He L0cked His Wife Inside the Deep Freezer for Power and Money, But Forgot His Six-Year-Old Son Was Awake That Night

My name is Chibuike and I am six years old and I still remember that night because it was the first time I was afraid of my own father inside our big house in the city.

I woke up because my throat was dry and Mommy usually kept a bottle of water for me on the kitchen counter every night before I slept beside my teddy bear.

When I walked out of my room, I saw the kitchen light on and the deep freezer open, and I thought Mommy was arranging meat like she sometimes did late at night.

But when I went closer, I saw her legs first, and they were stiff and pale and not moving the way they should when someone is alive and standing.

I called her softly and asked why she was inside the freezer, and I remember feeling confused because she did not answer or even blink at me.

Then Daddy came from the sitting room and his eyes were red and wide and his face looked different from the smiling face people see during the day.

He shouted at me to keep quiet and asked if I wanted the neighbors to hear, and his voice was shaking even though he was trying to sound strong.

I asked him if Mommy was cold because her body looked blue and strange and I thought maybe she was sick and needed a blanket.

Instead of answering me, he pushed me hard against the wall and told me to go back to my room before he broke my head.

He grabbed my shirt and bent down to my face and told me that if I told my teacher or my aunty what I saw, I would end up like Mommy.

I did not fully understand what that meant, but I understood fear, and I ran back to my bed and covered myself with my blanket and cried quietly.

What I did not know that night was that my father had already chosen money over the woman who stood by him when nobody else did.

Many years before we moved to the city mansion, Daddy was just Odogwu the mechanic in the village with dirty hands and torn slippers.

People laughed at him when he sat outside his small shed waiting for customers who rarely came with broken motorcycles and old engines.

Mommy, whose name is Nkechi, was the only person who believed that he would one day become something bigger than the village mockery.

Rich men came to ask for her hand in marriage because she was beautiful and educated and from a respected family in the village.

She refused them all and said she would marry Odogwu because he had a good heart and she believed they would grow together.

Her parents shouted and told her she would suffer and regret it, but she packed her things and moved into his leaking zinc room anyway.

When rain fell, water entered the room and they placed bowls on the floor to catch the drops while they slept close together.

Mommy sold her expensive wrappers to buy Daddy new tools so he could fix bigger engines and attract more customers.

She roasted corn by the roadside under the hot sun to feed them when there was no money from the workshop.

When Daddy fell sick and almost died from an infection, Mommy sold her gold earrings, the only thing her grandmother left her, to pay hospital bills.

Every night she prayed beside their small bed and asked God to lift her husband from shame and poverty.

Slowly, things began to change and Daddy got a small contract to repair vehicles for a local company in the nearest town.

From that small contract came another bigger opportunity and soon they moved to the city where people started calling him Chief Odogwu.

Money entered the house like floodwater after heavy rain and new cars replaced the old motorcycle he once struggled to push.

A mansion replaced the zinc room and the same people who mocked him started greeting him with respect and forced smiles.

But as money increased, something inside Daddy changed and he no longer looked at Mommy with the same gratitude and softness.

He told her she spoke too local for his new status and that her smell reminded him of roasted corn and poverty.

He began coming home late at night with young women whose laughter filled the house while Mommy cried quietly in her room.

Whenever she reminded him of how she suffered with him, he said that was past tense and that she should stop talking about old stories.

He started beating her whenever she questioned him, and I would hide behind the door and cover my ears so I would not hear her crying.

Daddy began speaking about politics and power and how he deserved to sit in government houses and control contracts worth billions.

He said being a Chief was not enough and that he wanted to become a Senator and rule the state like a king.

One evening, he traveled secretly to meet a powerful native doctor deep inside a forest outside the city.

The man told him that if he truly wanted unlimited wealth and political power, he must bring the person who loved him the most.

The native doctor said the blood of that person would open a gate of billions and secure contracts that no competitor could touch.

Daddy did not hesitate or argue or ask for another way because greed had already swallowed the memory of sacrifice.

He returned home smiling unusually and bought Mommy her favorite ice cream as if he suddenly remembered how to be gentle again.

He apologized for his harsh words and promised to treat her better and said he wanted them to start fresh as husband and wife.

Mommy’s eyes were full of hope and she believed the man she married years ago had finally come back to her.

She ate the ice cream happily without knowing it contained a strong sleeping substance that would stop her heart in minutes.