Absolute Being: I Am Nothing Chapter 43

Flashback

It started with a kid, barely twenty. Adam wasn’t a king yet. He was just a furious boy with dead eyes and a father buried in an unmarked grave. The government had taken their land. Enforcers had killed his old man for refusing to sign. The courts laughed. The police looked away.

Adam didn’t protest. He didn’t beg.

He watched.

He learned.

He stole a pistol from a sleeping cop.

Then he walked into the local enforcer’s hangout—a bar called The Pit—and shot the man who gave the order right between the eyes in the middle of a crowded Friday night. He didn’t run. He stood over the body, looked at the stunned, tough men, and said, "Anyone else want the job?"

No one moved.

He took the dead man’s wallet, bought a round of drinks for the house with the blood money, and walked out.

That was the start.

He didn’t build an empire. He collected the angry, the forgotten, the betrayed. Kola, whose sister was killed by a drunk senator’s son. Musa, whose construction business was burned down by rivals with police backing. Sade, a hacker whose family was framed and ruined. They weren’t soldiers. They were victims who decided to stop being victims.

They wore red armbands. A symbol. A warning. The Red Bandits.

At first, they were small. Hijacking shipments from corrupt officials. Leaking documents that ruined careers. Blackmailing judges.

Then a local governor, a man named Adebayo, decided to make an example. He sent a full squad of his specially trained "security force" to wipe out the Bandits’ known hideout.

Adam was waiting.

He didn’t have an army. He had six people.

He used the city itself. He had Sade cut the power to the entire block. In the darkness, he and Musa, using construction knowledge, rigged the alleyways with tripwires and industrial-grade flashbangs bought from the black market. When the governor’s men, armed with automatic rifles and body armor, stormed in, they were blinded, disoriented.

Adam didn’t use a gun. He used a machete and a crowbar.

He moved through the chaos like a ghost. He didn’t make a sound. He’d appear behind a man, slice the back of his knee, and when the man fell, Adam would drive the crowbar into the weak point of his body armor under the arm. He was methodical. Brutal. Efficient.

Kola fought with a sledgehammer, crushing limbs. Musa used a welding torch, searing through gear and flesh.

When the shooting started, Adam used the enemy’s own panic. He’d grab a wounded man, use him as a human shield, advance, drop the body, and keep moving.

In ten minutes, the governor’s elite squad of twenty were dead or screaming on the ground.

Adam stood in the middle of the carnage, covered in blood that wasn’t his own, breathing hard. He looked at the one man left alive, a young operative trembling against a wall.

"Go back," Adam said, his voice flat. "Tell your boss his guards are garbage. And I’m coming for him next."

That’s when the name started. The Red Devil.

But the real legend, the one that made the whole country sit up, happened a month later.

Governor Adebayo, now terrified, was holed up in the Lagos State Government House, surrounded by a small army. High walls, checkpoints, surveillance.

Adam didn’t care.

He didn’t siege it. He didn’t sneak in.

He walked in.

He had Sade hack the external cameras on a loop, giving them a ninety-second window. He, Musa, and Kola, dressed in stolen utility worker uniforms, drove a van right up to a side service entrance.

When the guards stopped them, Adam smiled. "Delivery for the governor."

As the guard leaned in to check the manifest, Adam’s hand shot out, grabbed the man’s head, and slammed it into the van door frame. He took the man’s rifle.

The next guard turned. Adam shot him twice in the chest, then used the body to push open the security door.

Then, it was a sprint. A bloody, chaotic race against time and alarms.

They moved in a triangle. Musa in front with a shotgun, blasting through doors and any resistance. Kola on the rear, watching their backs. Adam in the center, a pistol in each hand, his eyes scanning everything.

Guards poured into the hallways. Adam didn’t stop. He moved, shot, moved. He’d fire, drop the empty gun, pull another from a fallen guard, and keep going. He kicked open doors, tossed flashbangs stolen from the first raid ahead of them. The building became a maze of smoke, gunfire, and screams.

He wasn’t superhuman. He got hit. A bullet grazed his side. Another tore through his shoulder. He grunted, stumbled, but didn’t stop. He tied a strip of cloth around the wound and kept moving, his face a mask of cold focus.

They reached the governor’s private office on the third floor. Two final guards, huge men in tactical gear, blocked the reinforced door.

Musa charged one, tackling him. They went down in a brawl.

The other raised his rifle at Adam.

Adam was out of ammo. He threw his empty pistol at the man’s face. As the guard flinched, Adam closed the distance, grabbed the rifle’s barrel, and shoved it upward. He headbutted the guard, broke his grip, twisted the rifle around, and shot him point-blank with his own weapon.

He turned to see Musa finishing his man with a brutal elbow to the throat.

Adam kicked the office door. It was locked. He stepped back, raised the rifle, and emptied the magazine into the lock and hinges. He kicked it again. It flew open.

Governor Adebayo was cowering behind his massive desk, a small, ornate pistol in his shaking hands.

"Don’t come closer!" he screamed.

Adam, bleeding, breathing hard, walked in. He looked at the gun, then at the governor’s face.

"That won’t help you," Adam said, his voice hoarse.

"I’ll give you anything! Money! Power! Just name it!"

"I want my father’s land back," Adam said. "Can you do that?"

The governor stared, confused. "Land? What land?"

Adam’s expression didn’t change. He knew the man had no idea. He was just a cog. A greedy, corrupt cog.

"Yeah," Adam said. "That’s what I thought."

The governor raised his pistol and fired. He missed wildly.

Adam was already moving. He vaulted over the desk, knocked the pistol aside, and grabbed the governor by his expensive silk tie.

He dragged him, kicking and screaming, out of the office, down the main staircase, past the bodies of his guards, and out the front doors of the Government House into the bright afternoon sun.

A crowd had gathered, drawn by the sound of battle. Cameras were rolling.

Adam threw the governor onto the steps. The man scrambled, trying to crawl away.

Adam stood over him. He looked directly into the nearest news camera.

"My name is Adam," he said, his voice carrying in the sudden silence. "They call me the Red Devil. This man," he kicked the sobbing governor, "took from me. He took from thousands of you. He thinks he’s above us."

He bent down, grabbed the governor’s hair, and forced him to look at the camera. "Look at him. He’s not a leader. He’s a thief in a fancy suit."

He let go, letting the governor crumple.

Adam addressed the camera again, his eyes burning with a cold, terrifying intensity.

"This is just the start. The men in Abuja, sitting in their palaces, thinking they’re safe... they’re not. I’m coming. For all of them."

He looked right into the lens, a promise and a curse.

"Especially you, Mr. President. Especially you."

He turned, and with his surviving crew, walked away into the chaotic city, leaving a nation in shock.

That was the day the legend was sealed. The day the Red Devil promised to kill the President.

---

The flashback shattered.

Aminu was back in the present, in the glittering hotel ballroom, decades older, the President he had become.

And Adam, the Red Devil, was standing right in front of him.

Not older. Not weaker.

Exactly the same.

Adam looked at the terror in Aminu’s eyes and smiled.

"Miss me?"