My Husband Bought Me a Birthday SUV and Sent Me to the Expressway — The Mechanic Said My Blood Was the Real Gift Before Noon

My name is Chioma, and I used to believe love could survive poverty.

When I married Femi, we had nothing but a leaking room and stubborn hope. He was a bricklayer with cracked palms and tired shoulders. I sold roasted corn by the roadside to support us.

We counted coins at night. We prayed loudly so hunger would not hear our stomachs.

His family rejected him because he was poor. They said I married beneath myself. I stayed. I defended him. I fasted for him when contracts did not come.

When I had savings, I gave everything to him to start a small cement supply business.

I never kept secrets from him.

Six months ago, something changed.

He reconnected with an old school friend who introduced him to what he called a “Special Prayer Group.”

That night he returned home late. He did not greet me properly. He went straight to the bathroom and stayed there for a long time.

After that, he stopped eating my food.

He stopped praying with me.

Two weeks later, money began to flow like water from a broken pipe.

Big contracts. New cars. Expensive clothes. New friends who spoke in low tones and wore heavy perfumes.

He told me it was a government deal. I believed him because I wanted to believe him.

But every night at exactly 12 AM, he would wake up quietly.

He would take a red handkerchief from under the pillow and walk to the wardrobe.

Inside the wardrobe, behind his suits, there was a small clay pot.

He would whisper into it.

Sometimes I heard him say my name.

Whenever I asked questions, he shouted.

“Woman! If you want to enjoy this wealth, stop asking nonsense!”

I kept quiet.

I told myself prosperity sometimes looks strange.

Then my 30th birthday arrived.

Femi woke me up with excitement in his eyes. He handed me a shiny car key.

“Baby, I bought you a brand new SUV,” he said proudly.

My heart nearly burst from happiness.

He hugged me tightly. Too tightly.

“You must drive it alone to the village today and show my mother,” he said quickly. “I will join you later.”

I laughed and kissed him. “Thank you, my love.”

“Leave before 10 AM,” he added, glancing at his wristwatch. “You must be on the expressway before 12 noon.”

His voice trembled slightly. I thought it was excitement.

I dressed beautifully. I admired myself in the mirror.

I did not know the car was meant to be my coffin.

Before traveling, I decided to pass the mechanic workshop to pump the tires.

That decision saved my life.

As I stepped out of the SUV, the young mechanic who once begged me for hospital money approached me nervously.

“Madam,” he whispered, looking around carefully, “do not enter this car.”

I frowned immediately.

“Your husband paid me one million naira to cut the brake tubes,” he said, his hands shaking. “He wants you to die on the expressway today.”

My car keys fell from my hand.

Anger rose faster than fear.

I slapped him.

“How dare you lie against my husband?” I shouted. “The man who just bought me this jeep?”

He dropped to his knees instantly. Tears streamed down his face.

“I am not lying, Madam,” he cried. “Look under the car. I have already cut the wires. If you drive past 40 kilometers per hour, the car will somersault. He said he needs your blood before 12 noon.”

My body turned cold.

He showed me the bank alert on his phone.

The sender’s name was Femi.

My husband.

My vision blurred.

Just then, my phone rang.

It was him.

“Hello honey?” he said cheerfully. “Are you on the road now? Hope you are speeding? My mom is waiting.”

My lips trembled. I could not speak for a moment.

“Honey? Why are you quiet?” he asked impatiently.

I looked at the mechanic. I looked at the SUV shining under the sun.

“Yes baby,” I lied slowly. “I am on the expressway now. I am driving fast.”

“Good,” he whispered softly. “Safe journey.”

He ended the call.

The mechanic held my arm. “Madam, don’t go back to that house. He is desperate.”

But something inside me had shifted.

Fear left.

What replaced it was anger.

Not loud anger.

Cold anger.

“Fix the brake,” I told him quietly. “Now.”

He worked with shaking hands.

As he repaired the tubes, I remembered the clay pot in the wardrobe. The red handkerchief. The midnight whispers.

He said he needed my blood before noon.

Before noon for what?

To renew wealth?

To extend life?

Suddenly, everything made sense in a sick way.

The government contracts. The sudden money. The new friends.

I entered the SUV after the brake was fixed.

But I did not head toward the expressway.

I drove back home slowly.

It was 11:25 AM.

The house gate opened for me. The security men looked confused.

“Madam, you are back?” one asked.

I smiled faintly.

“Yes.”

I parked quietly and entered the house.

Femi was in the living room.

He was dressed in white native attire. The red handkerchief was folded neatly in his hand.

He looked up, surprised.

“You forgot something?” he asked cautiously.

I walked toward him slowly.

“I forgot to die,” I replied.

His face drained of color.

For a few seconds, neither of us spoke.

The clock on the wall ticked loudly.

11:32 AM.

“You spoke to the mechanic,” he said finally. It was not a question.

I nodded.

His eyes darkened.

“You have ruined everything,” he whispered.

“Everything?” I laughed bitterly. “You mean the wealth that requires my blood?”

He stood up slowly.

“You don’t understand,” he said. “This is bigger than you.”

I walked toward the bedroom.

He tried to block me, but I pushed past him.

I opened the wardrobe.

The clay pot was still there.

It vibrated slightly.

The air in the room felt thick.

The clock read 11:45 AM.

Femi grabbed my wrist.

“If the sacrifice is not completed, we will both lose everything,” he said urgently.