Chapter One: Enemy Territory

1131 Words
Zara Okonkwo did not return to Lagos for nostalgia. The city smelled like heat, ambition, and unfinished wars. From the backseat of the black sedan, she watched the skyline sharpen into glass and steel. Lagos had grown teeth since she left for London. It looked polished now. Refined. Dangerous in better tailoring. A fitting reflection of the Afolayan empire. Her phone vibrated. Her mother. Have you resumed? Zara typed back: Yes. Three dots appeared immediately. Remember why you’re there. As if she could forget. She had grown up watching her father unravel. Watching reporters camp outside their gate. Watching society women cross the street to avoid greeting her mother. Watching the Okonkwo name collapse under accusations of fraud and misappropriation of public funds. The Afolayans had walked away untouched. Thrived, even. Her jaw tightened. “I’m here,” she murmured to herself. Not as a victim. As a reckoning. Afolayan Holdings stood like a declaration. Glass exterior. Armed security. Controlled entry points. Power did not beg for attention. It simply existed. Zara stepped out of the car, heels steady against the pavement. Navy suit. Minimal jewelry. Hair pulled back cleanly. Professional. Unemotional. Prepared. Inside, the lobby gleamed in muted marble and calculated silence. Executives moved with quiet urgency. Assistants whispered into headsets. She walked to reception. “Good morning. Zara Adeyemi. Legal advisory department.” The alias slid easily off her tongue. The receptionist checked the system. Nodded. Smiled. “Fourth floor. Executive wing.” Executive wing. Good. Closer to the center. The elevator doors opened. She stepped inside. Alone. For now. The doors began to close— A hand stopped them. Her pulse did not change. She refused to let it. A man stepped in. Tall. Dark suit tailored to precision. No tie. Expensive watch. The kind of composure money could not buy — only power could. The air shifted. He pressed the button for the executive floor. Then he looked at her. Once. Twice. Recognition wasn’t loud. It was subtle. A narrowing of the eyes. A calculation. “Okonkwo.” Her name sounded deliberate in his mouth. Not questioning. Confirming. She turned her head slowly. “Afolayan.” Silence settled like a challenge. The elevator hummed upward. “You applied under Adeyemi,” he said calmly. His voice was low. Controlled. Educated abroad but sharpened by Lagos. “I didn’t realize your HR department specialized in background revenge.” A faint flicker crossed his face. Amusement? No. Assessment. “You think this is revenge?” She met his gaze fully now. Up close, his eyes were darker than she remembered from the newspapers. Less polished. More human. “I think your father destroyed mine.” The air between them tightened. He didn’t look surprised. That unsettled her. The elevator reached the executive floor. The doors opened. He didn’t move immediately. Instead, he leaned slightly closer. Not touching. Never touching. “You walked into a building owned by the family you believe ruined you,” he said quietly. “Yes.” “That’s either bravery.” Or— “Or strategy,” she finished. Something unreadable passed through his expression. “Be careful, Zara.” Her name. Not Miss Okonkwo. Not Adeyemi. Zara. “Of what?” “Underestimating what you stepped into.” She held his gaze. “I didn’t come here to be safe.” A beat. His lips curved faintly. “Good,” he said. “Neither did I.” He stepped out first. She followed. War, it seemed, preferred proximity. Two Hours Later The boardroom was designed for intimidation. Long walnut table. Floor-to-ceiling glass. Lagos sprawled beneath like something conquerable. Zara sat near the far end, reviewing files. She felt him before she heard him. Adebayo Afolayan entered without announcement. Conversations quieted. Executives straightened. Power acknowledged power. He took the head seat. No introduction necessary. “Before we begin,” he said smoothly, “we have a new addition to the legal advisory team.” All eyes turned. She did not shrink. He looked directly at her. “Zara Okonkwo.” He said it intentionally. Not Adeyemi. Okonkwo. A ripple of recognition passed around the table. Whispers didn’t start. But awareness did. He continued calmly. “She will be working closely with me on our government compliance portfolio.” Her spine stiffened internally. Closely. Of course. He was not removing her. He was containing her. Interesting. After the meeting, executives filtered out. She gathered her files. “Walk with me,” he said. Not a request. They moved through the corridor side by side. No touching. Too much electricity for that. “You wanted proximity,” he said without looking at her. “You assigned it.” “Of course I did.” She stopped walking. “So this is intimidation?” He turned slowly. “This is curiosity.” Her pulse shifted for the first time. “You think I came here blindly?” he asked. She didn’t answer. “You think I didn’t know who you were the moment your application crossed my desk?” Then why hire me? The question hovered. “Why?” she asked instead. He studied her. Not like an enemy. Like a problem worth solving. “Because,” he said quietly, “I want to see how far you’re willing to go.” The corridor suddenly felt narrower. “And you?” she asked. “How far are you willing to go?” His jaw flexed. “Further than you expect.” That Night Zara stood alone in her apartment overlooking Victoria Island. Laptop open. Encrypted email ready. Phase one required access to internal compliance reports. She had it now. Closer than expected. Her phone buzzed again. Her father’s old campaign manager. Remember — they are not innocent. She stared at the message. Neither are we. The thought startled her. Because for the first time since stepping into that building— She had seen something in Adebayo’s eyes. Not arrogance. Not cruelty. Restraint. As if he knew something she didn’t. And was waiting. Across the city— Adebayo stood in his office, lights dimmed. He watched CCTV footage of the lobby from earlier that morning. Her arrival. Her composure. Her calculated steps. He paused the screen on her face. “You shouldn’t have come back,” he murmured. His phone rang. Private number. He answered. “They’ve made contact,” the voice said. “When?” he asked. “This week. The rally is still scheduled.” His jaw tightened. “And the Okonkwo girl?” the voice continued. A pause. A slow exhale. “She stays close.” “Why?” Adebayo’s eyes returned to the paused image of Zara stepping through the lobby doors. “Because,” he said quietly, “The next attack won’t miss.”
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