ADEBIMPE (Episode 12)
Adebimpe (Episode 12)
Yet I felt the distance between us widen.
As I cleaned, my thoughts wandered to my mother again. She used to say, “When someone shows you how much they trust you, believe them. When they show you doubt, remember it too.”
I remembered.
After finishing, I bowed.
“I will return later, my prince.”
“Wait,” he said.
I stopped.
“You are free to speak here,” he added. “No one else is listening.”
I faced him slowly.
“What would you have me say?” I asked.
He stood and walked closer not too close, but close enough that I felt the air shift.
“That you forgive me.”
My chest tightened.
Forgiveness.
Such a heavy word for someone whose freedom was already taken.
“My prince,” I said carefully, “forgiveness does not mean forgetting.”
He nodded. “I know.”
“And trust,” I continued, “once broken, does not return the same way.”
His eyes softened. “Then tell me how it returns.”
I hesitated.
Then spoke from a place deeper than fear.
“With consistency,” I said. “With listening. With believing me before the palace convinces you otherwise.”
He studied my face as though engraving it into memory.
“You have my word,” he said.
I did not bow this time.
I only nodded.
Prince Adewale (POV)
After she left, the room felt emptier than usual.
Not because she was gone but because she had left something behind.
Expectation.
I had assumed clearing her name would restore everything. I was wrong. Justice delayed had already wounded her. And in this palace, wounds did not heal easily.
I realized then that my position did not excuse my hesitation.
Power did not absolve doubt.
That afternoon, I called for Iya Morounkeji.
“She is quieter,” I said.
“Yes,” the old woman replied. “Quiet comes after storms.”
“I want to regain her trust.”
Iya Morounkeji looked at me for a long moment.
“Then stop seeing her only as someone you protect,” she said. “See her as someone you respect.”
Her words stayed with me.
Adebimpe (POV)
That night, as I lay on my mat, sleep came slowly.
I replayed the conversation in my head—his voice, his eyes, his attempt at honesty.
I was not foolish enough to believe kindness erased danger. But I was also not made of stone.
He had listened.
That mattered.
Still, I promised myself something silently, staring into the dark:
I will serve him well.
I will respect him.
But I will never again forget that even princes can doubt the truth.
In the palace, survival was balance.
And I was learning how to stand on my own feet
even when the ground shifted beneath me. Continue reading Episode 13