The Expo Locker: My Answers from Nowhere / Chapter 1: The Mysterious Answer Sheet
The Expo Locker: My Answers from Nowhere

The Expo Locker: My Answers from Nowhere

Author: Bradley Jones


Chapter 1: The Mysterious Answer Sheet

Next →

Inside that exam hall, where even a pin drop dey fear to make sound, I raised my hand sharp-sharp to call invigilator.

The silence in the air thick pass ogbono soup, as if everybody dey hold their breath. The sound wey my desk make as I raise my hand, e loud pass normal. My heart dey beat gbim-gbim. Exam tension plus wahala—double pressure. Sweat dey my armpit, even though the fan dey blow anyhow.

The invigilator waka come my side, face serious, and ask, "Wetin happen? You no understand the question or wetin?"

He bend reach my desk, lower him voice like teachers wey no wan disgrace you for public. The faint smell of Dettol dey his sleeve—he don wash hand well. Him eyes dey move from my face to my exam script, as if e dey expect gbege.

I look the teacher for eye, try do face like innocent pikin wey no sabi anything. "Sir, there's an answer sheet inside my locker."

Small shakiness enter my voice, make e be say na true I dey talk. My hand dey tremble as I point the locker. Some people for hall don dey peep me, dey reason whether I wan run mad cruise.

He scratched his head, hissed, and looked me up and down like say I be the first person to try this stunt. The other invigilator just raise shoulder—this one pass am.

Before long, I became the center of attention in the exam hall. I just pray make my village people no dey play with me today.

You know that kain feeling wey everybody dey use eyes dey burn your back? The hall turn to look, some even pause their writing. The girl behind me muttered, “Na wa o, this boy no dey tire for drama.” Somebody for back even whispered, “E fit be juju o.”

To avoid disturbing others, one invigilator carry me outside.

He hold my arm small, like papa wey suspect say you don break TV remote. Shoe shuffle and pencil scratch dey follow us as door close, block out the wahala inside.

Outside, the invigilator ask, "This answer sheet na your own?"

His eyes sharp like blade, dey find any sign of lie. Sweat dey for him forehead—whether sun or problem, I no sure.

"It's not mine, sir. It just appeared in my locker from nowhere."

My voice steady, but inside, fear dey catch me. Who go believe this kain story? I try talk like pikin wey never see expo before.

"If e no be your own, how e enter your locker? No be we tell everybody to check locker before exam?"

He raise him voice, as if shout go force truth come out. The wall gecko for window run commot. Corridor empty, na only junior block laughter dey far.

"I checked, I swear. This thing just appeared from thin air. And if it was really mine, why would I raise my hand to tell you about it?"

I open hand wide, shirt rise small. My voice dey beg, almost like prayer. "Oga, abeg, believe me. I no get time for wahala."

The invigilator pause, no talk for one minute.

He look me, look the paper, as if the answer sheet go confess by itself. For my mind, I dey fear say e fit call my mama straight.

Na that time chief invigilator, Mr. Okon, waka pass. He see us for corridor, face squeeze. "Wetin dey happen here? This candidate get problem?"

Mr. Okon waka with confidence, kaftan starch no dey allow am fold. Him face carry that kain frown wey mean gbege. He look us, dey wait.

"Oga, you come at the right time. This candidate say answer sheet just appear for him locker," the invigilator talk, give Mr. Okon the paper.

Voice dey respect, but eyes show say e wan drop the matter for oga head. Paper dey shake small for Mr. Okon hand.

Mr. Okon frown, check the answer sheet well, frown come deep pass before.

He adjust glasses, squint at the answers, flip some pages like say my name go dey shout there. Forehead wrinkle scatter.

He point the answer sheet at me, face strong: "Where you get this one?"

Voice deep, e get weight. E look me like say e fit melt iron.

I see say the matter serious, so I no put sugar for mouth. I stand well, talk, "It’s not mine. It just appeared out of thin air. If you no believe, you fit check the CCTV."

I stand kampe, chest out, stubbornness full body. My eyes no shift. Some people dey talk say I get 'juju confidence.' Today, I really need am.

"Check it! We must check it!" Mr. Okon shout, make both me and invigilator jump. E voice echo for the whole building.

People wey dey waka outside stop, dey peep inside. Mama Chi, cleaner wey dey mop corridor, drop her mop: "Kai, wahala don burst."

The invigilator quickly pull Mr. Okon aside.

He look me, like say I fit disappear. Them stand for pillar, voice low but body stiff. I shift leg, dey pretend say I no dey hear.

But as dem try talk low, I still dey hear small-small.

Breeze carry their gist come my side. My ear sharp like mama dey gossip for kitchen.

"Oga, this thing necessary so?"

"Not necessary? See this answer sheet—every answer correct!"

"Ha! E mean say question leak?"

"I'm telling you, this matter serious. Today na last WAEC paper. We no fit allow wahala. If we no handle am, dem fit sack us both!"

Mr. Okon voice dey rise, hand dey waka as e talk. The other teacher dey wipe sweat, nod head like lizard. I just dey look their drama.

So, the two of them carry me go CCTV room.

Dem waka me pass corridor like thief, but nobody laugh. My mind dey run—future dey hang for air.

After we don watch CCTV like ten times, dem finally believe me: answer sheet just appear for locker.

Screen dey play again and again. Invigilator scratch head tire, hair fit fall commot. Mr. Okon dey mumble, "Oluwa o, na which kind thing be this?" The invigilator even touched his head, muttering small prayer under breath. When footage end, their eyes meet my own, small pity dey show.

"Oga, wetin we go do now?"

Invigilator voice dey shake, hand dey rub chin. Even ceiling fan for up dey groan, like e tire for the matter.

"You dey ask me? I don invigilate twenty years, never see this kain wahala."

Mr. Okon shoulder fall. He look the CCTV like say advice go drop from there. For once, e resemble confused uncle.

"Maybe... we call police?"

The suggestion hang for air, heavy like harmattan. He bite lip, like say e regret am.

"Call police? You dey craze?" Mr. Okon eye the invigilator, then face me. "Oya, go back finish your exam."

He wave hand like fly dey disturb am. Invigilator squeeze mouth, mutter something about "village people."

I just roll eye for Mr. Okon. After all the delay, wetin remain make I write?

My brain scatter. I hiss small, arrange my tie, pick biro. Students dey look me like say I just come back from cell.

But I no wan wahala, so I follow invigilator go inside.

I waka gently, head low, shoe dey squeak. My seat cold pass before. My neighbor dey look me, pen hang for air.

Next →

You may also like

Trapped in Exam Hell: The Loop Student
Trapped in Exam Hell: The Loop Student
4.8
Every time Ifedike fails to master his monthly exams, time drags him back to the same torturous week—443 times and counting. No matter how high his score climbs, the endless loop refuses to break, turning his so-called 'genius' into a living curse. When even death can’t set him free, and the only escape is true mastery, will he ever taste real life again—or is he doomed to repeat his suffering forever?
Trapped in Blood and Betrayal Mall
Trapped in Blood and Betrayal Mall
5.0
Eze just wan flex for weekend, but when a mysterious voice traps him and other shoppers inside Lagos’ hottest mall, survival turns to a deadly game. As bodies drop and fear grip everyone, Eze must decode brutal rules and team up with a sharp stranger to escape with his life. One wrong move and it’s instant death—who will survive when even trust fit kill?
My Roommate Exposed My Secret Love
My Roommate Exposed My Secret Love
4.9
When Obiora confesses his feelings to his roommate Tega, he never expects his secret to become campus gist. Betrayed, shamed, and driven out of his hostel, Obiora must find the courage to rebuild his life—and maybe find new love—in the most unlikely place. But as old wounds clash with fresh desires, Obiora learns that some betrayals cut deeper than heartbreak, and survival means risking everything.
I Unlocked a Door for the Dead
I Unlocked a Door for the Dead
4.8
Bello’s Lagos hustle is simple: secretly spoil people’s locks, then get paid to fix them. But when a midnight call from a trembling woman leads him to a blood-soaked, headless corpse clutching the same phone that called him, Bello realizes he’s opened a door he can’t close. Now, the real owner of Room 14B—and his own soul—may never escape the grip of what he’s unleashed.
Expelled for Telling the Truth
Expelled for Telling the Truth
4.7
One April Fool prank ruins my life—my phone is smashed, I'm accused of cursing a classmate's mother, and the whole school turns against me. My only crime? Trying to save a life with the truth nobody wants to believe. Now, facing expulsion, my only hope is the loyalty of my best friend and a ringing phone that could change everything.
The Girl Who Exposed My Secret
The Girl Who Exposed My Secret
4.9
Ifedayo, once a rising star in mathematics, hides his past as a failed PhD student behind a security guard uniform in Makurdi. When his ambitious ex, Zainab, suddenly resurfaces at his new workplace, old wounds and secrets threaten to destroy the fragile peace he’s built. With betrayal, pride, and the weight of family expectations at stake, Ifedayo must confront the truth of who he is—and who he wants to become.
My Ex Returned the Day My Wife Broke
My Ex Returned the Day My Wife Broke
4.8
Sola thought marrying Amaka—his wealthy, devoted wife—would erase the scars of heartbreak, until pregnancy turned her into a stranger he barely recognized. When Halima, his glamorous first love who once crushed him for a richer man, suddenly reappears as a humble salesgirl, old wounds and forbidden temptations flare up. Now Sola must hide his secret longing and shameful betrayals before his world, and marriage, collapse under the weight of secrets only Lagos can breed.
WAEC Palava Scatter My Family
WAEC Palava Scatter My Family
4.9
When the WAEC exam papers disappear overnight in Benue, Adaobi and her family’s dreams crumble as the whole nation falls into chaos. Parents, students, and teachers must battle fear, suspicion, and heartbreak as impossible questions threaten to destroy their future. In a year when trust is broken, will hope survive or will everyone be consumed by scandal?
VIP Ticket, Broken Promise
VIP Ticket, Broken Promise
4.9
A devoted father battles queue-jumping, disrespect, and public shame at a Lagos amusement park just to keep his promise to his daughter Zainab, who aced her exams. When a tour guide’s group tries to cheat the system, the father must choose between dignity and doing whatever it takes to make his little girl happy—no matter the cost. Will he stand strong, or will Naija wahala crush his hopes?
Forced to Lick Her Shoes for Love
Forced to Lick Her Shoes for Love
4.8
Transmigrated as the stand-in husband for a ruthless female CEO, Shola must play the obedient fool—cleaning, begging, and enduring daily humiliation, all for a system’s cruel tasks. With her true love back from abroad, he’s one signature away from freedom and a fat payout, but the system threatens him with electric shocks and a fate worse than disgrace. In Lagos, will survival and street sense win over heartbreak, or will suffering be his only inheritance?
I Played God in the Virtual Lagos
I Played God in the Virtual Lagos
4.6
When I broke the one rule and revealed myself as 'god' to a virtual Lagos hustler, I thought it would be fun and harmless. But granting Ifedayo’s wildest wishes turns the city upside down—until the day he gets arrested and blames everything on me, his invisible 'god.' Now, the police are listening... and a simple prank has spiraled into a dangerous game where I’m no longer sure which world is real.
My Girlfriend Caught My Secret Rash
My Girlfriend Caught My Secret Rash
4.8
A young man’s midnight dash to the ER with his girlfriend exposes more than just a food allergy—hidden guilt, shame, and the fear of losing everything. As secrets threaten to destroy their relationship, the doctor must untangle medical mystery from romantic scandal, all under the harsh lights and endless drama of Lagos nightlife.