I had caught the attention of a few eyes with the show I had just displayed. The almost audible gasp of the now drenched woman had not gone unheard but thankfully the large spaces drowned out the sound –– such that, people from afar could not hear or realize what had just happened.
"I'm so sorry," I apologised immediately, just as she struggled to find something to clean off the drink spill on her clothes before it became permanent.
My voice came out in a whisper so as not to drag back the eyes to us again but she wasn't even listening, she looked more concerned about the damp patch on the upper part of her clothes.
It was the only distraction I could think of, it wasn't all that smart but at least it worked.
"What the hell is wrong with you!" She bawled in a harsh whisper before making an attempt to push past me. It was successful, but only because I had decided to move my body the exact same time she rudely shoved me, as that measly attempt wouldn't have even nudged a fly.
She stormed off angrily, going down the aisle, over to the exit and when she was no more in sight, I let out a satisfied breath. After a few minutes, I walked through the same paths, in search of where she had gone.
As I was about to leave, I looked over at Emeka and he wore an indecipherable look on his face. He was declaring a silent question with his eyes, nodding his head towards the exit.
He was following right behind. His gesture explained that and I knew then that he had caught on to everything that had just happened in the last few minutes.
The Chief of Defence had started his own protocol speech, so I still had time to handle this situation and not miss out on the long awaited announcement. I just hoped I was right about the woman and that she was the one we were all dreading silently.
The hallways were filled with more army men than I had seen on entering. They were scattered everywhere, holding their big guns in an intimidating stance. I guess normal people might have been scared off by it but I wasn't. I had seen enough action in my life, even cradled them in use in my hands and in fact, I also enjoyed using them as a hobby to pass time. Fear was frankly a maxim unthinkable at the moment.
I stood around the bathroom entrance for like five minutes and the thought to barge into the ladies room was persistent. I almost concede but I stopped short instantly -- a lady, criminal or not should be given respect.
Funny enough, at this moment it was my mother's calm voice that seeped into my mind, her words fresh like they had just been said yesterday and not almost in a decade.
Tayo and I had been taught strictly that women were supposed to be prided and we should never belittle them. So to say, it was my morals that held me back, standing in counting patience, waiting for the lady in red to finish her business.
When the thoughts came, I visibly palmed my face because they had just clarified that the reason why I was out here was honestly more than just finding whether she was a spy.
Had it been so long since I felt a flutter this little somewhere inside. It was insane though, this wasn't me, I refused to go back to the Lade that felt and had emotions. Feelings were a sought of nemesis to my being and when I pledged an oath to join the Incident Command System of Nigeria, I vowed never to be a slave to them anymore.
"Ha!" I let out an audible laugh at the train of thoughts I had running through my mind. 'Why all these sappy talks on emotions and feelings all of a sudden?' I asked myself and I just chuckled, giving a mental shake of my head.
The door thrust open and I regained myself straight away. The lady's head was still bent and I could make out that the stain removal wasn't so successful.
She kept walking and even though I was almost foot away, I was still unnoticed.
"Gosh!" She gasped while clutching her chest, and a struggling laugh was seconds away from bursting out but still, I managed a slight smirk. The woman had eventually realised that she had hit a person instead of a wall and the shocked expression she had on was, priceless.
The distance between us was measurable now that she had withdrawn away from me. She was still trying to calm herself but then I didn't know why, at this same moment still, I felt a little more superior to the woman that had now seemed so little. She was tall and curvy but I could tell she was nervous under my scrutiny.
She scowled, folding her hands when the recognition that I was the one that had just dumped a tray of wine on her in a purposeful mistake set in.
I trudged forward without acknowledging her displayed annoyance and she stepped back almost on instinct. The action made me almost laugh again but then I reminded myself that I needed to concentrate and get to the bottom of this.
"What are you doing here?" I asked in an impolite tone, placing my hands in my pocket while making sure I loomed authoritatively over her.
"Excuse me!" She said, feeling a bit offended by my harsh tone. I didn't say anything next and she just sighed in further annoyance, trying to walk away but I had blocked her path this time.
"D3 special Agent, Lade Adenuga," I introduced myself, holding up the card to her face. At once, her angry intent diminished once she realized that I was an officer.
"I repeat, Who the hell are you? Because I don't recall seeing your face on the guest list," I said to her, a cold expression morphing on my features but then, actually, I had been bluffing though, for all I knew, her name could actually be on that list.
"I'm a representative for the Minister of Security."
I could see the silent prayer in her eyes. She had thought that I wouldn't notice the heavy lie those words carried but unfortunately, she just had to pick the wrong one.
In the conference hall, I had sat directly beside the Minister of Security and his deputy.
"Miss, I'll say this one more time or I'll be forced to do something we may both regret, who sent you?" I said to her again, more demanding whilst hovering over her, endeavouring to make sure she still felt intimidated by me.
"I have no idea what you're talking about," she responded with a firm voice but her body movements told otherwise. She was tense and she kept adjusting the hand of her cloth, more than twice even.
I followed the trail of those hands discreetly, in fact my eyes were still on her face when I saw the silver outlining of a small circle at the end of the v cut neck of her dress.
A camera?, the woman was hiding a camera but why?
"I'm on my last thread of patience already and let me rephrase if you haven't been getting my question, who do you work for?"
"Nobody, I'm just a guest that you're openly disrespecting," she replied with feigned ignorance and an irksome confidence before trying to shove past me again
"Well then, care to explain why you are carrying a camera in a top secret National meeting?" I interrogated, nudging my head towards her chest that bedded the gadget and then, lifting my eyes back to hers straight after.
The woman looked shell shocked and speechless. I was sure she hadn't planned for herself to be caught but now, what exactly was her mission.
The press were strictly prohibited from here and in fact, no news channel was meant to give details of what were to be disclosed in the meeting. It was questionable and the situation had left me chary, head deep in a series of thoughts, trying to put things together. Why would she be recording? If she wasn't an annoying reporter, then it would only mean the other option, she was really the spy.
"You're delusional, I don't have anything on me."
I could feel the anger rising, I had already spent too much of my time on irrelevant words. If it was some other Agent she was in the hands of, they wouldn't care about respecting and instead, they would manhandle her away from here to a cold cell in order to reflect on her lost memory.
For the third time in our little exchange, she tried to walk out and I was tired of holding back. So, I forcefully grabbed her wrist in anger, going further to seize the other in a handcuff.
"You have the right to remain silent and If you're eventually found guilty of being an informant, I hope they get the message because this war is only just beginning," I said spitefully and in rage, I felt my hold on her wrist increase.
"You're hurting me," she complained in quivering vocals –– a due result of the pain. I hadn't intended to be rough on her but she had left me no choice.
The woman tried to pull her hands from my grip but I held on harder. I had thought that I had since overcome it, that sick part of me that thrived on the pleasure of inflicting pain.
I hesitated for a few seconds before I loosened my hold and when she withdrew her hand, I saw the residual marks that formed from my previous, rough grip.
I almost fell back into that shell but then again, I was reminded by my subconscious that I had a job to do and lives to protect.
When I brought forth the second cuff to complete the arrest, she was still clutching her wrist in pain. Surprisingly, the woman suddenly committed her all strength to struggling and escaping the scene.
"Let me go! I have done nothing wrong," she protested, refusing to stay calm, as I tried to do my job. I knew soon enough that her shouts would attract attention and it wasn't up for consideration. This meeting needed to go well sans distractions and complications.
"Are you a spy for the Jama'atu?" I asked after I had dropped the handcuff, astutely deciding against locking her other hand, in order to work on easing the tension.
I looked at her intently, like I was trying to see through her disguise and catch her on her lies and truths.
"No!" She shouted and I was fed up.
My hands went straight for her clothes and I roughly pulled off the little camera lens.
"Then explain this?"
She didn't get to reply to my question when the first sounds of gunshots were heard.
My breath came in pants as I crouched forward, hiding away from the now shattered glass above me. Reflexively, I shielded the lady with my body as more of its pieces began to fall unto us.A frenzied disarray of actions, building up the chaos by the minute. It was unexpected, the turnout of events that had violently jerked my attention towards the outburst. In one minute everything changed, and at this point, we could lose everything. It was almost impossible how a minute of resolute peace erupted in a series of pandemoniums, heightening swiftly by the clock. I had to buckle up and be prepared, and at the fall of the last glass piece, I expertly reached out for my gun, awaiting the next masked face.The woman behind me was trembling and the muffled
It had been ten days since the tragic event that remained packed up in our hearts and minds, refusing to let go, happened. Almost the whole of my lifetime was built upon this career path and truly, it was never even my decision from the start. I loved my job but if anyone had asked me on that fateful day ten years ago, where I saw myself in the future, the most honest answer I could have given was a thin line between dead and hopeless.He had vouchsafed me a choice when I had had none and he had stuck by me throughout, fulfilling every promise he had made to me when I was twenty-two. The countdown had started because no one was safe anymore...all our lives were in danger. There was a very slim chance that it hadn't been the Jama'atu who had manned the attack at the barracks but currently, we were running low on possible suspects.
Kings International Church, Ikeja was filled with mixed circles of people from across the country and overseas too. Military officials in their uniforms and their various medals pinned to their clothes, stood in an angular row, saluting at the altar where his body lay.I felt an excruciating pang of agony overwhelm me as I took in the sight of his widow and only daughter. They were sitting at the front, using each other as a support for their tears.It was relieving though, at least they had shoulders to cry on, they had each other unlike Tayo and me."How is the hand," Emeka said while slapping me lightly on the back. He was referring to my now cast up hand that I felt like tearing off every minute. It was really impairing my movements and I almost felt useless without the complete full use of my hands."I can't wait to take it off," I replied as we both walked down the aisle, heading towards the altar"I heard it's a lady charmer," he said and that made me look at him with my eyebrow
"How are you doing?" She asked once we reached outside the church building.
We stood in a circle, round the large gaping hole as they lowered his body 6 feet into the ground. I was standing with Crystal and Faith and I had to support her, so she wouldn't crumble.His first cousin, Lee, was giving his own tribute and It was heartfelt and so sincere. Some families of the other victims were looking absolutely distraught while some managed to compose themselves but above all, funerals were the worst occasions to attend. I silently hoped I won't be visiting here anymore or worse end up as the one inside the box.It was Crystal's time to speak and I watched her as she gracefully walked towards the podium. The once fearless girl I knew looked shrunken and frail and my heart broke a little more seeing her like that."Dad, my rock, I don't have the strength in me to ponder on why they had to take you away from me. If I did, it might break the remaining threads holding this shattered heart of mine together.I would never find the answer, I know and as a wise person once
This time around a secret message was mailed to our inboxes requesting our presence and that was where I was now.Coker was a small town in Surulere, Lagos and I had to drive all the way from Ikeja to see why I had been called. I was more cautious and conscious of my surroundings as I would never allow what happened that day to repeat itself.When I arrived at the house in Enitan street which the mail had addressed, I was met with a group of some Generals and other Soldier's. This meet was more secretive than the other and I wondered why they hadn't summoned the rest of us but only a few. We were inaccurately, a number of 20 men present at this location, there might have been more but that was what I was able to achieve after my head count.We had sat down in a large spaced living room that had an oval centre mat with the face of a lion boldly indented on it, before a man began to speak. He had a protruding stomach that looked as though it had swallowed a whale but then I realized he w
"What?!" I asked in bewildered confusion. I had to go on this mission, I owed it to Richard."I had requested your presence mainly for contributions and to give you the respect accorded to being amongst the best in your field, not to lead you into action when you're undeniably unfit." "I am stable Sir," I insisted, trying my hardest to level my tone."You can't embark on an ops as high risked as this with a liability as such," he said referring to my bound hand and shoulder."The fracture caused by the stab is healed and I'm taking off the stupid cast in 6days but I'm certain we can make an exception of five days earlier," I argued, already fed up with the injury but I sincerely meant it, I didn't feel the pain anymore and I could even remove it today if I wanted."Still, I can't be too sure if you would be fully disposed to use it effectively and also you had experienced a mild axonotmesis.""Sir I need to go on this mission," I responded in desperation."What if something goes wrong
Even as the car had driven out of the hospital grounds, I still felt uneasy and agitated at the now forgotten hospital event.I left there as soon as I could as there was no time to deliver my righted annoyance at the staff or threats of suing. I needed to be away from there, so after hurriedly seeing the expected doctors and cajoling them into reporting my hand healed and my body ready for use, without a last glance, I took my leave with no intentions of returning.It was as though I had witnessed something unreal or was it just my mind playing tricks. I replayed the events again, countless times as I sat in the back seat of the car, clutching the doctor's reports firmly. The dark parts of my past came knocking on my doors for a visit today and to say I was not aware of who was standing on the other side would not be clearly accurate.I didn't know who the lunatic man was, I had never known him both then and now but somehow he had been more involved in my story than I would have permi
LADE: The Jama'tu soldiers left us alone upon Shugaba's command. The pain in my chest grew as if something was being drilled into my skin. My lungs weren't strong. I felt weaker than before. It was only a matter of time. "Agent Lade Adenuga of the ICS, we meet again," Shugaba said, wearing a striking snarl. He sent his gaze to my wounded arm and flitted it back to my face. Raising the arm some minutes ago had been tasking but I had no other choice. My weapons were on the ground. His soldiers had dislodged the bullets from inside them. "I have waited for you." His brows tipped. "Really?" "You owe me, soldier. I hate loosing." I flashed a charming smile. Shugaba eyeballed me and wet his lips. His next action had caught me off guard. He had thrown his weapon to the ground and opened his arms. "I'm all yours. If you w
Hafiz had told a lie, dawn didn't have to reach. Lade burst into the tent I was in with Hafiz. The look on his face revealed that there was trouble at hand. The final moments was here. I noticed he had aged a lot since I had first seen him at the Jama'tu camp. Now, it was time to end it all. "Your sister has made her move. I've been on her tail. She has made contact with the Jama'tu." It took about two seconds. I watched the news dwell on Hafiz. He jumped to his feet, big eyed and ready like he had been preparing for this moment for a long time, but scared because it had come too soon. Lade moved around, grabbing bags and anything reasonable. "I didn't expect her to do it so soon, but we have to act, and fast." Hafiz joined Lade in grabbing things and I stood, watching the two men try to survive. I couldn't stop myself from worrying. What if it was a trap? Since everyone had been pret
CRYSTAL... Protesters filled the streets, wailing. Some stood with angered faces. Everyone had something to say about the headlines of that morning, including Crystal. The news about the secret operation wasn't so secret anymore. The whole country knew about the eighteen dead men that risked their lives to save the kidnapped girls. The nineteenth was a traitor and only the twentieth had lived. Crystal didn't know what to think or believe. Lade had died in some faraway land and betrayed his country. Sitting at the back seat of the Maybach, she placed the cards together. She put everything Emeka had said from the start and the news of Lade's treachery in one basket. It didn't add up. Lade could kill in cold blood but he was loyal and she knew that. She didn't want to remember what Emeka said about her past pregnancy. What's to say he didn't lie? Emeka was Lade's bestfriend but he acted like an enemy who held a personal ve
"The beginning?" Hafiz chuckled. I frowned at him. I couldn’t read his features, and at this point, I had no clue on where our conversation would end. Tipping a brow, I could only fold my arms. Hafiz backed me now. He took a slow turn around the tent and said, "I'm afraid you're the beginning itself." I dragged a sigh and stood to my feet after that. "If you insist on beating around the bush, I don't have time to waste." "I know who you really are, Jane." He attacked from nowhere. "I came here today to let the cat out of the bag. It's time to come clean." At once, my gaze hardened like steel. For a second there, my heart had jumped in fear. It stunned me to hear those words fall from his mouth. I couldn't have thought that anyone would find out. "Correct me if I'm wrong, but a minute ago you tagged your sister as our biggest threat, and not me."
Hafiz toppled over, completely bound in chains of laughter. Apparently the conversation that came across as dead serious to me was weirdly amusing to him. The last indirect question he had brought to the table put me in a tight spot. I had said enough, there was nothing to free me from his vocal trap.
Morning had come but even so, I sat still, staring in silence at the wall. He didn't stay anymore and maybe this would be like all the previous times. Going scarce whenever a serious conversation happened, he had told me so much but I was even yet to spill any morsel of my own secrets—secrets that could change everything. He had also said soon, I just needed to wait a little more. Things were goin
Crystal...
It was still dark, dawn was yet to arrive and the only difference was that this time, I wasn't alone in the tent. The weight of another presence tightened the air. I was calmer now, and the upset in my belly had quelled.
I probably shouldn't have been wandering outside the tent in the dead of night but maybe I had just needed to clear my head. The dilapidated bungalow that was used as an infirmary by the locals here controlled