A Homeless Man Found a Wounded Billionaire and Cash in the Countryside. He Made a Choice 2

 

For several seconds, he did not move.

He looked up the road.

Empty.

He looked down the road.

Empty.

He looked at his plastic bag, thin, old, carrying everything he had left in the world.

Then he looked at the cash again.

A thought entered his mind with perfect clarity.

This is enough.

Enough for food.

Enough for a room.

Enough for clothes.

Enough to call Amaka and say, “Bring Chisom. I can stand again.”

Enough to restart.

Enough to buy two motorcycles, then a van, maybe the correct order this time.

Enough to stop being a man people looked through.

Enough to become visible again.

He crouched beside the split bag.

The money was real.

He touched one bundle with two fingers, then pulled his hand back as if it were hot.

His mind began calculating before his conscience could speak.

Four bags.

Empty road.

No witnesses.

No name.

No owner.

No police station nearby.

No guarantee anyone would believe him if he reported it.

No guarantee someone powerful would not accuse him anyway.

No guarantee that honesty would feed him tonight.

He thought about forty naira.

He thought about the last call with Chisom.

“When am I coming to see you, Daddy?”

He had laughed softly and said, “Soon.”

But soon had become one of those words poor people use when truth would hurt a child too much.

He thought about Amaka’s hands on the table.

He thought about his mother’s Bible in his plastic bag.

He thought about his old vans.

He thought about the van being towed away.

He thought about the order he had gotten wrong.

Then he heard a sound from the bush ten meters to his right.

Small.

Strained.

Human.

Everything that happened after that came down to that sound.

And what he did when he heard it.

Tobenna stood slowly.

He looked once more at the bags.

Then he left them where they were and walked toward the sound.

The grass was high enough to scratch his arms. Dry stalks broke under his feet. Flies lifted and settled again. For a moment, he saw nothing.

Then he saw her.

A woman half-hidden by the grass, lying on her side with one arm stretched forward.

She had been trying to crawl toward the road.

She had run out of strength.

Her face was pale beneath dust. There was a cut above her eyebrow. One shoe was gone. Her coat was torn. Her phone was nowhere near her. Her breathing came in careful, shallow pulls, like each one had to be negotiated.

Her side was dark with blood.

Not the kind of wound a man could ignore and remain human.

Tobenna crouched beside her.

Her eyes opened immediately.

Sharp.

Focused.

Terrified, yes.

But not gone.

They were the eyes of a woman whose mind had not surrendered even while her body was failing.

“Help,” she breathed.

“I have you,” Tobenna said. “Don’t move.”

He pressed his hand against her side through the fabric, holding pressure the way he had once seen a foreman do after a construction accident years earlier. The foreman had kept a man alive until the ambulance arrived by pressing hard, saying very little, and refusing to panic.

So Tobenna did the same.

He pressed.

He breathed.

He looked around.

“What happened?”

“Men,” she whispered. “On the road. Three of them.”

Her eyes moved toward the bags.

“They took everything.”

Tobenna glanced back.

“Not everything.”

Something moved across her face then.

Relief so strong it almost looked like pain.

“They didn’t know what was inside,” she said. “They took what looked valuable and left the rest.”

He looked at her.

In that moment, he did not make a decision.

Not really.

The decision had been made across fourteen months of having nothing and not taking what was not his. A man does not become honest only when life is easy. He becomes honest in the small decisions no one applauds until one day the large decision arrives and finds him already built.

Can you stand if I help you?” he asked.

“I don’t know.”

“We’re going to find out.”

It took nearly twenty minutes to get her to the road.

He half-carried her, her arm across his shoulders, his hand supporting her weight while still trying not to disturb the wound. She moved without complaint, though every step cost her. Sweat ran down Tobenna’s back. Dust stuck to his face. His hunger disappeared under focus.

At the road, he helped her sit at the base of a tree.

He gave her the small bottle of water from his plastic bag.

She drank carefully.

Not greedily.

That told him something about her.

Even wounded, she had discipline.

She looked at the bags.

Then at him.

“You didn’t take them.”

“No.”

“Why?”

“Because they’re not mine.”

She was quiet.

For a long moment, she studied him the way people in business meetings used to study a proposal when the first page told them the numbers were interesting but not enough yet.

“How long?” she asked.

“How long what?”

“On the streets.”

Tobenna looked away.

“Fourteen months.”

She absorbed that without comment.

“What is your name?”

“Tobenna Toby.”

“Zara,” she said.

She extended her hand.

Formal.

Direct.

Even sitting against a tree on a deserted road with a wound in her side.

He shook it carefully.

“We need to get you to a hospital,” he said. “There’s a village about seven kilometers back.”

Zara looked at the bags.

“We can’t leave those.”

“I know.”

He emptied his plastic bag without ceremony.

His clothes.

The small Bible.

The notebook.

The pencil.

He packed the split bag’s contents into his plastic bag, every note, every bundle, moving methodically. He checked the road, counted the bags, tied what needed tying, and arranged the load so he could manage it.

Everything accounted for.

Nothing left visible.

Zara watched him without speaking.

When he was finished, he lifted the bags one by one, adjusting the weight.

She was still watching.

PART 3