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CHRONICLES OF A RUNS GIRL— A Crime Thriller Series Episode One

Deòlu was tired of poverty. Born and raised in Ìlorin, she had known suffering all her life. Her father was a bricklayer who worked under the scorching sun for daily pay, and her mother sold roasted corn by the roadside. Feeding was a struggle, and school fees were a luxury. The streets had taught her one thing—if you wanted a good life, you had to grab it with both hands. So when her childhood friend, Teni, invited her to Lagos, promising her “soft life,” she didn’t think twice. “Lagos no be your village,” Teni had laughed over the phone. “If you sabi package, you go blow.” Deòlu packed her few belongings—just a small Ghana-Must-Go bag filled with second-hand clothes and cheap perfume—and boarded a night bus to Lagos. The city was a monster, but she was ready. Apapa Hustle Begins Teni lived in a cramped one-room apartment in Apapa, close to the port. The air smelled of fish and sea salt, and the streets were always busy, filled with truck drivers, market women, and men with wandering ...

ALL OF US ARE MENT IN IBADAN EP1

 

Wahala for Beere Junction

Beere Junction was as rowdy as ever. Buses and bikes weaved through the traffic like headless chickens, traders shouted over each other, and the air smelled of fried akara, burnt petrol, and too many people in one place.

Anike adjusted the  bag in her hand, filled with school materials she just bought at Beere Market. She had to hurry back to her aunt’s shop in Amuloko  before the woman started cursing her village people. She flagged down a danfo, the kind that looked like it had seen the end of the world and survived.

"Wole pelu change o!” the conductor yelled, hanging by the door like a stubborn lizard.

Anike climbed in and squeezed herself onto a tiny space beside an old woman chewing kola nut. The moment her butt touched the seat, the driver—a pot-bellied man with bloodshot eyes—slammed the gear and took off.

“EGBAMI O!” a woman screamed as the bus jerked forward, nearly throwing everyone out.

“Driver, small small?” Anike shouted.

The man didn’t answer. He was too busy honking, cursing, and swerving the bus like he was being chased. A group of alabaru—market women carrying loads on their heads—scattered out of the way as the danfo nearly hit them.

“Ah! Driver, take am easy nau!” someone begged.

The conductor, a short guy with tribal marks, grinned. “Sister, welcome to Ibadan transport. If you no wan enter, make you come down.”

Before Anike could respond, a loud GBAM! shook the bus.

“JESU! A ti ku o!” someone screamed.

The bus had rammed into a woman’s plantain stall. Plantains rolled onto the road, crushed under moving tires as people shouted. The woman, a dark-skinned trader with wrapper tied across her chest, stormed toward the bus.

“Driver, you're in debt! You don scatter my market!”

The driver didn’t even blink. “Mama, if you wan cry, go police station go report.”

Anike shook her head. She should have trekked instead.

Beere Junction and wahala—five and six.

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