Dami was not born into money. He was born into struggle. His father, Bolu, woke up every single morning before the sun came up. He worked as a bricklayer and carried heavy cement blocks on his back just to feed his family. His mother, Abigail, sold boiled groundnuts by the roadside from morning until night.
They lived in a small two-room apartment with a leaking roof and one small window. The walls were thin. The floor was bare concrete. But even in that small place, there was love. Dami grew up watching her parents fight every day just to survive. Bolu and Abigail had one dream for their son, just one. They wanted Dami to go to school and become something great.
They believed education was the only door out of poverty. So every month, no matter how hard things were, they scraped together money for his school fees. Some months, Abigail would skip lunch just so the money would be complete. Bolu once sold his only good pair of shoes to pay for Dami’s textbooks. They never complained.
They never told Dami how hard it was. They just kept pushing forward quietly like soldiers with no weapons. Dami saw everything. He saw his mother’s hands cracked. He saw his father’s tired eyes. He saw the holes in their clothes that they tried to hide. He never forgot those things. Not for one day. When other children were playing after school, Dami was reading under a street lamp because there was no electricity at home.
He studied with a small torch his uncle had given him as a gift. He wrote his notes in old exercise books that had already been half used by other students before him. But he read every word on every page like it was gold. By the time Dami was in secondary school, his teachers had already noticed something different about him.
He wasn’t just smart, he was extremely sharp. He understood things quickly. He remembered everything. His teacher, Mr. Facan, once told the whole class to pay attention to how Dami explained things. His classmates came to him before exams. They sat around him during break time and asked him to break down what the teacher had said. Dami never refused.
He helped every single person who asked. He did it with patience and a calm voice even when he was tired. He was also a boy of strong faith. Every Sunday without fail, Dami was in church before the service started. He sat in the front row and closed his eyes during prayers like the words he said actually meant something deep inside him.
He was not the kind of person who prayed only when things were bad. He prayed when things were good too. He prayed in the morning before school. He prayed at night before bed. He talked to God the same way he talked to a close friend. That faith was something nobody could take away from him.
Then came the day of the final exams. Dami walked into that examination hall with nothing but his pen, his brain, and a quiet prayer on his lips. The hall was silent. Hundreds of students sat in rows. The papers were placed face down on the desks. When the supervisor said go, Dami turned his paper over and began writing without stopping.
His hand moved quickly across the page. He answered every question. He checked his work twice. When he walked out of that hall, he said nothing to anyone. He just looked up at the sky, took a deep breath, and went home. Weeks passed, then the results came out. When the announcement was made at the school assembly ground, students gathered in a large crowd, pushing and whispering.
The headmaster stood at the front with a piece of paper in his hand. He cleared his throat and said the name of the overall best student of the graduating set. The name he called was Dami. The crowd went quiet for one second, then burst into noise. His classmates screamed, some jumped, some ran to hug him.
Dami stood very still, her eyes filled with tears. He thought about his father’s sold shoes. He thought about his mother’s skipped lunches. The awards ceremony was held inside the school hall. Dami was called up seven times to collect different prizes. Each time he walked to the front, the applause got louder.
His parents were sitting in the audience. Bolu was wearing his best shirt, the one he kept folded neatly in a plastic bag for special days. Abigail was holding her wrapper tightly with both hands like she was trying not to fall apart. When Dami held up his last award and looked at them from the stage, Bolu covered his face with his hand and turned away.
Abigail didn’t try to hide her tears at all. After graduation, everyone expected things to move quickly for Dami. His teachers said he was going to go far. His neighbors told Bolu that his son was going to save the whole family. People in the church said God had a big plan. Dami believed all of it. He believed it so much that the morning after the ceremony, he woke up early, sat down at the small table in their apartment, and began writing job applications.
He wrote carefully. He formatted every letter neatly. He printed them at a business center down the road and posted them to companies all over the city. One week passed, then two weeks, then a whole month. No reply came. Dami went back to the business center and sent more applications by email. This time, he researched companies online.
He found job listings and applied to every single one that matched anything he had studied. He applied to big companies, small companies, medium-sized companies. He applied to places that were not even hiring but had a contact email on their website. He wrote over a hundred letters in total. Some weeks he feels twenty in one day.
He checked his phone and his email every hour. Nothing came back, just silence. The silence started to eat at him slowly. It was not loud pain. It was the kind of pain that sits quietly in your chest and does not leave. He would wake up in the morning with hope, check his phone, see nothing, and then the weight would come back.
He started going for walk-in interviews. He dressed up in his clean shirt, the one he ironed the night before. He took a bus to the business district and walked into offices one after another. Most receptionists looked at him up and down and told him to fill out a form. He never heard back from any of them. One interview finally came.
A medium-sized logistics company called him in for a test and a panel interview. Dami prepared for five days straight. He read everything about the company. He practiced answering questions in front of the small mirror on their bedroom wall. He arrived thirty minutes early on the day. He sat in the waiting room with other candidates.
When his turn came, he walked in, shook every hand, sat down, and answered every question clearly and confidently. He left the interview feeling like something had finally shifted. He went home and prayed longer than usual that night. Then he waited. Three weeks later, a letter came. He tore it open with shaking hands.
It was a rejection letter. The words said, “Thank you for your time, but we have chosen a candidate whose profile more closely matches what we need at this time.” Dami read the letter once, then folded it slowly and placed it on the table. He sat down on the floor with his back against the wall. Bolu walked in and saw him sitting there.
He didn’t say anything. He just walked over quietly and sat down next to his son on the floor. They sat together in silence for a long time. More rejections came, some by email, some by letter. Some companies never responded at all, which felt worse in a different way. Dami started losing weight.
He stopped eating full meals. He would say he was not hungry, but Abigail knew the truth. She could see it in his face. She started putting extra food on her plate without saying anything. He ate a little more when she did that, but not enough. He started waking up later than before. The energy that used to push him out of bed every morning was getting harder and harder to find. But he still got up.
He still tried. He tried a small phone repair business with money he had borrowed from a neighbor. He learned how to fix basic phone problems by watching videos at the business center. He set up a small table outside the market. For two weeks, a few people came. Then the big repair shops nearby started undercutting its prices.
Customers stopped coming to his table. By the end of the month, he had made just enough to pay back the neighbor and had nothing left. He packed his tools into a bag and carried them home. He sat on the bed and stared at the wall for twenty minutes without moving. He tried selling boiled eggs near the bus stop. He woke up at four in the morning, boiled the eggs, packaged them, and walked to the stop before sunrise.
Some mornings he sold a good number. Other mornings, he came back with almost everything unsold. The profit was so small it could not even cover his daily bus fare to restock ingredients. After six weeks he stopped. He tried reselling phone credit in small units. He tried washing cars on weekends. He tried carrying goods to the market for traders.
Every small thing he tried either failed quickly or paid so little it barely counted as income. Then one afternoon, Dami was sitting outside the house doing nothing when an old man who lived a few streets away walked past pushing a large metal cart. The cart was filled with scrap metal, old wires, broken electronics, and bent iron rods.
The man’s name was Babalola. He was quiet, kept to himself, and had been doing that same work for years. Dami watched him pass. Something inside Dami made him stand up and follow the old man slowly. He caught up with him at the corner and asked him quietly what he earned from that kind of work. Babalola stopped and looked at him for a long time before answering.
Babalola told him plainly. It was not big money, but it was honest money and it was consistent. He said if a man knew the right routes, the right scrap dealers, and the right times to go out, he could make enough to eat every day and even save small amounts over time. He told Dami that the city was full of abandoned metal, broken machines, and thrown-away electronics if you knew where to look.
He said nobody would give that life a second glance. People looked down on scrap pickers, but those same people throwing things away were funding the small income of men like him. Dami listened to every word. The next morning, Dami borrowed a cart from Babalola and went out before dawn. He wore old clothes and old shoes.
He pushed the cart slowly through streets that were just waking up. He felt a deep sting inside his chest as he bent down to pick up his first piece of scrap from the gutter near a mechanic workshop. He thought about his awards. He thought about the stage. He thought about the clapping.
Then he pushed those thoughts aside, stood up, and kept moving. By afternoon, he had a half-full cart. He took it to a dealer and collected his money. It was small, but it was real. Days passed. Then weeks. Dami kept going out every morning with his cart. He learned the routes. He learned which streets had the most metal abandoned. He learned which scrap dealers gave better prices.
He learned how to spot copper wire inside old appliances because copper fetched more money per kilogram. He built a small system for himself. He was not happy doing it, but he was surviving. He kept paying his share at home. He kept food on the table some evenings. Bolu never said anything negative about what his son was doing. He just made sure Dami had something warm to eat when he came home tired.
On a morning that started the same as every other morning, Dami woke up, prayed quietly by his bed, put on his old clothes, drank a cup of water, and went out with his cart. The city was already noisy by the time he reached the outer roads. He pushed his cart along his usual route. He picked up a few pieces of twisted metal near a demolished wall.
He found some broken copper wires behind an electronics shop that had been cleared out. He loaded everything carefully and moved toward the quieter side of the city where a new estate had been under construction for months. The estate was not fully occupied yet. Some roads inside it were newly tarred but empty.
The houses were big and quiet. Only a few people walked around. Dami pushed his cart slowly through the main entrance and moved toward the back of the estate where he had found a pile of discarded iron rods the week before. As he turned a corner and moved toward a section of road that curved near a low bush, something caught his eye.
Just off the road inside the low bush, close to the fence of one of the big houses, there was a large black bag. It was sitting half hidden between the green leaves and the dry soil. Dami stopped pushing his cart. He looked at the bag for a moment without moving. It was a big bag, the kind people use to travel or carry heavy things. It was zipped up.
It was not ripped or damaged. It didn’t look like it had been there for long. He looked left and right slowly. There was nobody around, no gardener, no security guard, no one walking past. The road was completely empty. He stood still for almost a full minute just watching the bag and looking around.
Then he took one slow step toward it, then another. He moved carefully like a person walking on thin ice. When he got close enough, he crouched down and looked at the bag without touching it yet. It was clean, with barely any dust on it. He pressed one hand lightly on the side of it to feel the shape. It was firm and very heavy.
His heart started beating faster. He pulled his hand back and looked around again. Still nobody. He stayed crouched for a moment, thinking hard. What if someone had placed a bomb inside? What if it was chemicals? What if it was a body cut into pieces? His mind was going in ten different directions at the same time. Sweat appeared on his forehead.
Even though the morning was still cool, he stood up and stepped back. He put both hands on his head and just breathed. His chest was tight. He looked around the estate again, still quiet. A bird flew past overhead. A distant car horn sounded far away outside the estate. He looked back at the bag sitting in that bush and something pulled him toward it again.
He couldn’t explain what it was. He walked back to it slowly, reached down, grabbed the handle, and tried to lift it with one hand. It barely moved. He used both hands and pulled it upwards with real effort. The bag rose off the ground heavily. It was extremely heavy. Whatever was inside had real weight to it.
He placed the bag back down gently and looked over his shoulder one more time. The road was still empty. A curtain moved in the window of a house about two hundred meters away, but he could not tell if anyone was really watching. His breathing was fast now. He wiped sweat from his face with the back of his hand. He made a decision. He pulled the bag by its handle and dragged it slowly to his cart.
He lifted it with both arms and a grunt and placed it on top of the scrap metal inside the cart. He covered it as much as he could with some old flat iron sheets that were already there. Then he started walking. He didn’t take his usual route back. He went the long way around through smaller roads that fewer people used.
He walked quickly without running. He didn’t look at anyone directly. When a security guard at the estate gate gave him a quick glance, Dami nodded calmly and kept pushing. He did not stop until he was several streets away from the estate. His arms were shaking slightly from the weight of the cart and from the nerves running through his body.
His shirt was damp. He kept his eyes forward and pushed all the way home without stopping once. When he reached the front of his house, he looked around the small yard. Bolu was out at work. Abigail had gone to her spot to sell groundnuts. The house was empty. He pulled the cart inside the small yard quickly and unhooked the gate.
He lifted the bag out of the cart with both hands, carried it inside the house, closed the door behind him, and placed it on the floor in the middle of the small sitting room. He stood over it and just stared at it. The bag sat there heavy and quiet. He stared at it for a long time without doing anything. His hands were trembling.
He sat on the floor directly in front of the bag. His back was against the wall and his knees were pulled close to his chest. He stared at the zipper for what felt like a very long time. His mind kept throwing up warnings. Bomb. Chemicals. Body parts. But another part of him said no. The shape was wrong for all of those things.
It felt like compressed weight, dense and flat. He reached forward finally and his fingers touched the zipper. He paused. He closed his eyes for five seconds and said a short prayer under his breath. Then he pulled the zipper open slowly. It moved easily. He opened it wide and looked inside. The sight stopped his breath completely.
He blinked once, then again. He was looking at bundles and bundles of cash, notes stacked on top of each other, wrapped with bands, packed tightly from the bottom of the bag to near the top. There were different notes, some in large denominations, some in smaller ones. The colors were slightly different, which told him there were different currencies inside.
It was an enormous amount of money. More money than he had ever seen in one place in his entire life. Not on television. Not in a bank. Never in front of his eyes like this. He just sat there completely still and could not speak. He didn’t touch the money at first. He just stared at it with his eyes wide and his mouth slightly open. Sweat was running down the side of his face.
Even though he had not moved for several minutes, his hands were flat on the floor beside him like he needed the ground to hold him steady. He could hear his own heartbeat in his ears. He looked at the money, then at the door, then back at the money. He could hear people walking on the road outside, normal sounds, a child laughing somewhere, a woman calling out a name.
But inside that small room, everything was completely frozen. Then he noticed something else inside the bag. Beneath the top layer of money, there were documents folded and placed flat. He reached in carefully, pushed the money to one side, and pulled out the documents. He unfolded them on the floor in front of him.
They were official papers, contract papers. They had headings and paragraphs written in formal language. He read slowly, line by line. He understood that this money was a payment, a very large payment made in cash as part of a contract between two parties. The papers had signatures. They had dates. They had names printed in bold letters and the name of a company with an address.
They had phone numbers and official stamps. He read the documents twice from beginning to end. Then he sat back and breathed slowly. So this was not stolen money. Or at least it didn’t look like it. It was payment for a legitimate contract. Someone had won a contract and been paid. Someone had this bag and had lost it.
Or left it or been forced to leave it. He didn’t know yet, but the bag had an owner. That much was now clear. He folded the documents carefully and placed them on the floor beside him. Then he looked at the money again. He looked at it for a very long time. The room was completely silent. That night, Dami didn’t sleep.
He lay on his mat in the bedroom with his eyes open and the bag hidden under the metal frame of the bed. Every time he closed his eyes, he saw the bundles of cash in his mind. He thought about all the things he could do with that money. Pay the rent that was three months overdue. Buy food, buy decent clothes, start a real business, take his parents out of that house.
He thought about all of it in slow detail, but every time the picture formed clearly in his mind, something inside his chest pulled him back. A tight, uncomfortable feeling that would not let the fantasy settle properly. The next morning, he woke up and pulled the bag out from under the bed. He opened it again to confirm it was still real.
It was still there. He zipped it back up and pushed it back under the bed. He made himself a small breakfast and sat at the table and tried to think with a clear head. He made a list in his mind. Option one: keep the money and start spending it. Option two: take the money to the police station.
Dami was not born into money. He was born into struggle. His father, Bolu, woke up every single morning before the sun came up. He worked as a bricklayer and carried heavy cement blocks on his back just to feed his family. His mother, Abigail, sold boiled groundnuts by the roadside from morning until night.
They lived in a small two-room apartment with a leaking roof and one small window. The walls were thin. The floor was bare concrete. But even in that small place, there was love. Dami grew up watching her parents fight every day just to survive. Bolu and Abigail had one dream for their son, just one. They wanted Dami to go to school and become something great.
They believed education was the only door out of poverty. So every month, no matter how hard things were, they scraped together money for his school fees. Some months, Abigail would skip lunch just so the money would be complete. Bolu once sold his only good pair of shoes to pay for Dami’s textbooks. They never complained.
They never told Dami how hard it was. They just kept pushing forward quietly like soldiers with no weapons. Dami saw everything. He saw his mother’s hands cracked. He saw his father’s tired eyes. He saw the holes in their clothes that they tried to hide. He never forgot those things. Not for one day. When other children were playing after school, Dami was reading under a street lamp because there was no electricity at home.
He studied with a small torch his uncle had given him as a gift. He wrote his notes in old exercise books that had already been half used by other students before him. But he read every word on every page like it was gold. By the time Dami was in secondary school, his teachers had already noticed something different about him.
He wasn’t just smart, he was extremely sharp. He understood things quickly. He remembered everything. His teacher, Mr. Facan, once told the whole class to pay attention to how Dami explained things. His classmates came to him before exams. They sat around him during break time and asked him to break down what the teacher had said. Dami never refused.
He helped every single person who asked. He did it with patience and a calm voice even when he was tired. He was also a boy of strong faith. Every Sunday without fail, Dami was in church before the service started. He sat in the front row and closed his eyes during prayers like the words he said actually meant something deep inside him.
He was not the kind of person who prayed only when things were bad. He prayed when things were good too. He prayed in the morning before school. He prayed at night before bed. He talked to God the same way he talked to a close friend. That faith was something nobody could take away from him.
Then came the day of the final exams. Dami walked into that examination hall with nothing but his pen, his brain, and a quiet prayer on his lips. The hall was silent. Hundreds of students sat in rows. The papers were placed face down on the desks. When the supervisor said go, Dami turned his paper over and began writing without stopping.
His hand moved quickly across the page. He answered every question. He checked his work twice. When he walked out of that hall, he said nothing to anyone. He just looked up at the sky, took a deep breath, and went home. Weeks passed, then the results came out. When the announcement was made at the school assembly ground, students gathered in a large crowd, pushing and whispering.
The headmaster stood at the front with a piece of paper in his hand. He cleared his throat and said the name of the overall best student of the graduating set. The name he called was Dami. The crowd went quiet for one second, then burst into noise. His classmates screamed, some jumped, some ran to hug him.
Dami stood very still, her eyes filled with tears. He thought about his father’s sold shoes. He thought about his mother’s skipped lunches. The awards ceremony was held inside the school hall. Dami was called up seven times to collect different prizes. Each time he walked to the front, the applause got louder.
His parents were sitting in the audience. Bolu was wearing his best shirt, the one he kept folded neatly in a plastic bag for special days. Abigail was holding her wrapper tightly with both hands like she was trying not to fall apart. When Dami held up his last award and looked at them from the stage, Bolu covered his face with his hand and turned away.
Abigail didn’t try to hide her tears at all. After graduation, everyone expected things to move quickly for Dami. His teachers said he was going to go far. His neighbors told Bolu that his son was going to save the whole family. People in the church said God had a big plan. Dami believed all of it. He believed it so much that the morning after the ceremony, he woke up early, sat down at the small table in their apartment, and began writing job applications.
He wrote carefully. He formatted every letter neatly. He printed them at a business center down the road and posted them to companies all over the city. One week passed, then two weeks, then a whole month. No reply came. Dami went back to the business center and sent more applications by email. This time, he researched companies online.
He found job listings and applied to every single one that matched anything he had studied. He applied to big companies, small companies, medium-sized companies. He applied to places that were not even hiring but had a contact email on their website. He wrote over a hundred letters in total. Some weeks he feels twenty in one day.
He checked his phone and his email every hour. Nothing came back, just silence. The silence started to eat at him slowly. It was not loud pain. It was the kind of pain that sits quietly in your chest and does not leave. He would wake up in the morning with hope, check his phone, see nothing, and then the weight would come back.
He started going for walk-in interviews. He dressed up in his clean shirt, the one he ironed the night before. He took a bus to the business district and walked into offices one after another. Most receptionists looked at him up and down and told him to fill out a form. He never heard back from any of them. One interview finally came.
A medium-sized logistics company called him in for a test and a panel interview. Dami prepared for five days straight. He read everything about the company. He practiced answering questions in front of the small mirror on their bedroom wall. He arrived thirty minutes early on the day. He sat in the waiting room with other candidates.
When his turn came, he walked in, shook every hand, sat down, and answered every question clearly and confidently. He left the interview feeling like something had finally shifted. He went home and prayed longer than usual that night. Then he waited. Three weeks later, a letter came. He tore it open with shaking hands.
It was a rejection letter. The words said, “Thank you for your time, but we have chosen a candidate whose profile more closely matches what we need at this time.” Dami read the letter once, then folded it slowly and placed it on the table. He sat down on the floor with his back against the wall. Bolu walked in and saw him sitting there.
He didn’t say anything. He just walked over quietly and sat down next to his son on the floor. They sat together in silence for a long time. More rejections came, some by email, some by letter. Some companies never responded at all, which felt worse in a different way. Dami started losing weight.
He stopped eating full meals. He would say he was not hungry, but Abigail knew the truth. She could see it in his face. She started putting extra food on her plate without saying anything. He ate a little more when she did that, but not enough. He started waking up later than before. The energy that used to push him out of bed every morning was getting harder and harder to find. But he still got up.
He still tried. He tried a small phone repair business with money he had borrowed from a neighbor. He learned how to fix basic phone problems by watching videos at the business center. He set up a small table outside the market. For two weeks, a few people came. Then the big repair shops nearby started undercutting its prices.
Customers stopped coming to his table. By the end of the month, he had made just enough to pay back the neighbor and had nothing left. He packed his tools into a bag and carried them home. He sat on the bed and stared at the wall for twenty minutes without moving. He tried selling boiled eggs near the bus stop. He woke up at four in the morning, boiled the eggs, packaged them, and walked to the stop before sunrise.
Some mornings he sold a good number. Other mornings, he came back with almost everything unsold. The profit was so small it could not even cover his daily bus fare to restock ingredients. After six weeks he stopped. He tried reselling phone credit in small units. He tried washing cars on weekends. He tried carrying goods to the market for traders.
Every small thing he tried either failed quickly or paid so little it barely counted as income. Then one afternoon, Dami was sitting outside the house doing nothing when an old man who lived a few streets away walked past pushing a large metal cart. The cart was filled with scrap metal, old wires, broken electronics, and bent iron rods.
The man’s name was Babalola. He was quiet, kept to himself, and had been doing that same work for years. Dami watched him pass. Something inside Dami made him stand up and follow the old man slowly. He caught up with him at the corner and asked him quietly what he earned from that kind of work. Babalola stopped and looked at him for a long time before answering.
Babalola told him plainly. It was not big money, but it was honest money and it was consistent. He said if a man knew the right routes, the right scrap dealers, and the right times to go out, he could make enough to eat every day and even save small amounts over time. He told Dami that the city was full of abandoned metal, broken machines, and thrown-away electronics if you knew where to look.
He said nobody would give that life a second glance. People looked down on scrap pickers, but those same people throwing things away were funding the small income of men like him. Dami listened to every word. The next morning, Dami borrowed a cart from Babalola and went out before dawn. He wore old clothes and old shoes.
He pushed the cart slowly through streets that were just waking up. He felt a deep sting inside his chest as he bent down to pick up his first piece of scrap from the gutter near a mechanic workshop. He thought about his awards. He thought about the stage. He thought about the clapping.
Then he pushed those thoughts aside, stood up, and kept moving. By afternoon, he had a half-full cart. He took it to a dealer and collected his money. It was small, but it was real. Days passed. Then weeks. Dami kept going out every morning with his cart. He learned the routes. He learned which streets had the most metal abandoned. He learned which scrap dealers gave better prices.
He learned how to spot copper wire inside old appliances because copper fetched more money per kilogram. He built a small system for himself. He was not happy doing it, but he was surviving. He kept paying his share at home. He kept food on the table some evenings. Bolu never said anything negative about what his son was doing. He just made sure Dami had something warm to eat when he came home tired.
On a morning that started the same as every other morning, Dami woke up, prayed quietly by his bed, put on his old clothes, drank a cup of water, and went out with his cart. The city was already noisy by the time he reached the outer roads. He pushed his cart along his usual route. He picked up a few pieces of twisted metal near a demolished wall.
He found some broken copper wires behind an electronics shop that had been cleared out. He loaded everything carefully and moved toward the quieter side of the city where a new estate had been under construction for months. The estate was not fully occupied yet. Some roads inside it were newly tarred but empty.
The houses were big and quiet. Only a few people walked around. Dami pushed his cart slowly through the main entrance and moved toward the back of the estate where he had found a pile of discarded iron rods the week before. As he turned a corner and moved toward a section of road that curved near a low bush, something caught his eye.
Just off the road inside the low bush, close to the fence of one of the big houses, there was a large black bag. It was sitting half hidden between the green leaves and the dry soil. Dami stopped pushing his cart. He looked at the bag for a moment without moving. It was a big bag, the kind people use to travel or carry heavy things. It was zipped up.
It was not ripped or damaged. It didn’t look like it had been there for long. He looked left and right slowly. There was nobody around, no gardener, no security guard, no one walking past. The road was completely empty. He stood still for almost a full minute just watching the bag and looking around.
Then he took one slow step toward it, then another. He moved carefully like a person walking on thin ice. When he got close enough, he crouched down and looked at the bag without touching it yet. It was clean, with barely any dust on it. He pressed one hand lightly on the side of it to feel the shape. It was firm and very heavy.
His heart started beating faster. He pulled his hand back and looked around again. Still nobody. He stayed crouched for a moment, thinking hard. What if someone had placed a bomb inside? What if it was chemicals? What if it was a body cut into pieces? His mind was going in ten different directions at the same time. Sweat appeared on his forehead.
Even though the morning was still cool, he stood up and stepped back. He put both hands on his head and just breathed. His chest was tight. He looked around the estate again, still quiet. A bird flew past overhead. A distant car horn sounded far away outside the estate. He looked back at the bag sitting in that bush and something pulled him toward it again.
He couldn’t explain what it was. He walked back to it slowly, reached down, grabbed the handle, and tried to lift it with one hand. It barely moved. He used both hands and pulled it upwards with real effort. The bag rose off the ground heavily. It was extremely heavy. Whatever was inside had real weight to it.
He placed the bag back down gently and looked over his shoulder one more time. The road was still empty. A curtain moved in the window of a house about two hundred meters away, but he could not tell if anyone was really watching. His breathing was fast now. He wiped sweat from his face with the back of his hand. He made a decision. He pulled the bag by its handle and dragged it slowly to his cart.
He lifted it with both arms and a grunt and placed it on top of the scrap metal inside the cart. He covered it as much as he could with some old flat iron sheets that were already there. Then he started walking. He didn’t take his usual route back. He went the long way around through smaller roads that fewer people used.
He walked quickly without running. He didn’t look at anyone directly. When a security guard at the estate gate gave him a quick glance, Dami nodded calmly and kept pushing. He did not stop until he was several streets away from the estate. His arms were shaking slightly from the weight of the cart and from the nerves running through his body.
His shirt was damp. He kept his eyes forward and pushed all the way home without stopping once. When he reached the front of his house, he looked around the small yard. Bolu was out at work. Abigail had gone to her spot to sell groundnuts. The house was empty. He pulled the cart inside the small yard quickly and unhooked the gate.
He lifted the bag out of the cart with both hands, carried it inside the house, closed the door behind him, and placed it on the floor in the middle of the small sitting room. He stood over it and just stared at it. The bag sat there heavy and quiet. He stared at it for a long time without doing anything. His hands were trembling.
He sat on the floor directly in front of the bag. His back was against the wall and his knees were pulled close to his chest. He stared at the zipper for what felt like a very long time. His mind kept throwing up warnings. Bomb. Chemicals. Body parts. But another part of him said no. The shape was wrong for all of those things.
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