I have never felt secondhand embarrassment, today was my first time.
Until that afternoon, I thought embarrassment belonged to the person who caused it, not the person standing near them while everybody stared.
Then Ngithini collapsed in the middle of our celebration, in a house full of people who had known Mbambo long before they knew me, and somehow his fall landed on my name too.

The room smelled of food, perfume, sugar icing, and expensive flowers that were already wilting from the heat of too many bodies.
There were plates on side tables, glasses with fingerprints around the rims, decorations hanging where they had looked beautiful only minutes earlier.
Then Ngithini went down.
It was not dramatic enough to make people scream first and ask questions later.
It was a heavy, awful drop that made everyone stop at once.
The silence after it was worse than the sound.
People looked at him lying there, then looked at me, then looked away as if their own eyes had betrayed them.
Most of them were friends of the Mbambos, and that meant they had already chosen a side before anything happened.
No one said I had pushed him.
No one had to.
Silence has a way of wearing a judge’s robe when a woman is already unpopular.
For a few seconds the whole room froze in one perfect picture of cowardice.
A fork hovered over a plate.
A ribbon trembled slightly from the air conditioner.
A glass rolled a few centimeters on a side table and stopped against a folded napkin.
Someone’s child stared at the floor as if adults were supposed to know what to do next.
Nobody moved.
The ambulance arrived in less than fifteen minutes, which was the only decent thing the suburbs offered me that day.
Mbambo ran outside to lead the paramedics in, and while they worked, Ngithini stayed exactly where he had fallen, unresponsive and untouched.
Maybe MaBhembe would have touched him if she had been there.
Maybe she would have cried.
Maybe she would have stood at a safe distance and waited for someone else to decide whether her husband deserved softness.
With that family, I was still learning which loyalties were real and which ones were for public use only.
Mbambo caught me by the shoulders as they strapped his brother onto the stretcher.
His hands were warm, but his face had the exhausted look of a man who was always one emergency away from being blamed for not carrying enough.
He said he had to follow the ambulance.
I asked when he would be back.
He said he would not be long, and I told him to call me when he got there.
Then Zishaye asked if he and the other children could come with him.
For one strange second, Mbambo looked at me so coldly that my spine tightened.
The look vanished almost immediately.
But women do not need long to notice danger in a man’s face.
Mbambo and Robbie led the way to the cars, and the children followed with the serious steps children use when they know adults are frightened.
Then MaBhembe ran out to join them.
That surprised me because I thought she wanted nothing to do with her husband.
Still, she got into the motion of family when it mattered, and I watched them leave while the house behind me felt suddenly too big.
Anele asked if we should let everyone go.
I looked around at the room, at the food, at the decorations, and at the guests pretending not to watch me.
The mood had turned heavy and sour.
Thanks to Ngithini.
So I dismissed everyone.
Willy was not around.
Muntu had already gone to bed.
Soon it was only me and Anele left in the mess, surrounded by glasses, plates, and the kind of silence that sticks to your skin.
By nine o’clock, I still had not heard from Mbambo.
Nine o’clock meant the food had gone cold.
Nine o’clock meant the children were probably tired.
Nine o’clock meant my husband was still somewhere with his brother, MaBhembe, Robbie, medical people, and family problems that had existed before me but still kept reaching into my marriage.
I told Anele she could go home.
She was drunk, and I do not drink.
I also do not know how to deal with drunk people who become stubborn and sentimental on furniture I still want to use.
She lifted her thumb like she had solved something and said she was keeping me company.
I minded.
That was my couch.
Then my phone rang on the coffee table, and I almost dived for it because every tired part of me believed it was Mbambo.
It was a foreign number.
My disappointment turned into irritation before I could discipline my voice.
The caller laughed and asked what he had done to make me so mad.
My anger died instantly.
It was my brother.
I took the call to my bedroom because Anele was snoring like her life depended on it.
He had found Busani, but Busani wanted nothing to do with us.
There was nothing new there.
Busani had always been selfish.
I told my brother to come home so we could bury our mother ourselves, or maybe look for Phumzile’s father.
Even as I said it, I hated the second option.
I was not about to go hunting for people who had chosen not to stay.
My brother said he would drag Busani back because Muntu had been eating from another man’s hand while his own father was elsewhere.
We were bringing Busani back to bury his sister, not to rescue anybody’s pride.
Sometimes I wondered why we could not have proper uncles like everybody else.
I told him I just wanted to lay Phumzile to rest and move on with our lives.
That was the truth.
I was ready to start my forever with Mbambo.
My brother teased me about my sugar daddy, and I told him Mbambo was amazing.
I even told him about the Ferrari, though I could not ride a bicycle and my learner’s licence from Grade 12 Life Orientation had expired years ago.
Then I remembered the furniture.
I told him his grandmother had burned it, how the house had nearly gone up, where she was now, and how Mbambo had not replaced everything this time.
I had a feeling my brother would have to handle that when he came back, especially now that we had Candle Lights.
He said he saw it coming and doubted Phumzile’s ghost had anything to do with it.
I asked what if Phumzile really had something to tell us.
He said he wanted nothing to do with ghosts or anything demonic.
He would never forgive her for leaving.
Then Mbambo called.
He told me Ngithini had a heart attack.
Oh.
Ngithini could have ten heart attacks for all I cared, but Mbambo’s sigh told me the night was still heavy on him.
He said he would drop off MaBhembe and the kids, then drive home.
I hated the thought of him driving around that late, so I told him to be safe and to call me when he arrived and when he left.
He called me the love of his life.
He wished us good night.
He could wish the baby sweet dreams.
I was staying awake until he came home.
I checked every door, closed the sliding door, shut the windows, and for reasons I could not explain, locked my bedroom door too.
A woman learns to respect the small warnings her body gives before her mind has evidence.
After a long bath, I went to the kitchen hungry enough to forgive almost anything.
The light was on.
I knew I had left it off.
Anele sat on the bar stool eating.
In front of her was my engagement cake.
She had cut it.
She said she was hungry and it looked appetizing.
I asked if she was pregnant.
She said no.
Then I asked why she was eating my cake.
I was not crying.
Those were hormones looking for attention.
Mr Mbambo and I were supposed to cut that cake together, and when Anele called it just a cake, something in me cracked so sharply that even she went quiet.
It was not just a cake.
It was my engagement cake.
Would she cut my wedding cake too and call it just a cake?
Then she sighed and said pregnant people were weird.
That hit me so hard I stopped breathing.
She pointed at my stomach and said I was showing.
Just great.
She also pointed out a purse on the counter, but I did not care about the purse.
I cared about the cake, the secret, and the way one careless friend could slice through a moment I had been saving.
I went back to my room, locked the door, and cried in peace.
Mbambo came in late, exhausted and smelling faintly of hospital corridors and night air.
He told me he had to sort out Ngithini’s medical aid papers.
The whole family had medical aid, he said.
Ziningi, his brother and his family, even the children’s education from primary school until varsity.
Then the children would be hired as interns before getting permanent jobs in the company.
So Zishaye and Zonke were sorted for life.
What a privilege.
He was wealthy, yes, but this was more than wealth.
He was carrying everybody.
Paying for everybody.
Providing for everybody.
And suddenly all I could think was, who was taking care of him?
The next morning, I made him breakfast and packed him a lunchbox because he said lunchboxes felt like home.
Anele was gone, leaving a note explaining herself and apologizing.
Yes, I had overreacted.
No, I was not sorry.
She should never have cut my cake.
Mbambo was working on a Sunday, which I hated, but he promised it was not a normal working day.
I walked him to the car, held onto him until he kissed the top of my head, and watched the gate close behind him.
It was going to be a blue Sunday.
The catering people were coming for their equipment.
The house still needed cleaning.
Muntu had already made a friend next door, and I was starting to wonder why even a child could make friends more easily than me.
Then MaBhembe arrived unannounced.
I prayed she had not come to convince me to give away my car.
When I walked in from the bathroom, she was talking to the catering people.
The woman in charge handed her a business card and said she could call to set up an interview.
MaBhembe tried very hard not to smile when I asked if she had a new job.
Then she congratulated me on the car.
I could not tell whether she meant it or whether she was cursing me silently.
She asked if I could drive.
I said not yet.
Mr Mbambo would teach me, and until I felt ready, I was getting a chauffeur.
Her face changed immediately.
She said a chauffeur was a bit too extreme.
I told her I did not think so because I was his wife, and if he did not spend his money on me, who would he spend it on?
That little head shake she gave me was full of judgment.
She told me I needed to think of Mbambo and make sure he spent wisely.
I told her I was one hundred percent sure.
Mbambo was a provider, and I was not going to take that away from him.
Wasn’t he the one paying for Zonke and Zishaye’s school fees?
Wouldn’t they have jobs waiting after varsity because my husband had already sorted that out?
She looked away.
Exactly.
Then she finally said what she had come for.
She had left her bag there last night.
I told her I would be back and went upstairs to fetch it.
I was not even halfway there when I heard her scream.
My heart stopped.
My first instinct was to run back down and check on her.
Then male voices shouted for someone to get on the floor.
Every survival instinct in me took over.
I ran up the stairs because I was going to lock myself in the bedroom.
A man shouted for me to freeze.
I took one more step.
Then I heard the gun cock.
He told me to move and I was dead.
I lifted my hands slowly.
He grabbed me from behind and dragged me back down the stairs before I could think.
My body barely touched the steps as he hauled me into the lounge.
There were two more armed men there.
All of them wore balaclavas.
MaBhembe was already tied up on the floor, crying and praying in tongues.
The one behind me shoved me down beside her.
One man guarded the door.
The other two stood over us.
My phone started ringing the moment we came into the lounge, and it did not stop.
I knew that ringtone.
It was Mbambo.
I had personalized it.
The sound sliced through me because break-ins that end with everyone alive are rare, and all I could think was that he knew something was wrong.
He had to know.
One of the men demanded the car key.
I looked at MaBhembe.
Maybe I should cry too.
But fear had frozen me, and my brain had gone blank.
He raised the gun and demanded the key for the Ferrari.
I said I did not know.
He pressed the gun to my temple so fast my life flashed in pieces.
I screamed, hands raised, tears pouring down my face.
MaBhembe cried for me to give them the key before we died.
I pointed to the kitchen with a shaking hand.
The second robber went and came back with it.
I begged them to take the car and spare us.
They told me I did not make the rules.
Then one of them said something that made my whole body go cold.
He told me to give them the Versace dress too.
Not the dress too.
Who were these people?
How did they know about the dress?
The car was outside.
The dress was not.
I whispered that it was upstairs.
He yanked me to my feet and ordered one of the others to follow me to the bedroom.
A thousand thoughts hit me at once.
My baby.
Death.
Violation.
Blood.
Shame.
I did not want to die.
My phone was still ringing behind us.
The man in the lounge shouted for someone to shut it up because it was giving him a headache.
Then the ringtone stopped.
Mbambo, please understand that as a sign.
The dress was in the closet, and I moved as fast as I could.
The quicker I got it, the quicker we could leave the room before this boy behind me got ideas that would ruin my life forever.
He followed me into the closet.
I snatched the dress and threw it at him.
He almost missed it.
His hands were trembling.
That was when I saw it clearly.
This was not a man.
It was a boy.
He could barely look at me.
His eyes darted everywhere but my face.
I asked if his parents knew he robbed innocent people.
Gaslighting was not my gift, but desperation was making me creative.
He shrugged.
I told him that if he let me go, I would save him because my husband was on his way and his friends were going to jail.
At last he looked at me properly, though only for a second.
Then he jerked his head toward the door and motioned for me to walk.
The gun was still aimed at me.
I told him he looked like a child.
Eighteen.
Nineteen.
Still with his whole life ahead of him.
I asked if he wanted to spend it in jail.
I was gambling with my life, but I could see it on him now.
He was scared.
More scared than dangerous.
He shouted for me to go.
I started shaking harder.
Then I did the one thing that came into my mind.
I dropped to the floor and started convulsing like I was having a seizure.
The boy panicked instantly.
He cursed under his breath and paced in circles.
I made my body jerk harder.
His red-rimmed eyes widened.
He dropped both the gun and the dress and rushed to kneel beside me, completely lost.
That was my chance.
I reached up, grabbed his balaclava, and yanked it off.
And my blood ran cold.
Zishaye.
His eyes filled with tears as he fell backward onto the floor.
The same child whose education Mbambo had already paid into the future was on my bedroom floor with a gun beside him and my Versace dress in his shaking hands.
The same family I had watched from the outside was suddenly inside my house in the ugliest way possible.
I thought again about that celebration, about Ngithini on the floor, about all those eyes moving from his body to my face like I had caused the disaster.
Silence had worn a judge’s robe then, and now it came back wearing a balaclava.
Zishaye begged me not to tell uncle.
He sobbed that Mbambo would kill him.
He said it was not his idea.
I could barely breathe.
Outside the bedroom, the house was still full of armed men, MaBhembe was still downstairs, Mbambo was somewhere on the other end of a call that had gone quiet, and the boy in front of me was about to give me the one name that would turn the entire family inside out.
Then Zishaye whispered, ‘The person who planned everything was…’