SOW WIND AND REAP WHIRLWIND.

Once upon a time, there live a man called chief Ade. He was a rich man who was highly respected in his town. Chief Ade had two wives. The name of the first wife was Phebe Admosun while the younger wife was Ebun. Chief Ade married the first wife when he was poor. Phebe was a loving wife, who loved her husband and struggle very hard with her husband to acquire money. She had seven children for  chief Ade, six of whom were girls and the last was a boy. It was because it took her a long time to have a male child that her husband decided to marry Ebun, his second wife. 

Ebun was the daughter of the great herbalist in the town of illugun. Ebun's father was famous for bad medicines and charms. When she became chief Ade's wife, Ebun was about eighteen years old while the first wife was twenty-nine. Phebe, the chief's first wife accepted Ebun as her wife and always took care of her when she newly came into the family. At the time chief married Ebun, Phebe had five female children. The first wife, despite the fact that her husband was fed up with her after having five female children, was a pleasant woman who embraced Ebun and extended hands of fellowship to her. Before too long, Ebun became pregnant and had her first child who happened to be a male. Chief Ade was very happy after waiting for so long to have a male child. The first wife in her normal pleasant character regarded the arrival of the male child as an open way for her to have her own. Thus, she named the child Adesina (which means open the door Ade) Adesina grew up to love his father and his father's eldest wife because the woman showed no inhibition in loving him. 

To cut the long story short, Ebun had three boys for her husband and the eldest wife had six female and one male children. Chief Ade was trying his best to share his love among the two wives. The first wife in her characteristic manner showed love and affection for Ebun, the junior wife. The children were growing up in the same family. They were attending schools. The children of the first wife were more brilliant in the school than the children of the second wife. The most brilliant of all the children was the last male child of the first wife called Oluomo

This always annoyed the second wife who became unhappy with her three children. She always scolded them and made remarks that their younger brother, Oluomo was acknowledged to be more brilliant than than they. 
As a result of this she decided to complain to her father,  the great herbalist. She visited her father and when she told him her fears of the effect that Oluomo would be more popular than her three male children, she demanded that her father should give her poison to kill Oluomo. She collected the poison and headed home. 
When she got home she decided to poison Oluomo's food. The second week after this, it was her turn to prepare food the whole family. She prepared a good meal and poisoned Oluomo's food which she kept on a table where he could see it to eat. When the children closed from school, Adesina, Ebun's first child rushed home ahead of others. 

On getting home, he met nobody in the house and he was hungry. He started searching the kitchen for food. The first plate of food he saw in the table was the food his mother had poisoned and meant for Oluomo. He took the food and ate hurriedly. Soon after eating, he started feeling stomachache and before long, he started rolling on the floor, writhing in pains. As this was happening, the other children came into the house. They were  crying for help when the two wives and chief Ade came in. The wicked woman rushed in  crying while others were trying to rush the boy to the hospital. Ebun's could no longer contain the situation and she began to cry out: "I have killed my son. I don't know it'll end like this". When they heard this, the sympathisers who gathered forced her to explain. After listening to her dastardly story, her husband sent her packing. She begged for pity but her husband said: 
"Get away wicked wife, you reap what you sow"

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