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The buzzing fluorescent lights inside The Daily Grind cast a dull yellow glow over the chipped floor, making everything look even more tired than it already was. Outside, Lagos was alive with its usual nighttime chaos, but in here, the air was heavy with the scent of old coffee and burnt sugar.
I wiped the counter slowly, the cloth in my hand damp and lifeless. Sticky traces of spilled lattes clung to the surface, refusing to come off. My shoulders throbbed with a pain Iād gotten used to, and my feetāstuffed into sneakers that should've been thrown away months agoāfelt like blocks of stone. It was almost closing time. Soon, I could finally take off this sweaty, stained uniform and get away from the never-ending whine of the espresso machine.
Each movement was a reminder of how tired and broke I was. I mentally calculated how much I'd made today. Not enough. Rent was due in three days. My younger brother, Emeka, needed his asthma meds again. And the electricity bill was higher than usual this month. Mama hadn't said anything, but Iād seen the worry in her eyes.
I wasn't hungry, but something still ached in my stomach. That tight, gnawing feeling of anxiety. The kind that never went away. No matter how hard I worked, it always felt like I was running in place, never catching up.
I stacked some old mugs and glanced at the dirty window. Outside, I could hear the traffic, the city sounding like a wild animal, always hungry. Just for a second, I let my mind wander; imagining soft lights, clean fabric, and the scratch of pencil on paper as I brought one of my clothing designs to life. But it was a dangerous thought, that dream. A distraction. I pushed it aside and focused on the sugar dispensers. They needed refilling. At least that was something I could control.
As I poured sugar into one of the containers, the grains spilled onto the counter just like the worries overflowing in my chest.
I had just wiped down the last table when I heard a familiar sigh behind me.
It was Mr. Adebayo, the cafĆ©'s owner. His shoulders always drooped like he carried the weight of the whole city. He wasnāt a bad man. Just tired like the rest of us in this struggling part of town.
"Zara," he said, voice rough and low. "it's a Slow day again. The generator chewed up half our profit, and that espresso machine is acting up."
I didnāt turn around. I already knew what he was going to say. I wiped the table more slowly, bracing myself.
"I might need to cut some hours next week," he added. My stomach dropped. "And your pay from yesterday⦠Iāll need to hold on to it for a day or two. Just until the next delivery. You understand, right?"
My hand froze on the table. A day or two? The words hit me like a slap. A cold wave of fear cut through my exhaustion. He said it like it was nothing but it wasnāt. Not to me, but to my brother Emeka.
It was his asthma Ventolin, dinner for tonight. And for the thin line between just barely surviving⦠and slipping completely.
āUnderstood, sir,ā I said quietly, forcing the words out. My voice sounded calm, but it was a lie one I told with every part of me. I gripped the damp cloth tighter, my knuckles going white. Inside, I wanted to scream: No, I donāt understand. I need it now. Right now.
But I said nothing. The words stayed trapped in my throat, useless and unheard.
He nodded, probably thinking I was fine with it, then shuffled back to his dim little office.
I stayed there, standing in the silence of the nearly empty cafƩ. The stillness felt heavier than usual. The numbers in my head, my careful plans has fallen apart like broken glass. That money was part of everything. Without it, everything else crumbled too. And there was no backup plan. There never was.
When I finally stepped outside, the night air hit me hard, cold against my skin. The bells above the cafƩ door jingled behind me, almost mocking. I crumpled my apron in one hand, my uniform half unbuttoned beneath my old jacket. The street stretched out ahead, lit by tired yellow lights. Shadows moved on the walls, stretching long and strange.
Somewhere down the road, Fuji music blasted from a buka, mixing with the rumble of generators and the calls of late-night hawkers. The street wasn't exactly dangerous but it didn't feel safe either.
My mind was racing, full of fears that I couldn't be quite about.
Emeka's medicine,
Mama's worsening cough, and
The landlord's angry phone calls.
Each step I took felt heavier, like I was carrying all of it on my back.
Mr. Adebayo's words rang in my ears: āA day or two.ā
That wasn't a delay, it was a sentence.
Without that money, Emeka wouldn't get his inhaler tonight. I pictured him struggling to breathe, chest rising and falling in fast, shallow gasps. My stomach twisted.
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