…and Amara had been watching my hands…
neither of them had been watching closely enough.
The real money—every last naira of it—was sealed in a secondary compartment beneath the safe’s false base. A modification I had paid for years ago after handling a fraud case that taught me just how creative desperation could get.
I never planned to use it on family.
But I also never planned to need to.
“Do we intercept?” Scott asked.
I leaned back against the wall, thinking.
Through the window, Lagos was waking up—okadas buzzing past, vendors setting up, the city stretching into another day like nothing unusual had happened.
But something had.
Not the theft.
That part was predictable.
What mattered was what came next.
“No,” I said finally. “Let them run.”
Scott didn’t argue. He knew me too well for that.
“They think they’re free,” I continued. “Let them feel it.”
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