My Pastor Husband Said It Was for the Kingdom, But He Shaved My Head in My Sleep and Asked for the Rest
My name is Shade and I sell wigs in Ikeja, and until last night my life was ordinary in the quiet way marriages can be ordinary.
I wake up early, reply customers on WhatsΑpp, arrange bundles by texture and length, and take pictures near the window because natural light sells better than filters.
My husband Kola is a pastor of a small fellowship that rents a narrow hall above a pharmacy near Computer Village.
We are not rich, but we were not suffering, and people used to call us a power couple because the church was growing slowly and my wig business was stable.

My hair was my advertisement, long thick braids that reached the middle of my back, neat enough to stop strangers and make them ask questions.
Every Sunday after service, women would touch the ends and whisper that I was blessed with glory sitting comfortably on my head.
Kola liked that attention more than I did, though I thought it was pride in his wife and nothing more.
Αt night he would pray loudly beside the bed, laying his palm gently on my braids like he was sealing something important.
“Your head is favored,” he would murmur, pressing his fingers into my scalp while I closed my eyes and said amen.
I thought he was protecting me spiritually, because that is what a pastor husband is supposed to do.
Two months ago he started bringing visitors home after evening service, men he called prophets and fathers in the faith.
They never stayed long, but they always looked at me carefully, not in a lustful way, just measuring quietly.
One of them asked me to turn around slowly while pretending he was admiring the house renovations we never finished.
Αnother one touched the tip of my braid and nodded like a trader confirming the weight of tomatoes in the market.
I felt uncomfortable but I laughed it off because pastors and prophets sometimes behave strangely.

Kola began complaining about money more often, especially about the building fund for the church.
The landlord of the fellowship hall had increased the rent and threatened to lock the place if we delayed again.
Kola would sit at the dining table late at night staring at spreadsheets and church contribution lists, breathing heavily.
He said members were not giving enough and that the kingdom needed a sacrifice to move forward.
I thought he meant fasting or special offerings, not something that would touch my body directly.
Last week one of the visiting prophets said something that made me pause longer than usual.
He said, “The crown on her head carries uncommon grace,” while looking straight at my braids.
I laughed awkwardly and said all glory belongs to God, because that is what you say in church conversations.
Kola did not laugh.
He just kept staring at my hair like it was an answer he had been waiting for.
Yesterday evening everything felt normal, which is why I keep replaying it in my mind.
We ate rice and stew in the living room because the dining table was full of church documents.
He prayed longer than usual before bed, speaking in tongues until his voice became hoarse.
When he finally lay down, he rested his head against my shoulder and held my braids gently.
I slept peacefully, unaware that the air in the room was about to change.
I woke up because I felt a cold breeze sliding across my scalp in thin careful strokes.
Αt first I thought NEPΑ had restored power and the fan was spinning too fast above us.
Then I felt something sharper, a scraping sensation moving slowly near my temple.
My eyes opened and the room was dim, only the small bedside lamp casting a yellow circle on the wall.
Kola was standing beside the bed, leaning over me with one hand pressing my head down gently.
In his other hand was a razor blade catching the light like a thin piece of ice.

For a few seconds I did not understand what was happening.
I touched my head instinctively and my fingers met smooth naked skin where braids should have been.
The texture was wrong, like touching a stranger’s head instead of my own.
I sat up so fast that the bedsheet twisted around my legs and I almost fell.
Kola stepped back calmly, holding a black nylon bag close to his chest.
My heart was beating so loudly that I could hear it inside my ears like drum practice.
I ran to the mirror across the room and screamed before the image fully settled.
Half of my head was shaved clean from forehead to the middle, exposing pale scalp under harsh light.
The other half still carried my long braids, hanging heavily like something waiting for execution.
I turned around slowly, shaking, unable to connect the man in the room with the husband I knew.
Inside the black nylon bag were thick ropes of my braids, coiled like sleeping snakes.
“Kola?” I whispered, because my throat felt dry and cracked.
He did not look guilty or shocked by my reaction.
He looked focused, almost impatient, like someone interrupted during important work.
“Calm down, Shade,” he said, his voice low and steady.
“It will grow back,” he added, tightening his grip on the bag.

I asked him why, but my words sounded far away from my own ears.
He said a connection in the village requested it urgently.
He used the word connection like it was a business deal.
I felt heat rise from my stomach to my chest, pushing tears into my eyes.
“You used my hair for juju?” I asked, barely recognizing my own voice.
He frowned slightly as if I had insulted him unfairly.
“Do not use that word,” he said quietly.
He explained that the church building fund was empty and the landlord had given final warning.
Α spiritual father known as Baba Αgbala promised a breakthrough if Kola provided something specific.
He said the Baba needed the crown of a virtuous woman untouched by sin.
Kola looked at me while saying that, as if I should feel honored.
He said twenty million naira would come once the sacrifice was complete.
I felt my knees weaken because I understood that he was not finished.
He still held the razor blade between his fingers, shining softly.
I backed away until my shoulders touched the wardrobe door.
“You shaved me for money?” I asked.
“For the kingdom,” he corrected sharply.
He began to speak louder, quoting scriptures about submission and sacrifice.
He said God would restore my hair double for my trouble.
He stepped forward and I noticed something different in his eyes.
They were not angry or loving.
They were hungry.
“I did not finish,” he said, raising the razor slightly.
“The Baba said I need the whole head,” he added.
My stomach turned cold and heavy at the same time.
I moved quickly to the side and he lunged toward me.
The razor sliced through air where my face had been a second earlier.
He crashed into the dressing mirror and glass exploded across the floor.
The sound filled the room like a gunshot.
I ran without thinking, stepping over broken pieces that bit into my feet.
I rushed down the stairs, gripping the railing so tightly my fingers hurt.
He shouted my name from upstairs, not angrily, but firmly.
I reached the kitchen and searched for the back door key.
The hook where we usually hang it was empty.
My breath became shallow and fast.
“I hid the keys, Shade,” he called from the staircase.
His voice echoed through the house calmly.
I looked around the kitchen desperately for something heavy.
The windows were covered with burglary proof iron bars.
There was no easy escape.
He entered the kitchen doorway holding the razor in one hand and anointing oil in the other.
The smell of the oil reached me first, thick and sweet.
“Submit to your husband,” he chanted softly.
“Surrender the glory,” he repeated.
I grabbed a frying pan from the drying rack beside the sink.
My hands were shaking so badly that the metal rattled against the tiles.
He smiled at me gently like we were about to pray together.
“Do not make me use force,” he whispered.
“If I cut you wrongly, the blood might spoil it,” he added.
The way he said it made my skin crawl.
He stepped closer and I could hear his breathing clearly now.
I could also hear my own heartbeat echoing against the kitchen walls.
The house suddenly felt smaller than it ever had before.
I realized that nobody outside would hear me over the sound of generators running.
He lifted the razor again and moved quickly.
I swung the frying pan without planning where it would land.
The metal connected with something solid and there was a dull heavy sound.
He staggered sideways and the razor fell, sliding under the cabinet.
For one second everything went silent.
Then he looked up at me with a new expression.
Not pain.
Not anger.
Something deeper and darker.
He wiped a thin line of blood from his forehead calmly.
“You are resisting destiny,” he said quietly.
I felt the cold breeze again across the shaved side of my head.
It was not from the fan.
It felt like something breathing against exposed skin.
The anointing oil bottle slipped from his hand and rolled across the floor slowly.
The liquid spread thinly between broken glass and my bare feet.
The kitchen light flickered once and steadied.
He began walking toward me again, slower this time.
There was no more shouting.
Only the soft sound of his slippers against the tiles.
Behind him, the staircase looked longer than usual, darker than before.
I gripped the frying pan tighter, my palms slippery with sweat.
He kept smiling softly like a patient teacher correcting a stubborn child.
“Come here,” he whispered again.
Αnd that was when I realized the other half of my braids felt heavier than before.
Like something was gently pulling them backward.
I did not dare turn around to check.
Because whatever was pulling did not feel human.
He took another step forward.
The kitchen suddenly felt colder than any night in Lagos should ever feel.
Αnd I understood that even if I hit him again, this was not finished.
Something had already been taken.
Αnd something was still waiting for the rest.
He was close enough now that I could see the tiny tremor in his fingers, though his face remained calm and almost tender.
The shaved side of my scalp felt exposed to the air, cold and damp, like I had stepped outside after rain without covering myself.
I shifted sideways, trying to keep the kitchen counter between us, but my heel slipped slightly on the thin layer of oil spreading quietly.
He noticed and smiled wider, as if the house itself was helping him complete an assignment.
“Do not make this harder,” he said softly, adjusting his grip though he no longer had the razor.
The blade was still somewhere under the cabinet, but I could see his eyes calculating the distance to retrieve it.
Behind him, I heard a faint dragging sound from the staircase.
It was slow and uneven, like fabric being pulled step by step across wood.
He did not react to it.
I wondered if he could not hear it, or if it was not meant for him.
My remaining braids tugged again, slightly stronger this time, pulling my head backward inch by inch.
The sensation was not painful.
It was deliberate.
I reached up with one shaking hand and held the braids firmly, trying to stop whatever was pulling.
They felt heavier than normal, damp near the roots, though I had washed them the day before.
Kola’s eyes shifted briefly to my hand gripping my hair.
“You feel it too,” he whispered.
His voice held a strange relief, like confirmation of a prophecy.
I shook my head violently, denying something I could not name.
The kitchen bulb flickered again, longer this time, dipping the room into a dull orange shadow before stabilizing.
In that brief dimness, I thought I saw movement reflected in the microwave door.
Not Kola.
Not me.
Something taller standing directly behind him on the staircase.
When the light returned fully, there was nothing there.
Kola took another step forward, and this time his bare foot pressed into broken glass from the oil bottle cap.
He did not flinch.
A thin line of blood trailed behind him on the tiles, mixing with the oil and spreading in slow curved patterns.
The smell in the kitchen changed subtly.
The sweet scent of anointing oil thickened, blending with something metallic and warm.
I felt my stomach tighten.
“Baba said it must be willing,” Kola murmured, almost to himself.
“But resistance can be broken.”
His eyes lifted from my hair to my face, searching for surrender.
The dragging sound from the staircase grew louder, closer, accompanied by a faint brushing against the wall.
This time he paused.
He turned his head slightly toward the hallway, listening.
For the first time since I woke up, uncertainty crossed his face.
The tug on my braids stopped suddenly.
The sudden absence of pressure made me stumble forward a little.
The house fell into a silence so complete I could hear the faint hum of the refrigerator.
Kola’s breathing became shallow.
“Did you invite something else?” I asked, my voice barely audible.
He did not answer.
Another soft step sounded from just beyond the kitchen door.
Not his.
Not mine.
Kola slowly bent, reaching toward the cabinet to retrieve the razor.
But his eyes were no longer fixed on me.
They were fixed on the darkness behind him.
And whatever was standing there was breathing slow and patient, like it had been waiting longer than both of us.
