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The Lagos Police Station smelled like disappointment and diesel fumes.
I'd been sitting on a wooden bench for three hours, wedged between a woman screaming into her phone about a cheating husband and a man who'd been muttering about "these useless government people" since before I arrived. The ceiling fan made a grinding noise with each rotation, as if it were considering giving up entirely.
My termination letter was folded in my bag. Twenty-four hours old and already soft at the creases from my nervous hands. *Ms. Adeyemi, due to organizational restructuring, your position has been eliminated effective immediately. Security will escort you from the premises.*
Corporate speak for: *You found something you weren't supposed to see, and now you're a liability.*
But I hadn't come here to cry about wrongful termination. I'd come because of what I'd discovered three days before they fired me—and because staying silent would make me complicit in something that could destroy lives.
"Eniola Adeyemi?"
A tired-looking officer butchered the pronunciation of my name. Around the station, the usual chaos continued—arguments in Yoruba, forms being stamped, someone's grandmother demanding to see the commissioner.
I stood, smoothing the skirt I'd worn to the office yesterday, before Security had supervised me packing my desk like a criminal. "Yes. I'm here to report financial crimes."
His eyebrows rose. A few nearby officers glanced over. Financial crimes weren't typically reported by twenty-six-year-old women in wrinkled business casual.
"Follow me."
He led me through a narrow hallway to a cramped office that smelled like stale coffee and broken air conditioning. The nameplate on the desk read *Inspector Okafor.*
"What kind of financial crimes?" He gestured to a plastic chair that had probably been orange once.
I pulled my laptop from my bag, hands steadier than my pulse. "Money laundering. Approximately 2.3 billion naira moved through shell companies over the past eighteen months. I have the transaction records, corporate registration documents, and pattern analysis showing how they disguised the money trail."
That got his attention. He leaned forward, coffee forgotten.
"And you have this information because...?"
"I was a senior financial analyst at Westbridge Securities. It was my job to audit subsidiary transactions and flag anomalies." I opened the first spreadsheet, columns of numbers appearing on the screen. "These discrepancies appeared in my reports for six months. Management kept instructing me to reclassify them as 'administrative delays.' When I refused and started documenting the pattern, they terminated me."
"You understand the implications of what you're alleging?" His voice dropped low enough that I had to lean in to hear him over the station noise. "Westbridge handles accounts for some very powerful people."
"I understand I'm alleging crimes." I met his gaze directly. "Powerful people commit those too."
He studied me for a long moment—probably trying to decide if I was brave, stupid, or suicidal. Then he reached for his desk phone.
"I need to make a call."
---
Twenty minutes later, I was moved to a different room. This one had working air conditioning and chairs without suspicious stains. The kind of room they used for witnesses they actually wanted to keep alive.
The door opened. A woman entered first—tall, expensive navy suit, the kind of presence that said she billed by the minute. Behind her came a man who seemed to absorb all the available space in the room just by existing.
He was American. That was obvious from the way he carried himself, the cut of his charcoal suit that probably cost more than my former annual salary, the confidence of someone who'd never been told "no" without appealing to a higher authority.
White. Tall—easily six-three. Dark hair, sharp features, and eyes the color of a thunderstorm over the Atlantic. Those eyes swept the room with clinical efficiency, cataloging exits, threats, and me.
Especially me.
"Ms. Adeyemi." The woman set a leather portfolio on the table with a soft thud. "I'm Kemi Olatunde, corporate attorney. This is Elijah Kingston. He's here as an interested party regarding the evidence you've brought forward."
My stomach performed an impressive free-fall.
Kingston. As in Kingston Enterprises, one of the largest multinational conglomerates operating in West Africa. As in the company whose subsidiary transactions I'd just handed to the police.
I was either about to be saved or destroyed. Possibly both.
"Interested in what capacity?" I kept my voice level.
Elijah pulled out a chair and sat with the casual authority of someone who'd never questioned his right to any space he occupied. "Interested in whether you're remarkably brave or catastrophically naive."
His voice was deep, American—East Coast money, the kind of accent that came from prep schools and Ivy League lecture halls. But there was something else underneath. A weariness, maybe. Or calculation.
"Those files you brought in?" He nodded toward my laptop. "They don't just implicate Westbridge. They implicate three of my father's former business partners."
"Then you should want them investigated."
"I do." He leaned back, studying me like I was a quarterly earnings report. "What I'm trying to understand is why a recently terminated analyst decided to bring this to the police instead of selling it to the highest bidder. That evidence is worth millions to the right people. Or wrong people, depending on your perspective."
"Or my life to those same people," I countered.
Something flickered across his face. Not quite a smile, but close. "So you do understand the position you're in."
"I understand that companies don't fire their best analyst for 'restructuring.'" I crossed my arms. "They fire her because she found something she wasn't supposed to find and refused to pretend she didn't see it."
The lawyer—Kemi—glanced at Elijah. Some wordless communication passed between them, the kind that comes from years of working together.
"Ms. Adeyemi," Kemi said carefully, "what exactly are you hoping to accomplish by coming forward? Justice? Revenge? Financial compensation?"
"I want them to face consequences." I looked directly at Elijah. "Even if they were your father's partners."
"My father," Elijah said, each word precisely placed, "died six months ago. Plane crash over the Atlantic. Body never recovered." He stood, walking to the small window that overlooked the chaotic Lagos street below. "Those 'partners' you've exposed have been systematically looting the companies he built. Which is why I'm here instead of sending lawyers to bury your evidence in motions and NDAs."
He turned back to face me.
"I need someone who can testify about these transactions without being bought, blackmailed, or killed. Someone intelligent enough to understand the financial maze they constructed and angry enough to want to burn it down."
"You need a witness."
"I need a partner." He moved back to the table but didn't sit. "Those men you've exposed? They're currently attempting to take control of my company. My father's will has... complications. Unless I meet certain conditions in the next seventeen months, everything he built goes to my uncle—who happens to be in business with the same people you just reported."
I processed this. "What kind of conditions?"
"Marriage. An heir. Proof of stability and commitment to legacy." His jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. "The old man didn't trust me to build anything lasting without forcing me to start a family first."
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