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The boy who borrowed tomorrow

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The Boy Who Borrowed Tomorrow

In the small town of Idera, where the red dust danced in the evening wind and mango trees leaned lazily over cracked roads, there lived a boy named Tayo who was afraid of time.

Not afraid of being late. Not afraid of growing old.

He was afraid of tomorrow.

Tomorrow was always bigger than him. Tomorrow held exams he had not studied for, responsibilities he did not understand, and expectations that felt heavier than the sky before rainfall. While other boys played football in the open field near the river, Tayo often sat alone, watching the clouds move as if they knew exactly where they were going.

He wished he could know that too.

One evening, as the sun melted into orange and purple, Tayo wandered farther than usual. He followed a narrow footpath behind his grandmother’s house, past tall elephant grass, until he reached a clearing he had never seen before.

In the center stood a strange wooden door.

There were no walls. No building. Just a door standing upright in the middle of nowhere.

Tayo looked around. No one.

He stepped closer. The door was old, carved with symbols that shimmered faintly. At the top, in small letters, were words he could barely read:

“For those who wish to borrow tomorrow.”

His heart thudded.

“Borrow tomorrow?” he whispered.

Before fear could stop him, he turned the handle.

The world shifted.

The red dust vanished. The mango trees disappeared. The air changed — cleaner, sharper, humming with energy.

Tayo stood in Idera.

But not his Idera.

Tall glass buildings rose where small shops once stood. Cars moved without drivers. Screens floated in the air, displaying news and messages. The river had been transformed into a wide, glittering canal lined with lights.

A voice spoke behind him.

“You’re early.”

Tayo spun around.

Standing there was a man — tall, confident, dressed in a simple but elegant suit. His face was familiar.

Too familiar.

It was his own face.

Only older.

“Who are you?” Tayo asked, though he already knew.

“I am you,” the man said calmly. “Or rather, who you become.”

Tayo stared. “This is tomorrow?”

“Yes. Twenty years from now.”

Tayo’s chest tightened. “Why does it look like this?”

“Because you helped build it.”

The older Tayo began walking, and somehow the younger one followed. They passed a large building with a sign that read: Idera Innovation Center.

“You created this,” the older Tayo said. “A place where young people learn technology, engineering, and design. A place where ideas grow.”

“But… I’m not even the best student in my class,” young Tayo protested.

The older version smiled. “You think tomorrow belongs to those who are already ready. It doesn’t. It belongs to those who keep moving.”

They entered the building. Inside, teenagers worked on machines, solar panels, computers. Some laughed. Some argued passionately over designs.

“They were once like you,” the older Tayo said. “Unsure. Afraid. Waiting.”

“Waiting for what?”

“For confidence to arrive before action.”

Young Tayo lowered his eyes.

“I was scared,” he admitted. “Scared I won’t be good enough. Scared I’ll fail.”

“You will fail,” the older Tayo replied gently.

The words hit hard.

“You will fail exams. You will fail at business. You will trust people who disappoint you. You will doubt yourself so deeply that you will consider quitting.”

“Then how…” Tayo’s voice shook. “How did we get here?”

The older man stopped walking.

“We stopped trying to defeat tomorrow. We started building it.”

The scene around them shifted again.

Now Tayo saw flashes — like memories not yet lived.

He saw himself studying under a dim light while others slept.

He saw himself rejected from a scholarship.

He saw himself trying again.

He saw long nights of frustration.

He saw small successes.

He saw mentors appearing when he least expected.

He saw himself returning to Idera after years away.

He saw the first brick laid for the Innovation Center.

He saw doubt in people’s faces.

He saw belief slowly replace it.

“It wasn’t magic,” the older Tayo said. “It was consistency.”

The world flickered.

Suddenly they stood back in the clearing with the wooden door.

“Why show me this?” young Tayo asked.

“Because you came looking for tomorrow,” the older one said. “But tomorrow is not something you visit. It is something you practice.”

Young Tayo swallowed. “What if I change it?”

“You will.”

“And what if I ruin it?”

The older Tayo stepped closer.

“Tomorrow is not fragile glass. It is clay. You will shape it every day — whether you realize it or not.”

The wind began to rise. The door creaked.

“You cannot stay,” the older version said. “Borrowing tomorrow comes with a rule.”

“What rule?”

“You must return and earn it.”

The world blurred.

The hum of technology faded.

The glass towers dissolved.

And suddenly, Tayo was back in the quiet clearing behind his grandmother’s house.

The wooden door was gone.

Only tall grass swayed in the evening breeze.

For a moment, he wondered if he had imagined everything.

Then he noticed something in his han

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The day tomorrow break
Episode Two: The Day Tomorrow Broke Three years after finding the key, Tayo stopped believing in magic. Not because life was bad. But because life was hard. University was nothing like Idera. The city was loud, impatient, and competitive. Everyone seemed smarter. Faster. More confident. Ideas moved like lightning, and Tayo often felt like the last cloud in a dry sky. The metal key still stayed in his pocket. But it felt heavier now. One afternoon, after failing an important engineering exam, Tayo sat alone behind the campus laboratory. The sun was hot, but he felt cold inside. “You’re not built for this,” a voice inside him whispered. For the first time, he didn’t argue back. That evening, he took the key out and stared at it. “Build it daily,” he read aloud. “Build what?” he muttered. “Failure?” In frustration, he threw the key across the ground. The moment it hit the concrete, the air changed. The world tilted. And suddenly— He was back in the clearing. The wooden door stood before him. But this time, it was cracked. The carvings were dim. And smoke leaked from beneath it. Tayo’s chest tightened. He pushed the door open. Inside was not the bright, advanced Idera he had seen before. It was empty. Buildings unfinished. The Innovation Center half-constructed. Windows shattered. Weeds growing through concrete. “No…” he whispered. Footsteps echoed behind him. He turned. The older version of himself stood there — but this time he looked tired. His shoulders slumped. His eyes carried regret. “You stopped building,” the older Tayo said quietly. “I tried,” young Tayo protested. “It’s too hard.” “Yes,” the older one agreed. “It is.” Silence stretched between them. “I thought the future was guaranteed,” young Tayo admitted. “It never was,” the older Tayo replied. “The future you saw was a possibility. Not a promise.” Young Tayo looked around at the abandoned Innovation Center. “So this happens if I quit?” The older version nodded. “Not instantly. Slowly. One skipped effort at a time. One excuse at a time. Tomorrow doesn’t collapse in a day. It erodes.” The words cut deep. “Can I fix it?” young Tayo asked. The older Tayo stepped closer and handed him something. Not the metal key. A brick. “You rebuild it the same way it broke,” he said. “One piece at a time.” The world blurred again. And Tayo found himself back behind the university lab. The key lay near his feet. He picked it up slowly. This time, he didn’t expect magic. He went to the library. The weeks that followed were not dramatic. No sudden genius. No overnight success. Just small, stubborn effort. He failed again — but by fewer marks. He asked questions — even when embarrassed. He formed a study group. He swallowed pride. Months later, he passed. Not at the top of the class. But strong enough to move forward. The future did not need perfection. It needed persistence.

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