Naijavault May 2026
Temi didn’t wait for the fallout. She cloned NaijaVault onto seventeen servers across seven countries, set a dead-man’s switch to release everything if she didn’t log in every 48 hours, and bought a one-way ticket to Accra under a fake name.
Temi didn’t sleep that night. She traced the number to a government IP address — the same one her uncle had flagged in his final file. She had a choice: scrub the vault and disappear, or release the crown jewel — a folder Dele had labeled — a spreadsheet linking a current governor to over thirty unsolved assassinations. naijavault
By 3 a.m., she had published the ledger. Temi didn’t wait for the fallout
She stared at the screen. The Danfo bus roared back to life. The driver honked. Behind her, Lagos simmered — angry, beautiful, and full of secrets that would never die. She traced the number to a government IP
NaijaVault wasn’t gossip. It was proof.
She sat on her balcony in the rain, watching okada riders splash through the flooded streets. In the distance, a church choir sang “What a Friend We Have in Jesus.” She thought of her uncle’s grin, the way he’d say: “Naija no dey carry last, but we dey carry too much secret.”
It was a photograph of a man in a military uniform, standing next to her uncle Dele — alive — at a café in Nairobi. The caption read: “Tell Temi: the vault was just the beginning.”