My children screamed with joy as Mama Tobi handed them a steaming plate of jollof rice and chicken.
I forced a smile from the doorway, but jealousy twisted in my stomach.
That night, I threw the food away behind the compound, whispering, “They will eat only my cooking.”
But at dawn, I opened the door and froze.
The entire street was silent—
Every stray dog lay lifeless beside the dumped rice.
And that was only the beginning of the nightmare
The children’s laughter echoed across the courtyard as Mama Tobi handed them a steaming plate of jollof rice and chicken. Her cooking always filled the compound with warmth—spices drifting in the air, neighbors smiling, children licking their fingers in delight.
From the doorway of our small apartment, I watched my three kids devour every bite like they hadn’t eaten in days. They adored her. They always had. And I forced a smile, pretending it didn’t pierce something sharp into my chest.
I loved my children.
I cooked for them daily.
I tried.
But my meals never brought that kind of joy.
As Mama Tobi wiped their mouths and kissed their cheeks, an irrational jealousy twisted in my stomach. They love her more. The thought came uninvited, ugly, but it stayed.
That night, after everyone was asleep, I crept behind the compound with the plate my children had brought home—the leftovers they swore they weren’t hungry enough to finish. My hands shook as I dumped the jollof and chicken into the grass.
“I am their mother,” I whispered to the darkness. “They will eat only my cooking.”
It should have ended there—just a petty, shameful act of jealousy.
But dawn came with horror.
When I opened the door the next morning, the entire street was silent. Too silent. No barking, no scurrying, no morning chaos. Instead, a tragic stillness hung over the compound.
Then I saw them.
Every stray dog that roamed our street—eight, maybe nine of them—lay lifeless where the food had been dumped. Their bodies stiff. Their eyes glazed. Their tongues darkened.
My breath caught. My knees buckled.
Neighbors had gathered, whispering. Pointing. My children clung to my wrapper, confused and frightened.
The landlord knelt beside one of the dogs, sniffed the rice, and recoiled. “This food… something is very wrong.”
Mama Tobi hurried toward the scene, clutching her headscarf. When she saw the dead animals, she gasped and whispered, “God forbid… what happened?”
I couldn’t speak.
My hands trembled uncontrollably.
What had I done?
But then—just when I thought it couldn’t get worse—one of the neighbors turned to me with narrowed eyes.
And that was only the beginning of the nightmare.
The compound erupted in murmurs as people began connecting dots I wished they wouldn’t. The stray dogs were known to follow the children, sniffing around whenever food scraps were tossed out. No one ever intentionally harmed them. They were part of our messy, living street—loud, annoying, but harmless.
This, though… this was different.
This was deliberate poisoning.
“Who threw food here yesterday?” the landlord demanded. “Who?”
I felt my heart slam against my ribs. My children’s hands tightened around my skirt. Sweat trickled down my spine.
“I… I don’t know,” I whispered, wishing the ground would swallow me.
Then Mama Tobi stepped forward, looking genuinely distressed. “The children took food home last night,” she said gently. “Where is the plate?”
My stomach flipped.
My daughter spoke before I could think.
“Mama threw it away.”
Every head turned.
A neighbor muttered loudly, “So it was her.”
Another hissed under her breath, “What kind of mother does that?”
My son cried, “She didn’t want us to eat Mama Tobi’s food!”
And just like that, the shame I had tried to bury burst into the open.
“I didn’t poison anything!” I shouted, panicked. “I just… I just threw it away. I didn’t know—”
But someone cut me off.
“Mama Tobi’s food has never killed anyone,” a woman said. “The problem isn’t her cooking.”
Another man crouched near a dog, pointing. “See the foam? This is poison. Rat poison maybe. Or pesticide.”
Cold dread washed over me.
Had the food been contaminated before? Was Mama Tobi’s kitchen unsafe? Or had something else touched the rice after I dumped it?
Then I remembered.
The landlord had sprayed the back compound that morning—the chemical smell had been strong enough to sting the nose.
Spray.
Food.
Rain.
Dogs.
The realization hit me like a blow.
I hadn’t poisoned anything knowingly. But my jealousy—my childish, irrational jealousy—had put food in a place drenched with deadly chemicals.
The guilt crushed me.
Before I could speak, two officers entered the compound. Someone had called them. Someone had assumed the worst.
“Who disposed of the food?” one officer asked.
All eyes landed on me again.
My voice trembled. “I… I did.”
The officer stepped closer. “Ma’am, we need to ask you some questions.”
My nightmare wasn’t over.
It was just beginning.
I followed the officers into the landlord’s sitting room, my children crying outside, Mama Tobi trying to comfort them. My hands shook so badly I had to clasp them together.
One officer, a woman with calm eyes, asked gently, “Why did you throw the food away?”
Shame burned through me. “I… was jealous,” I whispered. “My children love her cooking. I wanted them to eat only mine. I didn’t know the area had been sprayed. I didn’t know it would kill anything.”
The officers exchanged a look.
“So you admit you disposed of the food,” the female officer said.
“Yes.”
“And you understand it resulted in multiple dead animals?”
I swallowed hard. “Yes.”
She nodded slowly. “It’s irresponsible. But we’ve spoken to the landlord. The back compound was saturated with pesticides strong enough to kill pests immediately. If the food absorbed any of it overnight, the outcome makes sense.”
My eyes filled. “I didn’t intend for any living thing to be harmed.”
“We can see that,” she said. “But we need to speak with the community. This caused a lot of fear.”
Fear.
Judgment.
Suspicion.
I knew what my neighbors already believed—that I was jealous, petty, vindictive. And they were right… to a point. But I was not malicious. Just insecure.
When we stepped back outside, the murmurs returned like buzzing insects.
The officer raised her voice. “This was an accident caused by pesticide contamination. The food was dumped in a dangerous area. No foul play.”
The crowd settled, some relieved, others still glaring.
Then Mama Tobi approached me.
She didn’t shout. She didn’t accuse.
She simply looked into my tear-filled eyes and said softly:
“Jealousy is a sickness, my daughter. But it doesn’t have to kill your spirit.”
A tear slipped down my cheek. “I’m so sorry.”
She nodded. “I know you are.”
I braced myself for her anger—but she surprised me.
“From today,” she said, taking my hand, “you will cook with me. You and your children. We will feed them together. Two mothers, not rivals.”
My breath caught.
A second chance. Not deserved—but offered.
The neighbors murmured approvingly. My children ran to me, hugging my legs. And for the first time in months, I didn’t feel like I was losing them.
As the officers left, the female officer whispered, “Learn from this. Don’t let fear of being replaced make you lose yourself.”
I nodded.
Because the real poison wasn’t in the food—
It had been in me.
