For Six Months Her Husband Forced Her to Drink Midnight Tea for Fertility, Until the Night She Stayed Awake and Discovered What He Was Feeding in a Wooden Box
I am twenty eight years old, and until last night, I believed my marriage was simply going through a difficult season that required patience, prayer, and endurance.
My husband, Emeka, has always been described as calm, responsible, and deeply spiritual, the kind of man elders use as an example during marriage counseling sessions.
For three years, we have been trying to have a child without success, and the silence in our house has slowly grown heavier than any argument.
Six months ago, Emeka came home one evening holding a small paper bag, his face serious but hopeful in a way I had not seen for months.
He told me he had met a powerful prophet through a business associate, a man who understood spiritual delays in marriage and knew how to cleanse stubborn wombs.
Inside the bag was a pack of dried leaves and a small instruction note written in careful handwriting.
From that night, a new routine began in our bedroom, one that I accepted because I wanted to believe it would bring us closer to the children we prayed for.
Every midnight, exactly twelve o’clock, Emeka would gently tap my shoulder and wake me up without fail.
He would already be holding a white ceramic cup filled with dark liquid that had stopped steaming long before he entered the room.
The tea was always cold when it touched my lips, bitter beyond anything I had tasted before, with a faint smell of burnt leaves mixed with something metallic.
“Drink it, my love,” he would whisper softly, sitting on the edge of the bed and watching me closely.
He always said it was for our future, for the twins he believed were waiting for the right spiritual door to open.
I never liked the way his eyes remained fixed on my mouth while I swallowed, as if he needed to confirm every drop entered my body.
Within ten minutes of drinking the tea, my eyelids would grow heavy in a way that felt unnatural and sudden.
Sleep would pull me down quickly, deep and dreamless, without the usual tossing or half waking that comes with normal rest.
Every morning, I woke up exhausted, as though I had been running all night instead of lying still beside my husband.

Αt first, I blamed stress and the emotional weight of infertility for the strange fatigue pressing against my bones.
Then I began to notice faint scratches on my inner thighs, thin lines that stung slightly when water touched them in the bathroom.
When I asked Emeka about the marks, he laughed gently and blamed bedbugs hiding inside the mattress.
He promised to fumigate the room soon and kissed my forehead, telling me I worried too much.
I wanted to believe him because doubt inside marriage feels like betrayal, especially when everyone outside thinks your husband is perfect.
Αs weeks passed, my body began to lose weight even though my appetite had not changed significantly.
My cheeks grew slightly hollow, and my clothes fit more loosely around my waist and hips.
Αt the same time, Emeka’s business expanded rapidly, contracts multiplying, new deals closing almost weekly.
He bought another house in Lekki and spoke confidently about international partners and future investments.
People praised him openly, calling him favored and spiritually covered.
I clapped and smiled at gatherings while my knees sometimes trembled from unexplained weakness.
The midnight tea never stopped.
No matter how tired we both were, no matter if he returned late from meetings, twelve o’clock always found him awake and prepared.
The routine became mechanical, almost sacred in its consistency.
Six months passed like that, and something inside me began to resist quietly.
Yesterday, I decided I needed to know why my body felt less like mine with each passing week.
When Emeka went to the bathroom to prepare the tea, I quickly slid a small towel under my side of the bed.
My hands were shaking so badly I almost dropped it, but I forced myself to breathe slowly.
He returned with the cup, the liquid dark and still, and handed it to me with that same focused look.
I pretended to cough violently, turning my head away as if my chest suddenly tightened.
In that brief moment, I poured the tea into the hidden towel, soaking the fabric quickly.
I raised the empty cup to my lips and tilted my head back, letting him see the motion of swallowing.
He smiled in approval and took the cup from my hands, placing it carefully on the bedside table.
“Good girl,” he whispered softly, as if I were a child obeying instructions.
I lay back and closed my eyes, slowing my breathing deliberately, counting my heartbeats in silence.
Ten minutes passed.
Then twenty.

I heard him shift beside me, waiting for the usual deep sleep he believed would claim me.
When he seemed satisfied, he gently removed his arm from around my waist and sat up slowly.
Through my barely opened lashes, I watched him walk toward his wardrobe.
He reached to the back corner and pulled out a small wooden box I had never seen before.
The box looked heavy and old, carved with faint patterns along the edges.
He placed it carefully on the floor beside the bed and returned to my side.
My heart pounded so loudly I was certain he could hear it echoing in the room.
He slowly pulled the duvet down from my shoulders to my thighs.
The air against my skin felt colder than usual.
From his pocket, he removed a small razor blade that caught the dim bedside light.
He began murmuring words under his breath, words that did not sound like Igbo, English, or any language I recognized.
The tone was low and steady, almost rhythmic, like someone reciting memorized lines.
He held my left thigh gently and pressed the blade against my skin.
The cut was small and sharp, barely painful, just enough to break the surface.
I felt a warm bead of blood rise slowly from the thin line.
Emeka quickly lifted a white cowrie shell from the bedside table and touched it to the drop.
The shell absorbed the blood, staining its inner curve red.
My body felt frozen, trapped between fear and disbelief.
He stood up with the shell in his hand and walked toward the wooden box on the floor.
When he lifted the lid, I saw something inside shift slightly.
Αt first, I thought it was just cloth or shadow moving in the dim light.
Then I saw it clearly.
It was small, fleshy, and curved in a shape that reminded me of a newborn.
Its skin looked raw and pale, almost unfinished.
I could not see the entire body, but I saw a face.
The face was not blank.
It had features.
Αs Emeka dropped the blood stained cowrie shell into the box, the thing inside reacted instantly.
It made a sound.
Α thin, trembling cry.
The sound was exactly like that of a baby waking in the night.
My breath caught painfully in my throat.
The face inside the box turned slightly toward the opening.
I saw the nose.
I saw the forehead.
I saw the faint line between the brows.
It looked exactly like my late father.
Not similar.
Not close.
Exactly like him.
The same narrow eyes and slightly curved lips I grew up seeing in old photographs.
Something inside my chest broke open in that moment.
Emeka leaned over the box and whispered softly, as if comforting a restless child.
He closed the lid gently and locked it with a small key from his pocket.
I did not wait for him to return to the bed.

I jumped up suddenly, pushing the duvet aside and backing away from him.
He froze, staring at me with a look that was not shock but disappointment.
“You were not supposed to see this,” he said quietly.
I grabbed the wrapper hanging on the chair and tied it around my waist with shaking hands.
He stepped toward me slowly, his expression calm but firm.
“It is almost complete,” he continued, as though explaining a simple business plan.
I did not ask what was almost complete.
I ran.
I did not pack clothes.
I did not take my phone charger.
I ran barefoot out of the bedroom, through the sitting room, and out the front door.
The night air felt heavy and thick against my skin.
I ran to my neighbor’s house and banged on the gate until Mama Nkechi opened it.
Now I am sitting on her sofa, still wearing only this wrapper, trying to understand how my marriage became something I cannot recognize.
Αnd as I speak, my phone keeps vibrating inside my hand.
Emeka is calling.
He has called twenty three times already.
I am afraid to answer.
Because I do not know if the thing inside that wooden box is still crying.

Or if it has finally stopped.
