You.
Or what was left of you then.
Something twists deep in your chest.
“I thought the story never ran,” you say.
“It didn’t. Not publicly.” Chiamaka’s mouth tightens. “But Chika kept drafts. She was stubborn. She also wrote private notes in the margins.”
With careful fingers, she turns the page.
There, in slanted ink, are words that make your breath catch.
The young woman in the hallway would not stop asking for her exam materials. Mother says she used to sing while sweeping the bakery before dawn. It is obscene how quickly beauty becomes public property and suffering becomes inconvenience. If this city buries her, it will not be because her life lacked value. It will be because powerful men fear witnesses who survive.
You stare until the letters blur.
Chiamaka lets the silence sit.
“When Obinna recognized your name at the school,” she says gently, “he didn’t tell me at first. But after he proposed to you, he showed me the article and admitted he thought you were the same woman. I told him he needed to tell you everything. I told him secrets grow teeth.”
Your laugh is brittle. “Smart woman.”
“I am surrounded by idiots, so I had to adapt.”
Despite yourself, you smile for half a second.
Then your eyes return to the photograph.
The version of you in that hallway looks both ancient and newborn. Wrapped in gauze, eyes swollen, mouth stubborn. She is almost unbearable to look at, not because she is grotesque, but because she is so clearly fighting not to vanish.
“You should also know,” Chiamaka adds, “that after the surgery, he started asking questions again about the bakery case. He found the old editor, the one who funded his treatment. He’s been trying to find out who buried the report.”
You look up sharply.
“Why?”
Continued on the next page