
Back inside, I placed the bread on the dining table. The golden ribbon glimmered under the dim light.
“Can we eat it, Mummy?” Kene asked.
“No,” I said sharply. Too sharply.
He froze; his smile faded. “Why?”
I forced myself to soften. “Not now. We just ate lunch. Maybe later.”
But deep down, I knew we would not eat it. Not today. Not tomorrow. Not ever.
Naza came later that afternoon, knocking on the door for our usual brief discussion about Sunday school planning. A lively, outspoken woman, she filled every room with energy.
“Ah-ah! Who bought this one?” she exclaimed the moment she saw the bread.
I explained everything—how the neighbor had given it, my uneasiness, the money she owed me, the timing, the strange instinct that something wasn’t right.
Naza burst out laughing.
“My friend, nothing will happen! Don’t be dramatic,” she teased. Then she added jokingly, “Me, I will cover it with the blood of Jesus. Give me. It’s too fine to waste.”
Her laughter was carefree. Innocent.
And I—wanting to avoid waste—handed it to her.
“If you’re sure…”
“Give it to me jare,” she said, throwing her head back. “I am hungry already.”
She left with the bread tucked under her arm, still laughing.
I stood at the doorway long after she left, watching her walk down the dusty compound path, unaware that I would later replay that image again and again—wondering if I had made the worst mistake of my life.
That evening, around 7:30 p.m., as I was bathing my children, my phone began to ring. I wiped my hands and picked it up.
It was Naza.
She wasn’t laughing this time.
She wasn’t calm.
She was screaming.
“Chinwe! Chinwe!! Ogbonna is shouting ‘My tummy! My tummy!’ He’s rolling on the floor! Vomiting! Chinwe what was in that bread?!”
My heart jumped to my throat.
“What?!”
“It started small—normal stomach ache!” she cried. “Now he’s sweating, vomiting nonstop. Chinwe, he’s losing strength!”
I heard her son screaming faintly in the background. A child’s desperate, agonizing cry.
Something inside me went cold.
“We’re taking him to the hospital now!” Naza screamed. “He’s—he’s not breathing well—”
The call cut off.
My hands trembled wildly. Tears blurred my vision as I collapsed onto the bed.
“God,” I whispered. “God, please. Please don’t let anything happen to that boy. Please.”
Minutes crawled like hours. I tried calling Naza back but her phone was engaged. My chest felt like it was tightening.
Then my husband rushed into the room. “What happened?”
I explained between sobs. His face changed instantly.
“We need to go to the hospital now.”
We grabbed the children, locked the house and sped to the clinic near her home.
When we arrived, I saw Naza and her husband outside, crying. The nurses were rushing around. A stretcher was wheeled inside. Tubes. Injections. Activated charcoal. Saline solution.
The doctor’s words pierced the air:
“Food poisoning. A severe case. You brought him early—thank God. Another thirty minutes, and we might have lost him.”
Naza crumbled to the floor, wailing.
Her husband held her tightly, both of them shaking as their son lay with wires and tubes all around him.
I stood there frozen—guilt crashing over me like a storm.
If anything happened to Ogbonna…
If he died…
I wasn’t sure I would ever recover.
Inside the ward, Ogbonna lay still. His breathing was shallow. A nurse wiped his forehead. Another adjusted the drip. Naza sat beside him, holding his tiny hand.
He whispered sometimes, “Mummy…” then drifted into pain again.
I couldn’t hold back my tears.
“I’m so sorry,” I whispered.
Naza shook her head weakly. “It’s not your fault. You warned me. I didn’t listen.”
I still felt the weight of responsibility crushing my chest.
Hours passed. Then, slowly, he began to improve. The vomiting stopped. His eyes fluttered open.
“Mummy…” he whispered.
Naza burst into tears of relief.
When the doctor finally came back, he said, “He’ll recover fully. You acted fast.”
Those words saved my sanity.
When news spread in our compound, the residents gathered like a small council. Questions flew everywhere.
“Who bought the bread?”
“What happened?”
“Is the boy okay?”
Eventually the questioning led to Madam Christiana.
When they told her what happened, she threw her hands up.
“Me?! Ha! God forbid! I did nothing! I swear with my life!”
“Where did you buy the bread?” someone asked.
She stuttered. “A—a vendor at the park.”
Suspicious.
“You ate the other bread?” someone asked.
“Yes! Yes! I bought two! I ate one myself.”
But her eyes darted around.
Her hands shook slightly.
And then she tried shifting the blame. “Maybe the bread seller did something! Maybe the bread was bad!”
Naza pulled me aside, eyes burning.
“Let’s force her to eat the remaining bread,” she whispered fiercely. “If she eats it, we’ll know.”
But my husband stepped between us.
“No,” he said calmly but firmly. “Let it go. Leave judgment to God.”
I clenched my jaw. “But she could have killed a child.”
“Let it go,” he repeated. “Leave it.”
I swallowed hard. “Fine.”
But something broke that day between me and my neighbor. Completely.
After that, I cut all ties. Even on social media—I deleted, blocked, and removed her. The money she owed me, I released it. Almost 300k. Gone.
Some losses, I decided, were better than death.
Some wars were better handed to God.
Life moved forward, though the memory scarred me. Every time I saw young children in Sunday school, I remembered Ogbonna’s tiny body lying on the hospital bed.
Eventually, our family grew. More children. More responsibilities. More dreams. We moved to a bigger place across town. I left the old compound behind and tried to forget.
Years rolled into years.
One afternoon, while folding clothes, I received a message from an old neighbor.
“Have you heard? Madam Christiana has a severe stroke.”
I froze.
“What happened?” I typed back.
“She’s bedridden now. Can’t move one side of her body.”
I sat down slowly. A mix of emotions passed through me—none of them joy, but none of them surprise.
Some battles, I remembered, are handled by nature itself.
I exhaled deeply.
“May God have mercy on her,” I finally typed.
Last week, Ogbonna turned eleven.
At his birthday celebration, he ran around, laughing, full of life and intelligence—smart as ever. His laughter filled the room like music.
As I watched him blow out his candles, something inside me softened, then strengthened.
I leaned close to him afterwards and whispered, “You are a miracle.”
He smiled, not fully understanding, but sensing something precious.
Sometimes, at night, I sit on our balcony and remember that day.
The big bread, beautifully packed.
My little boy, running inside with it.
My instinct tightening.
Ogbonna, pale and weak on the hospital bed.
And Naza, crying like a mother who had seen death and wrestled it to the ground.
Every time, I shiver.
Every time, I whisper, “Thank You, God.”
Because if we—my children and I—had eaten that bread…
If I had ignored the small voice inside me…
If Naza had delayed by thirty minutes…
Our story today would have been a tragedy.
Instead, it became a lesson.
A warning wrapped in mercy.
And that is why, whenever I remember it all, my heart still skips a beat.
Sometimes, it is better to be careful and misunderstood
than careless and full of regret forever.
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