Table of Contents

1. A BusinessMan 2. A Factory Worker 3. Birth of Gavinska 4. Broken Company 5. Dead Sames 6. Good Guy 7. He is a Lucifer 8. Nicest 9. Aabera is Powerfull 10. Not Great 11. Vattimal's Factory 12. Wicked Man 13. A Heaven's Tale 14. About Carlsbergo 15. Best Friends 16. Fell from Heaven 17. Finding a Factory Boss 18. Gborea Has Fallen 19. Kalerum is a Corpse 20. Man with the Heavy Soul 21. Oweile 22. Son of Isolo 23. The Best 24. The Librarian 25. What's Wrong with Him 26. Wise Man 27. Zuluwaka 28. A Farm in Landolum 29. Cursed Teachers 30. His Galada 31. My loved Son 32. Plane Crash 33. Projects Man 34. The Factory Researcher 35. The Ghost of Dederai 36. Wise was Bossiah 37. Donlema's Son 38. Beroondel

11. Vattimal’s Factory

Chapter One

Waandum loved his father. His father was good to him and even some children who were not his siblings. His father’s name was Vattimal.

Truly, his father was a good man which led God to send him a teacher, teaching him in some styles of factories.

Waandum approached his father about what course to study in the university. Waandum wanted to study the course God had placed in his heart but his father was against it.

This surprised Waandum; this was the first time his father would be found not doing the right thing. Waandum couldn’t do anything about it so started preparing for the course his father wanted.

Chapter Two

God spoke to Waandum after a short time telling him that it was a Devil’s doing that made his father refuse to allow him study the course He laid in Waandum’s heart.

Waandum said that is not true, that there was no one between him and his father.

God then said “Young man, there are secret worlds which not all could enter. It was in one of such worlds that a Devil made your father speak that way”.

Waadum then retorted “God, you are the one who created this Devil and gave him such evil powers”.

And then God replied “There are no evil powers, he only misused his (the Devil) power. Most things can look bad depending on who is welding them”.

After God’s speech to Waandum, Waandum went again to his father pleading that he wanted to study a different course (a course God placed in his heart). This time around his father agreed.

Chapter Three

Vattimal saw a problem in his society and decided to solve it. He started a factory on locks of many keys. He planned that the locks would have about ten keys.

Two months in, Baatdulam decided to start the same factory with the same vision as Vattimal.

Both completed their factories around the same time. Now there were two factories of the same purpose and good people wondered which was best of the two factories.

Chapter Four

God then woke up in Eldeero (an Angel of God). Then God went to inspect the two factories. His aim was to provide guidance to good people on which of the two factories was best.

For the best must be used so that the goodness of the best impacts our own businesses or pursuits.

Vattimal’s factory came out better.

Baatdulam’s factory became a waste of time, resources and efforts. Baatdulam lamented that life was hard. That if he had only started another factory there would not have been this waste. How was he supposed to know that someone greater than himself had started the factory he did Baatdulam complained.

Chapter Five

Someone who worked in a factory also wondered about Baatdulam and his great waste and embarrassment. He believed that the problems of Baatdulam could happen to anyone.

This necessitated his Holy Spirit to speak to him saying “That any Holy Spirit could check the records of Zarra ( the Lord of Records) if such a competition existed”.

This factory worker was glad, his great fear was solved.

Chapter Six

The best song during Eldeero’s days was these:

A young man came before a judge begging him to send him back to his own country. The judge replied that he would check his records, that if the Devil slapped you because of your pocket’s sake he would send him instead to a bad country. But if the Devil slapped you for everyone’s pocket then I would send you back to your country.

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