He keeps going, almost as if he knows that if he stops, you’ll bolt.
“She was angry because the story was getting buried. The bakery owner had relatives on the city council. There were photos in the file. She described one of them to me. A hospital hallway. A young woman sitting alone. Gauze around her neck. Her mother asleep beside her in a plastic chair. And in the woman’s lap was a workbook. She said even then, with her hands bandaged, that woman was trying to study.”
Your throat closes.
It had been your anatomy workbook.
You remember it. You remember the cover, bent and damp from where it had fallen in the ambulance. You remember forcing your burned fingers to turn the pages because if you stopped being a student, if you stopped moving toward a future, then the fire had taken not just your skin but your entire life. You didn’t know anyone had photographed you. You didn’t know anyone had described you to a blind stranger.
“I asked Chika to tell me more,” Obinna says. “She said the woman’s name was Adaeze.”
You close your eyes.
The name lands like ash. You have not heard it in his voice before.
When you met him, you told him to call you Eden.
It had started as an accident. The receptionist at the music school had asked your name, and you’d said, “Adaeze, but most people…” Then you saw the flicker in her face, the one people get when they’re trying not to show surprise at scars, and you changed course mid-sentence. “Eden. Most people call me Eden.”
Nobody had ever called you that before. But after the fire, your old name belonged to hospital forms, legal complaints, and whispered pity in church. Eden sounded cleaner. Like a place after ruin. Like a fresh start you did not feel but desperately wanted.
Obinna looks at you steadily. “I knew your name before you gave me the other one.”
The betrayal widens, becomes something with hallways and locked rooms.
“So that’s why?” you ask. “You heard some story about a burned girl and decided to what? Find her? Save her? Marry her?”
His face flinches for the first time. Good. Let him feel the heat too.
“No,” he says. “That’s not what happened.”
“Then what happened?”
“Months after Chika told me about you, she died.”
The anger in your chest stumbles.
You stare at him.
He rubs his thumb against his wedding band as though the metal itself is sharp. “A bus accident. Drunk driver. She was twenty-nine.”
“I’m sorry,” you say automatically, because grief is still grief even when it walks in carrying lies.
He nods once. “I kept her notes. I used to ask people to read them to me sometimes. It was my way of keeping her voice near. In one of the files, there was an update. The lawsuit from the bakery victims was dropped. Witnesses withdrew. Records disappeared. Your name showed up again. It said you had stopped attending classes and moved with your mother to another district.”
You look away.