Constitution for Boys on How a Bullet Works.
Abdulrazaq Salihu Abdulrazaq Salihu

Constitution for Boys on How a Bullet Works.

I bury the skin of dead people in my mouth, push their collected illiteracy down my throat, and watch my body rot for countless boys that sought the constitution on how a bullet works.

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Shadows in the Dark.
Solomon Idah Hamza Solomon Idah Hamza

Shadows in the Dark.

My father Atti was late again. And for a sane moment, I imagined him running away from his family. If he wasn’t, why the incessant disappointments? Why refuse to show up when he had promised to

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And My Cup Run-over.
Qudus Olowo Qudus Olowo

And My Cup Run-over.

Today, I pray in twenty-one languages, the ones I unearth from my neighbor’s tongue. I smoke my room with seven incense sticks, to test the sight of God, the sight of him anytime my life dresses

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Between Haram and Iniquity.
Excel Chinagorom Michael Excel Chinagorom Michael

Between Haram and Iniquity.

I mirror the entirety of myself in a pocket-sized gadget as counterfeit from foreign materials. These days, my flesh bleeds the odor of shortage, forged by the economist who reeks of poverty

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Something thicker than blood.
John Ebute John Ebute

Something thicker than blood.

Water and fire are said to be arch-enemies, the unresolvable dissension between them as profound and age-old as that between light and darkness. In the words of your grandmother, “You cannot…

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In the Hollow of Grief.
Emmanuel Somtochuwkwu Emmanuel Somtochuwkwu

In the Hollow of Grief.

It’s been seven years since night dispossessed me & claimed you as its own, your eyes remain forever bland, forever closed to dawn. At your grave, the earth opened its mouth widely…

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Lavender.
Will Simon Will Simon

Lavender.

“You have to bathe again,” my mother’s voice pierced through the void. Not angry, not tired, but hurt. Like she couldn’t believe I dared to trample on her heart. She stood in the doorway

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Dancing on a Minefield.
Oluwaseyi Daniel Busari Oluwaseyi Daniel Busari

Dancing on a Minefield.

They say God knows best, so they pass the pepper soup and turn the volume up. Laughter, loud and reckless, tumbles through the compound, bounces off the brown roof, spills into the streets,

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Finding Halima.
Confidence Isaiah Confidence Isaiah

Finding Halima.

The café was louder than usual, with the continued clicking of keyboards, the soft music looping under jumbled conversations, and the occasional hiss of the coffee machine.

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Dear Grief.
Marvellous Mmesomachi Igwe Marvellous Mmesomachi Igwe

Dear Grief.

Sometimes, the emotions are not always knife-sharp. Sometimes, we cannot point to the scarlet bite and say, this is where it hurts. Sometimes, the wound is just a wound. Dull. Lacking luster, lacking shine

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Yellow Dress.
Sunmisola Odusola Sunmisola Odusola

Yellow Dress.

The soft tick-tick of the clock-thing is everywhere. It stopped when Mother went out with Father about two evenings ago, when the sun was a huge red cotton ball disappearing into the corner of the streets.

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