he campaign had an unforeseen effect, the Law of Unintended Consequences being one of the constants of military action. As refugees fled the attacks, they poured into Nnamdi’s village. Welcomed at first, and then resented, these new arrivals built their settlements on the mudflats outside the village, in shantytown camps that smelled of excrement and despair. The riverbanks were pocked with feces, the children naked and round-bellied, steeped in dysentery.
Through attrition more than anything, Nnamdi’s village had become the central settlement in the outer creeks. On market days, goods from Portako appeared as though conjured, and the bags of rolled naira Nnamdi had amassed on the pipelines were soon almost worthless. Prices soared as a glut of currency continued to arrive, stuffed into suitcases and pillowcases. Nnamdi’s mother had to charge tenfold now for her Fanta and bitter greens. Even then, the thin slice she took as profit had narrowed to a razor’s width.