Blamed for Millions: My Office Betrayal / Chapter 5: Musa the Star, Ifedike the Scapegoat
Blamed for Millions: My Office Betrayal

Blamed for Millions: My Office Betrayal

Author: Robert Jackson


Chapter 5: Musa the Star, Ifedike the Scapegoat

Monthly management meeting reach, Musa na the star.

Dem arrange chairs, Musa sit for center like champion. E wear new suit, perfume strong, everybody dey hail am.

Oga dey praise am, dey tell everybody,

E even smile wide, dey tap him table. 'Musa, you sabi work!'

“Make una learn from Musa. In just one month for Purchasing, he don re-screen all suppliers. This year, we go save about five million.”

Oga voice loud, people dey tap table, dey clap as if dem dey welcome governor.

Everybody clap.

Some people clap like dem dey fear, others just dey clap for hand.

Musa begin yarn with pride. Main point: Many managers dey lazy, only dey find their own gain, dey use company head do business.

He clear throat, use am take shine for front of everybody. Even dey speak small English: 'We must eliminate personal interest from company process.'

He throw eye give me.

That one pain me. The look be like say, 'Na you I dey talk to.'

I hear Zainab and Old Bayo dey whisper:

“Five million per year—Old Ifedike don chop plenty for all these years.”

Dem dey do coded gist for back, but e loud for my ear.

Old Bayo signal make dem calm down, since I dey there.

He cough small, cross leg, form say e dey read minutes.

I just pretend say I no hear. I know say even if I explain, e no go change anything.

If I talk, e go look like defence. Na so company life be for Naija—nobody believe person wey fall.

Now, Musa don turn oga favorite. Anything wey concern supplier, na only him dey decide; Sade and other heads no fit talk.

Oga even tell secretary, 'From now, all supplier issue, just ask Musa.' Sade face squeeze, but she hold mouth.

Back when I dey Purchasing, I dey always discuss needs with Product and Tech, mostly follow their recommendation. I know those suppliers dey settle them well, but at least their sources sure.

We dey do joint inspection, dey share gala for site visit. At least, quality dey okay.

Now, Musa just dey ignore everybody.

He dey do one-man show. No more meeting, no more suggestion.

That night, oga happy, carry us go chop for one mama put joint.

We reach, dem arrange plastic chair for outside. Everybody dey chop amala, dey laugh. Na Musa get main seat, dey toast staff with small stout.

Of course, na Musa get spotlight.

Even DJ dey play 'Oga Musa, na you we hail.' Some people dey dance, some dey use toothpick dey look phone.

As everybody don high small, oga lean come my side.

Him breath dey smell alcohol. He nearly spit for my ear.

“Old Ifedike, you try well for all these years.”

I know wetin he mean, my belle just turn. I reply,

I look am straight, voice steady, 'Oga, abeg, if you get mind, talk am. No dey do corner-corner.'

“Oga, if you get something to talk, abeg talk am direct. No need to dey go corner.”

He shift stool, eye dey red.

“Abeg, seven years you dey here. I never add your salary, you never leave. That means say salary no mean anything to you, abi?”

He laugh, like say e talk something wise.

That one pain me.

I swallow spit, hold hand for lap, dey try hold my vex.

“Oga, for seven years, I work hard, I never collect one kobo wey no belong to me.”

I look am well. Even my voice low.

“You wan make I believe that? Musa just come, in one month, he save company five million this year. Where that five million dey go last year?”

He tap my shoulder, give me one wicked smile, then waka.

He even collect two pieces of goat meat from my plate.

I wan talk back, but wetin I wan talk? Anything I talk go just look like say I dey defend myself.

Dem go say, 'Na lie, na because dem catch am.'

Oga only dey see this year five million. Anything I talk, e go look like I dey hide.

For his eye, five million na real savings, na my head dem dey count am.

So, before the party finish, I just waka go house alone. I dodge all the razzmatazz, enter okada home. For street, I dey hear my new nickname echo for my ear—Ifedike Half-a-Hundred-Million. My heart heavy, but I no fit talk.

Make dem enjoy, dey gist about ‘Ifedike Half-a-Hundred-Million’ as dem like.

I no surprise say dem get new nickname for me. Na so office gist dey fly for Naija.

By the way, that nickname—‘Ifedike Half-a-Hundred-Million’—na Musa give me. He tell everybody say I dey collect five or six million chop money every year, so over time I don pocket half a hundred million from company.

Even people for security post don dey whisper am. I hear am once as I dey come in, e pain me.

Since Admin na the company “intelligence center,” by afternoon, Amaka for front desk don gist me already.

Amaka fit run NTA news—her mouth no dey rest. She update me on everything, even who dey owe water bill.

This chapter is VIP-only. Activate membership to continue.

You may also like

HR Set Me Up to Steal My Millions
HR Set Me Up to Steal My Millions
4.7
After hustling for years to become the top sales earner, Ifeanyi's reward is a wicked HR plot to strip him of his hard-won commissions. Betrayed by his boss and forced to hand over his clients to a rookie, he's pushed to the wall—either resign for nothing or fight for every kobo he bled for. In Lagos, if you let them use your head, you go lose everything—will Ifeanyi outsmart their dirty game, or will the office politics swallow him whole?
Demoted for Rest: HR’s Nephew Stole My Seat
Demoted for Rest: HR’s Nephew Stole My Seat
4.8
After sacrificing my health with endless overtime, HR used my approved leave as excuse to disgrace me—demoting me so her own nephew, a clueless intern, could take my supervisor role. My sweat and loyalty became their stepping stone, while they tried to shut me up with small money. In this Lagos office, connection pass hard work—now, I must fight to reclaim my dignity or lose everything I’ve built.
He Forced Me to Sign an IOU—Now I Hold His Fate
He Forced Me to Sign an IOU—Now I Hold His Fate
4.8
When my shameless colleague made me sign an IOU over bukka pepper soup compensation, he thought he could bully me forever—even as my mother lay sick and layoffs loomed. But what he didn’t know: I hold the layoff list, and I’ve uncovered his darkest office secret. In this Lagos office, who laughs last truly laughs best.
Betrayed by My Bride, Played by Her Lover
Betrayed by My Bride, Played by Her Lover
4.9
After five years of loyalty, I discovered my fiancée’s secret affair with her married supervisor—complete with a hidden pregnancy and abortion she never confessed. As her family rushes our wedding, she smiles in my face while plotting behind my back, using me as her cover. Now, with evidence in hand, I must decide: expose their lies and shatter both families, or swallow the pain and keep living a lie?
The CEO Used Me, Then Dumped Me
The CEO Used Me, Then Dumped Me
4.9
Tunde gave everything to build his boss’s dream, only to be betrayed when success came knocking. After promises of big money and family security, he’s blindsided and replaced by blood ties. With his pride and future on the line, Tunde must fight to protect his name and reclaim his dignity in a world where trust is a dangerous game.
My Boss Stole My Bonus Money
My Boss Stole My Bonus Money
4.9
Kunle, the star salesman, hustles hard only to see his bonus stolen by office politics and a manager's family connection. Betrayed and frustrated, he battles shameless HR and faces down his bosses with Lagos street wisdom, risking everything to reclaim what’s his. In a city where respect is strategy and only the bold survive, Kunle must choose between dignity and his daily bread.
I Drained My Wicked Boss’s Fortune
I Drained My Wicked Boss’s Fortune
4.8
After years of suffering and humiliation, I emptied my cruel boss’s company account, leaving his proud family in ruins. They forced me to kneel and swallow pain—never knowing I held the real power to destroy everything they owned. Let them taste the bitterness of poverty, because today, the goat has bitten back.
Accused of Betrayal on IVF Day
Accused of Betrayal on IVF Day
4.6
On the morning of their IVF surgery, the doctor storms out to accuse him of sleeping with his wife—destroying months of hope and shaming him in public. But he knows the truth: since the treatments began, he and Morayo haven’t touched. Now, with the eggs gone and suspicion thick as harmattan fog, he must uncover the real secret behind his wife’s pain, or risk losing everything he’s fought for.
Crown Prince Gave My Shares to His Side Chick
Crown Prince Gave My Shares to His Side Chick
4.8
When Amarachi catches her cold-hearted fiancé, Crown Prince Kamsiyochukwu, flaunting his influencer 'canary' and gifting her the family shares meant for his real bride, the whole internet drags Amarachi as the villain. Betrayed by love, disgraced in public, and blamed by her own family, Amarachi must choose: beg for crumbs, or walk away and risk losing everything her mother suffered for. In Lagos, love is war—and only the bold survive.
Betrayal Inside Palm Grove
Betrayal Inside Palm Grove
4.9
Okafor, trusted fish farmer and supplier, faces brutal betrayal when his years of loyalty to Palm Grove Restaurant are crushed by the boss’s arrogant son. As his premium yellow croaker is rejected and his reputation threatened, Okafor must fight to protect his name and business before Lagos gossip destroys everything. In this city, loyalty is currency—but betrayal is everywhere.
He Caught Me Cheating in the Game
He Caught Me Cheating in the Game
4.8
I lied to my online boyfriend, pretending to be his loyal supporter—only to sneak into a promotion match with four Naija top players. But when he exposed our couple tag in front of the whole server, my secret life crashed, and his messages came hot like Lagos traffic. Now, my heartbreak is trending, my sister is using my account for revenge, and the whole country is watching as my ex and my family collide live on stream—who will lose face first?
Fired By My Oga, Set Up By His Son
Fired By My Oga, Set Up By His Son
4.9
Ebuka, a loyal company man, faces betrayal from his longtime boss and the boss’s ambitious son, losing his job and dignity overnight. As he’s pushed out and set up, Ebuka must fight for survival and justice in a Lagos world where loyalty means nothing and only the sharpest survive. His next move will decide whether he becomes another corporate casualty or turns the tables for a shocking last laugh.