The Leather Briefcase in the Rainy Night

The leather briefcase lay silently on the back seat of Chik Okafor’s old taxi.

It lay there like a heavy secret, like an unexploded bomb.

Chik remained seated behind the wheel, though the engine had long since stopped. His hands still gripped the steering wheel. Outside, the rain had just stopped. The last raindrops fell onto the dark asphalt, reflecting the yellowish streetlights.

The night in Lagos suddenly became unusually quiet.

In eleven years of driving a taxi, Chik had picked up thousands of passengers. They got into his car, talked on the phone, argued, laughed, then got out and disappeared from his life.

The only thing they usually left behind was the scent of expensive perfume… or cheap beer.

But tonight, someone had left something else.

Something that didn’t belong in the old Honda with its doors sealed shut with tape.

A leather briefcase.

Chik reached behind him and pulled the briefcase onto his lap. It was heavier than he expected. The leather was soft and shiny, a kind of leather he certainly could never afford.

Engraved on the handle were two gold letters:

O.A.

Chik knew those letters.

In Lagos, almost everyone knew.

Obiora Ademi.

A billionaire in oil, real estate, banking, and transportation. They said he owned half of Victoria Island. His picture appeared on billboards, in newspapers, and at political meetings.

Chik swallowed hard.

That man… had left this briefcase in his taxi.

He unlocked it.

The briefcase opened.

Inside were thick stacks of documents, contracts with gleaming red seals, Zenith Bank checkbooks… and money.

Lots of money.

Statuses of naira bound with rubber bands.

Chik began to count.

Twenty stacks.

Fifty bills each.

One million naira.

Just lying there.

In his taxi.

The phone rang.

A new ride.

Chik hung up.

He thought of his wife.

Ngozi.

He thought of the tumor in her breast.

He thought of the surgery they couldn’t afford.

He thought of his little daughter, Adanna.

Her tuition was due in three days.

Chik closed his eyes.

Just three stacks of money.

150,000 naira.

Enough for the test.

Someone like Obiora Ademi… probably would never find out.

The phone rang again.

He answered.

Ngozi’s voice was hoarse with exhaustion.

—Chik…where are you?

—I’m still working.

—The hospital just called. If we don’t have 150,000 naira by Friday…they’ll cancel the appointment.

Chik was silent.

—We’ve borrowed from everyone… Ngozi whispered. My mother thinks I married the wrong man, a useless one.

A long silence followed.

—She asked today…why we’re not having chicken anymore.

Chik couldn’t answer.

The call ended.

Only the sound of the light rain remained in the taxi.

Chik picked up a stack of money.

50,000 naira.

Three stacks.

Just three stacks.

He started the engine.

But instead of going home, he drove through the brightly lit streets of Victoria Island.

Huge mansions.

Expensive cars.

A world he knew he didn’t belong to.

When they arrived back at their small rented room in Ajegunle, Ngozi was still awake.

The room had only a single yellow light bulb. Their daughter was sleeping on a mat in the corner.

Ngozi spotted the briefcase immediately.

“What is it?”

“A passenger left it behind.”

“Did you open it?”

“Yes.”

“What’s inside?”

Chik opened the briefcase.

Ngozi was speechless.

She counted.

When she finished, her hands trembled.

“One million naira…”

She looked at her husband.

“Do you understand what this means?”

“It’s not our money.”

Ngozi laughed bitterly.

“Give it back? Are you really going to give it back?”

“Yes.”

“Chik… I’m tired… I’m tired of being poor.”

She pointed to her chest.

“I could die from this. Our daughter is hungry.” “And you want the money back?”

Chik whispered.

“If it’s my money… do you want them to keep it?”

Ngozi clenched her fists.

“We’ll only take 150,000. The rest will be returned.”

“It’s still theft.”

Ngozi looked at him with red eyes.

“If you return it… don’t expect my forgiveness.”

The room fell silent.

Finally, Chik picked up the briefcase.

And walked out.

That night, he drove to Obiora Ademi’s mansion.

High walls, electric wires, guards.

They looked at him as if he were a madman.

Until he held up the briefcase.

The gate opened.

An hour later, Chik stood in the billionaire’s luxurious office.

Obiora opened the briefcase.

Counted the money.

Everything was still there.

He stared at Chik for a long time.

Then he asked:

“Do you know what’s in here?”

“Yes, sir.”

“And you didn’t take anything?”

“No.”

Obiora laughed loudly.

“You’re either the most honest person in Lagos…or the biggest fool.”

He walked to the window.

Then he spoke slowly.

“My father used to be a taxi driver too.”

Chik looked up.

Obiora told the story of his father…who had once returned $20,000 to a Lebanese businessman.

And that honesty had changed the lives of his entire family.

After a moment of silence, Obiora wrote a check.

He handed it to Chik.

“500,000 naira.”

“This is a reward.”

Chik shook his head.

“I can’t accept it.”

“You can.”

Then he continued:

“—And from Monday… you’ll work for me.”

Chik stood speechless.

“—250,000 naira a month. Apprentice on the construction site.”

When Chik got home, Ngozi was still sitting there.

She looked at him coldly.

“—Did you return it?”

Chik placed the check in her hand.

Ngozi looked down.

ng.

500,000 naira.

She burst into tears.

“What happened?”

Chik smiled.

“I think…a real miracle just happened.”

Three years later.

Chik stood in front of his family’s new house.

Three bedrooms.

A small garden.

Ngozi was healthy after the surgery.

Adanna ran around the house laughing.

That evening, the couple sat on the balcony.

Ngozi whispered:

“Have you ever thought…if we had kept the money that day?”

Chik nodded.

“Yes.”

“And?”

He looked at the city lights.

“Maybe we would only have lived a little longer.”

Then he smiled.

“But because we returned it…we changed our lives.”

Ngozi rested her head on his shoulder.

Inside the house, Adanna slept soundly in her own room.

A room built not with stolen money…

but with her father’s honesty.

And sometimes, the most precious thing a person can leave to their children…

is not money.

But a name to be proud of.