LOGINThe first time I saw Daniel, I did not think he would become the man who would change everything. It was a quiet evening, the kind where the sky looked tired and the wind carried the scent of rain. I had gone to the café only to escape my thoughts. Love and I had never been on good terms, and I had long decided that my heart was safer when it belonged only to me. Then he walked in. He wasn’t loud or dramatic. In fact, if you weren’t paying attention, you might have missed him completely. But there was something about the way he moved—calm, steady, like a man who understood the rhythm of life. When his eyes met mine, he smiled. Not the kind of smile men give when they want something from you. No. This one was different. It was warm, patient… almost like he already knew my story. I looked away quickly, pretending to read my phone, but my heart betrayed me. It beat faster, louder, as if it was whispering a secret I was not ready to hear. That night, I didn’t know his name. I didn’t know his voice. But somehow, in the quiet space between strangers, something had already begun. And before long, Daniel would teach me something I had spent years running from: What it truly means to love… and to be loved to the full.
View MoreCHAPTER 1 The Man at the Corner Table
(Amara’s POV) There are moments in life when everything changes quietly. No loud music. No dramatic entrance. Just a single glance that lingers longer than it should. That was how Daniel Cole entered my life. I was sitting at my usual table by the window of Willow Café, trying to focus on the disaster that was currently my business account balance. Running an event-planning company in Lagos sounded glamorous when I first started. In reality? It meant chasing clients for payments, negotiating with stubborn vendors, and pretending everything was fine even when it clearly wasn’t. I sighed and rubbed my temples. “Miss Amara, your coffee.” I looked up and forced a smile as Sola, the café waitress, placed the cup in front of me. “Thanks.” The rich smell of roasted coffee beans filled the air. Normally it helped clear my thoughts. Today it didn’t. My phone buzzed on the table. Unknown Number. I hesitated before answering. “Hello?” “Miss Nwoye?” the voice on the other end asked. “Yes, speaking.” “This is Mrs. Ajayi. I’m calling about the wedding you planned last weekend.” My stomach tightened. That tone never meant anything good. “I’m afraid we won’t be able to complete the remaining payment,” she continued casually. My fingers slowly tightened around the phone. Excuse me? “Sorry?” I said carefully. “The decorations didn’t meet my expectations. My husband and I agreed we shouldn’t pay the balance.” and we hope you do understand. For a moment, I couldn’t even speak. Because what was just going on in my heart are too many to say. At that moment voices where flashing within me with some split seconds and I did not know what to say or do at the time. That event had nearly killed me. Three sleepless nights, twenty vendors, and a last-minute venue change. And here she is trying to play or thinking to fool me. “You signed a contract,” I reminded her. She laughed softly. “Take me to court if you want.” Then the line went dead. I stared at my phone in disbelief. People were unbelievable. I dropped the phone on the table and leaned back in my chair, trying to calm the frustration rising in my chest. Because I was not expecting the way things tune out between me and this lady. I was still lost in thought when I heard a voice that brought me back to real life. “Rough day?” The voice came from my right. Deep. Smooth. Completely unfamiliar. I turned. And that was the first time I saw him. He sat at the corner table across from mine, a laptop open in front of him. He looked like he had just stepped out of a business magazine cover. Tall. Broad shoulders. Dark tailored suit. But it wasn’t the suit that caught my attention. It was his eyes. Sharp. Observant. Almost too observant. Like a man who noticed everything. Including me. “I’m sorry?” I said cautiously. His lips curved into a faint smile. “You sounded like you were about to declare war on someone over the phone.” My cheeks warmed. Great. A stranger or so I thought had just heard my entire financial meltdown. “It was nothing,” I muttered. Trying so had for him not to give him room into the matter. He closed his laptop slowly and leaned back in his chair. “I disagree.” I frowned. “Why are you listening to my conversations?” “I wasn’t,” he said calmly. “You were just… hard to ignore.” Something about the way he said it made my heart skip. Not flirtatious. Not teasing. Just honest. And that made it more dangerous. I picked up my coffee cup quickly. “Well, you heard wrong.” He studied me for a moment, like he was trying to solve a puzzle. “You run a business,” he said. It wasn’t a question. “How do you know that?” “You mentioned vendors, contracts, and payments.” I blinked. Observant was an understatement. “You’re also stubborn,” he added. My eyebrows shot up. “Oh really?” “Yes.” “And how exactly did you conclude that?” He shrugged slightly. “You didn’t cry.” That answer surprised me. Most people assumed women were emotional when things went wrong. But his tone wasn’t mocking. It sounded… respectful. “Crying won’t fix unpaid invoices,” I replied. A slow smile appeared on his face. Interesting. That single word seemed to hang in the air between us. I suddenly became aware of how quiet the café had become. Just the sound of coffee machines and soft jazz playing from the speakers. “You come here often,” he said. Now it was my turn to be suspicious. “You’ve been watching me?” “Observing.” “That’s not less creepy.” He chuckled softly. And something about that sound made my chest feel warm. “My name is Daniel,” he said finally. Am just trying to introduce ourselves. I hesitated. Something about this man felt… significant. Like meeting him wasn’t random at all. Still, I answered. “Amara.” with out thinking about anything I just gave out my name to a man I just met. His eyes darkened slightly when he heard my name. It was subtle. So subtle that I almost thought I imagined it. But the way he repeated to it told me I hadn’t. “Amara,” he said slowly. Like he was testing how it felt on his tongue. Then he leaned forward slightly. “Tell me something, Amara.” “What?” “If someone offered you an opportunity that could change your entire business…” I narrowed my eyes. “Go on.” “Would you take the risk?” I laughed softly. “With my current bank account?” “Yes.” His gaze locked onto mine. “Even if it meant working very closely with me?” Something about the way he said it sent a strange shiver down my spine. Not fear. Something deeper. More complicated. I didn’t know it then. But that moment— That simple conversation in a quiet café— Was the beginning of everything. The beginning of love. The beginning of secrets. And the beginning of a truth that would eventually destroy us both.SEASON 2 — EPISODE 2 The Man Wearing My Face Rain hammered the canal harder. Nobody moved. Nobody even breathed properly. Daniel stared at the stranger standing beneath the tunnel light while cold water dripped slowly from the man’s black coat. Every feature looked identical. The same jaw. The same eyes. The same scar near the eyebrow. It looked like staring into a darker version of himself. Victor lowered his weapon slightly in disbelief. “Oh, that’s disgusting.” Amara felt Daniel tense beside her instantly. Not fear. Instinct. Like his body recognized something his mind didn’t. The stranger’s eyes shifted slowly across the group before settling directly on Amara. Then her stomach. And something dangerous passed through his expression. Recognition. Michael stood up immediately now. “No…” The stranger finally spoke. And even the voice sounded like Daniel’s. “You shouldn’t have brought her to the surface.” Daniel stepped forward without thinking. “Who are you?
SEASON 2 — EPISODE 1 The Surface That Lied The first thing Daniel noticed after escaping the holding layer was the rain. Real rain. Cold drops slammed against his face while smoke rose endlessly behind them from the collapsing underground structure hidden beneath the abandoned industrial district. The night sky above looked enormous after spending hours trapped inside steel corridors and dying chambers underground. But freedom didn’t feel real. Not anymore. The ground beneath them still trembled faintly from the destruction below while distant sirens echoed somewhere across the city. Lagos looked normal from a distance. That was the terrifying part. Cars still moved across wet roads. Billboards still glowed. Traffic lights still changed colors. People still walked beneath umbrellas without realizing an entire nightmare had just collapsed beneath their feet. Daniel stood near the edge of the abandoned drainage canal beside the others, breathing hard while rain soaked thro
CHAPTER 50 The World That Forgot (Dual POV: Daniel & Amara) Silence swallowed the hidden chamber after Michael’s words. The system already escaped. Nobody breathed for a second. Nobody moved. The truth sat there heavily between them while the holding layer continued trembling around them like the entire structure was reacting to what had just been uncovered. Victor slowly lowered his weapon. “No.” Michael’s face looked pale beneath the flickering emergency lights. But he wasn’t guessing anymore. He was remembering. Daniel saw it clearly now. The fragmented pieces inside Michael’s head were finally reconnecting. And every memory returning looked like it was killing him. Michael pressed trembling fingers against his forehead. “I remember the cities…” His breathing became uneven. “The fires… the outbreaks… people attacking each other after synchronization exposure spread through public networks…” Amara felt cold move through her entire body. The Founder stood silentl
Chapter 49The sound of the Founder’s footsteps coming down the corridor felt worse than alarms. Slow. Controlled. Certain. Like he already knew nobody inside the hidden chamber could stop what was coming next. Elias collapsed to one knee near the destroyed entrance, his massive body trembling beneath deep wounds carved across his flesh and armor. Black tendrils still clung to parts of him, moving beneath torn metal plating like parasites trying to crawl deeper into his body. Amara stared at him in shock. The creature looked close to death. But even now— He had still come back to warn them. Victor immediately moved toward the entrance and aimed his weapon into the dark corridor beyond. “Well, this day somehow keeps getting worse.” Michael staggered upright slowly, still shaken from whatever had just happened to him moments earlier. Sweat covered his face while fear lingered visibly in his eyes after the words that had come out of his mouth. She’s pregnant. The sentence s






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