Jerry froze.
The annoyance in his chest turned into a cold spike of confusion.
“What did you just say?”
“They say she’s going blind,” the boy continued, looking at Maya with a kind of pity that broke Jerry’s heart. “But it’s a lie. Someone in your big house is slowly taking her light away.”
Jerry felt a rush of anger. He was not about to take medical advice from a kid off the street.
“Are you crazy? Who sent you? If this is some joke from one of my rivals—”
But the boy stepped even closer, dropping his voice.
“It’s your wife, sir. The one with the red hair. She put something in the little girl’s food every single day.”
Jerry’s heart stopped for a second.
Everything—the honking cars, the shouting hawkers, the children playing—just went silent. He could not breathe.
Memory started hitting him like a fast-moving train.
He thought of Victoria, his beautiful second wife. She had been the perfect stepmother since Maya’s mother passed away. Maybe too perfect.
He remembered when Maya first started getting sick: the stomach aches, the tiredness, the way her vision always seemed worse right after dinner. He remembered how Victoria insisted on cooking Maya’s meals herself.
“You can’t trust these house helps, Jerry,” she would say. “Let me handle her food. It’s my duty.”
He looked at the boy again, searching for a lie. But he did not see a kid looking for a payday. He saw the eyes of someone who had seen something evil and could not unsee it.
“Why would you say that?” Jerry asked, his voice shaking. “Do you know who I am? Do you know what I can do to you for saying things like that about my family?”
The boy just nodded.
“I know you’re Chief Williams. I clean the high windows at the back of your house in Banana Island. The security guys let me do it for a little change. I see things because rich people never look down.”
Jerry’s knuckles turned white as he gripped the bench. He knew those windows. They looked right into the kitchen.
“What did you see?” Jerry whispered, terrified of the answer.
The boy looked at his feet, then back up.
“I saw her, Madam Victoria. When the sun goes down, she sends everyone out of the kitchen. Then she opens a small silver locket around her neck and drops a white powder into the girl’s soup. I saw her do it yesterday and the week before that.”
A cold, sick feeling washed over Jerry. It was not the heat. It was the feeling of being stabbed in the back by the person you are supposed to trust most.
The silver locket.
Victoria never took it off. She told him it held her grandmother’s ashes.
Just then, the sound of gravel crunching behind them broke the silence.
“Jerry, darling—”
Jerry went stiff.
He turned to see Victoria standing there. She looked stunning in her silk dress, her designer shades perched on her head. But when she saw her husband’s face and the ragged boy standing right next to him, she stopped dead in her tracks.
She tried to pull off a smile, but her eyes were darting back and forth. You could see the panic starting to crack through her makeup.
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