Tunde looked at his phone. Then back at the screen. Page 3 of 3. No next button. No going back.
He hit send. Three dots appeared immediately, as if someone had been waiting.
“MP3 Download: Available. Password: your father’s silence.”
He clicked the “Contact admin” link. An email draft opened. He typed: “I’m the son of Tams O. the drummer for the Dynamites. I need ‘Oghene Do.’ What’s the price?” Tunde looked at his phone
The Dynamites—his father’s band. In the 1970s, they were kings of the Port Harcourt hotel circuit, their highlife a shimmering, guitar-driven wave that made civil servants forget curfews and lovers forget their homes. But by 1985, they were a footnote. A few crackly 45s. A rumored album that never was. And a secret his father took to his grave last April.
Tunde had been scrolling for forty-five minutes. His thumb ached, and the blue light of his phone was a ghost on his face in the dark of his Lagos apartment. HighlifeNg’s website was a labyrinth of faded banners and broken links, but it was also the last true archive. The last place where the old world still echoed.
The listing read: "The Dynamites – Songs, Albums & MP3 Download 2025 – Page 3 of 3 – HighlifeNg." No next button
The reply was not an email. It was a single text message to his phone—a number he’d never given the website.
His father’s dying words had been a rasp: “Find the eleventh song. It’s not about the music. It’s about what we buried with it.”
Below the phantom track, a new line had appeared, written in the smallest gray font: Three dots appeared immediately, as if someone had
Tunde had thought it was delirium. But now, staring at the phantom track on Page 3, his blood turned cold.
He was on Page 3 of the Dynamites’ discography. The final page.
Below it, greyed out like a ghost, was a single entry: No download button. Just a broken microphone icon and a note: "Source: Private tape, digitized 2025. Contact admin."