Enugu Tintin Link

Tintin took the button, drew it in his notepad, and smiled. "Madam, the beautiful game just got ugly."

The woman paled further. "That wasn't me. That was Pocket, acting on his own. He wanted the bronze artifacts to melt down for foreign buyers." enugu tintin

Her father, the late Chief Mbadinuju Eze, was a legendary highlife musician from the 1970s. Months before his death, he had recorded his final, unreleased song—a haunting melody titled “The Ebony Coal.” It was said to contain the coordinates of a secret, illegal mine his band had discovered, a cavern filled not just with coal, but with ancient, pre-colonial bronze artifacts. Tintin took the button, drew it in his notepad, and smiled

The master tape had vanished from the family vault the night before. Adanna had found a single clue: a tiny, gold-plated button embossed with the crest of the Enugu Rangers Football Club . That was Pocket, acting on his own

Three days later, the Enugu Eyeglass ran the story. The illegal mine was excavated by the National Museum. The bronze artifacts—bells, leopard statues, and a royal stool—were saved. The Albino Marmoset turned out to be a UNESCO audio archivist; she and Adanna released “The Ebony Coal” as a charity single for mine rehabilitation.