Episode 1 | The Call at 2:17a.m.
The rain had not stopped since dawn.
It fell in slow, deliberate sheets over Abuja, washing the city in a gray silence that felt heavier than mourning itself. At the private wing of the National Hospital, security men stood stiffly under umbrellas, their faces expressionless, while inside, grief moved quietly through polished corridors.
Bright Umeh stood alone by the glass window at the end of the hallway.
He did not cry.
Not because he did not feel pain—but because pain had settled too deeply inside him to find tears. His tall frame was rigid, his shoulders squared beneath a perfectly tailored black suit that had been chosen for him that morning. Everything about him looked composed, controlled, untouchable. Yet behind the calm exterior, something had cracked.
His father was gone.
Senator Anthony Umeh—former chairman of the Senate Committee on Works, political giant of the Federal Capital Territory, kingmaker, strategist, and patriarch—was dead. The news still felt unreal, like a cruel headline that refused to fade.
Plane crash en route to a political meeting in the United Kingdom.
No survivors.
Bright replayed the words over and over in his mind, as if repetition might dull their sharpness. But they did not. Instead, they carved a hollow space in his chest where certainty used to live.
He adjusted his cufflinks slowly, a habit he had developed over the years whenever he needed control. His reflection stared back at him from the glass—fair-skinned, sharp-featured, eyes dark and calculating. At thirty-three, Bright was already a force in Nigeria’s corporate world. Now, overnight, he had become something else entirely.
The Senator’s son.
Behind him, muted voices murmured—lawyers, aides, politicians, family friends offering condolences wrapped in ambition. They spoke softly, but Bright heard the undercurrent beneath every word.
What happens next?
Who inherits what?
Will the son measure up?
He turned away from the window just as the hospital door opened. A man in his late fifties stepped out—Dr. Alade, the physician who had overseen the identification process.
“I’m sorry, Mr. Umeh,” the doctor said gently. “We’ve done all we can.”
Bright nodded once. No questions. No dramatics.
“Thank you, Doctor.”
The doctor hesitated, as if wanting to say more, then quietly walked away.
Moments later, Bright’s phone vibrated in his hand. He didn’t need to look to know who it was.
Chief Okorie—his father’s long-time legal counsel.
“Sir,” the older man said the moment Bright answered, his voice formal even in grief, “the board of Peak Construction has been informed. Emergency meetings are being scheduled. Your father’s will—”
“I know,” Bright interrupted calmly. “I’ll be there.”
There was a pause on the line, then a sigh. “You sound… prepared.”
Bright allowed himself a brief, humorless smile.
“I was trained,” he replied. “By him.”
When the call ended, Bright slipped his phone into his pocket and straightened his shoulders. The boy who once trailed behind his father at campaign grounds, watching power move rooms, was gone. In his place stood a man who understood exactly what this moment meant.
Peak Construction Company.
Properties across Lagos and Abuja.
Political alliances.
Enemies hiding behind sympathy.
Everything his father had built now rested on his shoulders.