• How Advice from a Native Doctor Saved Her Marriage

    Born again...
    Holy Ghost filled...
    Yet squabbles unending.
    For a six-month-old marriage...
    When there is still supposed to be plenty honey to suck from the moon.

    But she prayed... she sought the face of God... before she said... yes.


    ---

    Flashback

    Lanre.
    On bended knees... phone cameras flashing, smiles everywhere... asking for her hand in marriage.
    Total surprise.
    Yes.
    But total joy.

    Of course... who no like better thing?
    Fine boy wey love Jesus met hot babe wey love Jesus.
    A match made in heaven.

    Yet six months later...
    Quarrels... boning... apparent bad belle.

    “Did I make a mistake?
    Should I call pastor?”

    This morning... it happened again.

    To encourage herself, she put on DStv and stayed flipping stations... randomly... just looking for nothing in particular.


    ---

    Daystar TV – Joyce Meyer was talking about submission... being the key.
    “Abeg... na today... we don dey hear dat one since.”
    Wasn't she submissive?


    ---

    Enter African Magic

    Native doctor scene

    Baba:
    “My husband hates me. He doesn't love me again.”

    “This ‘Bam Bam’ dey act sha!!”

    Baba brought out a charm and told her to put it in her mouth whenever the husband comes home.
    As long as he is in the house, she should never remove it from her mouth — and his love will come back.
    No woman will be able to snatch him.

    Bam Bam said:
    “Baba thank you.”
    Baba:
    “Go well, my daughter.”


    ---

    A thought struck her.
    Where had she heard this before?

    Old story...
    Oh — in secondary school... she had read a book. African tales.
    The charm was just palm fruit kernel.
    And when she put it in her mouth, she stopped arguing with her husband... and peace came.

    “ I don't have any kernels to put.”

    But there was something that Baba said:
    “Don’t let it come out of your mouth.”


    ---

    BOOM — Joshua 1 vs 8:

    “This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth...”

    Oh! I get it.
    I will put the Word in my mouth in place of the kernel.

    She didn’t just read the scripture.
    She meditated on it — whispered it, repeated it, lived it.
    Suddenly, the Word became her spiritual charm... and it began to work.


    ---

    Nothing to lose.

    She dressed well, scenting well like Ruth, house all arranged, food like Queen Esther.

    Lanre in the house.
    Greeted.

    All through that evening... only one phrase on her lip:
    “He that finds a wife finds a good thing and obtains favour from the Lord.”

    Day one.
    Day two.
    Day three.

    The same thing.

    Lanre came... shocked her — as he was on his knees again... with gifts, apologies.
    She quickly rushed, telling him to get up.

    “How can my odogun be kneeling... my king?”

    All the while, with joy in her heart, she kept the kernel —
    sorry, she meant the Word — in her lips, constantly, non-stop.


    ---

    Meditation on scripture was the key.

    No room for the devil in this marriage ever again.
    Baba advice had worked.
    But the Word worked better.


    ---

    Have you tried putting the Word in your mouth daily?

    Accepting Jesus is the first step to a life of peace, power, and purpose.
    Say YES to Jesus today.
    How Advice from a Native Doctor Saved Her Marriage Born again... Holy Ghost filled... Yet squabbles unending. For a six-month-old marriage... When there is still supposed to be plenty honey to suck from the moon. But she prayed... she sought the face of God... before she said... yes. --- Flashback Lanre. On bended knees... phone cameras flashing, smiles everywhere... asking for her hand in marriage. Total surprise. Yes. But total joy. Of course... who no like better thing? Fine boy wey love Jesus met hot babe wey love Jesus. A match made in heaven. Yet six months later... Quarrels... boning... apparent bad belle. “Did I make a mistake? Should I call pastor?” This morning... it happened again. To encourage herself, she put on DStv and stayed flipping stations... randomly... just looking for nothing in particular. --- Daystar TV – Joyce Meyer was talking about submission... being the key. “Abeg... na today... we don dey hear dat one since.” Wasn't she submissive? --- Enter African Magic Native doctor scene Baba: “My husband hates me. He doesn't love me again.” “This ‘Bam Bam’ dey act sha!!” Baba brought out a charm and told her to put it in her mouth whenever the husband comes home. As long as he is in the house, she should never remove it from her mouth — and his love will come back. No woman will be able to snatch him. Bam Bam said: “Baba thank you.” Baba: “Go well, my daughter.” --- A thought struck her. Where had she heard this before? Old story... Oh — in secondary school... she had read a book. African tales. The charm was just palm fruit kernel. And when she put it in her mouth, she stopped arguing with her husband... and peace came. “ I don't have any kernels to put.” But there was something that Baba said: “Don’t let it come out of your mouth.” --- BOOM — Joshua 1 vs 8: “This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth...” Oh! I get it. I will put the Word in my mouth in place of the kernel. She didn’t just read the scripture. She meditated on it — whispered it, repeated it, lived it. Suddenly, the Word became her spiritual charm... and it began to work. --- Nothing to lose. She dressed well, scenting well like Ruth, house all arranged, food like Queen Esther. Lanre in the house. Greeted. All through that evening... only one phrase on her lip: “He that finds a wife finds a good thing and obtains favour from the Lord.” Day one. Day two. Day three. The same thing. Lanre came... shocked her — as he was on his knees again... with gifts, apologies. She quickly rushed, telling him to get up. “How can my odogun be kneeling... my king?” All the while, with joy in her heart, she kept the kernel — sorry, she meant the Word — in her lips, constantly, non-stop. --- Meditation on scripture was the key. No room for the devil in this marriage ever again. Baba advice had worked. But the Word worked better. --- 🙏 Have you tried putting the Word in your mouth daily? Accepting Jesus is the first step to a life of peace, power, and purpose. Say YES to Jesus today.
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  • We're growing Oyo's economy, repositioning state as investment destination- Makinde, Explains Govt House project

    Oyo State governor, 'Seyi Makinde, has reiterated his administration's commitment to building a resilient economy, improving the quality of life for the people and securing the future for generations to come.

    The governor said this on Friday while presenting a State of the State Address, held at the Oyo State House of Assembly Complex, Secretariat, Agodi, Ibadan.

    He noted that through several policies being implemented by the state government and its simple approach to solving complex governance issues, Oyo State has become an investment destination.

    Governor Makinde stressed that the government's efforts have yielded many positive results, including the designation of the Fasola Agribusiness Industrial Hub as Nigeria’s first agricultural transformation centre by the African Development Bank (AfDB), the ongoing construction of the Eruwa Agribusiness Industrial Hub and the admittance of Oyo State into the World Union of Wholesale Market, the first sub-national in Africa to achieve such feat.

    Others, the governor noted, are the ongoing upgrade of the Samuel Ladoke Akintola Airport, which first phase will be commissioned in October 2025, the fixing of the state's infrastructure deficit, with major arterial roads across the state, inner roads in Ibadan already done and dusted and the ongoing construction of 87 kilometres of rural roads under the Rural Access and Agricultural Marketing Project (RAAMP), while efforts are also on to complete the 48 kilometres Ido-Eruwa Road.

    Makinde also reiterated that the fixing of inner roads will continue in the coming months, with Ogbomoso and Oyo zones set to become the next ports of call.
    He declared that the administration would not relent until the vision of making Oyo State a regional economic powerhouse, a cultural beacon, and a place where every citizen can thrive, is achieved.
    In the education and health care sectors, Governor

    Makinde assured residents of the state that his government would bridge the gap between rural and urban education and continue to upgrade education infrastructure so as to reduce deficit.
    He also promised to continue to provide healthcare programmes that would bring benefits to the people of the state.

    This was just as the governor addressed the controversy surrounding the planned reconstruction of the Oyo State Government House, explaining that the instability in foreign exchange, among other factors, is responsible for the perceived high cost of the project, which is expected to cover the reconstruction of buildings, roads and other ancillary facilities in the Government House and adjoining chalets.

    He said: “Yesterday, I trended for the wrong reason, because people were saying we want to spend N63bn to renovate the Government House. My answer to them is just to point our attention to one thing and I want you to listen to me attentively.

    “Before I came into office, the previous administration took a loan of $200m from the World Bank for the Ibadan Urban Flood Management Project (IUFMP). As of the time I came in on May 29, 2019, that dollar-denominated loan was in the book of Oyo State as N70bn, because a dollar to a Naira was around N350. We were paying about N700 million every month to service the loan. But we finished the IUFMP, though, before I came in, $100m had been spent and $50m committed.

    “This administration was supposed to spend N$50m to complete the projects but we did not spend the amount. We honoured all the commitments made by the previous administration, and returned $18m to the World Bank, which we didn’t spend. That was how we have managed the project prudently in Oyo State. But that is not even where I am going.

    “My point is, in 2019 in the Oyo State books, N70bn was what Oyo State owed. Fast-forward to today, the IUFMP project is completed without adding one inch of drainage to the project, but simply by the exchange rate movement, Oyo State today owes N320bn. This is because the N70bn calculated as N350 to one dollar in 2019 is now the same amount, but it is now calculated at about N1,540 to the dollar.

    That is our reality. We have now moved from paying N700m on the IUFMP loan when I came in, to now paying N3bn to service that loan monthly now.
    “Can we sleep when it is raining? Yes, because the IUFMP has basically tamed the issue of erosion. We have an Advanced Warning System installed in that place. But, my point is, to manage our exchange rate is not for me to determine in Oyo State. It is on the exclusive list. But whatever it is, we will do what is in the best interest of our state.”

    Governor Makinde, who also expressed his excitement that he is the governor of the state at the auspicious period of the state's 50th anniversary, which comes up in February 2025, said the state is embarking on key efforts to mark the epochal event.
    He maintained that the government is planning to purchase two aircraft for security surveillance and that this will be achieved before the 50th anniversary celebration on February 3, 2026, during which the government will celebrate the state and those who have contributed to make it what it is today.

    Earlier in his address, the Speaker of the Oyo State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon. Adebo Ogundoyin, appreciated the governor for prioritising the welfare of the workers and for approving the recruitment of 181 new staff for the Oyo State House of Assembly, among other developments.

    He assured the citizens that the 10th Assembly remained committed to delivering quality legislation, robust oversight and responsive representation with sincerity, diligence, and accountability.

    Also speaking, House Assembly members, including the Deputy Speaker, Hon. Mohammed Fadeyi, Majority Leader, Hon. Sanjo Adedoyin, Hon. Gabriel Babajide, Hon. Gbenga Oyekola, Hon. Dele Adeola and Hon. Peter Ojedokun, among others, lauded Governor Makinde for his people-oriented leadership.

    They all pointed out other areas they would want the government to focus its attention in the coming months, including the resuscitation of LAUTECH Teaching Hospital Annex in Oyo, rural roads in other zones of the state, education and health infrastructure, among others.

    The event had in attendance former deputy governor and PDP Deputy National Chairman (South), Ambassador Taofeek Arapaja; former deputy governors, Engr Hamid Gbadamosi and Barr. Hazeem Gbolarumi; wife of a former Governor, Chief Mrs Mutiat Ladoja; Chief Judge of Oyo State, Justice Iyabo Yerima; Secretary to the State Government, Prof Olanike Adeyemo; Chief of Staff, Otunba Segun Ogunwuyi; and Head of Service, Mrs Olubunmi Oni, mni.

    Others were Commissioners, Chairmen of Boards and Agencies, Chairmen of local governments councils, traditional rulers, PDP leaders and religious leaders, among other dignitaries.
    We're growing Oyo's economy, repositioning state as investment destination- Makinde, Explains Govt House project Oyo State governor, 'Seyi Makinde, has reiterated his administration's commitment to building a resilient economy, improving the quality of life for the people and securing the future for generations to come. The governor said this on Friday while presenting a State of the State Address, held at the Oyo State House of Assembly Complex, Secretariat, Agodi, Ibadan. He noted that through several policies being implemented by the state government and its simple approach to solving complex governance issues, Oyo State has become an investment destination. Governor Makinde stressed that the government's efforts have yielded many positive results, including the designation of the Fasola Agribusiness Industrial Hub as Nigeria’s first agricultural transformation centre by the African Development Bank (AfDB), the ongoing construction of the Eruwa Agribusiness Industrial Hub and the admittance of Oyo State into the World Union of Wholesale Market, the first sub-national in Africa to achieve such feat. Others, the governor noted, are the ongoing upgrade of the Samuel Ladoke Akintola Airport, which first phase will be commissioned in October 2025, the fixing of the state's infrastructure deficit, with major arterial roads across the state, inner roads in Ibadan already done and dusted and the ongoing construction of 87 kilometres of rural roads under the Rural Access and Agricultural Marketing Project (RAAMP), while efforts are also on to complete the 48 kilometres Ido-Eruwa Road. Makinde also reiterated that the fixing of inner roads will continue in the coming months, with Ogbomoso and Oyo zones set to become the next ports of call. He declared that the administration would not relent until the vision of making Oyo State a regional economic powerhouse, a cultural beacon, and a place where every citizen can thrive, is achieved. In the education and health care sectors, Governor Makinde assured residents of the state that his government would bridge the gap between rural and urban education and continue to upgrade education infrastructure so as to reduce deficit. He also promised to continue to provide healthcare programmes that would bring benefits to the people of the state. This was just as the governor addressed the controversy surrounding the planned reconstruction of the Oyo State Government House, explaining that the instability in foreign exchange, among other factors, is responsible for the perceived high cost of the project, which is expected to cover the reconstruction of buildings, roads and other ancillary facilities in the Government House and adjoining chalets. He said: “Yesterday, I trended for the wrong reason, because people were saying we want to spend N63bn to renovate the Government House. My answer to them is just to point our attention to one thing and I want you to listen to me attentively. “Before I came into office, the previous administration took a loan of $200m from the World Bank for the Ibadan Urban Flood Management Project (IUFMP). As of the time I came in on May 29, 2019, that dollar-denominated loan was in the book of Oyo State as N70bn, because a dollar to a Naira was around N350. We were paying about N700 million every month to service the loan. But we finished the IUFMP, though, before I came in, $100m had been spent and $50m committed. “This administration was supposed to spend N$50m to complete the projects but we did not spend the amount. We honoured all the commitments made by the previous administration, and returned $18m to the World Bank, which we didn’t spend. That was how we have managed the project prudently in Oyo State. But that is not even where I am going. “My point is, in 2019 in the Oyo State books, N70bn was what Oyo State owed. Fast-forward to today, the IUFMP project is completed without adding one inch of drainage to the project, but simply by the exchange rate movement, Oyo State today owes N320bn. This is because the N70bn calculated as N350 to one dollar in 2019 is now the same amount, but it is now calculated at about N1,540 to the dollar. That is our reality. We have now moved from paying N700m on the IUFMP loan when I came in, to now paying N3bn to service that loan monthly now. “Can we sleep when it is raining? Yes, because the IUFMP has basically tamed the issue of erosion. We have an Advanced Warning System installed in that place. But, my point is, to manage our exchange rate is not for me to determine in Oyo State. It is on the exclusive list. But whatever it is, we will do what is in the best interest of our state.” Governor Makinde, who also expressed his excitement that he is the governor of the state at the auspicious period of the state's 50th anniversary, which comes up in February 2025, said the state is embarking on key efforts to mark the epochal event. He maintained that the government is planning to purchase two aircraft for security surveillance and that this will be achieved before the 50th anniversary celebration on February 3, 2026, during which the government will celebrate the state and those who have contributed to make it what it is today. Earlier in his address, the Speaker of the Oyo State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon. Adebo Ogundoyin, appreciated the governor for prioritising the welfare of the workers and for approving the recruitment of 181 new staff for the Oyo State House of Assembly, among other developments. He assured the citizens that the 10th Assembly remained committed to delivering quality legislation, robust oversight and responsive representation with sincerity, diligence, and accountability. Also speaking, House Assembly members, including the Deputy Speaker, Hon. Mohammed Fadeyi, Majority Leader, Hon. Sanjo Adedoyin, Hon. Gabriel Babajide, Hon. Gbenga Oyekola, Hon. Dele Adeola and Hon. Peter Ojedokun, among others, lauded Governor Makinde for his people-oriented leadership. They all pointed out other areas they would want the government to focus its attention in the coming months, including the resuscitation of LAUTECH Teaching Hospital Annex in Oyo, rural roads in other zones of the state, education and health infrastructure, among others. The event had in attendance former deputy governor and PDP Deputy National Chairman (South), Ambassador Taofeek Arapaja; former deputy governors, Engr Hamid Gbadamosi and Barr. Hazeem Gbolarumi; wife of a former Governor, Chief Mrs Mutiat Ladoja; Chief Judge of Oyo State, Justice Iyabo Yerima; Secretary to the State Government, Prof Olanike Adeyemo; Chief of Staff, Otunba Segun Ogunwuyi; and Head of Service, Mrs Olubunmi Oni, mni. Others were Commissioners, Chairmen of Boards and Agencies, Chairmen of local governments councils, traditional rulers, PDP leaders and religious leaders, among other dignitaries.
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  • FG CLOSES CASE AGAINST KANU

    The Federal Government has officially closed its case against Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), after presenting its fifth and final witness at the Federal High Court in Abuja.

    Kanu is facing an eight-count charge of terrorism, but the case took an unexpected turn when the final prosecution witness — a Department of State Services (DSS) officer identified only as Mr. EEE — admitted under cross-examination that he had never investigated Kanu directly.

    Mr. EEE, who works with the DSS in Abuja, told the court he only knew of Kanu through the media and had never met him. He said his role was limited to gathering reports on events in the southern region during the 2020–2021 EndSARS protests.

    According to him, those reports showed that 128 police officers, 37 soldiers, and 10 DSS operatives were killed, while 164 police stations and 19 INEC offices were destroyed. However, he admitted under questioning that:

    * He was not involved in investigating any specific crimes linked to Kanu;
    * He had no information tying IPOB to events in Lagos, Ibadan, or Ile-Ife;
    * He was unaware of the Lagos State Judicial Panel report on EndSARS, which did not implicate IPOB in the violence.

    Following his testimony, government lawyers said they had presented enough evidence and would close their case.

    Kanu’s lawyer, Kanu Agabi, responded by announcing plans to file a “no-case submission” — a legal argument that the prosecution has not provided sufficient evidence to continue the trial. He requested 14 days from 24th June to prepare the filing.

    Justice James Omotosho granted both sides 14 days each to file their final written addresses and adjourned the case until 18 July 2025 for the adoption of those submissions.

    The trial continues to draw national attention, with critics questioning the strength of the prosecution’s case and supporters of Kanu claiming the charges are politically motivated.
    FG CLOSES CASE AGAINST KANU The Federal Government has officially closed its case against Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), after presenting its fifth and final witness at the Federal High Court in Abuja. Kanu is facing an eight-count charge of terrorism, but the case took an unexpected turn when the final prosecution witness — a Department of State Services (DSS) officer identified only as Mr. EEE — admitted under cross-examination that he had never investigated Kanu directly. Mr. EEE, who works with the DSS in Abuja, told the court he only knew of Kanu through the media and had never met him. He said his role was limited to gathering reports on events in the southern region during the 2020–2021 EndSARS protests. According to him, those reports showed that 128 police officers, 37 soldiers, and 10 DSS operatives were killed, while 164 police stations and 19 INEC offices were destroyed. However, he admitted under questioning that: * He was not involved in investigating any specific crimes linked to Kanu; * He had no information tying IPOB to events in Lagos, Ibadan, or Ile-Ife; * He was unaware of the Lagos State Judicial Panel report on EndSARS, which did not implicate IPOB in the violence. Following his testimony, government lawyers said they had presented enough evidence and would close their case. Kanu’s lawyer, Kanu Agabi, responded by announcing plans to file a “no-case submission” — a legal argument that the prosecution has not provided sufficient evidence to continue the trial. He requested 14 days from 24th June to prepare the filing. Justice James Omotosho granted both sides 14 days each to file their final written addresses and adjourned the case until 18 July 2025 for the adoption of those submissions. The trial continues to draw national attention, with critics questioning the strength of the prosecution’s case and supporters of Kanu claiming the charges are politically motivated.
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  • Nigeria’s Defence Chief Proposes Fenc!ng Borders To Curb Insecur!ty

    The Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), General Christopher Musa, has advocated fencing borders to curtail movement of T£rror!sts and curtail other trans­border cr!mes.

    He said this when he deliv­ered a keynote address at the in­augural Voice of Nigeria (VON) security summit with the theme, ‘Renewed Hope Agenda: Citi­zens’ Engagement and National Security’, in Abuja
    Nigeria’s Defence Chief Proposes Fenc!ng Borders To Curb Insecur!ty The Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), General Christopher Musa, has advocated fencing borders to curtail movement of T£rror!sts and curtail other trans­border cr!mes. He said this when he deliv­ered a keynote address at the in­augural Voice of Nigeria (VON) security summit with the theme, ‘Renewed Hope Agenda: Citi­zens’ Engagement and National Security’, in Abuja
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  • Let me share this here.

    If this incident that happened a few hours ago.

    I wasn’t supposed to stop.

    But I did.

    There was chaos just ahead of the supermarket gate somewhere in Surulere.

    A black Toyota Corolla was surrounded by three LASTMA officials.

    The driver, mid-40s, shirt soaked in sweat, kept pacing between them.

    And something in his voice stopped me.

    "Please. Please just look inside the car. He is not even moving anymore. That’s my son. He is sick, he is very sick. We were going to the hospital. I only stepped in to grab his medication. I was gone for just five minutes."

    One of the officials shook his head like he’d heard it a thousand times.

    "You people always have stories. Why park where you're not supposed to? You want us to lose our job?"

    Another officer barked.

    "Oga, if you don’t bring ₦70,000 now, this car is going to the yard. And from there? You’ll need close to ₦400,000 to bail it."

    The man reached out. Not to touch them. Just to plead.
    They stepped back like he carried something contagious.

    "I swear I’m not lying. Please. He has severe asthma. I forgot the nebulizer at home. I was rushing to the hospital, Faithview, just ten minutes from here. Look at him! You have a child, right? Please, have sympathy."

    That was when I looked.

    The boy,maybe ten, was in the backseat, his small frame slumped against the door, eyes half-closed. His chest heaved in rapid spasms, every breath sounding like gravel grinding in a pipe.

    His fingers trembled. His lips were turning dark.

    So I stepped forward.

    "What’s wrong with him?"

    The father looked at me, disoriented.

    "Asthma. It started an hour ago. He had a mild attack in the morning, but it’s worsening fast. I was going to get him treated and just stopped for a refill. Please, sir… help me talk to them."

    I tried to talk to the LASTMA officers but they ignored me so I turned back to the man.

    "Try and sort this with them, let me take him to the hospital."

    His eyes widened.

    "You…?”

    "We don't have another option and there is no time. He needs oxygen. Now.”

    He hesitated.

    "You’re a stranger."

    "I am. But your son is dying.”

    He looked back at the boy.

    Then at me.

    He obviously saw that there was no other option left.

    His lips trembled.

    "Give me your number. Please.”

    I gave him mine.

    And he gave me his.

    I opened the door and gently lifted the boy from the backseat.

    He was warm. Burning. His eyes barely focused on mine.

    As I placed him in my car, the father shouted behind me.

    "Please, call me the moment you get there. Please don’t let anything happen to him!"

    I nodded once. Then I got into the car and quickly drove off.

    The hospital wasn’t crowded, I guess because it was a private one.

    I rushed in carrying the boy in both arms.

    "Emergency! Severe asthma attack. Ten-year-old boy!"

    The receptionist stood up so fast her chair hit the wall.

    She shouted.

    "Treatment Room Two! Get Doctor Okafor!"

    While I tried to fill the form I was given, two nurses rushed and took the boy, placed him on the oxygen tank, connected a nebulizer, and began checking vitals.

    One of the nurses murmured.

    "He’s tachypneic. Respiration over 40. Oxygen saturation 82%."

    The doctor said as he rushed in still zipping his scrubs.

    "Get the hydrocortisone ready. Nebulize him every 20 minutes. Keep him on oxygen. If he doesn’t stabilize, we’re moving to adrenaline injection.”

    I stood there.

    My heart pounding.

    This wasn’t my child.

    But it felt like my fight.

    Minutes passed.

    Then the doctor came out.

    “He is stable."

    He said, wiping his forehead.

    "That was close. He’ll be okay, but he needs to stay a few hours for monitoring.”

    I thanked him so much.

    The bill came.

    ₦89,000.

    I paid with my debit card.

    I stepped outside and called the boy’s father.

    He picked on the first ring.

    “Hello! Sir, please, is he?"

    "He is stable. He is getting oxygen and treatment.”

    A pause.

    Then I heard the man begin to cry. Softly.

    I didn’t speak. I let him.

    But he wasn’t done.

    “They’ve taken the car. They refused to wait. I was still begging when the towing truck came. They said the 70K grace was over. I’m at their yard in Iponri now. Sir… they’re asking for ₦385,000 to release my car.”

    I looked at the hospital door behind me.

    Then at the sky.

    Then back to my car.

    I didn't know what to say to him.

    But all I found myself saying was.

    "I’m coming.”

    And I meant it.

    He couldn't believe his ears.

    I arrived at the LASTMA office just before 3PM.

    The weather was warm, no sun, but the heat stuck to my skin like wet cloth.

    I found him standing by a corner fence, head down, fingers digging into his scalp.

    He was tired and confused.

    So I said to him gently.

    "Sir."

    He looked up like someone coming out of a bad dream. His eyes were red, his face streaked with dry sweat and tears.

    He approached me nervously.

    His voice was hoarse.

    "My car… they have impounded it. Said I’ll pay ₦385,000. They even threatened to keep increasing the fine by day. That car is my only source of income. That's my office from where I make money to take care of my son and my wife. God, please, help me."

    I told him.

    "Stay calm. Nothing will happen to your car, you'll get it back, I believe."

    He nodded slowly.

    "They have been laughing at me. One said, ‘Your son is sick? Na why you go break law? You think say we be Red Cross?’"

    I felt something cold stir in my chest.

    Not rage.

    Just sadness.

    I said to him.

    "Please, come with me."

    We walked into the building.

    Inside, it smelled of engine oil, sweat, and indifference.

    I approached the counter.

    “Good afternoon. I’d like to speak with your superior officer. It’s regarding a car that was impounded a few hours ago, black Toyota Corolla.”

    A thickset officer with bloodshot eyes looked up at me. "Eeyyaa who you be? Police or Army? Abeg everything you want to say, say it here. We don’t have time.”

    I responded calmly but firm.

    "I was the one who rushed the sick boy to the hospital, I have the hospital card and bill here. He was in the back seat of that vehicle. That child would have died today if I didn’t act."

    He scoffed.

    "And so? Good for him. E mean say we no go do our job?”

    "No one said that but this man was in an emergency. All he asked was a few more minutes. Instead, you people want to extort him. Now you’re billing him almost ₦400,000. This isn’t traffic enforcement. It’s cruelty."

    Another officer chimed in.

    "Oga, the car don enter system. Na only Oga inside go override am. And e no dey see everybody."

    "Then let him see me."

    "As governor of Lagos State or as who?"

    Silence.

    I stood my ground.

    "Get your superior. I’ll wait.”

    The minutes crawled.

    The father stood beside me like a child awaiting judgment.

    Fortunately, a senior officer emerged.

    Bald, tall, stern. I saw his name tag.

    He sized me up before he said.

    "What’s the problem?”

    I stepped forward and told the story. From the moment I saw the boy wheezing in the back seat, to carrying him into the hospital, to paying the ₦89,000 hospital bill, to returning only to find the car had been towed.

    The Commander listened without interruption. Then he asked a single question:

    “Do you have proof the boy was sick?”

    I handed him the hospital bill and the case card. He studied them for a long moment.

    Then something shifted in his eyes.

    He looked at the officers behind the desk.

    "You towed the vehicle knowing a child was dying in it?"

    "Sir, the man parked in a no-parking."

    "I didn’t ask that. I asked if you knew a child was in distress in the car."

    No one answered.

    He sighed.

    "Release the car. Immediately. Remove the fine. No man should suffer for saving his own son’s life. And you."

    He turned to the father.

    "You’re lucky someone still has a conscience in this country. Thank this guy for stepping in."

    The man fell to his knees.

    "Thank you. Thank you, sir… I swear, thank you…"

    When the superior left, he turned to me.

    And his voice broke.

    "You didn’t know me. Yet you rushed my son to the hospital. You paid for his treatment. And now, you’re standing here fighting for me when I couldn’t even fight for myself."

    I helped him to his feet.

    He opened his wallet and tried to hand me some money.

    "I don’t have much. Please… even if it’s part of what you spent..."

    I shook my head.

    "Your son is breathing. That’s enough. Please, pick your car and go and see him. God bless you."

    He looked at me, eyes trembling.

    "Why? Why would you do this for me?"

    I didn’t know how to answer that.

    So I said the only thing I truly believed.

    "Because someone should."

    As we walked out into the fading light, I handed him a folded note.

    It was the hospital’s follow-up card. His son had to return in two days for further tests.

    "I already booked the appointment. He’ll need more care. Don’t miss it."

    He opened it slowly, then looked back at me, his lips parted, but no words came.

    Only tears.

    Only silence.

    And behind us, the LASTMA officers watched.

    They were quiet now. Maybe even ashamed.

    But I left there happy and fulfilled.

    You could do the same.

    And the world will be a better place.

    .

    Chiemelie Kyrian Offor
    June 17, 2025
    Let me share this here. If this incident that happened a few hours ago. I wasn’t supposed to stop. But I did. There was chaos just ahead of the supermarket gate somewhere in Surulere. A black Toyota Corolla was surrounded by three LASTMA officials. The driver, mid-40s, shirt soaked in sweat, kept pacing between them. And something in his voice stopped me. "Please. Please just look inside the car. He is not even moving anymore. That’s my son. He is sick, he is very sick. We were going to the hospital. I only stepped in to grab his medication. I was gone for just five minutes." One of the officials shook his head like he’d heard it a thousand times. "You people always have stories. Why park where you're not supposed to? You want us to lose our job?" Another officer barked. "Oga, if you don’t bring ₦70,000 now, this car is going to the yard. And from there? You’ll need close to ₦400,000 to bail it." The man reached out. Not to touch them. Just to plead. They stepped back like he carried something contagious. "I swear I’m not lying. Please. He has severe asthma. I forgot the nebulizer at home. I was rushing to the hospital, Faithview, just ten minutes from here. Look at him! You have a child, right? Please, have sympathy." That was when I looked. The boy,maybe ten, was in the backseat, his small frame slumped against the door, eyes half-closed. His chest heaved in rapid spasms, every breath sounding like gravel grinding in a pipe. His fingers trembled. His lips were turning dark. So I stepped forward. "What’s wrong with him?" The father looked at me, disoriented. "Asthma. It started an hour ago. He had a mild attack in the morning, but it’s worsening fast. I was going to get him treated and just stopped for a refill. Please, sir… help me talk to them." I tried to talk to the LASTMA officers but they ignored me so I turned back to the man. "Try and sort this with them, let me take him to the hospital." His eyes widened. "You…?” "We don't have another option and there is no time. He needs oxygen. Now.” He hesitated. "You’re a stranger." "I am. But your son is dying.” He looked back at the boy. Then at me. He obviously saw that there was no other option left. His lips trembled. "Give me your number. Please.” I gave him mine. And he gave me his. I opened the door and gently lifted the boy from the backseat. He was warm. Burning. His eyes barely focused on mine. As I placed him in my car, the father shouted behind me. "Please, call me the moment you get there. Please don’t let anything happen to him!" I nodded once. Then I got into the car and quickly drove off. The hospital wasn’t crowded, I guess because it was a private one. I rushed in carrying the boy in both arms. "Emergency! Severe asthma attack. Ten-year-old boy!" The receptionist stood up so fast her chair hit the wall. She shouted. "Treatment Room Two! Get Doctor Okafor!" While I tried to fill the form I was given, two nurses rushed and took the boy, placed him on the oxygen tank, connected a nebulizer, and began checking vitals. One of the nurses murmured. "He’s tachypneic. Respiration over 40. Oxygen saturation 82%." The doctor said as he rushed in still zipping his scrubs. "Get the hydrocortisone ready. Nebulize him every 20 minutes. Keep him on oxygen. If he doesn’t stabilize, we’re moving to adrenaline injection.” I stood there. My heart pounding. This wasn’t my child. But it felt like my fight. Minutes passed. Then the doctor came out. “He is stable." He said, wiping his forehead. "That was close. He’ll be okay, but he needs to stay a few hours for monitoring.” I thanked him so much. The bill came. ₦89,000. I paid with my debit card. I stepped outside and called the boy’s father. He picked on the first ring. “Hello! Sir, please, is he?" "He is stable. He is getting oxygen and treatment.” A pause. Then I heard the man begin to cry. Softly. I didn’t speak. I let him. But he wasn’t done. “They’ve taken the car. They refused to wait. I was still begging when the towing truck came. They said the 70K grace was over. I’m at their yard in Iponri now. Sir… they’re asking for ₦385,000 to release my car.” I looked at the hospital door behind me. Then at the sky. Then back to my car. I didn't know what to say to him. But all I found myself saying was. "I’m coming.” And I meant it. He couldn't believe his ears. I arrived at the LASTMA office just before 3PM. The weather was warm, no sun, but the heat stuck to my skin like wet cloth. I found him standing by a corner fence, head down, fingers digging into his scalp. He was tired and confused. So I said to him gently. "Sir." He looked up like someone coming out of a bad dream. His eyes were red, his face streaked with dry sweat and tears. He approached me nervously. His voice was hoarse. "My car… they have impounded it. Said I’ll pay ₦385,000. They even threatened to keep increasing the fine by day. That car is my only source of income. That's my office from where I make money to take care of my son and my wife. God, please, help me." I told him. "Stay calm. Nothing will happen to your car, you'll get it back, I believe." He nodded slowly. "They have been laughing at me. One said, ‘Your son is sick? Na why you go break law? You think say we be Red Cross?’" I felt something cold stir in my chest. Not rage. Just sadness. I said to him. "Please, come with me." We walked into the building. Inside, it smelled of engine oil, sweat, and indifference. I approached the counter. “Good afternoon. I’d like to speak with your superior officer. It’s regarding a car that was impounded a few hours ago, black Toyota Corolla.” A thickset officer with bloodshot eyes looked up at me. "Eeyyaa who you be? Police or Army? Abeg everything you want to say, say it here. We don’t have time.” I responded calmly but firm. "I was the one who rushed the sick boy to the hospital, I have the hospital card and bill here. He was in the back seat of that vehicle. That child would have died today if I didn’t act." He scoffed. "And so? Good for him. E mean say we no go do our job?” "No one said that but this man was in an emergency. All he asked was a few more minutes. Instead, you people want to extort him. Now you’re billing him almost ₦400,000. This isn’t traffic enforcement. It’s cruelty." Another officer chimed in. "Oga, the car don enter system. Na only Oga inside go override am. And e no dey see everybody." "Then let him see me." "As governor of Lagos State or as who?" Silence. I stood my ground. "Get your superior. I’ll wait.” The minutes crawled. The father stood beside me like a child awaiting judgment. Fortunately, a senior officer emerged. Bald, tall, stern. I saw his name tag. He sized me up before he said. "What’s the problem?” I stepped forward and told the story. From the moment I saw the boy wheezing in the back seat, to carrying him into the hospital, to paying the ₦89,000 hospital bill, to returning only to find the car had been towed. The Commander listened without interruption. Then he asked a single question: “Do you have proof the boy was sick?” I handed him the hospital bill and the case card. He studied them for a long moment. Then something shifted in his eyes. He looked at the officers behind the desk. "You towed the vehicle knowing a child was dying in it?" "Sir, the man parked in a no-parking." "I didn’t ask that. I asked if you knew a child was in distress in the car." No one answered. He sighed. "Release the car. Immediately. Remove the fine. No man should suffer for saving his own son’s life. And you." He turned to the father. "You’re lucky someone still has a conscience in this country. Thank this guy for stepping in." The man fell to his knees. "Thank you. Thank you, sir… I swear, thank you…" When the superior left, he turned to me. And his voice broke. "You didn’t know me. Yet you rushed my son to the hospital. You paid for his treatment. And now, you’re standing here fighting for me when I couldn’t even fight for myself." I helped him to his feet. He opened his wallet and tried to hand me some money. "I don’t have much. Please… even if it’s part of what you spent..." I shook my head. "Your son is breathing. That’s enough. Please, pick your car and go and see him. God bless you." He looked at me, eyes trembling. "Why? Why would you do this for me?" I didn’t know how to answer that. So I said the only thing I truly believed. "Because someone should." As we walked out into the fading light, I handed him a folded note. It was the hospital’s follow-up card. His son had to return in two days for further tests. "I already booked the appointment. He’ll need more care. Don’t miss it." He opened it slowly, then looked back at me, his lips parted, but no words came. Only tears. Only silence. And behind us, the LASTMA officers watched. They were quiet now. Maybe even ashamed. But I left there happy and fulfilled. You could do the same. And the world will be a better place. . Chiemelie Kyrian Offor June 17, 2025
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  • Money money money. The money matter is a very serious issue in the world today. Making money has caused a lot of people to loose their lives. Money has devastated and caused family to be separated. It has also caused some parents to mortgage their families or children because of agreement entered in fulfilment of getting the said money in an unauthorised ways. The question here is, is it mandatory to look for this money by all means? Or to do what is required in the rightful and Godly ways of getting this said money. What is your opinion viewers.
    Money money money. The money matter is a very serious issue in the world today. Making money has caused a lot of people to loose their lives. Money has devastated and caused family to be separated. It has also caused some parents to mortgage their families or children because of agreement entered in fulfilment of getting the said money in an unauthorised ways. The question here is, is it mandatory to look for this money by all means? Or to do what is required in the rightful and Godly ways of getting this said money. What is your opinion viewers.
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  • SEEDS OF DESTINY DAILY DEVOTIONAL GUIDE

    DATE: FRIDAY 20TH JUNE, 2025.

    TOPIC: FROM REJECTION TO ELEVATION

    SCRIPTURE: The stone which the builders refused is become the head stone of the corner. This is the LORD's doing; it is marvellous in our eyes. (Psalm 118:22-23)

    THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: There is distinction in the midst of rejection.

    I met a man some years ago. At the time I met him, he had married three times, but all the wives left him one after another because they all complained of one thing – a terrible odour around him. But the interesting thing was that no one else around him could perceive the odour. He even sat around me and there was no odour.

    He was a highly placed person in a financial institution but suddenly crashed down to zero. In fact he was putting on slippers to my office.
    I gave him some messages and told him to listen to them and come back for prayers, but he told me he had no electronic device on which to listen to the messages; he had no tape player.

    After that encounter, God repackaged and transformed his life. One day, I was at the Abuja airport, and someone was walking towards me in a majestic dark suit. He looked at me and said, “Pastor, good afternoon.” I said, “Good afternoon, Sir.” He said, “Pastor, you cannot recognize me?”, I looked again and exclaimed, “Wow! I can recognize you now. What happened?” I asked. He said, “It is a long story Sir.” I said, “Can we drive together in my car so you can tell me the story.” And he said, “My driver is waiting for me.”

    That was a man who wore ordinary slippers to my office, driverless, carless. He said, “God changed my story after you prayed with me.”
    Beloved, I don’t care about the rejection you have suffered so far. There is an unction for rejection. There is distinction in the midst of rejection.

    Don’t kill yourself because you suffered rejection because God is attracted to the rejected. People may have looked down on you, and concluded your future from your face, not knowing that a man’s future is not on his face. Your present circumstance does not confirm your future destination.

    Remember this: There is distinction in the midst of rejection.

    ASSIGNMENT(S):
    1. Acknowledge the fact that God has a great plan for you.

    2. Decide to be joyful despite what the enemy tries to throw at you.

    3. Build an unbroken fellowship with the Holy Spirit.

    4. Never give up!

    PRAYER: Father, thank You for Your unfailing love for me. I receive acceptance from You Lord. I refuse to be rejected. Every spell of rejection around me is broken in the Name of Jesus Christ.

    FOR FURTHER UNDERSTANDING, GET THIS MESSAGE: Thieves of Joy

    DAILY BIBLE READING: Psalm 127-129

    QUOTE: Inside every frustration is the revelation of the Almightiness of God. Culled from the Book, Riding the Storms of Life by Dr Paul Enenche.

    AMAZING FACT: Octopuses can change color to blend into their surroundings, thanks to specialized cells called chromatophores.

    PROPHETIC DECLARATION/WORD: The Lord release on you the unction to turn your rejection into distinction today, in Jesus’ Name.

    BY DR. PASTOR PAUL ENENCHE.
    🍒🔥SEEDS OF DESTINY DAILY DEVOTIONAL GUIDE DATE: FRIDAY 20TH JUNE, 2025. TOPIC: FROM REJECTION TO ELEVATION SCRIPTURE: The stone which the builders refused is become the head stone of the corner. This is the LORD's doing; it is marvellous in our eyes. (Psalm 118:22-23) THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: There is distinction in the midst of rejection. I met a man some years ago. At the time I met him, he had married three times, but all the wives left him one after another because they all complained of one thing – a terrible odour around him. But the interesting thing was that no one else around him could perceive the odour. He even sat around me and there was no odour. He was a highly placed person in a financial institution but suddenly crashed down to zero. In fact he was putting on slippers to my office. I gave him some messages and told him to listen to them and come back for prayers, but he told me he had no electronic device on which to listen to the messages; he had no tape player. After that encounter, God repackaged and transformed his life. One day, I was at the Abuja airport, and someone was walking towards me in a majestic dark suit. He looked at me and said, “Pastor, good afternoon.” I said, “Good afternoon, Sir.” He said, “Pastor, you cannot recognize me?”, I looked again and exclaimed, “Wow! I can recognize you now. What happened?” I asked. He said, “It is a long story Sir.” I said, “Can we drive together in my car so you can tell me the story.” And he said, “My driver is waiting for me.” That was a man who wore ordinary slippers to my office, driverless, carless. He said, “God changed my story after you prayed with me.” Beloved, I don’t care about the rejection you have suffered so far. There is an unction for rejection. There is distinction in the midst of rejection. Don’t kill yourself because you suffered rejection because God is attracted to the rejected. People may have looked down on you, and concluded your future from your face, not knowing that a man’s future is not on his face. Your present circumstance does not confirm your future destination. Remember this: There is distinction in the midst of rejection. ASSIGNMENT(S): 1. Acknowledge the fact that God has a great plan for you. 2. Decide to be joyful despite what the enemy tries to throw at you. 3. Build an unbroken fellowship with the Holy Spirit. 4. Never give up! PRAYER: Father, thank You for Your unfailing love for me. I receive acceptance from You Lord. I refuse to be rejected. Every spell of rejection around me is broken in the Name of Jesus Christ. FOR FURTHER UNDERSTANDING, GET THIS MESSAGE: Thieves of Joy DAILY BIBLE READING: Psalm 127-129 QUOTE: Inside every frustration is the revelation of the Almightiness of God. Culled from the Book, Riding the Storms of Life by Dr Paul Enenche. AMAZING FACT: Octopuses can change color to blend into their surroundings, thanks to specialized cells called chromatophores. PROPHETIC DECLARATION/WORD: The Lord release on you the unction to turn your rejection into distinction today, in Jesus’ Name. BY DR. PASTOR PAUL ENENCHE.
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  • “She Slapped Me in Front of the Whole School Because I Couldn’t Pay My Fees.”
    15 Years Later, I Sponsored Her Retirement — And Paid Her Salary for Life.

    She humiliated me.
    Called me “a charity case.”
    Told me I’d never make it without my father’s name.

    But pain doesn’t always break you.
    Sometimes, it builds an empire with your name on the gate.

    From Broke Student to Multimillionaire — What He Did for the Teacher Who Once Publicly Shamed Him Left Everyone in Shock
    Written by Rosyworld CRN

    2008. Anambra, Nigeria.

    I owed ₦2,700 in school fees.
    My mother had sold all her jewelry.
    My uncle had stopped answering calls.

    One day during morning assembly, the principal announced:

    > “All students owing school fees — come forward!”

    We did.

    Then Mrs. Obasi, our economics teacher, pointed at me and shouted:

    > “Chijioke! You again? Third term, still owing?!

    What kind of poverty runs in your blood?”

    Before I could respond —
    She slapped me.

    In front of everyone.
    I stood there — broken.
    Laughed at. Shamed.

    That evening, I told my mother I wanted to drop out.

    She said:

    > “No. Even if I die, you must finish.”

    She started cleaning people’s compounds secretly to pay the fees.

    I passed.
    Graduated.
    Hustled.

    I sold recharge cards.
    Managed social media for businesses.
    Taught myself code from a borrowed phone.

    In 2020, I launched a fintech app.
    It grew fast.

    By 2023, I was worth more than ₦400 million.

    Then one day, I saw a GoFundMe post:

    “Please help. Retired teacher needs funds for eye surgery and basic needs.”

    It was Mrs. Obasi.

    People were commenting.
    Donating ₦1k, ₦2k…

    I said nothing.
    But I booked a flight.

    One week later… I knocked on her rusty gate.

    She opened it — frail, older, shocked.

    > “Do you remember me?” I asked.

    She squinted.

    > “You’re… Chijioke? Oh my God. My son, I’m so sorry for how I treated you.”

    I nodded.

    Then I handed her an envelope.

    Inside:

    Full payment for her surgery

    ₦5 million cheque

    A letter stating I would pay her ₦100k monthly for life.

    She collapsed.
    Neighbours gathered.

    I said:

    > “You beat me when I was poor.

    Now, let me bless you because I’m rich.”

    Today, I call it Healing with Honour.

    Because not every wound needs revenge.
    Some need a reminder that grace speaks louder than shame.

    From slapped… to celebrated.
    From “charity case”… to cheerful giver.
    From insulted boy… to investor in dignity.

    Follow Rosyworld CRN for more stories that prove:
    Even the people who hurt you… can one day benefit from your growth.
    “She Slapped Me in Front of the Whole School Because I Couldn’t Pay My Fees.” 15 Years Later, I Sponsored Her Retirement — And Paid Her Salary for Life. She humiliated me. Called me “a charity case.” Told me I’d never make it without my father’s name. But pain doesn’t always break you. Sometimes, it builds an empire with your name on the gate. From Broke Student to Multimillionaire — What He Did for the Teacher Who Once Publicly Shamed Him Left Everyone in Shock Written by Rosyworld CRN 2008. Anambra, Nigeria. I owed ₦2,700 in school fees. My mother had sold all her jewelry. My uncle had stopped answering calls. One day during morning assembly, the principal announced: > “All students owing school fees — come forward!” We did. Then Mrs. Obasi, our economics teacher, pointed at me and shouted: > “Chijioke! You again? Third term, still owing?! What kind of poverty runs in your blood?” Before I could respond — She slapped me. In front of everyone. I stood there — broken. Laughed at. Shamed. That evening, I told my mother I wanted to drop out. She said: > “No. Even if I die, you must finish.” She started cleaning people’s compounds secretly to pay the fees. I passed. Graduated. Hustled. I sold recharge cards. Managed social media for businesses. Taught myself code from a borrowed phone. In 2020, I launched a fintech app. It grew fast. By 2023, I was worth more than ₦400 million. Then one day, I saw a GoFundMe post: “Please help. Retired teacher needs funds for eye surgery and basic needs.” It was Mrs. Obasi. People were commenting. Donating ₦1k, ₦2k… I said nothing. But I booked a flight. One week later… I knocked on her rusty gate. She opened it — frail, older, shocked. > “Do you remember me?” I asked. She squinted. > “You’re… Chijioke? Oh my God. My son, I’m so sorry for how I treated you.” I nodded. Then I handed her an envelope. Inside: Full payment for her surgery ₦5 million cheque A letter stating I would pay her ₦100k monthly for life. She collapsed. Neighbours gathered. I said: > “You beat me when I was poor. Now, let me bless you because I’m rich.” Today, I call it Healing with Honour. Because not every wound needs revenge. Some need a reminder that grace speaks louder than shame. From slapped… to celebrated. From “charity case”… to cheerful giver. From insulted boy… to investor in dignity. Follow Rosyworld CRN for more stories that prove: Even the people who hurt you… can one day benefit from your growth.
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  • SHORT NOTE FOR MINISTERS GOING THROUGH SCANDALS IN MINISTRY!

    If you have never experience or survived scandals as a minister (Preacher or Singer) you're a baby minister

    Mind you, scandals are inevitable, you can never run away from it no matter how careful you're.

    They are coming from these sets of people

    Colleagues in ministry, Disconnected sons and daughters, Unsatisfied former church members, Enemies of the Gospel, Failed and struggling ministers, Ex lovers and envious friends etc.

    There are many channels of scandals in ministry, some are true but 80% are lies. Never you judge or conclude anyone because of scandals in MINISTRY, whether True or false, because you will understand when you experience too.

    If you are experiencing #Scandal plesse Face it and Quench it .

    Nothing new about scandals, silence is the only key to kill scandals. Don't be afraid or ashamed of scandals, people go talk but face your front. What #He_Said is more important than what #they_said

    The assignment is so important
    SHORT NOTE FOR MINISTERS GOING THROUGH SCANDALS IN MINISTRY! If you have never experience or survived scandals as a minister (Preacher or Singer) you're a baby minister 😁 Mind you, scandals are inevitable, you can never run away from it no matter how careful you're. They are coming from these sets of people👇 Colleagues in ministry, Disconnected sons and daughters, Unsatisfied former church members, Enemies of the Gospel, Failed and struggling ministers, Ex lovers and envious friends etc. There are many channels of scandals in ministry, some are true but 80% are lies. Never you judge or conclude anyone because of scandals in MINISTRY, whether True or false, because you will understand when you experience too. If you are experiencing #Scandal plesse Face it and Quench it . Nothing new about scandals, silence is the only key to kill scandals. Don't be afraid or ashamed of scandals, people go talk but face your front. What #He_Said is more important than what #they_said The assignment is so important
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  • "The most T£rrible thing I’ve ever done was slapp|ng my dad, and I really cri£d after doing It” – Femi Adebayo spill,
    As he explain what really transpired between him and Oga Bello

    Femi Said being an actor has made him do some t£rrible things such as slapp|ng his father, Adebayo Salami, aka Oga Bello.

    While speaking with Sunday Scoop, he said as an actor, one must be ready to do anything to play unb£lievable roles.

    He stated, “I have been presented with scripts where I had to ṣlàp my father on set and I must do it as an actor. He has slapp£d me on set too countless times. The moment we are acting, I don’t see him as my father anymore; I see him as a colleague and we need to interpret our roles very well.

    He trained me and he is my boss in the industry. He has taught me not to f£ar whenever I come across a bigger actor or someone like him on set. But the moment the director says stop, I prostrate to him and ap0logise.”
    "The most T£rrible thing I’ve ever done was slapp|ng my dad, and I really cri£d after doing It” – Femi Adebayo spill, As he explain what really transpired between him and Oga Bello Femi Said being an actor has made him do some t£rrible things such as slapp|ng his father, Adebayo Salami, aka Oga Bello. While speaking with Sunday Scoop, he said as an actor, one must be ready to do anything to play unb£lievable roles. He stated, “I have been presented with scripts where I had to ṣlàp my father on set and I must do it as an actor. He has slapp£d me on set too countless times. The moment we are acting, I don’t see him as my father anymore; I see him as a colleague and we need to interpret our roles very well. He trained me and he is my boss in the industry. He has taught me not to f£ar whenever I come across a bigger actor or someone like him on set. But the moment the director says stop, I prostrate to him and ap0logise.”
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  • I saw the post below. It touched the core of my soul. With people like Chiemelie Kyrian Offor, I am again hopeful for my country. God bless him

    ***Let me share this here.***

    Of this incident that happened a few hours ago.

    I wasn’t supposed to stop.

    But I did.

    There was chaos just ahead of the supermarket gate somewhere in Surulere.

    A black Toyota Corolla was surrounded by three LASTMA officials.

    The driver, mid-40s, shirt soaked in sweat, kept pacing between them.

    And something in his voice stopped me.

    "Please. Please just look inside the car. He is not even moving anymore. That’s my son. He is sick, he is very sick. We were going to the hospital. I only stepped in to grab his medication. I was gone for just five minutes."

    One of the officials shook his head like he’d heard it a thousand times.

    "You people always have stories. Why park where you're not supposed to? You want us to lose our job?"

    Another officer barked.

    "Oga, if you don’t bring ₦70,000 now, this car is going to the yard. And from there? You’ll need close to ₦400,000 to bail it."

    The man reached out. Not to touch them. Just to plead.
    They stepped back like he carried something contagious.

    "I swear I’m not lying. Please. He has severe asthma. I forgot the nebulizer at home. I was rushing to the hospital, Faithview, just ten minutes from here. Look at him! You have a child, right? Please, have sympathy."

    That was when I looked.

    The boy,maybe ten, was in the backseat, his small frame slumped against the door, eyes half-closed. His chest heaved in rapid spasms, every breath sounding like gravel grinding in a pipe.

    His fingers trembled. His lips were turning dark.

    So I stepped forward.

    "What’s wrong with him?"

    The father looked at me, disoriented.

    "Asthma. It started an hour ago. He had a mild attack in the morning, but it’s worsening fast. I was going to get him treated and just stopped for a refill. Please, sir… help me talk to them."

    I tried to talk to the LASTMA officers but they ignored me so I turned back to the man.

    "Try and sort this with them, let me take him to the hospital."

    His eyes widened.

    "You…?”

    "We don't have another option and there is no time. He needs oxygen. Now.”

    He hesitated.

    "You’re a stranger."

    "I am. But your son is dying.”

    He looked back at the boy.

    Then at me.

    He obviously saw that there was no other option left.

    His lips trembled.

    "Give me your number. Please.”

    I gave him mine.

    And he gave me his.

    I opened the door and gently lifted the boy from the backseat.

    He was warm. Burning. His eyes barely focused on mine.

    As I placed him in my car, the father shouted behind me.

    "Please, call me the moment you get there. Please don’t let anything happen to him!"

    I nodded once. Then I got into the car and quickly drove off.

    The hospital wasn’t crowded, I guess because it was a private one.

    I rushed in carrying the boy in both arms.

    "Emergency! Severe asthma attack. Ten-year-old boy!"

    The receptionist stood up so fast her chair hit the wall.

    She shouted.

    "Treatment Room Two! Get Doctor Okafor!"

    While I tried to fill the form I was given, two nurses rushed and took the boy, placed him on the oxygen tank, connected a nebulizer, and began checking vitals.

    One of the nurses murmured.

    "He’s tachypneic. Respiration over 40. Oxygen saturation 82%."

    The doctor said as he rushed in still zipping his scrubs.

    "Get the hydrocortisone ready. Nebulize him every 20 minutes. Keep him on oxygen. If he doesn’t stabilize, we’re moving to adrenaline injection.”

    I stood there.

    My heart pounding.

    This wasn’t my child.

    But it felt like my fight.

    Minutes passed.

    Then the doctor came out.

    “He is stable."

    He said, wiping his forehead.

    "That was close. He’ll be okay, but he needs to stay a few hours for monitoring.”

    I thanked him so much.

    The bill came.

    ₦89,000.

    I paid with my debit card.

    I stepped outside and called the boy’s father.

    He picked on the first ring.

    “Hello! Sir, please, is he?"

    "He is stable. He is getting oxygen and treatment.”

    A pause.

    Then I heard the man begin to cry. Softly.

    I didn’t speak. I let him.

    But he wasn’t done.

    “They’ve taken the car. They refused to wait. I was still begging when the towing truck came. They said the 70K grace was over. I’m at their yard in Iponri now. Sir… they’re asking for ₦385,000 to release my car.”

    I looked at the hospital door behind me.

    Then at the sky.

    Then back to my car.

    I didn't know what to say to him.

    But all I found myself saying was.

    "I’m coming.”

    And I meant it.

    He couldn't believe his ears.

    I arrived at the LASTMA office just before 3PM.

    The weather was warm, no sun, but the heat stuck to my skin like wet cloth.

    I found him standing by a corner fence, head down, fingers digging into his scalp.

    He was tired and confused.

    So I said to him gently.

    "Sir."

    He looked up like someone coming out of a bad dream. His eyes were red, his face streaked with dry sweat and tears.

    He approached me nervously.

    His voice was hoarse.

    "My car… they have impounded it. Said I’ll pay ₦385,000. They even threatened to keep increasing the fine by day. That car is my only source of income. That's my office from where I make money to take care of my son and my wife. God, please, help me."

    I told him.

    "Stay calm. Nothing will happen to your car, you'll get it back, I believe."

    He nodded slowly.

    "They have been laughing at me. One said, ‘Your son is sick? Na why you go break law? You think say we be Red Cross?’"

    I felt something cold stir in my chest.

    Not rage.

    Just sadness.

    I said to him.

    "Please, come with me."

    We walked into the building.

    Inside, it smelled of engine oil, sweat, and indifference.

    I approached the counter.

    “Good afternoon. I’d like to speak with your superior officer. It’s regarding a car that was impounded a few hours ago, black Toyota Corolla.”

    A thickset officer with bloodshot eyes looked up at me. "Eeyyaa who you be? Police or Army? Abeg everything you want to say, say it here. We don’t have time.”

    I responded calmly but firm.

    "I was the one who rushed the sick boy to the hospital, I have the hospital card and bill here. He was in the back seat of that vehicle. That child would have died today if I didn’t act."

    He scoffed.

    "And so? Good for him. E mean say we no go do our job?”

    "No one said that but this man was in an emergency. All he asked was a few more minutes. Instead, you people want to extort him. Now you’re billing him almost ₦400,000. This isn’t traffic enforcement. It’s cruelty."

    Another officer chimed in.

    "Oga, the car don enter system. Na only Oga inside go override am. And e no dey see everybody."

    "Then let him see me."

    "As governor of Lagos State or as who?"

    Silence.

    I stood my ground.

    "Get your superior. I’ll wait.”

    The minutes crawled.

    The father stood beside me like a child awaiting judgment.

    Fortunately, a senior officer emerged.

    Bald, tall, stern. I saw his name tag.

    He sized me up before he said.

    "What’s the problem?”

    I stepped forward and told the story. From the moment I saw the boy wheezing in the back seat, to carrying him into the hospital, to paying the ₦89,000 hospital bill, to returning only to find the car had been towed.

    The Commander listened without interruption. Then he asked a single question:

    “Do you have proof the boy was sick?”

    I handed him the hospital bill and the case card. He studied them for a long moment.

    Then something shifted in his eyes.

    He looked at the officers behind the desk.

    "You towed the vehicle knowing a child was dying in it?"

    "Sir, the man parked in a no-parking."

    "I didn’t ask that. I asked if you knew a child was in distress in the car."

    No one answered.

    He sighed.

    "Release the car. Immediately. Remove the fine. No man should suffer for saving his own son’s life. And you."

    He turned to the father.

    "You’re lucky someone still has a conscience in this country. Thank this guy for stepping in."

    The man fell to his knees.

    "Thank you. Thank you, sir… I swear, thank you…"

    When the superior left, he turned to me.

    And his voice broke.

    "You didn’t know me. Yet you rushed my son to the hospital. You paid for his treatment. And now, you’re standing here fighting for me when I couldn’t even fight for myself."

    I helped him to his feet.

    He opened his wallet and tried to hand me some money.

    "I don’t have much. Please… even if it’s part of what you spent..."

    I shook my head.

    "Your son is breathing. That’s enough. Please, pick your car and go and see him. God bless you."

    He looked at me, eyes trembling.

    "Why? Why would you do this for me?"

    I didn’t know how to answer that.

    So I said the only thing I truly believed.

    "Because someone should."

    As we walked out into the fading light, I handed him a folded note.

    It was the hospital’s follow-up card. His son had to return in two days for further tests.

    "I already booked the appointment. He’ll need more care. Don’t miss it."

    He opened it slowly, then looked back at me, his lips parted, but no words came.

    Only tears.

    Only silence.

    And behind us, the LASTMA officers watched.

    They were quiet now. Maybe even ashamed.

    But I left there happy and fulfilled.

    You could do the same.

    And the world will be a better place.

    .

    Chiemelie Kyrian Offor
    June 17, 2025
    I saw the post below. It touched the core of my soul. With people like Chiemelie Kyrian Offor, I am again hopeful for my country. God bless him🙏 ***Let me share this here.*** Of this incident that happened a few hours ago. I wasn’t supposed to stop. But I did. There was chaos just ahead of the supermarket gate somewhere in Surulere. A black Toyota Corolla was surrounded by three LASTMA officials. The driver, mid-40s, shirt soaked in sweat, kept pacing between them. And something in his voice stopped me. "Please. Please just look inside the car. He is not even moving anymore. That’s my son. He is sick, he is very sick. We were going to the hospital. I only stepped in to grab his medication. I was gone for just five minutes." One of the officials shook his head like he’d heard it a thousand times. "You people always have stories. Why park where you're not supposed to? You want us to lose our job?" Another officer barked. "Oga, if you don’t bring ₦70,000 now, this car is going to the yard. And from there? You’ll need close to ₦400,000 to bail it." The man reached out. Not to touch them. Just to plead. They stepped back like he carried something contagious. "I swear I’m not lying. Please. He has severe asthma. I forgot the nebulizer at home. I was rushing to the hospital, Faithview, just ten minutes from here. Look at him! You have a child, right? Please, have sympathy." That was when I looked. The boy,maybe ten, was in the backseat, his small frame slumped against the door, eyes half-closed. His chest heaved in rapid spasms, every breath sounding like gravel grinding in a pipe. His fingers trembled. His lips were turning dark. So I stepped forward. "What’s wrong with him?" The father looked at me, disoriented. "Asthma. It started an hour ago. He had a mild attack in the morning, but it’s worsening fast. I was going to get him treated and just stopped for a refill. Please, sir… help me talk to them." I tried to talk to the LASTMA officers but they ignored me so I turned back to the man. "Try and sort this with them, let me take him to the hospital." His eyes widened. "You…?” "We don't have another option and there is no time. He needs oxygen. Now.” He hesitated. "You’re a stranger." "I am. But your son is dying.” He looked back at the boy. Then at me. He obviously saw that there was no other option left. His lips trembled. "Give me your number. Please.” I gave him mine. And he gave me his. I opened the door and gently lifted the boy from the backseat. He was warm. Burning. His eyes barely focused on mine. As I placed him in my car, the father shouted behind me. "Please, call me the moment you get there. Please don’t let anything happen to him!" I nodded once. Then I got into the car and quickly drove off. The hospital wasn’t crowded, I guess because it was a private one. I rushed in carrying the boy in both arms. "Emergency! Severe asthma attack. Ten-year-old boy!" The receptionist stood up so fast her chair hit the wall. She shouted. "Treatment Room Two! Get Doctor Okafor!" While I tried to fill the form I was given, two nurses rushed and took the boy, placed him on the oxygen tank, connected a nebulizer, and began checking vitals. One of the nurses murmured. "He’s tachypneic. Respiration over 40. Oxygen saturation 82%." The doctor said as he rushed in still zipping his scrubs. "Get the hydrocortisone ready. Nebulize him every 20 minutes. Keep him on oxygen. If he doesn’t stabilize, we’re moving to adrenaline injection.” I stood there. My heart pounding. This wasn’t my child. But it felt like my fight. Minutes passed. Then the doctor came out. “He is stable." He said, wiping his forehead. "That was close. He’ll be okay, but he needs to stay a few hours for monitoring.” I thanked him so much. The bill came. ₦89,000. I paid with my debit card. I stepped outside and called the boy’s father. He picked on the first ring. “Hello! Sir, please, is he?" "He is stable. He is getting oxygen and treatment.” A pause. Then I heard the man begin to cry. Softly. I didn’t speak. I let him. But he wasn’t done. “They’ve taken the car. They refused to wait. I was still begging when the towing truck came. They said the 70K grace was over. I’m at their yard in Iponri now. Sir… they’re asking for ₦385,000 to release my car.” I looked at the hospital door behind me. Then at the sky. Then back to my car. I didn't know what to say to him. But all I found myself saying was. "I’m coming.” And I meant it. He couldn't believe his ears. I arrived at the LASTMA office just before 3PM. The weather was warm, no sun, but the heat stuck to my skin like wet cloth. I found him standing by a corner fence, head down, fingers digging into his scalp. He was tired and confused. So I said to him gently. "Sir." He looked up like someone coming out of a bad dream. His eyes were red, his face streaked with dry sweat and tears. He approached me nervously. His voice was hoarse. "My car… they have impounded it. Said I’ll pay ₦385,000. They even threatened to keep increasing the fine by day. That car is my only source of income. That's my office from where I make money to take care of my son and my wife. God, please, help me." I told him. "Stay calm. Nothing will happen to your car, you'll get it back, I believe." He nodded slowly. "They have been laughing at me. One said, ‘Your son is sick? Na why you go break law? You think say we be Red Cross?’" I felt something cold stir in my chest. Not rage. Just sadness. I said to him. "Please, come with me." We walked into the building. Inside, it smelled of engine oil, sweat, and indifference. I approached the counter. “Good afternoon. I’d like to speak with your superior officer. It’s regarding a car that was impounded a few hours ago, black Toyota Corolla.” A thickset officer with bloodshot eyes looked up at me. "Eeyyaa who you be? Police or Army? Abeg everything you want to say, say it here. We don’t have time.” I responded calmly but firm. "I was the one who rushed the sick boy to the hospital, I have the hospital card and bill here. He was in the back seat of that vehicle. That child would have died today if I didn’t act." He scoffed. "And so? Good for him. E mean say we no go do our job?” "No one said that but this man was in an emergency. All he asked was a few more minutes. Instead, you people want to extort him. Now you’re billing him almost ₦400,000. This isn’t traffic enforcement. It’s cruelty." Another officer chimed in. "Oga, the car don enter system. Na only Oga inside go override am. And e no dey see everybody." "Then let him see me." "As governor of Lagos State or as who?" Silence. I stood my ground. "Get your superior. I’ll wait.” The minutes crawled. The father stood beside me like a child awaiting judgment. Fortunately, a senior officer emerged. Bald, tall, stern. I saw his name tag. He sized me up before he said. "What’s the problem?” I stepped forward and told the story. From the moment I saw the boy wheezing in the back seat, to carrying him into the hospital, to paying the ₦89,000 hospital bill, to returning only to find the car had been towed. The Commander listened without interruption. Then he asked a single question: “Do you have proof the boy was sick?” I handed him the hospital bill and the case card. He studied them for a long moment. Then something shifted in his eyes. He looked at the officers behind the desk. "You towed the vehicle knowing a child was dying in it?" "Sir, the man parked in a no-parking." "I didn’t ask that. I asked if you knew a child was in distress in the car." No one answered. He sighed. "Release the car. Immediately. Remove the fine. No man should suffer for saving his own son’s life. And you." He turned to the father. "You’re lucky someone still has a conscience in this country. Thank this guy for stepping in." The man fell to his knees. "Thank you. Thank you, sir… I swear, thank you…" When the superior left, he turned to me. And his voice broke. "You didn’t know me. Yet you rushed my son to the hospital. You paid for his treatment. And now, you’re standing here fighting for me when I couldn’t even fight for myself." I helped him to his feet. He opened his wallet and tried to hand me some money. "I don’t have much. Please… even if it’s part of what you spent..." I shook my head. "Your son is breathing. That’s enough. Please, pick your car and go and see him. God bless you." He looked at me, eyes trembling. "Why? Why would you do this for me?" I didn’t know how to answer that. So I said the only thing I truly believed. "Because someone should." As we walked out into the fading light, I handed him a folded note. It was the hospital’s follow-up card. His son had to return in two days for further tests. "I already booked the appointment. He’ll need more care. Don’t miss it." He opened it slowly, then looked back at me, his lips parted, but no words came. Only tears. Only silence. And behind us, the LASTMA officers watched. They were quiet now. Maybe even ashamed. But I left there happy and fulfilled. You could do the same. And the world will be a better place. . Chiemelie Kyrian Offor June 17, 2025
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  • THE DEVIL'S MISTRESS
    PART 15
    Nine months. The city of Lagos breathed, pulsed, and roared beneath a relentless sun, oblivious to the silent war waged within the gilded cage of Sebastian Scar’s world. Time had scarred over the raw wound of the poisoning, leaving a thick, knotted tissue of suspicion, bitterness, and a haunting absence.
    Scar stood at the penthouse window, a tumbler of untouched whiskey in his hand. The view was the same – the sprawling, vibrant chaos of the city he commanded. Yet, it felt alien, muted. Amanda flitted around the living room behind him, the sharp click of her designer heels a constant, grating counterpoint to the silence in his soul. She’d embedded herself like a persistent thorn, a constant presence draped in silks and poisonous concern. She managed his schedule, filtered information, played the devoted caretaker – the role of the wronged fiancée finally vindicated. But her attempts to reignite their past, to seduce him, were met with a cold, impenetrable wall. He tolerated her, used her efficiency, but the chamber of his heart she once occupied was now a locked vault filled only with echoes of betrayal and the phantom scent of jasmine.
    Jessica. The name was a ghost that walked the halls. His men – the best trackers, the most connected shadows in the city – had turned Lagos upside down. Rivers dredged, slums combed, borders watched, informants squeezed dry. Nothing. Not a whisper, not a footprint. She and Ghost had vanished as if swallowed by the earth. The frustration was a constant, low hum beneath his rage. He didn’t just want her dead anymore; a deeper, more torturous need had taken root. He needed to *see* her. To look into the eyes he’d once drowned in and demand, with the last breath she’d ever draw, *“Why?”* Why shatter the sanctuary he’d built for them? Why poison the hand that gave her everything? Why betray a love that had thawed his frozen heart? The unanswered question festered, poisoning his days more insidiously than the aconite ever had.
    Her family remained a confusing testament to that shattered past. Still under house arrest in the mansion he’d gifted them, guarded by men whose loyalty was now solely to him. Amanda railed against it constantly. "They know something, Sebastian! They’re her blood! They’re laughing at you, hiding her!" she’d hiss, her eyes flashing with malice. But Scar had held firm. "They stay. Unharmed." It was a command born not of mercy, but of a grim, unresolved thread. Harming them felt like closing a door he wasn’t ready to shut, admitting a finality he couldn’t face. Were they hostages for a ghost? Or a lingering, irrational hope that their presence might somehow draw her out? He didn’t know anymore.
    Ghost… his betrayal stung with a unique venom. A man forged in the same fires of loyalty, whose silence had always been his strength. He’d reappeared weeks after the poisoning, materializing one night in Scar’s study as if stepping from a shadow. His story was chillingly plausible, delivered with his usual impassive calm. He’d tracked a lead on a rival faction potentially linked to the poison, deep into the Niger Delta. Communications compromised. Ambushed. Left for dead. He’d only just recovered. He vehemently denied helping Jessica escape. "Boss, I would die before betraying you. She must have had other help, or she was far more resourceful than we knew. I failed you. I should have been there." The explanation was tight, logical. Scar had stared into Ghost’s unreadable eyes, searching for a flicker of deceit. He found none. But the absence of proof wasn’t proof of innocence, and a seed of doubt, carefully nurtured by Amanda’s whispers, remained. Ghost was reinstated, his duties curtailed, watched.
    Meanwhile, miles away yet impossibly close, hidden in a modest, unremarkable apartment building just five streets from the towering opulence of Scar’s villa, Jessica lived in the fragile eye of the storm. Ghost’s gamble had been audacious. Bringing her back to the lion’s den, to a safehouse nestled within the very territory crawling with men hunting her. It was a move born of necessity and audacious strategy – the last place Scar would think to look.
    Jessica’s world was confined to three small rooms. The weight she carried now wasn't just fear, but the profound, undeniable swell of her pregnancy. Eight months. Her body was a landscape of taut skin, aching bones, and the ceaseless, miraculous flutter of life within. Chioma, Ghost’s fiercely protective fiancée, was her anchor, her midwife, her confidante. She tended to Jessica with quiet competence, brewing herbal teas for the swelling in her ankles, massaging the knots from her back, her eyes holding a constant, watchful worry.
    The apartment was a world away from the penthouse luxury, filled with the smell of simmering stews and the sound of distant city life filtering through thin walls. Jessica spent her days by a small window overlooking a dusty courtyard, her hands often resting on the hard curve of her belly. She traced patterns, whispered secrets to the life inside – stories of its father, not the man baying for her blood, but the man who had held her like she was the world, who had whispered love against her skin. "Your Papa, Sebastian," she’d murmur, tears often blurring her vision. "He’s strong. He’s brave. And he’s lost right now. But we’ll find him, little one. We’ll make him see."
    Fear was a constant companion. Every footstep on the stairwell, every raised voice in the courtyard, sent her heart racing. But it was tempered now by a ferocious, maternal resolve. She carried Scar’s heir. This child was her truth, her weapon, her reason to fight. She couldn’t run forever. She had to clear her name, for herself, for her child, and for the man whose love had created this life, even if he now sought to end hers.
    Unbeknownst to Jessica and Scar, a quiet revolution was brewing among the ranks. William, Scar’s steadfast second-in-command, had become the epicenter of doubt. The initial rage had cooled, replaced by cold logic and gnawing inconsistencies. The missing CCTV footage – too clean, too convenient. Amanda’s constant presence, her manipulation of information, her eagerness to see Jessica’s family harmed. Ghost’s improbable, yet unchallenged, alibi. And Jessica… the girl from the slums who’d fought tooth and nail for an education, who’d sent money home religiously, who’d looked at Scar with an adoration William had never seen in Amanda’s calculating eyes. Did that woman poison the man she loved?
    William began cautiously. Late-night meetings in secure garages, hushed conversations with other senior lieutenants – men who’d witnessed Jessica’s quiet strength, who remembered Scar’s transformation when she was near. Men like Kola, the head of security, who’d privately questioned the lack of physical evidence tying Jessica to the poison beyond proximity. Slowly, carefully, a network of doubt solidified into a conspiracy of truth. They shared fragments: Amanda making unexplained calls before the poisoning, her subtle influence over certain guards, her unnatural calm amidst the chaos. They couldn’t prove anything yet, but the conviction grew – Jessica was innocent. Amanda had orchestrated it all. And Ghost… his role was still murky, but his return and Jessica’s continued disappearance pointed towards something more complex than betrayal.
    Their plan was dangerous, embryonic. Gather irrefutable proof. Find Jessica. Expose Amanda before she consolidated her power or eliminated them. They moved like shadows within shadows, aware that one misstep meant death.
    Back in the penthouse, Amanda felt the shifting sands. Scar’s coldness was a fortress she couldn’t breach. Her seduction attempts – lingering touches, suggestive whispers, expensive lingerie showcased under flimsy robes – were met with indifference or curt dismissal. He slept in his own room, the door locked. The engagement ring she’d subtly placed on her finger remained unacknowledged.
    One evening, fueled by desperation and expensive wine, she cornered him in his study. He was reviewing weapons manifests, his profile harsh in the lamplight. She approached, the scent of her perfume cloying. "Sebastian," she purred, draping herself over the arm of his chair, her hand sliding onto his thigh. "It’s late. You work too hard. Let me… ease your mind." Her fingers crept higher.
    Scar didn’t look up. His hand shot out, not violently, but with crushing finality, clamping around her wrist and removing it from his leg. His touch was ice-cold. "Don't," he said, his voice devoid of any inflection, his gaze still fixed on the papers. "Leave, Amanda."
    Humiliation burned her cheeks. "Why?" she hissed, the mask slipping. "Why cling to the ghost of that treacherous whore? I’m *here*. I’ve *always* been here! We’re meant to be together!"
    Finally, he looked at her. His eyes, dark and fathomless, held not anger, but a chilling emptiness. "Meant to be?" he echoed, a hollow laugh escaping him. "That childhood contract died the day you shot an unarmed woman in my house. It was buried when you poisoned me and framed Jessica. You are here because you manipulated your way in. Not because I want you. Not because I *ever* will." He stood, towering over her, the sheer force of his presence pushing her back a step. "You serve a purpose, Amanda. For now. Don't mistake tolerance for desire. Now get out."
    She fled, not in tears, but in a silent, shaking rage that promised retribution. The walls were closing in. William’s subtle resistance, Scar’s impenetrable coldness, the persistent, maddening silence of Jessica’s whereabouts – it was all unraveling.
    As Amanda seethed in her suite, and Scar stared sightlessly at the city lights, wrestling with ghosts and unanswered questions, Jessica lay in the stifling heat of the safehouse apartment, Chioma gently rubbing cooling balm onto her swollen feet. The baby kicked vigorously, a powerful reminder of the life pulsing against all odds. Five streets away, William and Kola met in a dimly lit back room, a stolen security log spread between them, their voices low and urgent. The storm was no longer gathering; it was on the horizon, a tempest fueled by love, betrayal, and the desperate hope held within a heavily pregnant woman hidden in plain sight. The reckoning was coming, and the heir to the Scar empire would be born amidst its fury.
    TO BE CONTINUED...
    THE DEVIL'S MISTRESS PART 15 Nine months. The city of Lagos breathed, pulsed, and roared beneath a relentless sun, oblivious to the silent war waged within the gilded cage of Sebastian Scar’s world. Time had scarred over the raw wound of the poisoning, leaving a thick, knotted tissue of suspicion, bitterness, and a haunting absence. Scar stood at the penthouse window, a tumbler of untouched whiskey in his hand. The view was the same – the sprawling, vibrant chaos of the city he commanded. Yet, it felt alien, muted. Amanda flitted around the living room behind him, the sharp click of her designer heels a constant, grating counterpoint to the silence in his soul. She’d embedded herself like a persistent thorn, a constant presence draped in silks and poisonous concern. She managed his schedule, filtered information, played the devoted caretaker – the role of the wronged fiancée finally vindicated. But her attempts to reignite their past, to seduce him, were met with a cold, impenetrable wall. He tolerated her, used her efficiency, but the chamber of his heart she once occupied was now a locked vault filled only with echoes of betrayal and the phantom scent of jasmine. Jessica. The name was a ghost that walked the halls. His men – the best trackers, the most connected shadows in the city – had turned Lagos upside down. Rivers dredged, slums combed, borders watched, informants squeezed dry. Nothing. Not a whisper, not a footprint. She and Ghost had vanished as if swallowed by the earth. The frustration was a constant, low hum beneath his rage. He didn’t just want her dead anymore; a deeper, more torturous need had taken root. He needed to *see* her. To look into the eyes he’d once drowned in and demand, with the last breath she’d ever draw, *“Why?”* Why shatter the sanctuary he’d built for them? Why poison the hand that gave her everything? Why betray a love that had thawed his frozen heart? The unanswered question festered, poisoning his days more insidiously than the aconite ever had. Her family remained a confusing testament to that shattered past. Still under house arrest in the mansion he’d gifted them, guarded by men whose loyalty was now solely to him. Amanda railed against it constantly. "They know something, Sebastian! They’re her blood! They’re laughing at you, hiding her!" she’d hiss, her eyes flashing with malice. But Scar had held firm. "They stay. Unharmed." It was a command born not of mercy, but of a grim, unresolved thread. Harming them felt like closing a door he wasn’t ready to shut, admitting a finality he couldn’t face. Were they hostages for a ghost? Or a lingering, irrational hope that their presence might somehow draw her out? He didn’t know anymore. Ghost… his betrayal stung with a unique venom. A man forged in the same fires of loyalty, whose silence had always been his strength. He’d reappeared weeks after the poisoning, materializing one night in Scar’s study as if stepping from a shadow. His story was chillingly plausible, delivered with his usual impassive calm. He’d tracked a lead on a rival faction potentially linked to the poison, deep into the Niger Delta. Communications compromised. Ambushed. Left for dead. He’d only just recovered. He vehemently denied helping Jessica escape. "Boss, I would die before betraying you. She must have had other help, or she was far more resourceful than we knew. I failed you. I should have been there." The explanation was tight, logical. Scar had stared into Ghost’s unreadable eyes, searching for a flicker of deceit. He found none. But the absence of proof wasn’t proof of innocence, and a seed of doubt, carefully nurtured by Amanda’s whispers, remained. Ghost was reinstated, his duties curtailed, watched. Meanwhile, miles away yet impossibly close, hidden in a modest, unremarkable apartment building just five streets from the towering opulence of Scar’s villa, Jessica lived in the fragile eye of the storm. Ghost’s gamble had been audacious. Bringing her back to the lion’s den, to a safehouse nestled within the very territory crawling with men hunting her. It was a move born of necessity and audacious strategy – the last place Scar would think to look. Jessica’s world was confined to three small rooms. The weight she carried now wasn't just fear, but the profound, undeniable swell of her pregnancy. Eight months. Her body was a landscape of taut skin, aching bones, and the ceaseless, miraculous flutter of life within. Chioma, Ghost’s fiercely protective fiancée, was her anchor, her midwife, her confidante. She tended to Jessica with quiet competence, brewing herbal teas for the swelling in her ankles, massaging the knots from her back, her eyes holding a constant, watchful worry. The apartment was a world away from the penthouse luxury, filled with the smell of simmering stews and the sound of distant city life filtering through thin walls. Jessica spent her days by a small window overlooking a dusty courtyard, her hands often resting on the hard curve of her belly. She traced patterns, whispered secrets to the life inside – stories of its father, not the man baying for her blood, but the man who had held her like she was the world, who had whispered love against her skin. "Your Papa, Sebastian," she’d murmur, tears often blurring her vision. "He’s strong. He’s brave. And he’s lost right now. But we’ll find him, little one. We’ll make him see." Fear was a constant companion. Every footstep on the stairwell, every raised voice in the courtyard, sent her heart racing. But it was tempered now by a ferocious, maternal resolve. She carried Scar’s heir. This child was her truth, her weapon, her reason to fight. She couldn’t run forever. She had to clear her name, for herself, for her child, and for the man whose love had created this life, even if he now sought to end hers. Unbeknownst to Jessica and Scar, a quiet revolution was brewing among the ranks. William, Scar’s steadfast second-in-command, had become the epicenter of doubt. The initial rage had cooled, replaced by cold logic and gnawing inconsistencies. The missing CCTV footage – too clean, too convenient. Amanda’s constant presence, her manipulation of information, her eagerness to see Jessica’s family harmed. Ghost’s improbable, yet unchallenged, alibi. And Jessica… the girl from the slums who’d fought tooth and nail for an education, who’d sent money home religiously, who’d looked at Scar with an adoration William had never seen in Amanda’s calculating eyes. Did that woman poison the man she loved? William began cautiously. Late-night meetings in secure garages, hushed conversations with other senior lieutenants – men who’d witnessed Jessica’s quiet strength, who remembered Scar’s transformation when she was near. Men like Kola, the head of security, who’d privately questioned the lack of physical evidence tying Jessica to the poison beyond proximity. Slowly, carefully, a network of doubt solidified into a conspiracy of truth. They shared fragments: Amanda making unexplained calls before the poisoning, her subtle influence over certain guards, her unnatural calm amidst the chaos. They couldn’t prove anything yet, but the conviction grew – Jessica was innocent. Amanda had orchestrated it all. And Ghost… his role was still murky, but his return and Jessica’s continued disappearance pointed towards something more complex than betrayal. Their plan was dangerous, embryonic. Gather irrefutable proof. Find Jessica. Expose Amanda before she consolidated her power or eliminated them. They moved like shadows within shadows, aware that one misstep meant death. Back in the penthouse, Amanda felt the shifting sands. Scar’s coldness was a fortress she couldn’t breach. Her seduction attempts – lingering touches, suggestive whispers, expensive lingerie showcased under flimsy robes – were met with indifference or curt dismissal. He slept in his own room, the door locked. The engagement ring she’d subtly placed on her finger remained unacknowledged. One evening, fueled by desperation and expensive wine, she cornered him in his study. He was reviewing weapons manifests, his profile harsh in the lamplight. She approached, the scent of her perfume cloying. "Sebastian," she purred, draping herself over the arm of his chair, her hand sliding onto his thigh. "It’s late. You work too hard. Let me… ease your mind." Her fingers crept higher. Scar didn’t look up. His hand shot out, not violently, but with crushing finality, clamping around her wrist and removing it from his leg. His touch was ice-cold. "Don't," he said, his voice devoid of any inflection, his gaze still fixed on the papers. "Leave, Amanda." Humiliation burned her cheeks. "Why?" she hissed, the mask slipping. "Why cling to the ghost of that treacherous whore? I’m *here*. I’ve *always* been here! We’re meant to be together!" Finally, he looked at her. His eyes, dark and fathomless, held not anger, but a chilling emptiness. "Meant to be?" he echoed, a hollow laugh escaping him. "That childhood contract died the day you shot an unarmed woman in my house. It was buried when you poisoned me and framed Jessica. You are here because you manipulated your way in. Not because I want you. Not because I *ever* will." He stood, towering over her, the sheer force of his presence pushing her back a step. "You serve a purpose, Amanda. For now. Don't mistake tolerance for desire. Now get out." She fled, not in tears, but in a silent, shaking rage that promised retribution. The walls were closing in. William’s subtle resistance, Scar’s impenetrable coldness, the persistent, maddening silence of Jessica’s whereabouts – it was all unraveling. As Amanda seethed in her suite, and Scar stared sightlessly at the city lights, wrestling with ghosts and unanswered questions, Jessica lay in the stifling heat of the safehouse apartment, Chioma gently rubbing cooling balm onto her swollen feet. The baby kicked vigorously, a powerful reminder of the life pulsing against all odds. Five streets away, William and Kola met in a dimly lit back room, a stolen security log spread between them, their voices low and urgent. The storm was no longer gathering; it was on the horizon, a tempest fueled by love, betrayal, and the desperate hope held within a heavily pregnant woman hidden in plain sight. The reckoning was coming, and the heir to the Scar empire would be born amidst its fury. TO BE CONTINUED...
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