My Boss, My Daddy, My Wahala / Chapter 2: Papa’s Wahala and ATM Embarrassment
My Boss, My Daddy, My Wahala

My Boss, My Daddy, My Wahala

Author: Denise Robles


Chapter 2: Papa’s Wahala and ATM Embarrassment

After my papa hammer for work, pride come enter him head, e begin arrange one guy wey senior me with six years make I date am. I no gree. So I pack my load run comot from house. My papa vex, say e go block all my cards, say I go crawl come back within three days. E don reach one week now. I never return, so na my papa lose this round. Because before I waka, I don carry all my designer bags and watches.

My mama just dey look me that time, shake head, say, "This your stubbornness na from your papa side." But I no send. Even as I dey drag luggage, na correct Aboki dey help me for gate, he dey hail me, "Madam, na you get street!" I just dey laugh, my chest dey rise—small freedom dey sweet belle.

But street no be beans. I try use my ATM for one POS stand near junction, na so the thing show 'transaction declined.' The POS attendant look me, I dey form big girl. I clear throat: 'Aunty, abeg try am again—maybe network dey misbehave.' She try am again, still decline. My face dey hot, embarrassment wan finish me.

To show say I fit survive, I find job for one company wey dey stock market, salary na three thousand per month. One week pass, na my papa first begin panic. E try add me for WhatsApp again, this time e use Hibiscus as nickname. After I leave am hang for one day, I reason say make I just reply small.

As I dey scroll him status, I see say e just land for Geneva. No wahala—while him only pikin dey manage three thousand salary, e dey flex for Switzerland dey chop life for Alps. I no send, I shamelessly message am: “Daddy~ next time you dey go business trip, abeg carry me join body.” Still, e no reply. I begin send cat wey dey beg stickers. “The small cat don broke, no money chop.”

Hibiscus: “……”

I just sigh, I know say my papa still dey vex.

But me sef stubborn: “Wire me hundred thousand make I know say you get power, if not I no go call you Daddy again.”

As I dey type am, I dey laugh small. All those small children wey dey hustle money from parent, na me be their chairman. Sometimes I dey even wish say my papa dey act like other Yoruba daddies—dem for don send me sermon, join fasting. But my papa get style, just dey ghost me.

The bags and watches wey I post online too cost, people no believe say na original, even after I reduce price. Na Zashadu bag I carry, dem still dey argue say e be Aba. Hotel wey I dey stay, na per day dem dey collect money. Daddy, you go gree make your baby girl go sleep under bridge?

All morning, Hibiscus just dey read my message, no reply. After lunch, I try again: “Daddy, your heart dey cold o. You go just allow your small cat dey hungry?”

Finally, as work dey close, e wire me hundred thousand. Sharp sharp I reply: “Daddy, you too much!” I nearly jump for seat, pack my bag, ready go chop correct asun and fried rice after work. As I stand up, my team lead block me.

“Morayo, everybody still dey work.”

I look around. “Okay, I go first, abeg.”

E just look me, shake head, lower voice: “MD never comot o. If you waka now, no bother come tomorrow.”

I raise voice: “I dey collect three thousand per month, una still wan make I do overtime?”

The whole office quiet, my voice just loud. I hear one coworker whisper: 'This girl get liver o.' Abeg, I just wan chop my asun, na wahala?

Na so MD office door open with one loud sound.

My heart fly, na so office people begin dey use eye look me, as if say wahala don set. Na Naija office, if you get mind talk back, dem go just dey wonder who dey give you ginger. Me, na hunger dey drive o!

This chapter is VIP-only. Activate membership to continue.

You may also like

My Boss Stole My Bonus Money
My Boss Stole My Bonus Money
4.9
Kunle, the star salesman, hustles hard only to see his bonus stolen by office politics and a manager's family connection. Betrayed and frustrated, he battles shameless HR and faces down his bosses with Lagos street wisdom, risking everything to reclaim what’s his. In a city where respect is strategy and only the bold survive, Kunle must choose between dignity and his daily bread.
My Boss Used Me To Destroy Love
My Boss Used Me To Destroy Love
5.0
Onuche hustles through Lagos as an errand boy for Ifedayo, a ruthless rich kid who turns people’s lives into wicked games. Torn between saving his dying sister and refusing blood money, Onuche must choose between loyalty, survival, and his own conscience. In a world where money buys everything—even love and betrayal—one wrong move could cost him his soul.
My Boss Chose My Rival
My Boss Chose My Rival
4.9
Amara’s loyalty to her boss is tested when a phone mishap exposes her private life and a younger, ambitious colleague threatens her place at work. Torn between pride and survival in Lagos, she must fight for respect, love, and her own future before everything slips away. One wrong move, and she could lose everything—including her heart.
Fired By My Oga, Set Up By His Son
Fired By My Oga, Set Up By His Son
4.9
Ebuka, a loyal company man, faces betrayal from his longtime boss and the boss’s ambitious son, losing his job and dignity overnight. As he’s pushed out and set up, Ebuka must fight for survival and justice in a Lagos world where loyalty means nothing and only the sharpest survive. His next move will decide whether he becomes another corporate casualty or turns the tables for a shocking last laugh.
Demoted for Rest: HR’s Nephew Stole My Seat
Demoted for Rest: HR’s Nephew Stole My Seat
4.8
After sacrificing my health with endless overtime, HR used my approved leave as excuse to disgrace me—demoting me so her own nephew, a clueless intern, could take my supervisor role. My sweat and loyalty became their stepping stone, while they tried to shut me up with small money. In this Lagos office, connection pass hard work—now, I must fight to reclaim my dignity or lose everything I’ve built.
Used and Owed: My Salary Is Their Profit
Used and Owed: My Salary Is Their Profit
4.6
Manager Dayo spent his own money for months, surviving on gala and prayers, just to keep his company’s million-naira project afloat. But when he begs for his ₦800,000 reimbursement, all he gets is cold faces, impossible rules, and humiliation—forced to collect his money in crumbs while his boss profits off his suffering. Now, with hunger chasing him and dignity gone, Dayo must decide: keep begging, or fight a system built to break him?
My Boss Blocked Me After One Night
My Boss Blocked Me After One Night
5.0
Tolu, a witty office worker, tries to resign but accidentally triggers office-wide chaos and unexpected attention from her fine, mysterious boss, Mr. Jide. As rumors, office drama, and secret crushes swirl, Tolu’s attempt to secure her own future puts her at the center of a romantic and career gamble—where one wrong move could mean heartbreak or a new beginning. Will she finally claim her own soft life, or will Lagos wahala catch up with her?
He Forced Me to Sign an IOU—Now I Hold His Fate
He Forced Me to Sign an IOU—Now I Hold His Fate
4.8
When my shameless colleague made me sign an IOU over bukka pepper soup compensation, he thought he could bully me forever—even as my mother lay sick and layoffs loomed. But what he didn’t know: I hold the layoff list, and I’ve uncovered his darkest office secret. In this Lagos office, who laughs last truly laughs best.
My Secret Bedmate Is My Boss
My Secret Bedmate Is My Boss
4.7
Ifeanyi thought he was just having fun with a no-strings-attached lover—until his new boss walks into the office, and it's Fisayo, the same man he's been sharing beds with every weekend. Now, every stolen glance threatens to expose them, and office gossip is one mistake away from destroying his career. In Lagos, where secrets spread faster than NEPA light, can Ifeanyi survive the hottest temptation of his life?
The CEO Used Me, Then Dumped Me
The CEO Used Me, Then Dumped Me
4.9
Tunde gave everything to build his boss’s dream, only to be betrayed when success came knocking. After promises of big money and family security, he’s blindsided and replaced by blood ties. With his pride and future on the line, Tunde must fight to protect his name and reclaim his dignity in a world where trust is a dangerous game.
Merit Elder Wahala for Sacred Throne
Merit Elder Wahala for Sacred Throne
4.7
Baba Nnaji’s moment of triumph turns to confusion and suspicion when a mysterious young elder with powerful family ties arrives to share his glory. As whispers of favoritism and shortcut promotions swirl, Baba must decide whether to protect tradition or challenge the new order—because in this village, one mistake can destroy a legacy.
My Canteen, Their Wahala
My Canteen, Their Wahala
4.9
Auwalu, a hardworking school canteen manager in Lagos, faces envy and suspicion from parents who believe he’s profiting off their children’s meals. Pushed to the edge by accusations and public shaming, he must decide whether to fight for his reputation or walk away—knowing that in Nigeria, success always attracts enemies. His dignity and livelihood hang in the balance as the community tests his limits.