Black River: Chapter 6


The early morning light struggled to pierce through the heavy curtains of the dimly lit room. Olumide sat across from Jide in a sparse safehouse on the outskirts of Lagos, the air between them thick with tension. The night had been long, filled with doubt, suspicion, and the cold, calculating rage that only betrayal could breed. Olumide’s eyes, bloodshot and focused, bore into Jide, searching for any sign of deception.

"You have one chance, Jide," Olumide's voice was low but sharp, cutting through the oppressive silence of the room. "One chance to tell me why I shouldn’t kill you right now."

Jide, visibly shaken, looked down at his hands as he rubbed them together nervously. His usual calm and collected demeanor was nowhere to be found. "Boss, I swear... it’s not what you think. Everything I did, I did to protect us."

"Protect us? Protect us?" Olumide’s voice rose as he slammed his fist against the table, rattling the glasses and papers on it. "I watched that video. You were meeting with Taiwo! The man who killed Femi! You think I don’t know what’s going on?"

Jide swallowed hard, his throat dry. He knew his life was hanging by a thread, but he also knew the truth needed to be told. "I was meeting Taiwo because Femi found something, something bigger than us, bigger than the entire underworld of Lagos."

Olumide’s anger simmered just beneath the surface, his hands clenched into fists. "What are you talking about?"

"Femi wasn’t killed because of a personal grudge or some petty gang war. He stumbled upon a conspiracy, something that goes beyond our operations. The Syndicate… it’s not just a criminal organization. They have ties to powerful politicians, major corporations, the banks… even the military. They’re trying to take control of Lagos, from the shadows, from the top down."

Olumide’s breath hitched as he tried to process the information. "And you were working with them?"

Jide shook his head vigorously. "No, boss. I wasn’t working with them. I was trying to get ahead of them. Taiwo contacted me, wanted me to join them. He said the game was changing, that the days of street-level crime were over. But I stayed loyal. Femi didn’t realize how deep it went until it was too late. He was killed because he was getting too close to the truth."

The room fell silent for a moment. Olumide’s mind raced as he thought about Femi’s death and the symbol carved into his chest, the same symbol that haunted him since that night. He wasn’t sure if he could believe Jide, but the story made sense—too much sense.

"And you didn’t think to come to me with this?" Olumide growled.

Jide’s voice cracked with desperation. "I wanted to, but I didn’t know who to trust. Femi’s murder changed everything. Taiwo said they’d come for you next, and when I saw that symbol… I knew they meant it."

Before Olumide could respond, a loud crash echoed through the room. The front door of the safehouse burst open, and several armed men stormed in. Olumide instinctively reached for his gun, but Jide was already on his feet, returning fire.

"Taiwo’s men!" Jide shouted, ducking behind the overturned table as bullets flew through the air. Olumide cursed under his breath as he fired back, realizing that the safehouse had been compromised.

The firefight was brutal and chaotic. Olumide’s men, scattered throughout the safehouse, tried to hold their ground, but Taiwo’s men were relentless. One by one, they were picked off, their bodies hitting the floor with sickening thuds.

"We need to get out of here!" Jide yelled as he grabbed Olumide by the arm, pulling him toward the back exit.

Olumide hesitated for a moment, his mind still processing everything that had just been revealed. But as the bullets continued to fly, he had no choice but to follow Jide. Together, they sprinted through the narrow hallway, dodging gunfire as they burst through the back door into the cold morning air.

The streets of Lagos were eerily quiet as they ran, their footsteps echoing against the concrete. The sound of sirens wailed in the distance, a reminder that the city was never truly silent. Olumide’s heart pounded in his chest, a mixture of adrenaline and fury driving him forward.

"We can’t go back to any of our safehouses," Jide panted as they reached an alleyway and crouched behind a dumpster, catching their breath. "They know all our locations."

Olumide’s jaw clenched. "Then we go underground. Let’s see how deep this Syndicate really runs."

Meanwhile, Detective Durojaiye sat in his office, surrounded by a sea of paperwork and evidence boards. He had spent the entire night connecting the dots between the evidence found at Femi’s crime scene and the raid on Olumide’s warehouse. What he had uncovered was more than just a web of criminal activity—it was a vast conspiracy linking some of Lagos’ most powerful individuals.

He leaned back in his chair, rubbing his tired eyes. The Syndicate, a name whispered only in dark corners of the underworld, had reared its ugly head. But now that Durojaiye was getting closer to the truth, the danger was escalating. Every lead he followed pointed back to a group of high-ranking politicians and corporations working in tandem to control the city’s economy, its streets, and even the police force itself.

His phone buzzed, breaking the silence in the room. It was a text from his captain: “Watch your back. Things are getting messy.”

Durojaiye frowned, his mind racing. He knew that diving deeper into this investigation would put a target on his back, but he was determined to see it through. Femi’s murder was the key, and now that he had uncovered links to The Syndicate, he wasn’t going to let it slip through his fingers.

Hours later, in another part of Lagos, the mutilated body of Jide was unceremoniously dumped outside one of Olumide’s remaining hideouts. His chest bore the same horrific symbol carved into Femi’s—a gruesome calling card from Taiwo and The Syndicate. The sight of Jide’s broken form sent Olumide spiraling into a rage unlike anything he had felt before.

They were closing in, and Olumide knew he had to act fast.

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