I Wore a Perfect White Okrika Wedding Gown to Impress a Rich Man in Ikeja, But by Midnight I Realized I Was Wearing Something That Had Already Been Buried

My name is Toke, and I sell second-hand clothes at Katangowa market, the section everyone calls Bend-Down-Select because you must bend low and search carefully for treasure among what others have discarded.

I am not from a wealthy family, and I do not have a rich boyfriend, but I understand Lagos very well, and in this city appearance often opens doors that hard work alone cannot unlock.

Every morning before sunrise, I arrive at the market to compete for the best bales before other sellers tear through them, because the first hands inside always find the finest pieces.

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Last week Friday, a fresh bale labeled First Grade London arrived at my stall, tightly wrapped in thick nylon and tied with white rope that still smelled faintly of shipping containers.

When the bale was cut open, everyone rushed forward, grabbing jeans, jackets, shirts, anything that looked expensive enough to resell quickly before the next person noticed its value.

As I pushed my hand deeper into the pile of mixed fabrics, my fingers brushed against something unusually soft, layered, and heavy beneath the ordinary cotton and denim.

I pulled it out slowly, expecting maybe a lace blouse or bridal scarf, but what unfolded in my hands made me inhale sharply without thinking.

It was a full white lace gown, long and detailed, covered in tiny stones and pearls that caught even the weak market light and reflected it like broken pieces of crystal.

There was no stain on it, no tear, no missing bead, no discoloration from age, and that was the first thing that should have made me pause longer than I did.

Mama Chinedu, who sells children’s clothes beside my space, leaned over and stared at it for several seconds before her expression changed into something I could not read immediately.

“Toke, leave that dress,” she said quietly, her voice lower than usual. “It is too clean. Something about it is not right at all.”

I laughed loudly so the other sellers would not think I was afraid, because fear spreads quickly in markets and reduces bargaining power faster than bad weather.

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“Madam, are you jealous?” I teased her. “You want to price it low and carry it home before I can calculate profit.”

But even as I joked, I noticed how the gown felt heavier than it looked, like it carried more than beads and lace stitched into its body.

I folded it carefully and slipped it into my large handbag, deciding immediately that I would not sell it inside the market where someone might undervalue what I believed was destiny.

There was a wedding scheduled for Saturday evening in Ikeja, a big society event where rich families gathered, and I had already planned to attend quietly as a gatecrasher.

In Lagos, weddings are not just celebrations; they are exhibitions of wealth and opportunity, and sometimes you only need to be seen in the right place wearing the right thing.

Saturday morning arrived with the kind of bright sun that makes white fabric glow even more boldly against dark skin, and I felt unusually confident while preparing myself.

I bathed slowly, exfoliating carefully, rubbing my best cream generously across my arms and legs, imagining already the heads that would turn when I walked into the hall.

When I laid the gown on my bed again in daylight, it seemed even more perfect than before, untouched by time, almost preserved rather than worn.

I slid into it gently, lifting it over my head and allowing the fabric to fall down my body, adjusting itself around my curves without resistance or stiffness.

The fit was exact in a way that unsettled me slightly, because I did not need to tighten or loosen anything for it to sit flawlessly against my waist and hips.

I turned slowly before my mirror, watching how the stones shimmered, how the lace hugged my shoulders, how the hem brushed lightly against the floor.

For a moment, I did not recognize myself in the reflection, because I looked like someone who belonged in luxury rather than someone who sold discarded clothes for survival.

Then I noticed a faint smell rising from the fabric, subtle at first, something chemical, something sharp, not perfume, not detergent, not sweat.

It reminded me of passing near a mortuary generator when I once attended a burial in Surulere, that mixture of chemicals and something metallic in the air.

I stood still for several seconds, breathing slowly, telling myself it must be preservation spray used on exported bales to prevent insects or mold.

To silence my doubt completely, I sprayed almost half a bottle of perfume across my body and the dress, drowning whatever faint odor lingered beneath it.

When I arrived at the wedding reception hall in Ikeja, decorated in gold and cream with crystal chandeliers reflecting warm light, I immediately felt eyes shift toward me.

Women paused mid-conversation to glance in my direction, some with curiosity, some with subtle competition, and I lifted my chin slightly to match their scrutiny.

A tall man dressed in a deep blue Agbada approached me confidently, smiling in a way that suggested he was accustomed to attention and never feared rejection.

“Hello angel,” he said softly, studying me carefully. “You look otherworldly tonight, like you stepped out of somewhere I cannot describe.”

I laughed lightly, enjoying the compliment, allowing my confidence to expand inside my chest as the music vibrated through the hall and guests danced freely.

Then something changed in my ears.

While everyone else moved rhythmically to what I recognized as a Burna Boy track earlier, the sound slowly shifted for me alone.

The beat flattened, the drums faded, and what replaced it was a slow, heavy church organ playing in long, dragging notes.

I blinked, assuming I had moved too close to a faulty speaker, but the organ sound grew clearer instead of disappearing.

Underneath it, faint whispers echoed repeatedly, the same two words spoken over and over in a low, distant tone.