Chike’s throat tightened. Memories came rushing back—the little boy who once toddled around Ifeoma’s sitting room, who called him Uncle Chi with his tiny voice. Chike remembered making a promise back then: “No matter what, I’ll look out for this boy.” He had failed.
That night, lying awake in his big empty house, Chike’s mind refused to rest. He thought about Tobi’s hollow eyes, his loneliness, and the injustice of it all. By dawn, his decision was made.
The next week, Chike returned to Ojuelegba.
“Tobi,” he said firmly, “pack your things. You’re coming with me.”
“Go where?” the boy frowned.
“Home. My home. You are my son now.”
At first, Tobi laughed bitterly. “Uncle Chi, you don’t owe me anything. Nobody ever wanted me.”
Chike grabbed his hand. His eyes burned with unshed tears. “Listen to me. I may not have been there at the start, but I’ll be there for the rest of your life. You are mine.”
For the first time in years, Tobi wept in someone’s arms.
The transition wasn’t easy. Lagos neighbors whispered. “At your age, instead of marrying a woman, you went to adopt your ex’s child?” Some laughed, some accused him of trying to prove a point. Even Chike’s elder brother warned, “You know how people will talk. That boy is not your blood.”
But Chike didn’t care.
He bought Tobi new clothes, enrolled him in a computer training center, and slowly filled his fridge with the boy’s favorite things—fanta, chin-chin, roasted groundnuts. On Sundays, they sat together in church, ignoring the stares. When the choir sang It Is Well With My Soul, Chike felt tears sting his eyes.
Months later, the adoption papers came through. Chike took Tobi’s hand, placed it on his own chest, and said:
“From today, you are no longer a forgotten child. You are Tobi Chike Okafor. My son.”
There was silence. Then, with trembling lips, Tobi whispered a word he had never spoken to any man before:
“Dad.”
Chike broke down and wept. In that moment, two broken hearts found healing—one who thought he had lost love forever, and one who thought he would never be loved at all.
And from that day, the lonely house in Surulere was never quiet again.
