LOGINBut it was too late.
Amara’s chest stopped moving. Her face relaxed into stillness. Her body was gone cold. Adaobi broke down, clutching her lifeless sister against her chest, wailing. “No! Amara, no! Please come back. Please don’t leave me here alone!” Instantly, the doctor and a nurse stormed the room, trying to check Amara’s pulse… ************ Alex sat in his office, restless. His pen rolled between his fingers, tapping against the desk, but his mind was not with the papers before him. His heart was heavy, thoughts scattered. He didn’t even notice when his colleague walked in, carrying a file. “Dr. Spencer,” the colleague said, placing the folder gently on the table, “this is the list of patients waiting for you in the cue.” Alex barely looked up. His voice was distant. “Drop it there.” The colleague turned to leave but paused at the door. His eyes narrowed as he studied Alex. “Are you okay?” Alex’s fingers scratched absently at the side of his neck. His nails dragged across the spot again and again until red welts appeared, followed by thin traces of blood. The colleague frowned. “Wait… is that an allergic reaction?” Alex jerked slightly, pulling his hand away. “It’s nothing. Just go check on the patients.” “Nothing? You’re bleeding. You should let someone look at that.” “I said it’s fine,” Alex muttered, impatience lacing his tone. But the colleague didn’t leave. Instead, he stepped closer. “You know, Amara once compiled a full list of your allergens. Every single thing you react to. She worked on it for days. I still remember her coming around different departments, asking about precautions.” Alex’s head lifted slowly. His eyes searched his colleague’s face. “Allergens?” he repeated, his voice heavy with surprise. “Yes. She was very particular. She wanted to be sure you never touched or ate anything that could harm you.” The words hit him deep, but he said nothing. His jaw tightened as he looked away, swallowing hard. That evening, Alex sat with a group of his friends in their usual lounge. Drinks crowded the table. Laughter and loud music filled the space. But his mind was lost. His hand moved automatically, lifting glass after glass, gulping whatever his fingers touched. James leaned over from the other side of the table, his eyes narrowing. “Alex, are you alright? The way you’re drinking… this one is not ordinary stress oo. Did your wife leave you?” Alex dropped his glass and spoke without hesitation. “She divorced me.” The table went silent for a moment. Then one of the friends suddenly jumped to his feet, clapping his hands. “Finally! Congratulations, my brother!” Another friend raised his own drink, laughing loudly. “Freedom! This calls for a toast.” He pushed his glass high in the air. “To Alex, who is now free from chains!” The men burst into cheers, clinking glasses together. But Alex’s face stayed blank. He took another deep gulp, then slammed the glass down on the table with force. His eyes darkened. He shot up to his feet. “I’m out,” he muttered. His steps were heavy as he stormed away from the table. “Alex! Alex!” James called after him. But Alex didn’t turn back. He pushed through the crowd and left the lounge. ******************* By the time he arrived home, alcohol still thick in his blood, his voice thundered through the mansion. “Where is everyone?!” he roared, throwing his coat to the floor. His eyes darted around the sitting room. “Where is Amara?!” His voice rose again, desperate. “Amara!” The butler hurried in, his steps cautious. “Sir…” Alex spun to face him. “Where is she? Answer me!” The butler knew his master was aware his wife had left him. But the influence of alcohol or maybe depression had caused a little disorder to his senses. The butler bowed his head slightly. “Madam has left, sir.” “Left?” Alex’s voice cracked. He looked around the room as though she might appear from the shadows. His fists slammed against the table. “Can’t this house function without her? Is everyone blind here?!” The butler said nothing, only watched him with quiet sorrow. Alex dropped heavily onto the sofa, his chest heaving. His head bent low into his hands. After a long silence, the butler cleared his throat. “Sir… there is something you should know.” Alex’s eyes shot up sharply. “What is it?” “This afternoon, while one of the maids was cleaning, she found a paper. It… it was Madam’s medical report.” Alex frowned, straightening. “What report?” The butler hesitated, then spoke carefully. “Madam Amara has brain cancer. Um… Pilocytic Astrocytoma.” The words hit Alex like a thunderclap. He stood suddenly, grabbing the report the butler held out. His eyes scanned the pages. His breath caught. His body stiffened. “Brain… cancer?” he whispered. His hands trembled, his eyes wet. But almost immediately, anger burned through his chest. His voice rose in fury. “No! No, this pathetic trick won’t fool me!” The paper crumpled beneath his grip. He tore it apart in a violent rip. Shreds of paper fell from his fingers like pieces of broken truth, scattering across the floor. The butler stared, stunned, unable to move. Alex’s face hardened. His chest heaved with wild breaths. He pulled his phone from his pocket, his fingers flying across the screen. He pressed a number and waited until the voice answered. “Track her down,” Alex ordered, his voice like ice. “Find Amara’s location immediately.” His jaw tightened as his eyes burned with fury. “How dare she fake medical reports just to manipulate me?!”The storm that followed Alex’s release shook New York to its core.For three full days after Dennis discovered the evidence Alex gave him, the station became a war zone—meetings behind closed doors, state officials going in and out, lawyers hovering like bees, phones ringing non-stop. But the moment the police finally released Alex Spencer, the entire city erupted. Angry protests gathered outside the precinct, people demanding answers from the justice system they trusted. The media tore into the police with merciless headlines, questioning their competence and their integrity.“How can a murder suspect be released?”“What happened to justice for Martins Cooper?”“Is New York police now controlled by powerful elites?”The noise grew louder every hour.Amara watched everything on TV with a hand pressed against her mouth. She didn’t know what to think. She didn’t know whether to be relieved that perhaps Alex truly wasn’t the monster she thought or terrified that she might still be wr
The chair screeched lightly against the floor as Amara pulled it out. She didn’t sit gently, she dropped into it, her breath sharp, her eyes burning like she was forcing herself not to explode. The interrogation room felt smaller with her inside, as if her fury had filled every corner. Alex sat opposite her, his hands cuffed and fixed to the metal table. The chains made a soft rattling sound whenever he shifted, but he barely moved.She couldn’t even look at him at first. Her chest rose and fell in slow, angry waves, the weight of betrayal clinging to her skin like thick fog. Then finally, her eyes snapped to his.“Tell me the truth,” she said, her voice trembling, not with weakness but with a rage she had held back too long. “Why would you do this to me?”Alex swallowed. His voice came out quiet but steady.“I didn’t do anything to you, Amara.”She laughed—a painful, disbelieving sound.“Don’t insult my intelligence,” she snapped. “Roland and Eva confessed. They mentioned you. You
The tension inside Spencer Group's executive boardroom was the kind that made the air feel heavy and oppressive, as if every breath carried physical weight that pressed down on the lungs. The long mahogany table, polished to a mirror shine, reflected the harsh fluorescent light overhead, until James walked through the double doors and silence rippled across the room like a swift wind cutting through tall grass.He took the seat at the head of the table—Alex's seat. The chair reserved for the President. The symbolic throne of power in this corporate empire.A bold declaration on its own, spoken without words.His expression was stone cold, carved from granite, his posture sharp and rigid, his fingers clasped together in front of him on the polished wood like a general ready to announce war to his troops. The senior executives exchanged worried looks across the table, their eyes darting between James and each other, searching for answers no one had. Everyone had heard about Alex's su
The sky was still grey with early morning fog when the police hotline rang. The officer on duty answered, barely awake, expecting another false alarm or noise complaint. Instead, the caller spoke quickly, breathlessly.“Good morning, officer. I—I think I just dropped off the man you people are looking for. The CEO… the one on the news.”The officer sat upright.“You mean Alex Spencer?”“Yes! Yes, him!” the taxi driver said. “I swear it’s him. Same face, same height, same hair. He told me to drop him at the old Spencer Group plant on Riverside Industrial Lane. That place is empty now.”Within minutes, a full SWAT team was deployed.The convoy sped through the city, sirens slicing the morning air.As they approached the abandoned property—an old manufacturing plant Spencer Group shut down years ago, the scene was chilling. Weeds curled up the cracked walls. Windows were broken. Rusted machinery stood in the courtyard like metal skeletons.Dennis stepped forward, signaling silently to
Inspector Dennis stood in his office long after Roland and Eva’s confessions were typed, recorded, signed, and sealed. The cold weight of everything he had just uncovered pressed down on him until his breath turned shallow. Outside his door, officers buzzed with frantic disbelief, whispering Alex Spencer’s name in tones that carried shock, rage, and something close to betrayal.Dennis finally picked up his pen.His hand trembled but not from fear. From fury.From the deep, unsettling knowledge that the man the world had praised for years… the man powerfully rooted in New York’s corporate and political landscape… the man Amara once loved, and his city respected… had orchestrated murder.In clear, bold handwriting, Dennis signed his name beneath the arrest request.Then he stamped it.WARRANT FOR THE ARREST OF ALEX SPENCER.A chill swept through him. There was no going back.He walked straight to the operations floor, lifted the warrant for his entire team to see, and declared:“Full
Three days had crawled by since the Inspector General placed that impossible, dangerous command on Inspector Dennis— release Roland and Eva… or lose everything.Three days of a voice echoing in his head like poison.Three days of wrestling fear, law, duty, and conscience.Yet, the suspects remained exactly where they were.Not because Dennis forgot.Not because he hesitated.But because the moment the call ended that day, something in him rose, something too rooted in integrity to be pushed aside.After pacing his office like a man trapped inside two lives, Dennis had grabbed his keys and driven straight to the Attorney General’s office, cutting through traffic with a speed fueled by conflict.He didn’t wait to be announced. He walked in and faced the AG—the only man powerful enough, fearless enough, principled enough to challenge the kind of monster who stood behind the IGP’s strange order.For almost twenty minutes, Dennis spoke.Not as a junior officer bowing to authority.Not as a







