Follow
Chapters
Share
Lemonade Dreams Novel Cover

Lemonade Dreams

"When life handed me lemons, I learned to survive bitterness. Now I'm learning to build groves." Tiara Gold's world shatters at age eight when her parents die in a tragic accident. What follows is a calculated theft-her father's relatives strip her of inheritance, education, and dignity, forcing her into menial labor in the very home that was supposed to be her safe haven. Beaten down but unbroken, Tiara flees to the streets of Ibadan, where survival becomes her education and resilience her means of living. Through the mentorship of Aunty Bisi-a fierce market woman with her own scars-and friendships forged in hardship, Tiara rebuilds herself word by word, meal by meal, dream by dream. When she earns a scholarship to a University in Lagos, she meets Deba, a gentle medical student whose love challenges everything she's learned about trust and vulnerability. As her success grows, so does the threat from her past. Tiara must face her relatives in court, reclaim her stolen legacy, and decide whether opening her heart to love is worth the risk of being shattered again. This is a story about the alchemy of pain-how bitterness, when refused dominion, becomes the foundation for extraordinary sweetness.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

The attic was not a room. It was a sanctuary, an archive, a time capsule of the life that had been stolen from her. Tiara began spending entire afternoons there once her chores were done, creating a world separate from the one imposed upon her.

She organized the space carefully. Her mother's diaries were arranged chronologically on a wooden shelf, protected in a cloth bag she'd sewn herself. Her father's old journals - notebooks filled with business thoughts and personal reflections she'd found in a dusty corner - were placed beside them. Letters from relatives, old report cards, photographs she'd managed to hide from Aunt Jola's aggressive tidying: all catalogued and preserved.

But more than organizing, Tiara was reading. She read her mother's decades-long diary, following her journey from a young girl questioning her own courage to a woman who had learned to build a life of intention.

Her mother's teenage entries were the most revelatory:

I am afraid of being ordinary. I am afraid of disappearing into someone else's dreams. But I'm also learning that the bravest thing isn't to never be afraid-it's to do the thing you're afraid of anyway. Today I told my parents I wanted to study fashion designing. They laughed. Tomorrow, I'll tell them again. And the day after. Until they stop laughing and start listening.

Tiara devoured these words like bread. The voice was so distinctly her mother's-the same mix of vulnerability and stubborn determination that Tiara recognized in herself.

Other entries showed her mother struggling with marriage, with parenthood, with disappointment. One of them included a particularly raw passage dated just after Tiara was born:

I'm exhausted. The baby doesn't sleep. I cried at the market today-just sat down on the ground and wept. A complete stranger bought me water and sat with me. She said, "This part is hard, but it doesn't last. The hard parts never do. They just teach you how strong you are." I don't feel strong. But maybe strength isn't a feeling. Maybe it's what you keep doing even when you don't feel it.

Tiara wept reading this. Her mother had been scared. Her mother had cried at markets. Her mother had questioned whether she could survive. And yet she had. She had built a beautiful life, and Tiara carried had that same blood running through her veins.

~~~~~

As Tiara's formal education ended, her informal one accelerated. She began writing letters - not in her diary, but separate, formal letters addressed to her parents, to her future self, to God (though there were times she questioned her belief).

Dear Daddy,

I found your old business journals today. I read about how you started with nothing but an idea. You wrote about the first deal you made, the fear you felt, and how you overcame it by remembering that everyone fails sometimes. You said that failure isn't the opposite of success-it's part of the journey.

I'm failing every day, Daddy. I'm failing to escape this house. I'm failing to keep my hope alive. I'm failing to believe that anything good waits for me, but maybe I'm learning something from it. Maybe I'm learning what kind of person I want to be when I finally do escape.

I miss you. I miss you more than I thought it was possible to miss someone.

Starlight

She wrote to her mother about the diary, about feeling her presence in the words:

Dear Mummy,

Your diary is like having you here. When I'm desperate, I open to a random page and find exactly what I need to read. Today I read about the day you and Daddy met. You wrote, "He looked at me like I was worth something. Like my opinions mattered. Like my dreams weren't too big or too foolish." I think I understand now why you loved him so much. He saw you.

No one sees me anymore, Mummy. I'm invisible to everyone in this house. But when I read your words, I feel seen by you-by the version of you that exists in ink on these pages. It's not enough, but it's something.

I'm trying to see myself the way you saw yourself-as someone with value, with potential, with a story that matters. It's harder than it sounds, easier said than done. But I promise you I'd keep trying

I love you. Even now. Even from the attic.

She also began to write letters to her future self-a practice that continued through her adolescence:

Dear Tiara,

If you're reading this, it means you survived. It means you got out of that house. I don't know how yet - I'm only fourteen and the path is not so clear yet. But I need you to know: it was worth surviving for. Every humiliation, every ache, every night you cried into your pillow-it was worth it because you made it. You built a life that is yours.

I hope you've forgotten the sound of Aunt Jola's voice telling you that you're worthless. I hope you've learned to hear your own voice instead-telling yourself that you are enough.

I hope you remember the lemon tree. I hope you understand what Daddy meant about bitterness and strength.

You are going to be extraordinary. You just have to survive long enough to find out how.

~~~~~

Hidden in a trunk in the corner of the attic, Tiara discovered treasures she'd forgotten existed. Her mother's wedding dress, yellowed but still beautiful. Her father's first business award, given when he was just twenty-five. Photographs from their courtship-young and hopeful and so clearly in love.

But there was also loss. An entire box of letters from relatives who had disowned her parents for some long-ago family quarrel. Love letters from her parents to each other, hidden away but never destroyed. A miscarried pregnancy, documented in a letter to her mother's sister - a sibling who had since died.

She realized her parents' lives were not simple. They were not the perfect memories she'd constructed in her grief. They were complex, flawed, human. They had suffered and endured and loved fiercely.

And they had both wanted her to survive.

They had tried. They had known the world was dangerous and had tried so hard to prepare her. Their love for her existed in this dust-filled attic, in the ink-stained pages of the diaries and journals, in the foundation they'd built before the world took them away.

~~~~~

By fifteen, Tiara had transformed her attic into something unprecedented-a combination library, archive, and art studio. She'd collected books from neighbors, borrowed from the small library in the city, smuggled home anything she could find. Her reading had become voracious and strategic: business books, history, poetry, novels, science, anything that expanded her understanding of the world.

She began to sketch-first just copying pictures from magazines, then moving to original drawings. She drew the lemon tree from memory. She drew her parents' faces from photographs. She drew her hopes: herself in a school uniform, herself receiving an award, herself standing tall.

She collected news clippings about successful women-journalists, businesswomen, activists. She studied how they had overcome obstacles, what they had done differently, how they had refused to accept the narratives society assigned them.

Then she began to write fiction. Stories about girls who escaped, who fought back, who transformed their pain into power. She wrote a short story about a girl born to servants who became a queen. She wrote a poem about trees that grew in impossible soil. She wrote letters to herself that she knew she would need one day-fuel for the future.

~~~~~

One evening, as sunset painted the attic golden, Tiara sat surrounded by the artifacts of her former life and the records of her current one. She thought about the girl she had been before-Tiara the beloved, Tiara the hopeful, Tiara the child who believed in promises.

That girl was gone. But she hadn't been replaced by Tiara the Broken or Tiara the Victim. Instead, there was a new Tiara emerging-Tiara the Observer, Tiara the Documenter, Tiara the Planner. A Tiara who understood that the way out wasn't through acceptance but through preparation.

She opened a new page in her diary and wrote:

I understand now that this house is not my prison. It's my schoolroom. I'm learning lessons here that I could never have learned otherwise:

I'm learning that people are capable of tremendous cruelty-and that cruelty says nothing about the worth of its victim.

I'm learning that systems are built to keep certain people down-and that the only response is to refuse to stay down.

I'm learning that pain is a teacher, if you let it be, rather than a destroyer.

I'm learning that my survival is a form of rebellion.

Most importantly, I'm learning that I am not what they call me. I am not a servant, not a burden, not an orphan to be tolerated. I am Tiara Gold. My father was a builder. My mother was brave. And I am becoming someone far above the limitations of this world.

They don't know it yet. But one day, they will.

As darkness fell and she descended the attic stairs, pulling the cord to dim the light behind her, Tiara felt something shift. It was small, almost imperceptible-but it was real. It was the moment she stopped waiting to be rescued and started planning to rescue herself.

The attic had done its work. Now it was time for something new.

You may also like

Broken Engagement, Berlin Escape Novel Cover
7.6
I flew to London with a custom engagement ring, ready to surprise my boyfriend for our anniversary. Instead, I found him wearing a matching "couple's bracelet" with his "anxious" female best friend, Britney. He even ditched our anniversary dinner because she had a "panic attack" over a chipped nail. Realizing I was the third wheel in my own relationship, I quietly transferred to a university in Berlin to escape. But Graham wouldn't let go. He followed me across the continent, dragging my mother along to guilt-trip me into coming back. When that didn't work, he handed me a "farewell gift." As I opened the box, a sickly sweet smell hit me-he was trying to drug me to kidnap me back to New York. My legs gave out, but I didn't hit the floor. I fell into the arms of Harrison McKee-Britney's terrifyingly powerful uncle and my new professor. "Find another side chick, Graham," Harrison growled, pulling me close. "This one is taken."
Mafia's Captive Desire  Novel Cover
9.7
He leaned in, inhaling her sweet scent as his hands traveled from her back to her waist, and then down to her thigh. She felt her breath hitch as she let out a small gasp. "We shouldn't be doing this." She said, her voice barely above a whisper. "Then tell me to stop." His voice was low, daring, as his fingers traced slow circles on her skin. *** Lucy had always lived life on her own terms, until the night everything changed. One moment, she was free; the next, she was bound to Barry Cooper, a cold, dangerous man who ruled the underworld with an iron fist. She never expected to be trapped in a world of power struggles, deceit, and unspoken desires. But as the lines between captor and captive blur, Lucy realizes she's caught in a deadly game, one where trust is a luxury and survival is not guaranteed. Will she escape the ruthless mobster who owns her... or will she become his greatest obsession?
Mated To The Possessive Wolf Admiral Novel Cover
7.2
I am a top-tier Alpha from another universe, but a spatial jump error dropped me straight into a high-security military isolation chamber. Right in front of me was a terrifying, silver-haired wolf-beastman Admiral, completely losing his mind to a lethal biological heat cycle. To survive in this strange dimension where my powers were restricted, I had to pretend to be a helpless, terrified girl. Surprisingly, my mere presence and scent instantly cured his incurable madness. But this backfired horribly. He became obsessively possessive, treating me like a fragile, priceless treasure. When I managed to sneak out to the city's lawless slums to gather intel and accidentally saved a dying panther boy, the Admiral went completely feral. He brought an entire war fleet, blotting out the sky, just to "rescue" me. He nearly slaughtered the boy out of blind jealousy, forcing me to throw myself into his arms and cry fake tears to stop the bloodshed. "I'm taking you home. No one will ever hurt you again." He brought me to his flagship's secret medical bay and ordered the Empire's chief doctor to run a full genetic classification test on me. I panicked. If they discovered my true identity as an off-world Alpha, I would be dissected or executed. I immediately commanded my AI system to fake my blood data, aiming for a perfectly average, forgettable Omega result. But as the machine processed my blood, the alarms blared, and the system overloaded. The old doctor fell to his knees in absolute worship, and the terrifying Admiral looked at me with wild, starving eyes. My system had overcompensated. I wasn't registered as average. I was just classified as the only SSSSS-grade Omega in the history of the universe.
Silent Regret Novel Cover
7.3
Louisa Vale's life was shattered when her best friend betrayed her and the man she loved did nothing to stop it. Humiliated and alone, she vows to rebuild her life and never let anyone hurt her again. Then Keon Ashford enters her world. Confident, powerful, and relentless, he challenges everything Louisa believes about trust and love. Despite her anger and desire for revenge, she cannot ignore the pull between them. Louisa wants to protect her heart, yet desire and unresolved anger are harder to ignore than she imagined. Can she survive betrayal and find love again, or will regret follow her forever?
The Fallen Queen's Dating Show Comeback Novel Cover
7.9
Catalina had just won the Best Actress Golden Globe. It was supposed to be the absolute pinnacle of her acting career. But a broken heel on her way backstage sent her crashing right into the arms of Brogan Cohen. He was Hollywood's most untouchable A-lister, and the man she despised most. A hidden paparazzo snapped a perfectly timed photo of him kneeling to untangle her dress, making it look like a deeply intimate, secret romance. The internet instantly exploded. Brogan's rabid fanbase tore Catalina apart, branding her a shameless clout-chaser. To make matters worse, a rival actress weaponized the scandal, accusing Catalina of sleeping her way to the top to steal roles. Within days, Catalina's world collapsed. Her upcoming lead role in a major indie film was suspended. Two luxury fashion houses unilaterally terminated her contracts. Meanwhile, Brogan simply hopped on his private jet and fled to the South of France, leaving her trapped in her apartment as a mob of screaming paparazzi battered her front door. She had spent years proving her talent, only to be blacklisted and labeled a manipulative homewrecker over a stupid accident. The sheer injustice of it suffocated her. She hated Brogan with a fiery, visceral passion for destroying her reputation and running away like a coward. With her career bleeding out, her manager slammed a contract on the desk: an unedited, live-streamed survival dating show on a private Caribbean island. "You need to prove you are entirely repulsed by Brogan Cohen." Catalina grabbed the pen and signed her name with aggressive, sharp strokes. She was going to flirt with every model on that island, burn this false narrative to the ground, and make Brogan choke when he turned on his TV.