Home / Romance / Beneath Lagos Rain / Chapter Four: The Shape of a Lie

Share

Chapter Four: The Shape of a Lie

Author: SALGMAN
last update Petsa ng paglalathala: 2026-05-11 15:14:40

Lagos does not hide truth.

It buries it under better stories.

Amara stood by her door longer than she intended to after Damian left.

Not because he had said anything comforting.

He hadn’t.

Not because he had offered safety.

He hadn’t done that either.

But because something about the way he arrived suggested that the situation she thought she was surviving… had already been studied from multiple angles.

And she was not the first person to look at it.

Just the last.

When the car finally disappeared down the quiet Ikoyi street, the silence it left behind felt heavier than noise.

Amara closed the door slowly.

Locked it twice.

Then leaned against it—not in collapse, but in recalibration.

Her phone lit up again.

Unknown number.

A new message.

No greeting.

Just:

“Check the upload origin.”

She hesitated.

Then opened her laptop.

Three hours later, she was no longer breathing normally.

Not fast.

Not slow.

Controlled.

The way someone breathes when they are trying not to break something they still need.

The video.

The one that destroyed her life.

She had never questioned where it came from.

Because pain rarely asks for geography.

But now she did.

She traced it.

Then traced it again.

Then again.

Until the pattern stopped feeling like coincidence.

It was not uploaded from the university.

Not directly.

It was routed.

Cleanly.

Professionally.

Through a private relay system tied to a media syndication node.

A node she had seen before.

On a lecture slide.

Attached to a guest speaker.

A donor program.

A familiar surname.

Her breath stopped slightly when the name aligned.

Zainab Balogun had once tagged that same foundation in a post.

Amara stared at the screen.

Not emotion.

Recognition forming slowly.

Then she dug deeper.

Access logs.

Shared Wi-Fi nodes.

Device fingerprint overlap.

One consistent point.

Not Tobe.

Not the lecturer.

Not random students.

Zainab.

But not alone.

There was someone else.

A second route.

Cleaner.

Older infrastructure.

Corporate-level routing.

Her cursor paused over the metadata.

AFOYLAN NETWORK SUBSYSTEM.

Amara’s hand went still.

That name.

She had seen it again.

On Damian’s documents.

On financial summaries she was never supposed to access.

Her laptop felt colder suddenly.

Not physically.

Emotionally.

Because the truth was no longer a theory.

It was structure.

And she was inside it.

Meanwhile, in Ikoyi, Damian stood in a private records room beneath Afolayan Tower.

No one spoke here unless spoken to.

He had already reviewed the same data Amara had found.

But faster.

Cleaner.

Without emotional interference.

Behind him, his legal lead finally spoke carefully.

“The secondary upload route was masked under influencer-linked traffic. One of the accounts belongs to Zainab Balogun.”

A pause.

Damian did not react.

“Confirmed?” he asked.

“Yes, sir.”

Another pause.

Then:

“And the initial framing trigger?”

The analyst hesitated.

“That… originated from a device registered to Miss Nwosu’s academic peer group.”

Damian turned slightly.

Not quickly.

Not angrily.

Just enough.

“Meaning?”

The analyst swallowed.

“Someone inside her circle gave the system access point.”

Silence.

Then Damian said something very quietly.

“Not access.”

A pause.

“Permission.”

The room went still.

Because there is a difference.

Access is accidental.

Permission is intentional.

Later that night, Amara walked.

Not because she wanted to.

Because staying still felt like surrender.

She moved through the quiet mainland streets, hoodie over her head, phone in hand, replaying everything she had found.

Zainab.

Tobe.

The lecturer.

The routing system.

And the Afolayan connection.

Her mind kept returning to one question:

Why her?

Not “who did this.”

But why her specifically.

She stopped under a streetlight flickering weakly against rain residue.

Then her phone rang.

Unknown number again.

She almost didn’t answer.

Then did.

A voice.

Male.

Familiar in tone but not identity.

“You found it,” Damian said.

Not a question.

A confirmation.

Amara froze slightly.

Her grip tightened.

“How did you get this number?” she asked.

A pause on the other end.

Then calmly:

“I didn’t ask for it.”

That alone was unsettling.

Because it implied systems she did not control were already aligned around her.

Amara swallowed once.

“You knew,” she said quietly. “From the beginning.”

Another pause.

Not denial.

Not agreement.

Then Damian’s voice:

“I suspected.”

A beat.

“And I prefer not to ignore suspicions when they involve my infrastructure.”

Her eyes narrowed slightly.

“So I’m infrastructure now?”

A faint silence.

Then:

“No,” he replied.

“You’re a breach.”

That word landed differently.

Not insult.

Classification.

Amara’s voice lowered.

“Who framed me?”

Damian did not answer immediately.

When he did, it was precise.

“Someone who needed attention removed from a larger financial leak.”

A pause.

“And your reputation was the easiest ignition point.”

Amara closed her eyes briefly.

Not because she was weak.

Because clarity sometimes hurts more than confusion.

“And Zainab?” she asked.

A longer pause.

Then:

“Used.”

Not softened.

Not emotional.

Just fact.

Amara opened her eyes again.

Rain had started lightly.

Somewhere between them, distance felt irrelevant.

“Why are you helping me?” she asked.

Damian’s answer came after a moment.

Not rehearsed.

Not warm.

Honest in the only way he knew how.

“Because whoever did this,” he said, “did not expect you to look back.”

A pause.

“And now they will have to adjust.”

Silence.

Then the call ended.

Amara stood under the flickering light long after the screen went dark.

Not shaking.

Not crying.

Something quieter forming.

Understanding.

Because betrayal was no longer the full story.

It was only the surface layer of something structured.

And somewhere in Ikoyi, a man who did not believe in coincidence had just confirmed what she had only begun to suspect:

She was not destroyed randomly.

She was selected.

And Damian Afolayan had stepped into her life not as a rescuer…

but as someone correcting an imbalance he did not approve of.

The rain deepened.

And for the first time,

Amara stopped asking whether her life had ended.

She started asking who had rewritten it.

Patuloy na basahin ang aklat na ito nang libre
I-scan ang code upang i-download ang App

Pinakabagong kabanata

  • Beneath Lagos Rain   Chapter 201: The Room Above

    The open lift stood before them in complete silence.Its polished steel doors reflected the faces gathered in the corridor, making it seem as though twice as many people were standing there.Justice Sani instinctively stepped forward."Nobody enters yet."His voice was calm but firm.Two officers immediately moved to either side of the lift, weapons drawn but lowered. Another officer radioed the bomb disposal unit already working elsewhere in the building."Possible concealed level," he reported. "Proceeding with caution."Nathan remained kneeling beside the maintenance panel, his eyes fixed on the newly illuminated 22."I still don't understand."Richard looked at him."What?""I didn't unlock it."He replayed every step in his mind."I disconnected the secondary control board.""I checked the relay.""I examined the keypad.""I never entered a code."Samuel frowned."Then why did it open?"Nathan slowly stood."Either the system recognised that someone was trying to access it..."".

  • Beneath Lagos Rain   Chapter 200: Floor Twenty Two

    The lift hummed quietly as it climbed.Three.Seven.Twelve.Eighteen.Twenty one.With a soft chime, it stopped.The doors slid open.The corridor beyond was exactly as Amara remembered it.White marble floors.Dark wooden panels.Tastefully framed artwork.The executive level of Horizon Headquarters had once been one of the most heavily guarded places in the country.Now it was eerily silent.Police officers moved methodically from office to office, cataloguing evidence and sealing documents into numbered containers.The silence made every footstep sound louder.Justice Sani led the group towards the far end of the corridor, where Richard was speaking with two structural engineers.Richard looked up as they approached."You're here."Nathan immediately noticed the open ceiling panels and cables hanging from the wall."You've been dismantling the control system."Richard nodded."We thought the lift had developed a fault.""And?""It hasn't."One of the engineers handed Nathan a digi

  • Beneath Lagos Rain   Chapter 199: The Initials

    The card lay silently in Amara's hand.Plain white.No company logo.No telephone number.No address.Nothing except two carefully written initials.V.A.The ink was dark blue.Fresh.Nathan took the card carefully, holding it only by the edges."Don't touch the writing."Samuel looked at him."You think it contains something?""I don't know.""But after everything Horizon taught us...""...I've stopped believing in coincidences."He slipped the card into a transparent evidence sleeve from his backpack before examining it beneath the light.The surface appeared ordinary.Heavy cardstock.High quality.Professionally cut.Nothing unusual.Which, once again, made it unusual.The café manager shifted uneasily."Is... is there a problem?"Justice Sani's name had been on every news broadcast for three days. Amara's face had appeared on television beside his. The manager had recognised them the moment they walked into the café that morning.Samuel smiled reassuringly."No problem.""Can you

  • Beneath Lagos Rain   Chapter 198: The Woman Across the Street

    For several long seconds, no one at the table moved.Nathan still held the phone against his ear, staring at the blank screen as though the caller might speak again.The call had lasted less than fifteen seconds.Yet it had unsettled him more than months of decoding Horizon's encrypted servers.Samuel reached across the table and took the phone from Nathan's hand."Unknown number."He checked the call log."No caller ID.""No location.""No trace."Nathan finally found his voice."I've never seen anything like it."Amara looked at him carefully."What do you mean?""I mean..."He frowned."The call never passed through the normal mobile network."Samuel looked up."Is that even possible?"Nathan gave a tired smile."Everything is possible."He quickly opened a diagnostic application on his laptop and connected the phone with a cable from his backpack.Lines of code began scrolling across the screen.Amara had seen that expression before.Nathan wasn't just curious.He was determined.

  • Beneath Lagos Rain   Chapter 197: The Invisible Auditor

    Nathan's words hung over the table like a storm cloud.Someone was auditing Horizon.For several seconds, neither Amara nor Samuel spoke.The bustling café suddenly felt strangely distant. The clatter of cups, the low hum of conversations, even the ferry horns outside faded into the background.Amara reached for the financial statements spread across the table.She wasn't an accountant, but after months of investigating Horizon, she had learned enough to recognise one thing.Power always left fingerprints.Money never moved without someone deciding where it should go.She carefully flipped through another page.Then another.Everything was meticulously organised.Every payment had supporting documentation.Every transfer carried a corresponding approval.Every expense matched an operational report.Nothing appeared suspicious.Which was exactly what disturbed Nathan.Samuel finally broke the silence."Maybe Leon was simply that disciplined."Nathan looked at him and immediately shook

  • Beneath Lagos Rain   Chapter 196: Ashes Never Stay Still

    Three days had passed since the lighthouse.Three days since Leon, the man the world had known only as the Chairman, had surrendered to the authorities without firing a single shot.Three days since Horizon had fallen.The newspapers called it the greatest intelligence breakthrough in Nigeria's modern history.Television stations called it the end of a shadow government.Social media had already found a dozen different names for it.But on the streets of Lagos...Life simply continued.Commercial buses still fought for passengers at Ojota. Street traders arranged their goods beneath colourful umbrellas despite the morning heat. Office workers hurried through Marina with cups of coffee in one hand and mobile phones in the other, complaining about traffic as though the nation had not just survived one of the darkest conspiracies in its history.History, Amara realised, had an extraordinary ability to become ordinary.She sat alone beside the wide glass window of a quiet café overlooking

Higit pang Kabanata
Galugarin at basahin ang magagandang nobela
Libreng basahin ang magagandang nobela sa GoodNovel app. I-download ang mga librong gusto mo at basahin kahit saan at anumang oras.
Libreng basahin ang mga aklat sa app
I-scan ang code para mabasa sa App
DMCA.com Protection Status