“Daddy, Don’t Go!” The Maid’s Daughter Stops the Prince and Reveals a Terrible Plot

“Daddy, Don’t Go!” The Maid’s Daughter Stops the Prince and Reveals a Terrible Plot

Part 1
The little girl threw herself in front of the royal convoy and screamed the forbidden word that made the whole palace freeze.
—Papa, don’t enter that car!
Prince Chinedu stopped with one hand already on the open door of the black Lexus. Cameras flashed. Guards reached for their radios. The palace courtyard of Aruoma, one of the oldest traditional kingdoms in eastern Nigeria, fell into a silence so sharp that even the fountain seemed to stop breathing.
The child on the polished stone floor was Ifeoma, only 5 years old, daughter of Nneka, a palace maid who washed bedsheets, carried trays and lowered her eyes whenever nobles passed. Ifeoma’s small Ankara dress was faded. Her sandals were cracked. Tears ran down her round cheeks as she stretched both hands toward the prince.
—Papa, please, don’t go there. They will hurt you.
A guard grabbed her arm.
—Take this child away. She is disturbing His Highness.
Nneka rushed forward, nearly falling at Queen Amara’s feet.
—Your Majesty, please forgive her. She is only a child. She had a nightmare. She does not know what she is saying.
Queen Amara’s face hardened. Her green and gold wrapper shimmered under the morning sun, but her eyes were cold.
—A servant’s child dares to call my son Papa in front of the palace?
Whispers spread like dry-season fire.
—Papa?
—Who is her mother?
—Is this maid trying to trap the prince?
Nneka’s hands shook. For 6 years she had lived inside the palace like a shadow, cleaning corridors where her reflection shone brighter than her future. She had no husband to defend her, no family powerful enough to protect her. Ifeoma’s father had disappeared before the child was born, leaving Nneka with shame, hunger and a baby who became her only reason to keep breathing.
Prince Chinedu raised his hand.
—Release her.
The guards hesitated.
Queen Amara snapped.
—Chinedu, don’t encourage this madness.
But the prince’s eyes remained on the child. He had seen Ifeoma before, sitting near the kitchen baskets with an old notebook, drawing suns, crowns and a man she called “the man of light.” Once, during a rainy afternoon near the royal library, she had shown him a drawing of his black car and told him she did not like it because it carried him away.
Now the same child was kneeling before him, trembling as if she had seen death waiting inside the vehicle.
Chinedu crouched in front of her.
—Look at me, Ifeoma. Why did you call me Papa?
Her lips quivered.
—I don’t know. My heart said it before my mouth could stop it.
The courtyard went colder.
Chinedu’s voice softened.
—And why do you think someone will hurt me?
Ifeoma pressed both hands to her chest.
—Because I saw it. The Unity Square. The flags. You standing on the stage. Men hiding behind the platform. Smoke everywhere. People screaming. And a red hibiscus flower on the ground.
Commander Musa, the prince’s chief of security, stepped closer. His expression changed when he heard the details.
Queen Amara folded her arms.
—Enough. A child’s dream cannot cancel a national ceremony.
Nneka bowed her head to the stone.
—Please, Your Majesty. Punish me if you must, but do not touch my daughter.
Ifeoma shook her head violently.
—Mama, I am not lying. The man with the smiling mouth and dead eyes planned it.
Prince Chinedu slowly turned toward the ministers standing near the palace steps. Minister Dike, head of internal affairs, stood among them in a dark agbada, his beard neat, his smile thin. He had always hated Chinedu’s plan to return seized farmlands to poor communities. He had called the reform childish. Dangerous. An insult to the families who had supported the throne.
Only 3 nights earlier, Nneka had passed a half-open salon door and heard Dike’s voice.
—If the prince refuses to understand, after the ceremony it will be too late for regret.
She had been too afraid to speak. Who would believe a maid over a minister?
Chinedu stood.
—Commander Musa, cancel my departure. Send a different team to Unity Square. Not the internal affairs team. Check the stage, the flowers, the cameras, the cars, the back entrances, everything.
The queen gasped.
—You will humiliate the crown because of a servant’s child?
Chinedu looked at Ifeoma, then at Nneka, still kneeling like a woman waiting for judgment.
—No, Mother. I am stopping because no child cries like this for a lie.
Minister Dike stepped forward.
—Your Highness, the whole country is waiting. The cameras are ready. The chiefs have arrived. If you fail to appear, it will be a scandal.
Chinedu’s eyes narrowed.
—Then let the scandal save my life.
Ifeoma suddenly pointed behind him, straight at Dike.
—That is him. That is the man whose eyes hide something.
For the first time, Minister Dike’s smile disappeared.
Part 2