تسجيل الدخولA Promise He Never Broke
The rain had finally begun to lose its anger. Outside the hospital windows, droplets slid lazily down the glass, turning the lights of Victoria Island into blurred ribbons of gold and white. The storm was passing, but inside Amara's heart, another had only just begun.
She stood beside Lily's bed, watching the little girl sleep. The fever had eased. Her breathing was steadier. Every few minutes, Lily shifted beneath the white blanket before settling again, clutching the small stuffed rabbit she insisted on taking everywhere.
Amara carefully brushed a curl away from her daughter's forehead.
"You scared me tonight," she whispered.
"I don't know what l'd do without you."
The words dissolved into the quiet room.
She pulled the chair closer and sat, but her mind refused to stay in the present.
It kept returning to him.
Ethan.
Seven years had changed everything.
His clothes.
His confidence.
His posture.
The way everyone in the hospital immediately recognized him.
Yet, one thing hadn't changed.
When he saw someone in pain...
He still stepped in without asking for recognition.
She remembered another rainy evening years ago.
Back then, they had been students with almost empty pockets.
An elderly woman had slipped while trying to cross a flooded road near campus.
People stopped.
People looked.
People shook their heads.
Only Ethan ran toward her.
He had carried the woman to safety with soaked shoes and muddy trousers, then laughed when Amara scolded him for ruining his only pair of good jeans.
"What?" he had asked with that familiar grin.
"They'll dry."
"You'll catch a cold."
"So?"
"You'll miss classes."
He had smiled.
"If helping someone becomes an inconvenience, then maybe it wasn't help in the first place."
That was Ethan. He never announced his kindness.
He simply lived it, Amara closed her eyes.
So why had a man like that walked away from her without a single explanation? Nothing made sense anymore. A gentle knock interrupted her thoughts. The door opened slowly. The young nurse who had first admitted Lily stepped inside carrying a tray. "She's due for another dose of antibiotics."
Amara stood.
"Thank you."
The nurse adjusted Lily's IV line before looking at Amara with a hesitant smile.
"I hope you don't mind me asking something."
"What is it?"
"That gentleman earlier..."
Amara looked down.
"Mr. Cole."
"Were you two... together?"
The question lingered between them.
After a long silence, Amara answered honestly.
"A lifetime ago."
The nurse smiled softly.
"I thought so."
"Why?"
"The way he looked at you."
Amara frowned.
"What do you mean?"
"I've worked here for three years."
The nurse folded her arms thoughtfully.
"I've seen Mr. Cole visit this hospital many times. He's respectful, generous, and polite."
She paused.
"But tonight was different."
"Different how?"
"He wasn't looking at a stranger."
The words settled heavily in the room.
"He looked..." the nurse searched for the right expression, “..like someone who had just found something he'd spent years believing was lost."
Amara couldn't respond.
Because she had seen the same look.
And it frightened her.
Not because she didn't want to believe it.
Because part of her still did.
Across town, Ethan stood alone in front of the floor-to-ceiling windows of his study. The city glittered beneath him. Millions of lights. Millions of lives.
Yet all he could see was a woman kneeling on a hospital floor.
He loosened his tie and reached for the crystal glass on his desk.
He never drank when making business decisions.
Tonight wasn't about business.
He poured a small measure of whisky but never touched it.
His phone buzzed again.
This time it wasn't Vivian.
It was his head of security.
Sir, the child is stable. The doctor says she responded well to treatment.
Ethan stared at the message.
A quiet relief spread through him.
He typed only four words.
Keep me updated discreetly.
He pressed send. Then he walked to a bookshelf in the corner of the room.
Hidden behind a row of business biographies was an old leather journal.
The edges had faded with age.
He opened it carefully.
Every page carried a date.
Every page carried a memory.
Every page was about one person.
Amara.
He turned to the final entry.
The ink had begun to fade.
It was dated exactly seven years earlier.
Today I lost the woman I planned to spend my life with.
If she is happier without me, l'll let her go.
But I don't think I'll ever understand why she left without looking back. Ethan closed the journal.
For years he had believed those words were the end of the story.
Tonight, for the first time...
They felt like the beginning of another one.
He looked toward the rain-soaked city beyond the glass.
Somewhere out there, Amara was awake too.
He was certain of it.
Neither of them knew that before the sun rose, someone else would make the first move. Someone who had far more to lose than either of them realized.
The Letter That Never ArrivedMonday mornings were always the busiest at AmaraStitches. By nine o'clock, customers had begun filling the small shop. One woman needed a last-minute alteration for her daughter's engagement ceremony. Another wanted a matching Ankara outfit for her twins. A young banker dropped off two suits that needed resizing before a business trip to Abuja.Amara welcomed each customer with the same gentle smile as always.Work had always been her refuge. As long as her hands were occupied, her mind had less room to wander."Madam Amara," Kemi called from the cutting table."Mrs. Hassan is here for her gown.""I'll bring it."Amara disappeared into the fitting room and returned carrying a carefully pressed emerald dress.Mrs. Hassan gasped the moment she saw it."My goodness..."She gently ran her fingers over the beadwork."This is even more beautiful than I imagined."Amara smiled."I'm glad you like it.""Like it?" the woman laughed. "I'll probably make everyone e
The Tailor's ShopBy noon, the streets of Surulere had reclaimed their usual rhythm.Danfo buses honked impatiently at every junction. Street vendors balanced trays of fruit on their heads while calling out to passersby. The aroma of roasted corn mixed with the scent of fresh bread drifting from a nearby bakery. Lagos had a remarkable gift, it never stayed quiet for long.Amara unlocked the door to her tailoring shop just after dropping Lily at home with her elderly neighbor, Mama Bose.The doctor had insisted Lily rest for at least another week, but the little girl had begged not to stay in the hospital another night. After one final examination that morning, they had been discharged with medication and strict instructions.Before leaving, Amara had settled every outstanding hospital bill.Or rather, she had tried to.The cashier had smiled apologetically."Mrs. Okafor, your account has already been cleared.""I know someone paid the admission deposit."The cashier shook her head."I
Questions That Refused to SleepThe morning passed slowly and for the first time in days, Lily had enough strength to sit upright in bed. She had spread her new coloring book across the hospital blanket, carefully filling the pages with bright shades of blue and yellow while the pink teddy bear sat proudly beside her like a trusted companion.Amara watched from the chair by the window. Seeing Lily smile again should have eased her mind. Instead, it only reminded her of the man who had made that smile possible. She picked up the handwritten card from the bedside table for what must have been the tenth time.For brave little fighters. Get well soon.No signature.No initials.No explanation.It was exactly something Ethan would do.He had always believed kindness lost its beauty the moment it demanded recognition."You're thinking about him again."Amara looked up, startled.Lily wasn't looking at her. She was still coloring."Why do you say that ?""You've been reading that card foreve
Ghosts Don't KnockMorning arrived quietly over Lagos.The rain had washed the city clean, leaving behind damp roads that reflected the pale glow of the rising sun. From the fifth floor of St. Catherine's Specialist Hospital, the endless stream of vehicles below looked almost peaceful, as though the city had forgotten the storm that had kept so many awake through the night.Amara knew better.Some storms never ended when the rain stopped.She had barely slept.Every time she closed her eyes, she saw Ethan standing in the reception area, his expression frozen somewhere between disbelief and pain. She had spent seven years convincing herself she would never see him again. Then fate had chosen the worst possible night to prove her wrong.A soft groan pulled her back to the present.Lily blinked awake."Morning, Mummy."Amara smiled immediately, relief spreading across her face."Good morning, sunshine.""Did I sleep all night?""You certainly did."Lily looked around the unfamiliar room
A Promise He Never BrokeThe rain had finally begun to lose its anger. Outside the hospital windows, droplets slid lazily down the glass, turning the lights of Victoria Island into blurred ribbons of gold and white. The storm was passing, but inside Amara's heart, another had only just begun.She stood beside Lily's bed, watching the little girl sleep. The fever had eased. Her breathing was steadier. Every few minutes, Lily shifted beneath the white blanket before settling again, clutching the small stuffed rabbit she insisted on taking everywhere.Amara carefully brushed a curl away from her daughter's forehead."You scared me tonight," she whispered."I don't know what l'd do without you."The words dissolved into the quiet room.She pulled the chair closer and sat, but her mind refused to stay in the present.It kept returning to him.Ethan.Seven years had changed everything.His clothes.His confidence.His posture.The way everyone in the hospital immediately recognized him. Ye
Love Over Fears."I'll spend my whole life proving that loving you is the easiest decision I'll ever make." She had believed him. With everything she had. A tear escaped before she could stop it.Outside the room, unnoticed by Amara, a man in a dark suit stood near the nurses' station.One of Ethan's security personnel. He wasn't there to watch Amara. He was there because Ethan had given one quiet instruction before leaving the hospital. "If the little girl needs anything before morning, call me immediately."Sleep refused to come. Amara sat beside Lily's hospital bed with both hands wrapped around a paper cup of tea that had long gone cold. The room was quiet except for the steady rhythm of the heart monitor and the occasional footsteps passing in the hallway.She had always believed hospitals had a way of changing time. Minutes became hours.Hours became memories. You entered hoping to leave with answers.Sometimes you leave carrying questions instead. She leaned back in the chair a







