The major themes of this story by Chinua Achebe are political hypocrisy, class conflict, and education as a pathway out of poverty in postcolonial Africa. Other themes include exploitation, child labor and city vs. country life. A government introduces free education for all as an election ploy, but later abandons the policy due to its cost and resultant cheap-labor shortages. The vengeful creditor is a ten-year-old girl subsequently employed by a rich family as a baby-nurse. When they are too slow keeping what she thought was a promise to pay for her schooling, she decides to impose a heavy penalty.
A major irony in the story is how little the country’s social structure changes with so-called democracy. Privilege, abuse of power and exploitation of the poor simply shift from the former colonial masters to the native elite.
Vengeful Creditor Text / PDF (5,750 words)