
21/07/2025
THE GIRL WHO RETURNED AFTER HER BURIAL
PART 8: Ada’s Goodbye
After Obinna’s body was found—his mouth filled with soil, his eyes wide with terror—Umuolu fell into uneasy silence. No one dared speak ill of the dead anymore. Not when the dead could still hear.
The villagers returned to their homes early each evening. Drums no longer played. Fires burned lower. The name “Ada” was now spoken only in whispers, followed by a quick prayer for forgiveness.
But something had changed.
The air no longer felt heavy. The wind no longer carried cries. The whispers had stopped.
Only Mama Njideka heard the final message.
She said it came in a dream.
She was standing by the stream, the same stream where Ada used to fetch water. The air was calm. The water still. And there, on the opposite bank, stood Ada—glowing, barefoot, dressed in the same white cloth she was buried in.
She looked peaceful.
“Mama,” she said, smiling softly. “I can rest now.”
Tears rolled down Mama Njideka’s cheeks as she reached out, but Ada stepped back gently, her anklet jingling one last time.
“Thank you for hearing me,” she whispered. “Thank you for fighting for me.”
And then, she was gone.
The next morning, Mama Njideka rose early and walked to the grove. She placed the anklet under the baobab tree where Ada was supposed to rest.
And from that day on, a small white flower began to grow there—one that had never bloomed in Umuolu before.
They called it “Ada’s Peace.”
The village slowly returned to life. The drums played again. Children laughed. But the grove remained sacred—untouched, undisturbed.
And sometimes, when the wind passed through the trees, it carried a lullaby only a few could recognize.
The song of a girl who returned after her burial… to find peace.
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THE END