Amara Akwarandu sat on the hard hospital bench, her back bent, her fingers squeezing the paper in her hand like life itself depended on it.
Her eyes kept running over the words written there – BRAIN CANCER (PILOCYTIC ASTROCYTOMA). The meaning refused to soften. The line stared back at her, bold, merciless. And under it, the note that broke her soul: few weeks to live. Her throat tightened as if someone was pressing it shut. She tried to breathe but air felt like hot stones in her chest. The paper shook in her hands. It was not only the sickness eating her away, it was the finality of those words. Her vision blurred. Before she knew it, hot tears had rolled down her cheeks. She reached for her phone with weak fingers, the device heavy as if it knew the burden she was about to drop. She scrolled quickly, pressed Alex Spencer’s number. He was her husband, her one person in the world or so everybody thought. The call connected. “Alex,” her voice cracked, low, shaking, “I just came from the doctor… they said—” He cut her off before she could finish. “Amara, please, if it’s one of those small sicknesses again, just buy medicine. I’m busy.” And just like that, he ended the call. The phone slipped in her hand, dangling as though it might fall to the floor. She stared at the screen, her tears running freely now. She whispered to the empty corridor, broken and trembling, “Alex… I’m dying.” Everybody outside envied her. They said she was lucky to have married the perfect man—the brilliant doctor, the shining star. But envy was easy when they didn’t know the truth. It is easy to admire and praise a broken car because the body appears shiny and unarguably attractive. But not when you’re able to take the key yourself, turn on the ignition and drive it. Only then can your perception about that car change for the truth. For four years she had lived with Alex, but she had walked through everything alone. He never cared what storm she was facing. When she fell sick, she went to the hospital alone. When problems rose in the house, she handled them herself. And now, even as death announced its arrival, she had no hand to hold, no voice to comfort her. Amara pressed the paper to her chest. The weight of the world sat on her shoulders, and she felt smaller than she had ever felt. “Madam! Madam, please, come quickly!” The sharp, urgent voice of a nurse cut into her sorrow. She looked up, startled. A young nurse in uniform was hurrying towards her, her eyes full of insistence. “Please, follow me,” the nurse said, holding her arm. “Dr. Spencer is around today. He’s the best neurosurgeon we have. He might be able to help your case.” Amara froze where she sat. Her heart dropped. She knew who the nurse was talking about. She tried to shake her head, but her body was too weak. “Come, don’t waste time,” the nurse urged, already lifting her gently to her feet. “Don’t lose this chance.” Amara’s legs dragged as they moved down the corridor. Each step felt like punishment. Her chest was heavy with something the nurse could not understand. When they reached the consultation wing, the sight before her made her stop. A long line of patients waited patiently, hope written on every face. The air carried tension and desperation. People shifted on their seats, clutching files and test papers like treasures. The nurse pushed open the door and led her in. Inside, Alex Spencer sat behind his desk – her so-called perfect husband. He was finishing with a patient, his voice calm, soft, and professional. He smiled faintly, offered reassurance, and the patient left with a bow of gratitude. Then Alex looked up and his eyes landed on Amara. For a moment, something flashed across his face: surprise, almost alarm. But within seconds, his expression hardened, wiped clean of anything human. “Amara,” his voice was flat, cold. “What are you doing here?” He didn’t wait for her answer. He turned away, walked back to his chair, and picked up a file as though she was a mistake that had entered his office. Amara’s lips trembled, but no words came. Her heart was breaking silently in her chest. Before she could even gather herself, Alex spoke again, sharper this time, not sparing her a glance. “I told you, stop bringing your little issues to me. I am busy.” His words pierced her. Her knees weakened. She clutched the test result harder, trying to steady herself. The nurse, unaware of the storm, quickly collected the paper from Amara and placed it on the desk. “Doctor Spencer, this patient’s condition is very serious. Please, look at her result immediately. She needs urgent review.” Alex didn’t even lift his head. “Every patient here is serious. If all of them demanded I abandon procedure, how would I work?” The nurse blinked, taken aback. “But Doctor—” Alex snapped. His voice rose, hard and final. “Enough! Get out, both of you.” He turned his eyes on Amara at last, but they were colder than ice. “If you want consultation, join the queue like every other patient. And if this is personal, then wait until I get home.” The room fell silent. The nurse looked at him in shock, her mouth opening and closing. Amara’s tears spilled freely now. She reached out, picked the paper with trembling fingers, and turned. Her steps were heavy as she walked out. Outside, the bright corridor lights stabbed her eyes. She leaned against the wall, her whole body shaking. Her breath came out in whispers, broken and painful. “If I need an appointment to see my own husband… then what is the use of this marriage?” Her fingers pressed against the wall for balance. Her heart pounded, not just from the sickness, but from the emptiness swallowing her whole.“Deranged husband?” Alex repeated, his lips curling into a bitter scoff. “I’m not here for you, Adaobi. Go and get me my wife right now. This trick stops here, right now!”Adaobi let out a laugh that carried no joy, only pain. Her eyes glistened but her lips remained hard. “Did you just say your wife?” she asked, shaking her head before another sad laugh slipped out.Alex clenched his jaw and refused to answer. He knew where she was heading, but his pride stopped him from admitting it.Adaobi’s voice sharpened as she stepped closer. “While she was battling with brain cancer, she came to you at the hospital. Do you remember? What did you do? You shunned her and sent her away. What kind of doctor sees his own wife sick and doesn’t give a damn? What kind of husband treats his wife like trash?” Her tone cracked slightly but her eyes never left him. “Now she’s gone, and you show up here looking like a mad man, obviously regretting your actions, demanding to see her?”Her words pierced th
Alex dragged himself up from the floor with James’ help, his body trembling as though strength had been drained out of him. His eyes refused to shift away from the frame picture of Amara on the stand. Her smile was too alive, too warm to belong to someone who was gone. His lips trembled as if words were fighting to come out, but all he could manage was a broken whisper.“This is not real… it’s not real.”On one of the frames where written a memorial note that added more dagger to Alex's broken heart.“Sir, are you here for the funeral of Miss Amara Akwarandu?”The soft voice of one of the ladies arranging flowers nearby broke into his grief. Alex’s head jerked sharply towards her. Her face looked harmless, but her words stabbed like sharp glass. His chest tightened.“Funeral?” His voice cracked, almost childlike. “What are you saying? Whose funeral?”The two ladies exchanged quick, nervous glances, unsure if this man standing before them was in his right senses. The first lady st
Alex sat in his garden, gulping the last glass from the whiskey bottle. The bitter taste burned down his throat, but it did nothing to calm the fire inside him. Cigarette butts littered the small side table beside him, the air thick with smoke. His eyes were bloodshot, restless, shifting from the dark sky to the empty glass in his hand. He wasn’t restless because he missed Amara. No, what ate him up was the thought of her daring to fool him, daring to walk out with divorce like she could command his life.The gate creaked open. A tall, well-built man stepped in, his stride calm but deliberate. It was James, Alex’s closest friend, the one he had asked earlier to trace Amara’s whereabouts. James stopped near the chair, his eyes quietly scanning the bottles, the ash, and the mess of a man before him.“You know, Alex,” James said slowly, “the way you’re drinking, the way you’re smoking yourself into pieces like this… it almost looks like heartbreak. Could it be you’re finally falling
But it was too late.Amara’s chest stopped moving. Her face relaxed into stillness. Her body was gone cold.Adaobi broke down, clutching her lifeless sister against her chest, wailing. “No! Amara, no! Please come back. Please don’t leave me here alone!”Instantly, the doctor and a nurse stormed the room, trying to check Amara’s pulse…************Alex sat in his office, restless. His pen rolled between his fingers, tapping against the desk, but his mind was not with the papers before him. His heart was heavy, thoughts scattered. He didn’t even notice when his colleague walked in, carrying a file.“Dr. Spencer,” the colleague said, placing the folder gently on the table, “this is the list of patients waiting for you in the cue.”Alex barely looked up. His voice was distant. “Drop it there.”The colleague turned to leave but paused at the door. His eyes narrowed as he studied Alex. “Are you okay?”Alex’s fingers scratched absently at the side of his neck. His nails dragged across the
Amara walked down the lonely road with slow, tired steps. Her handbag hung loosely on her arm, but her eyes were fixed straight, seeing nothing, only emptiness. She felt like somebody moving without life inside her body.Four years ago, she had walked into marriage with Alex because her parents wanted it, not because her heart wanted it. She had hoped things would change, that maybe with time Alex would warm up to her. But instead, he gave her a heart filled with wounds. His heart had always belonged to another woman, one who had walked away from him to follow wealth. And since that day, Alex never forgave Amara. In his own mind, she was the reason he lost love.Four years. Four long years of marriage where she carried every weight alone. She was never wife to him; just somebody that filled space in his house. Today, at last, her eyes were open.And she was free finally of that prison of a marriage. But was she entirely free?She was diagnosed of brain cancer and had only few week
By the time Amara reached home, evening had already covered the sky, and her body was screaming from exhaustion. Her hand still clutched the brown envelope she collected from her lawyer’s office earlier. She had waited there almost the entire day, signing, re-signing, answering questions she barely heard, her mind numb with pain. When the lawyer finally slid the divorce papers across the desk to her, she had felt no joy, no freedom, only a quiet heaviness pressing her heart.Now in her living room, she sat at the dining table with the envelope in front of her. For a long while, she didn’t touch it. Her eyes were on it, but her mind was far away, lost in the years she had given to Alex, years that had left her dry and empty. She forced her fingers to open it at last. One by one she pulled out the documents, reading carefully through each line as though reading her own obituary. Her name was everywhere, her signature on the final pages, and the bold title: DIVORCE AGREEMENT, stari