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Every New Year holds promise, as though it is any different from the turn of
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Chapter 10
Family
“Oh my God, baba Ramota just entered my car.”
“Calm down, he doesn’t know yet that you are the one driving.”
”What am I supposed to tell him when he finds out who is driving him about town this night?”
“You will have to keep calm and behave professionally.”
“Professionally ke! How? He knows me like the palm of his hands. The last time I was at the village I told him I had started work in an international blue chip company and that I would be posted to Europe for a year. This is the worst thing to happen to me right now Don.”
“Do you have a face cap you can put over your head?”
“Yes, but it is in the car boot.”
“Then you must get it?”
“Oh my God, what kind of a mess is this?”
“Is this not Adio omo Morenike?” came the elderly voice from his backseat. “Adio! Oladotun!”
“Busted.”
“I think you must be mixing me up with someone else Baba.” Adio tried to refine his accent as much as he could.
“Adio! Please turn your face to me, let me take a good look at you properly. There can not be two of your person.”
Adio fiddled with the knob of the car stereo to distract himself. He knew that the less he spoke, the better.
The old man fiddled with his mobile phone for a bit and soon enough Adio noticed the vibration of his phone in his pocket. He was suddenly very grateful for always having his phone on silent mode.
Not satisfied, the man elderly man, drabbed in flowing white agbada and a cap to match, leaned forward to take a good look at his face.
“Adio.” he whispered. “It is indeed you.” The man concluded.
“I am sorry sir, my name is Jonathan Akporie. I grew up in Asaba. This is such a coincidence sir.”
“Where did that even come from. Nice one.”
The man looked confused. He removed his cap, dumping it in the backseat.
“Listen, Jonathan…Adio, is something wrong? Why have you taken up a new identity. Let me see your forearm.”
Adio promptly wrestled his arm from the old man. His birthmark would have instantly given him away. He was grateful for the long sleeve shirt he had on.
“Please don’t touch me.” He protested weakly.
“You even smell like him.” Befuddled, the old man slowly sank back into the chair. “How could this be?”
Adio welcomed the silence between them. He stepped harder on the accelerator pedal to eat up the distance till the old man’s destination.
“That was close. But you are not in the clear yet.” Don added.
“The boy Adio.” The old man started a soliloquy. “He is the only son of my late younger sister. The shining star of the family. We prayed for his success since he was a boy and hoped he would someday become a great philanthropist and a proud export of Kajola Village.” He heaved.
“He started well.” he continued. “Passing all his secondary school final examination in flying colors and gaining admission into the state university. He is the pride of the village. It took a thrift contribution from a good chunk of the villagers to pay for his four-year stay in the university. We truly struggled for this boy. We did!”
It sounded like the old man spoke through clenched teeth with a hint of regret.
“He is a good son of the soil.” Adio imagined the old man nodding his head in affirmation. “He gave back to the village by contributing generously towards the purchase of seedlings for the farming season. He showed gratitude.”

Silence filled the space in between thoughts, punctuated only by the wheezing sound from the old man’s weakened lungs.
“Stay true to the game Adio. Don’t flinch or give in.” Don warned.
Adio remained silent. The less he spoke the better. Nothing was going to change that.
“He is currently sponsoring two of my children through secondary school and I hear he also pays the fees for some of his relatives. We haven’t stopped praying for him. He is a good son.”
Adio cleaned off the tear pooling in his eyes, using two of his fingers, as he turned the car into the street where he hoped that this nightmare and heartache would end.
“Ha! Adio.” The old man wails. “What happened to my Adio?”
“Stay true buddy. Get a grip.” Don encouraged.
“What did you say your name is again?” The old man asked as he pulled the car to a stop in front of a motel.
“Adio….sorry Jonah…sorry Jonathan.”
“Fuck up!”
“Adio, I know it is you. My son, there is no shame in whatever you have to do to support yourself and your family. No shame Son!”
The tears rolled down his cheek freely as he listened to the old man.
“We are praying for you dear Son. We are praying for you. Be humble in your disposition and focus on your goals. Everything good will happen in due time.”
The man then handed the fare to him in cash before easing himself out of his car slowly.
Just as he stepped out of the car, the old man leaned in for final words.
“I came to Lagos for the burial ceremony of your great granduncle. You never met him. I will leave tomorrow. Take good care of yourself.” He paused for a few seconds before shutting the door with parting words. “Adio omo Morenike, May God be with you.”
Adio remained silent all through. Not a word uttered in affirmation or in denial.
Through the inner rearview mirror, Adio watched as his uncle waved good bye the further he drove away.
That night, he cried. He cried for a really long time.
Click here to enjoy his next ride.

Every New Year holds promise, as though it is any different from the turn of

Adaeze had been awake since 4 a.m.
Not because she was anxious — though she was — but because this trip felt different. After eighteen months of follow-ups, phone calls, and PowerPoint presentations polished to a mirror shine, the deal was finally ready to close. An investor meeting in Abuja. A partnership that would change the trajectory of her small but gutsy consulting firm. She had triple-checked her flight, her documents, her outfit. She had prayed. She was ready.

When he told his father, Dare’s first response was a sigh. Then: “I told you to practice more. I told you months ago. You don’t listen. You never listen.”
There was no “I’m sorry, son.” No pause to let the boy simply feel the loss of the thing he wanted. Just a swift, seamless pivot to what Temi had done wrong — and, by extension, how Temi’s failure was evidence of Temi’s failure to take his father’s wisdom seriously.

I want to tell you something that took me embarrassingly long to learn. Not because the idea is complicated — it is not. But because it cuts against something deeply wired in us, something we are rarely honest enough to admit.

You are somewhere between forty and fifty-five. You looked in the mirror recently and had a thought you immediately dismissed. Maybe you googled something at 2am that you would never say out loud. Maybe you bought something expensive and impractical and told everyone it was an investment. Or maybe you just feel — quietly, persistently — like the life you built was supposed to feel better than this by now.

Anton Chekhov was a Russian physician and playwright — a man trained in the discipline of diagnosis before he became one of the most precise storytellers in the history of world literature. That combination of sensibilities matters, because the principle he articulated in the late nineteenth century was not merely a rule of dramatic craft. It was an observation about the nature of significance itself. About what it means for something to be present. About the relationship between introduction and consequence.

There is a prison that has no concrete walls, no iron bars, no guards posted at the gate. Nobody built it for you. Nobody sentenced you to it. And yet, for many people, it is the place they spend the better part of their lives — circling its perimeter, brushing their fingers against its invisible boundaries, and quietly retreating each time they feel the edge of something that might require more of them than they believe they can give.

Picture a hand holding sand. The tighter the grip, the faster the grains escape between the fingers. Ease the grip — open the palm, allow the hand to become a vessel rather than a vice — and the sand stays. This is one of the oldest paradoxes of leadership, and one of the least learned: that control, pursued too aggressively, produces the very loss of control it was designed to prevent.

There is a version of ambition that builds. And there is a version of ambition that consumes. From a distance — and especially from inside it — they look almost identical. Both are energetic. Both are forward-moving. Both speak the language of vision and possibility. The difference only becomes visible later, usually at the point of fracture, when what was built begins to come apart under the weight of what was promised.

There is a particular kind of organisational absurdity that most people who have ever worked in a company will recognise immediately. It is the policy that was clearly designed by someone who has never had to implement it. The restructuring that looked elegant on a slide deck and chaotic on the ground. The customer-facing process that was overhauled by a committee that has not spoken to a customer in years. The directive that arrives from above, fully formed and non-negotiable, that causes the people closest to the work to exchange a look — the kind of look that says, without words: they have no idea what we actually do here.

We have built an entire mythology around exhaustion. In boardrooms and business culture — perhaps nowhere more so than in the high-pressure, always-on professional culture many of us inhabit — busyness has become a currency. To be tired is to be serious. To be overwhelmed is to be important. To be burning out, quietly, is somehow proof that you are fully committed.

There is a particular kind of failure that never makes the headlines. It does not arrive with a scandal, a public collapse, or a dramatic resignation. It builds slowly, almost imperceptibly, in the space between what a leader sees and what they choose to say. It lives in the meetings that end without the real conversation ever starting. It grows in the silence after a poor decision goes unchallenged, not because nobody noticed, but because everyone agreed — unspokenly — that it was simply easier not to say anything.

The boardroom at Crescent Capital Partners on Victoria Island smelled of leather and ambition — the kind that had been earned, aged, and perhaps left out a little too long. Emeka Osei-Bello, Managing Director and Group CEO, sat at the head of a long mahogany table, his charcoal suit immaculate, his posture the kind that says, I built this. He had, in many ways, done exactly that.

When you stay loyal to a version of yourself that no longer exists—the one who was hurt, the one who failed, the one who was overlooked—you are still choosing. You are choosing to let one moment in time define the whole arc of your life. And that choice costs more than it keeps.
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13 thoughts on “Night Runs – chapter 10 -Family”
This is emotional!!!
The Hustle is real.
S/O to all the strong people who support their family. God bless you.
Adio is just as human.
Wow. That was rather close. But why lie?
Adio didn’t want Baba Ramota to know how hard he worked, doing a less honorable job, despite the promise he showed.
Eeyaa, I feel for Adio, still, I feel he shouldn’t have made baba Ramota pay for the fare so that the prayers can sink in better.
Adio has suffered ooo
It was a sad moment for Adio
Another interesting story thanks for sharing this wonderful story.
Thanks Inusa
A sad and a thought provoking moment for Adio.
Awesome story from the maestro himself.
Another simple way to guide our path…..
using your stories we learn we get guidance. Thank you and keep it up
This is another interesting story to read I enjoyed every bit of it thanks for sharing.
This episode is really touching
I feel for Adio omo morenikeji
Been a taxi driver doesn’t make you feel less instead feel fulfilled
I am glad I can evoke the emotions in you.