• "They told her to wait in the corridor while the family ate."
    She was “just the help.”
    She served their meals but ate leftovers.
    She washed their clothes but wore rags.
    But one day…
    She knocked on their door — not to beg, but to bless.

    She Was the House Girl Who Wasn’t Allowed to Eat at the Table — 25 Years Later, She Returned With a Surprise That Made the Whole Family Cry
    Written by Rosyworld CRN

    1999. Lagos, Nigeria.

    Amarachi was 13 when she was sent from her village to Lagos to work as a housemaid for the Okoye family.

    Her job?
    Clean the house.
    Fetch water.
    Cook.
    Wash.
    Repeat.

    She wasn’t allowed to sit on the couch.
    Not allowed to eat with the children.
    She ate on the kitchen floor.
    Sometimes slept near the store room.

    They said:

    “Know your place. You’re lucky to be here.”

    But she was kind.
    Obedient.
    And every night, she read old textbooks she found in the bin.

    One of the children, Chidera, once caught her studying and said:

    “You? School? Who will pay for your brain?”

    She smiled and said:

    “Maybe one day, God will.”

    After four years, she was sent back to her village.
    No certificate.
    No savings.
    No promise.

    But Amarachi didn’t stop.

    She farmed.
    Saved.
    Taught children.
    Got into a polytechnic.
    Graduated in business.
    Started a food brand.
    Expanded into export.

    By 2024, she became one of the leading agro-entrepreneurs in Southern Nigeria.

    ---

    One day, she saw a social media post — the Okoye family was launching a foundation and needed a major sponsor.

    She made a call.

    Used her married name.

    They invited her… not knowing who she was.

    On the day of the launch, she walked in — head high, dressed in white lace.

    The family froze.

    Chidera blinked.

    The father gasped.

    She smiled and said:

    “25 years ago, I served your food in silence.
    Today, I came to serve your future with love.”

    She handed them a cheque — ₦20 million donation to the foundation.

    Then added:

    “This is not revenge. It’s remembrance.
    Because the girl you ignored… grew in grace.”

    The hall fell silent.

    Even Chidera wept.

    Amarachi turned, hugged the family’s grandmother, and whispered:

    “The table I once wasn’t allowed to sit at…
    God gave me the tools to build my own.”

    She didn’t come to repay pain.
    She came to rewrite history.

    Because sometimes, the girl they made eat in the kitchen…
    Returns to fund the banquet.
    "They told her to wait in the corridor while the family ate." She was “just the help.” She served their meals but ate leftovers. She washed their clothes but wore rags. But one day… She knocked on their door — not to beg, but to bless. She Was the House Girl Who Wasn’t Allowed to Eat at the Table — 25 Years Later, She Returned With a Surprise That Made the Whole Family Cry Written by Rosyworld CRN 1999. Lagos, Nigeria. Amarachi was 13 when she was sent from her village to Lagos to work as a housemaid for the Okoye family. Her job? Clean the house. Fetch water. Cook. Wash. Repeat. She wasn’t allowed to sit on the couch. Not allowed to eat with the children. She ate on the kitchen floor. Sometimes slept near the store room. They said: “Know your place. You’re lucky to be here.” But she was kind. Obedient. And every night, she read old textbooks she found in the bin. One of the children, Chidera, once caught her studying and said: “You? School? Who will pay for your brain?” She smiled and said: “Maybe one day, God will.” After four years, she was sent back to her village. No certificate. No savings. No promise. But Amarachi didn’t stop. She farmed. Saved. Taught children. Got into a polytechnic. Graduated in business. Started a food brand. Expanded into export. By 2024, she became one of the leading agro-entrepreneurs in Southern Nigeria. --- One day, she saw a social media post — the Okoye family was launching a foundation and needed a major sponsor. She made a call. Used her married name. They invited her… not knowing who she was. On the day of the launch, she walked in — head high, dressed in white lace. The family froze. Chidera blinked. The father gasped. She smiled and said: “25 years ago, I served your food in silence. Today, I came to serve your future with love.” She handed them a cheque — ₦20 million donation to the foundation. Then added: “This is not revenge. It’s remembrance. Because the girl you ignored… grew in grace.” The hall fell silent. Even Chidera wept. Amarachi turned, hugged the family’s grandmother, and whispered: “The table I once wasn’t allowed to sit at… God gave me the tools to build my own.” She didn’t come to repay pain. She came to rewrite history. Because sometimes, the girl they made eat in the kitchen… Returns to fund the banquet.
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 85 Views
  • "They told her to wait in the corridor while the family ate."
    She was “just the help.”
    She served their meals but ate leftovers.
    She washed their clothes but wore rags.
    But one day…
    She knocked on their door — not to beg, but to bless.

    She Was the House Girl Who Wasn’t Allowed to Eat at the Table — 25 Years Later, She Returned With a Surprise That Made the Whole Family Cry
    Written by Rosyworld CRN

    1999. Lagos, Nigeria.

    Amarachi was 13 when she was sent from her village to Lagos to work as a housemaid for the Okoye family.

    Her job?
    Clean the house.
    Fetch water.
    Cook.
    Wash.
    Repeat.

    She wasn’t allowed to sit on the couch.
    Not allowed to eat with the children.
    She ate on the kitchen floor.
    Sometimes slept near the store room.

    They said:

    “Know your place. You’re lucky to be here.”

    But she was kind.
    Obedient.
    And every night, she read old textbooks she found in the bin.

    One of the children, Chidera, once caught her studying and said:

    “You? School? Who will pay for your brain?”

    She smiled and said:

    “Maybe one day, God will.”

    After four years, she was sent back to her village.
    No certificate.
    No savings.
    No promise.

    But Amarachi didn’t stop.

    She farmed.
    Saved.
    Taught children.
    Got into a polytechnic.
    Graduated in business.
    Started a food brand.
    Expanded into export.

    By 2024, she became one of the leading agro-entrepreneurs in Southern Nigeria.

    ---

    One day, she saw a social media post — the Okoye family was launching a foundation and needed a major sponsor.

    She made a call.

    Used her married name.

    They invited her… not knowing who she was.

    On the day of the launch, she walked in — head high, dressed in white lace.

    The family froze.

    Chidera blinked.

    The father gasped.

    She smiled and said:

    “25 years ago, I served your food in silence.
    Today, I came to serve your future with love.”

    She handed them a cheque — ₦20 million donation to the foundation.

    Then added:

    “This is not revenge. It’s remembrance.
    Because the girl you ignored… grew in grace.”

    The hall fell silent.

    Even Chidera wept.

    Amarachi turned, hugged the family’s grandmother, and whispered:

    “The table I once wasn’t allowed to sit at…
    God gave me the tools to build my own.”

    She didn’t come to repay pain.
    She came to rewrite history.

    Because sometimes, the girl they made eat in the kitchen…
    Returns to fund the banquet.
    "They told her to wait in the corridor while the family ate." She was “just the help.” She served their meals but ate leftovers. She washed their clothes but wore rags. But one day… She knocked on their door — not to beg, but to bless. She Was the House Girl Who Wasn’t Allowed to Eat at the Table — 25 Years Later, She Returned With a Surprise That Made the Whole Family Cry Written by Rosyworld CRN 1999. Lagos, Nigeria. Amarachi was 13 when she was sent from her village to Lagos to work as a housemaid for the Okoye family. Her job? Clean the house. Fetch water. Cook. Wash. Repeat. She wasn’t allowed to sit on the couch. Not allowed to eat with the children. She ate on the kitchen floor. Sometimes slept near the store room. They said: “Know your place. You’re lucky to be here.” But she was kind. Obedient. And every night, she read old textbooks she found in the bin. One of the children, Chidera, once caught her studying and said: “You? School? Who will pay for your brain?” She smiled and said: “Maybe one day, God will.” After four years, she was sent back to her village. No certificate. No savings. No promise. But Amarachi didn’t stop. She farmed. Saved. Taught children. Got into a polytechnic. Graduated in business. Started a food brand. Expanded into export. By 2024, she became one of the leading agro-entrepreneurs in Southern Nigeria. --- One day, she saw a social media post — the Okoye family was launching a foundation and needed a major sponsor. She made a call. Used her married name. They invited her… not knowing who she was. On the day of the launch, she walked in — head high, dressed in white lace. The family froze. Chidera blinked. The father gasped. She smiled and said: “25 years ago, I served your food in silence. Today, I came to serve your future with love.” She handed them a cheque — ₦20 million donation to the foundation. Then added: “This is not revenge. It’s remembrance. Because the girl you ignored… grew in grace.” The hall fell silent. Even Chidera wept. Amarachi turned, hugged the family’s grandmother, and whispered: “The table I once wasn’t allowed to sit at… God gave me the tools to build my own.” She didn’t come to repay pain. She came to rewrite history. Because sometimes, the girl they made eat in the kitchen… Returns to fund the banquet.
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 88 Views
  • 7 Mental Upgrades to Start Making Money by Breaking Poverty Indoctrination

    I have been providing one-on-one coaching for close to 15 years now. When it comes to money, I’ve observed that most people have certain mental limitations that keep them from breaking into financial breakthroughs through what they do.

    In this short article, let me show you 7 of these limitations along with quick tips on what to do to break out and start winning financially.

    1. Upgrade from Scarcity Thinking to Opportunity Awareness
    Stop believing there's “not enough.”
    Start training your mind to believe there is so much money to make and you have all it takes to make the money you need.
    Start training your mind to spot overlooked opportunities.
    Wealth flows to those who solve problems, not those who avoid them.

    Just to add, jealousy often stems from a scarcity mindset, the belief that someone else's success limits your own opportunities.
    But when you have an abundance and opportunity driven mindset, you won’t feel jealous. Instead, you’ll celebrate others' success, knowing that more success creates more opportunities for everyone.

    2. Upgrade from Waiting for Permission to Taking Initiative
    Poverty conditioning teaches obedience and approval-seeking.
    Wealth mindsets are built on bold decision-making and self-leadership.
    Don’t wait. Move. Test. Adjust. Win.
    People who take initiatives always end up making more money because money follows movement. ~ Dr. Joybert Javnyuy

    3. Upgrade from Passive Learning to Income-Driven Execution
    Poor mindsets collect information with no transformation.
    Wealth builders turn every insight into income-producing action.
    Your notebooks are full. It's time your wallet is too.
    This can only happen when you stop learning passively and start taking actions on what you have been learning.
    Learners do not make money. Money making is for those who deploy knowledge acquired.

    4. Upgrade from Money Avoidance to Money Mastery
    Poverty indoctrination makes you feel guilty about desiring more money.
    Do not confuse loving money so much that you're willing to make it at all costs, even through unethical means, with desiring more money so you can use it as a tool to improve your life and positively impact others.
    The wealthy learn how money moves, grows, and multiplies. ~ Dr. Joybert Javnyuy
    Study money like your life depends on it, because it does.
    Religious people avoid money and spiritual people master money and use it to serve humanity.

    5. Upgrade from Skill Hoarding to Value Packaging
    It’s not about how much you know, it’s about how you package what you know for impact and income.
    Knowledge is potential wealth. Packaging is real wealth.
    You can only monetize the knowledge you have packaged. ~ Dr. Joybert Javnyuy

    By the way, I am admitting cohort 2 of Knowledge & Skill Monetization Academy. Interested?
    Join the WhatsApp waitlist here: https://chat.whatsapp.com/DL4xFWYLUZDEj53fxwmW1T
    In under 30 days, you'll have at least 5 sellable products crafted from your knowledge, experience, and skills, ready to launch and start earning.

    6. Upgrade from Victim Stories to Ownership Identity
    Poverty loves blame. Wealth loves responsibility.
    Even when it's not your fault, it is your future.
    Take the driver’s seat. Rewrite the narrative.
    Poor people are experts in blaming and complaining and wealthy people are experts in taking responsibility and initiative.

    7. Upgrade from ‘One Day’ Thinking to 90-Day Wealth Projects
    Stop dreaming “someday.” Start committing to bold 90-day goals.
    Stop saying, "I will start this in the next few days." Start saying, "In the next 90 days, I will have completed this, achieved that, and accomplished those goals."
    Every quarter should have a money mission.
    Time doesn’t build wealth, execution does.
    Poor people think in terms of time only, while wealthy people have projects for every season.

    Dr. Joybert Javnyuy
    I Help Experts & Institutions to Extract, Package & Monetize Specialized Value | Book Me to Train, Coach & Speak |
    7 Mental Upgrades to Start Making Money by Breaking Poverty Indoctrination I have been providing one-on-one coaching for close to 15 years now. When it comes to money, I’ve observed that most people have certain mental limitations that keep them from breaking into financial breakthroughs through what they do. In this short article, let me show you 7 of these limitations along with quick tips on what to do to break out and start winning financially. 1. Upgrade from Scarcity Thinking to Opportunity Awareness Stop believing there's “not enough.” Start training your mind to believe there is so much money to make and you have all it takes to make the money you need. Start training your mind to spot overlooked opportunities. Wealth flows to those who solve problems, not those who avoid them. Just to add, jealousy often stems from a scarcity mindset, the belief that someone else's success limits your own opportunities. But when you have an abundance and opportunity driven mindset, you won’t feel jealous. Instead, you’ll celebrate others' success, knowing that more success creates more opportunities for everyone. 2. Upgrade from Waiting for Permission to Taking Initiative Poverty conditioning teaches obedience and approval-seeking. Wealth mindsets are built on bold decision-making and self-leadership. Don’t wait. Move. Test. Adjust. Win. People who take initiatives always end up making more money because money follows movement. ~ Dr. Joybert Javnyuy 3. Upgrade from Passive Learning to Income-Driven Execution Poor mindsets collect information with no transformation. Wealth builders turn every insight into income-producing action. Your notebooks are full. It's time your wallet is too. This can only happen when you stop learning passively and start taking actions on what you have been learning. Learners do not make money. Money making is for those who deploy knowledge acquired. 4. Upgrade from Money Avoidance to Money Mastery Poverty indoctrination makes you feel guilty about desiring more money. Do not confuse loving money so much that you're willing to make it at all costs, even through unethical means, with desiring more money so you can use it as a tool to improve your life and positively impact others. The wealthy learn how money moves, grows, and multiplies. ~ Dr. Joybert Javnyuy Study money like your life depends on it, because it does. Religious people avoid money and spiritual people master money and use it to serve humanity. 5. Upgrade from Skill Hoarding to Value Packaging It’s not about how much you know, it’s about how you package what you know for impact and income. Knowledge is potential wealth. Packaging is real wealth. You can only monetize the knowledge you have packaged. ~ Dr. Joybert Javnyuy By the way, I am admitting cohort 2 of Knowledge & Skill Monetization Academy. Interested? Join the WhatsApp waitlist here: https://chat.whatsapp.com/DL4xFWYLUZDEj53fxwmW1T In under 30 days, you'll have at least 5 sellable products crafted from your knowledge, experience, and skills, ready to launch and start earning. 6. Upgrade from Victim Stories to Ownership Identity Poverty loves blame. Wealth loves responsibility. Even when it's not your fault, it is your future. Take the driver’s seat. Rewrite the narrative. Poor people are experts in blaming and complaining and wealthy people are experts in taking responsibility and initiative. 7. Upgrade from ‘One Day’ Thinking to 90-Day Wealth Projects Stop dreaming “someday.” Start committing to bold 90-day goals. Stop saying, "I will start this in the next few days." Start saying, "In the next 90 days, I will have completed this, achieved that, and accomplished those goals." Every quarter should have a money mission. Time doesn’t build wealth, execution does. Poor people think in terms of time only, while wealthy people have projects for every season. Dr. Joybert Javnyuy I Help Experts & Institutions to Extract, Package & Monetize Specialized Value | Book Me to Train, Coach & Speak |
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 89 Views
  • Oga you fit wait in darkness forever and she no go recharge that light. Better recharge and do what you want to do. Some women too do sha
    Oga you fit wait in darkness forever and she no go recharge that light. Better recharge and do what you want to do. Some women too do sha
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 87 Views
  • DISCOVERY 3:
    IF YOU DON'T KNOW WHO YOU ARE WAITING FOR THEN YOU DON'T NEED TO WAIT...

    * : don't waste your time.
    DISCOVERY 3: IF YOU DON'T KNOW WHO YOU ARE WAITING FOR THEN YOU DON'T NEED TO WAIT... * : don't waste your time.
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 96 Views
  • "They told her to wait in the corridor while the family ate."
    She was “just the help.”
    She served their meals but ate leftovers.
    She washed their clothes but wore rags.
    But one day…
    She knocked on their door — not to beg, but to bless.

    She Was the House Girl Who Wasn’t Allowed to Eat at the Table — 25 Years Later, She Returned With a Surprise That Made the Whole Family Cry
    Written by Rosyworld CRN

    1999. Lagos, Nigeria.

    Amarachi was 13 when she was sent from her village to Lagos to work as a housemaid for the Okoye family.

    Her job?
    Clean the house.
    Fetch water.
    Cook.
    Wash.
    Repeat.

    She wasn’t allowed to sit on the couch.
    Not allowed to eat with the children.
    She ate on the kitchen floor.
    Sometimes slept near the store room.

    They said:

    “Know your place. You’re lucky to be here.”

    But she was kind.
    Obedient.
    And every night, she read old textbooks she found in the bin.

    One of the children, Chidera, once caught her studying and said:

    “You? School? Who will pay for your brain?”

    She smiled and said:

    “Maybe one day, God will.”

    After four years, she was sent back to her village.
    No certificate.
    No savings.
    No promise.

    But Amarachi didn’t stop.

    She farmed.
    Saved.
    Taught children.
    Got into a polytechnic.
    Graduated in business.
    Started a food brand.
    Expanded into export.

    By 2024, she became one of the leading agro-entrepreneurs in Southern Nigeria.

    ---

    One day, she saw a social media post — the Okoye family was launching a foundation and needed a major sponsor.

    She made a call.

    Used her married name.

    They invited her… not knowing who she was.

    On the day of the launch, she walked in — head high, dressed in white lace.

    The family froze.

    Chidera blinked.

    The father gasped.

    She smiled and said:

    “25 years ago, I served your food in silence.
    Today, I came to serve your future with love.”

    She handed them a cheque — ₦20 million donation to the foundation.

    Then added:

    “This is not revenge. It’s remembrance.
    Because the girl you ignored… grew in grace.”

    The hall fell silent.

    Even Chidera wept.

    Amarachi turned, hugged the family’s grandmother, and whispered:

    “The table I once wasn’t allowed to sit at…
    God gave me the tools to build my own.”

    She didn’t come to repay pain.
    She came to rewrite history.

    Because sometimes, the girl they made eat in the kitchen…
    Returns to fund the banquet.
    "They told her to wait in the corridor while the family ate." She was “just the help.” She served their meals but ate leftovers. She washed their clothes but wore rags. But one day… She knocked on their door — not to beg, but to bless. She Was the House Girl Who Wasn’t Allowed to Eat at the Table — 25 Years Later, She Returned With a Surprise That Made the Whole Family Cry Written by Rosyworld CRN 1999. Lagos, Nigeria. Amarachi was 13 when she was sent from her village to Lagos to work as a housemaid for the Okoye family. Her job? Clean the house. Fetch water. Cook. Wash. Repeat. She wasn’t allowed to sit on the couch. Not allowed to eat with the children. She ate on the kitchen floor. Sometimes slept near the store room. They said: “Know your place. You’re lucky to be here.” But she was kind. Obedient. And every night, she read old textbooks she found in the bin. One of the children, Chidera, once caught her studying and said: “You? School? Who will pay for your brain?” She smiled and said: “Maybe one day, God will.” After four years, she was sent back to her village. No certificate. No savings. No promise. But Amarachi didn’t stop. She farmed. Saved. Taught children. Got into a polytechnic. Graduated in business. Started a food brand. Expanded into export. By 2024, she became one of the leading agro-entrepreneurs in Southern Nigeria. --- One day, she saw a social media post — the Okoye family was launching a foundation and needed a major sponsor. She made a call. Used her married name. They invited her… not knowing who she was. On the day of the launch, she walked in — head high, dressed in white lace. The family froze. Chidera blinked. The father gasped. She smiled and said: “25 years ago, I served your food in silence. Today, I came to serve your future with love.” She handed them a cheque — ₦20 million donation to the foundation. Then added: “This is not revenge. It’s remembrance. Because the girl you ignored… grew in grace.” The hall fell silent. Even Chidera wept. Amarachi turned, hugged the family’s grandmother, and whispered: “The table I once wasn’t allowed to sit at… God gave me the tools to build my own.” She didn’t come to repay pain. She came to rewrite history. Because sometimes, the girl they made eat in the kitchen… Returns to fund the banquet.
    Like
    2
    0 Σχόλια 1 Μοιράστηκε 125 Views
  • THE DEVIL'S MISTRESS
    PART 10
    The morning sun streaming through the penthouse windows felt like a lie. Jessica woke alone, the space beside her in the massive bed cold and empty. A hastily scribbled note lay on Scar’s pillow, the bold, slashing script stark against the linen: "Urgent business. Stay inside. William guards the door. - S." The initial felt like a wall. Sebastian. His real name, used by the ghost now haunting their home.
    A knot of dread tightened in Jessica’s stomach. Stay inside. Like she was a prisoner again. But the thought of facing the day trapped in the bedroom, listening for Amanda’s footsteps, was suffocating. She needed air, even if it was just the curated atmosphere of the penthouse living room. She needed to feel normal, if only for a moment. Surely, she could go downstairs, make some tea, sit by the window overlooking the city she’d fought so hard to rise above.
    She dressed carefully in simple, elegant trousers and a soft cashmere sweater – clothes Scar had chosen for her, clothes that felt like armor against the memory of rags. She took a deep breath, unlocked the bedroom door, and stepped into the hushed corridor. William stood rigidly a few feet away, his expression grim.
    "Miss Jessica," he murmured, his voice low. "The Boss said—"
    "I just want some tea, William," Jessica interrupted, forcing a calm she didn’t feel. "Downstairs. I won’t leave the penthouse." She met his worried gaze. "Please."
    William hesitated, then gave a curt nod. "I’ll be right outside the living room door, Miss."
    The walk downstairs felt endless. The usual opulent silence of the penthouse now felt charged, oppressive. As she reached the bottom step, the scent hit her – heavy, cloying perfume, expensive but overwhelming. And there she was.
    Amanda sat regally on the central cream sofa, bathed in the morning light. She was breathtaking. Her skin, a deep, flawless mahogany, glowed against the stark cream fabric. Her hair, a cascade of meticulously defined blonde curls, framed a face of sculpted perfection – high cheekbones, a sharp jawline, full lips painted a dangerous, glossy crimson. She wore a designer red gown, short and daring, showcasing long, toned legs crossed elegantly. She looked like a fashion icon, a goddess casually inhabiting their space. She held a delicate porcelain cup, sipping coffee with an air of utter ownership.
    Jessica’s breath hitched. She forced her feet to move, aiming for the kitchen doorway across the expansive room. "Good morning," she murmured, her voice barely audible, keeping her eyes downcast.
    The sound of the cup being placed sharply on its saucer echoed like a gunshot. "Well, well," Amanda’s voice purred, smooth as velvet but laced with ice. "Aren’t you going to stop and greet me properly? Or do they not teach manners in the gutter?"
    Jessica froze mid-step. Slowly, she turned. Amanda’s dark eyes, fringed with impossibly long lashes, raked over her with open contempt. A predatory smile played on her crimson lips.
    "I said good morning," Jessica repeated, her voice firmer this time, though her heart hammered against her ribs.
    Amanda laughed, a light, tinkling sound devoid of warmth. "Good morning? Is that all? Darling, when you encounter the lady of the house, you curtsy. Or at the very least, introduce yourself. Who *are* you? The new maid? Though you’re dressed rather presumptuously for a maid." Her gaze swept over Jessica’s outfit with disdain.
    Jessica swallowed hard. "My name is Jessica."
    "Jessica," Amanda drawled, tasting the name like it was something unpleasant. "How... ordinary. And what exactly are you doing here, Jessica?" She leaned forward slightly, her eyes narrowing. "Scrubbing floors? Warming Sebastian’s bed?"
    The crudeness, delivered in that cultured, elegant tone, was a slap. Jessica felt heat flood her cheeks. "I live here," she stated, holding Amanda’s gaze, refusing to flinch.
    Amanda’s perfect composure cracked. A flash of pure, unadulterated fury contorted her beautiful features. "Live here?" she spat, her voice losing its velvety smoothness, turning shrill. "In my home? With my fiancé? You insolent little SLUT!"
    Jessica recoiled as if physically struck. The venom in the word was paralyzing.
    "You think you can just waltz in here, you gutter rat?" Amanda hissed, rising from the sofa with feline grace, her red gown swirling around her. She stalked closer, her perfume now choking. "You think your cheap tricks and slum-bred desperation can replace me? ME?!" She stopped inches from Jessica, towering slightly in her heels. "I was chosen for Sebastian when we were SIX YEARS OLD! Our fathers bound empires! We are destiny! You?" She let out a harsh, mocking laugh. "You’re nothing! A temporary distraction! A prostitute he picked up off the streets! A gold-digging cockroach crawling where it doesn’t belong!"
    Each word was a lash, meticulously designed to wound. Gutter rat. Prostitute. Gold digger. Home wrecker. They struck Jessica’s deepest insecurities, the ghosts of Lagos’s slums she thought she’d buried. Tears blurred her vision, hot and humiliating.
    "Look at you," Amanda sneered, her voice dripping with contempt. "Crying already? Pathetic. You don’t belong here, you filthy little whore. You’re a stain on this house. On him." She leaned in, her voice dropping to a venomous whisper. "Pack your cheap rags and crawl back to whatever filthy hole you came from. Today. Or I swear, I will make you wish you’d never laid eyes on Sebastian Scar. Do you understand me, you slum TRASH?"
    The final words, delivered with such vicious certainty, shattered Jessica’s fragile composure. The revelation of the childhood engagement – the fiancée – echoed like a death knell in her mind. *Why hadn’t he told her? The betrayal, layered on top of the searing humiliation, was too much.
    A choked sob escaped Jessica’s lips. She couldn’t breathe. She couldn’t speak. She turned and fled, her vision swimming, Amanda’s cruel laughter ringing in her ears like the shriek of harpies. She stumbled up the stairs, past William’s shocked face, fumbling with the bedroom door handle, finally bursting into the room and slamming the door behind her, locking it with trembling fingers.
    She slid down the door to the floor, her body wracked with violent sobs. The luxurious rug beneath her felt like cold concrete from her past. Fiancée. Engaged since six. Destiny. Gutter rat. Prostitute. The words swirled in her head, a toxic whirlpool dragging her down. How could he? How could he hold her, love her, whisper promises, and never mention this? Was she truly just a distraction? Was everything he’d said and done a lie? The beautiful room, the sanctuary he’d built for her, now felt like a gilded cage built on deception. The weight of Amanda’s words, the terrifying history they implied, crushed her. She cried until her throat was raw, until her head throbbed, until exhaustion pulled her into a fitful, tear-stained sleep on the floor by the door. She didn’t eat. She didn’t drink. The day passed in a blur of despair.
    The sound of the penthouse door opening in the evening jolted Jessica awake. Dusk had painted the room in deep blues and purples. Her body ached from the hard floor and the emotional ravages of the day. She heard muffled voices downstairs – Scar’s deep baritone, sharp and questioning, and then Amanda’s voice, artificially bright and laced with malice.
    Jessica pressed her ear against the cool wood of the door, her heart pounding anew.
    "Sebastian! Darling, you’re back!" Amanda’s voice was syrupy sweet. "Did you have a productive day, burying bodies or whatever it is you do?" A tinkling laugh. "Oh, but wait! I met your little… project today. Jessica, was it?"
    A beat of heavy silence. Jessica could imagine Scar freezing, his senses on high alert.
    "What did you do, Amanda?" His voice was dangerously low, a growl that vibrated through the floorboards.
    "Me? Nothing!" Amanda feigned innocence. "We just had a little chat. Girl to girl. Or rather," her voice dropped, turning venomous and loud, deliberately carrying, "Lady to gutter trash! Hahaha! Oh, Sebastian!" Her laughter was sharp, hysterical, filled with cruel amusement. "I’ve seen the cheap little whore you replaced me with! Hahaha! Your taste has certainly… changed! From royalty to RAGS! A slum-dwelling prostitute! Is that what gets you hard now, darling? The stink of desperation?!"
    Downstairs, Scar’s world tilted. It wasn’t Amanda’s insults that terrified him; it was the knowledge that Jessica had heard them. He saw the trap Amanda had laid, the poison she’d injected directly into the heart of the only thing that mattered to him. The image of Jessica’s face, hearing those vile words – his Jessica, who carried the scars of the slums like hidden wounds, who had fought so hard for dignity – it unleashed a primal fear deeper than any enemy’s threat. The fear of loss. The terror of her pain, her disillusionment… her *leaving*.
    His carefully controlled composure evaporated. The feared King of Lagos didn’t think. He *fled*. He took the stairs two at a time, his heart hammering against his ribs like a frantic bird, a cold sweat breaking out on his skin. He skidded to a stop outside their bedroom door, seeing it firmly shut. The silence behind it was more terrifying than any scream.
    "Baby!" His voice was raw, stripped bare, cracking with panic. He pounded on the solid wood with his fist. *BAM! BAM! BAM!* "Open this door! Please, baby, open the door! Jessica!" The pleading, the raw desperation in his voice, was utterly alien to him. "Please! I need to talk to you! Let me explain! Please, open the door!"
    He pressed his forehead against the cool wood, his breathing ragged. Guilt, thick and suffocating, washed over him in a sickening wave. He’d been a fool. A coward. He’d buried the Amanda chapter, hoping it would stay dead, never imagining Jessica would be confronted with that toxic history in the cruelest way possible. He’d wanted to protect her from the ugliness, but his silence had become the weapon Amanda used against her.
    He slid down the door, mirroring Jessica’s position on the other side, his back against the wood. He could feel the faint vibration of her presence, the stifled sound of her breathing. He rested his head in his hands.
    "Jessica," his voice was a broken whisper now, muffled against his palms. "I’m sorry. God, I’m so sorry. Please… please just open the door. Let me see you. Let me…" His voice choked off. How could he explain a lifetime of obligation, violence, and a broken engagement born of madness? How could he make her understand that Amanda belonged to a past he’d thought buried, a past that meant *nothing* compared to what he felt for her? The thought of her silent tears, her shattered trust, the possibility that she believed Amanda’s lies… it was a physical agony worse than any bullet wound. He was hurt, terrified for her, and utterly confused about how to mend the devastation Amanda had wrought with just a few vicious words. The mighty Scar was brought low, not by an enemy’s bullet, but by the fear of losing the woman who had thawed his frozen heart. He sat slumped against her door, a fortress of muscle and power reduced to a supplicant, whispering pleas into the uncaring wood, waiting for a sign of life from the woman who held his soul captive on the other side.
    TO BE CONTINUED...
    THE DEVIL'S MISTRESS PART 10 The morning sun streaming through the penthouse windows felt like a lie. Jessica woke alone, the space beside her in the massive bed cold and empty. A hastily scribbled note lay on Scar’s pillow, the bold, slashing script stark against the linen: "Urgent business. Stay inside. William guards the door. - S." The initial felt like a wall. Sebastian. His real name, used by the ghost now haunting their home. A knot of dread tightened in Jessica’s stomach. Stay inside. Like she was a prisoner again. But the thought of facing the day trapped in the bedroom, listening for Amanda’s footsteps, was suffocating. She needed air, even if it was just the curated atmosphere of the penthouse living room. She needed to feel normal, if only for a moment. Surely, she could go downstairs, make some tea, sit by the window overlooking the city she’d fought so hard to rise above. She dressed carefully in simple, elegant trousers and a soft cashmere sweater – clothes Scar had chosen for her, clothes that felt like armor against the memory of rags. She took a deep breath, unlocked the bedroom door, and stepped into the hushed corridor. William stood rigidly a few feet away, his expression grim. "Miss Jessica," he murmured, his voice low. "The Boss said—" "I just want some tea, William," Jessica interrupted, forcing a calm she didn’t feel. "Downstairs. I won’t leave the penthouse." She met his worried gaze. "Please." William hesitated, then gave a curt nod. "I’ll be right outside the living room door, Miss." The walk downstairs felt endless. The usual opulent silence of the penthouse now felt charged, oppressive. As she reached the bottom step, the scent hit her – heavy, cloying perfume, expensive but overwhelming. And there she was. Amanda sat regally on the central cream sofa, bathed in the morning light. She was breathtaking. Her skin, a deep, flawless mahogany, glowed against the stark cream fabric. Her hair, a cascade of meticulously defined blonde curls, framed a face of sculpted perfection – high cheekbones, a sharp jawline, full lips painted a dangerous, glossy crimson. She wore a designer red gown, short and daring, showcasing long, toned legs crossed elegantly. She looked like a fashion icon, a goddess casually inhabiting their space. She held a delicate porcelain cup, sipping coffee with an air of utter ownership. Jessica’s breath hitched. She forced her feet to move, aiming for the kitchen doorway across the expansive room. "Good morning," she murmured, her voice barely audible, keeping her eyes downcast. The sound of the cup being placed sharply on its saucer echoed like a gunshot. "Well, well," Amanda’s voice purred, smooth as velvet but laced with ice. "Aren’t you going to stop and greet me properly? Or do they not teach manners in the gutter?" Jessica froze mid-step. Slowly, she turned. Amanda’s dark eyes, fringed with impossibly long lashes, raked over her with open contempt. A predatory smile played on her crimson lips. "I said good morning," Jessica repeated, her voice firmer this time, though her heart hammered against her ribs. Amanda laughed, a light, tinkling sound devoid of warmth. "Good morning? Is that all? Darling, when you encounter the lady of the house, you curtsy. Or at the very least, introduce yourself. Who *are* you? The new maid? Though you’re dressed rather presumptuously for a maid." Her gaze swept over Jessica’s outfit with disdain. Jessica swallowed hard. "My name is Jessica." "Jessica," Amanda drawled, tasting the name like it was something unpleasant. "How... ordinary. And what exactly are you doing here, Jessica?" She leaned forward slightly, her eyes narrowing. "Scrubbing floors? Warming Sebastian’s bed?" The crudeness, delivered in that cultured, elegant tone, was a slap. Jessica felt heat flood her cheeks. "I live here," she stated, holding Amanda’s gaze, refusing to flinch. Amanda’s perfect composure cracked. A flash of pure, unadulterated fury contorted her beautiful features. "Live here?" she spat, her voice losing its velvety smoothness, turning shrill. "In my home? With my fiancé? You insolent little SLUT!" Jessica recoiled as if physically struck. The venom in the word was paralyzing. "You think you can just waltz in here, you gutter rat?" Amanda hissed, rising from the sofa with feline grace, her red gown swirling around her. She stalked closer, her perfume now choking. "You think your cheap tricks and slum-bred desperation can replace me? ME?!" She stopped inches from Jessica, towering slightly in her heels. "I was chosen for Sebastian when we were SIX YEARS OLD! Our fathers bound empires! We are destiny! You?" She let out a harsh, mocking laugh. "You’re nothing! A temporary distraction! A prostitute he picked up off the streets! A gold-digging cockroach crawling where it doesn’t belong!" Each word was a lash, meticulously designed to wound. Gutter rat. Prostitute. Gold digger. Home wrecker. They struck Jessica’s deepest insecurities, the ghosts of Lagos’s slums she thought she’d buried. Tears blurred her vision, hot and humiliating. "Look at you," Amanda sneered, her voice dripping with contempt. "Crying already? Pathetic. You don’t belong here, you filthy little whore. You’re a stain on this house. On him." She leaned in, her voice dropping to a venomous whisper. "Pack your cheap rags and crawl back to whatever filthy hole you came from. Today. Or I swear, I will make you wish you’d never laid eyes on Sebastian Scar. Do you understand me, you slum TRASH?" The final words, delivered with such vicious certainty, shattered Jessica’s fragile composure. The revelation of the childhood engagement – the fiancée – echoed like a death knell in her mind. *Why hadn’t he told her? The betrayal, layered on top of the searing humiliation, was too much. A choked sob escaped Jessica’s lips. She couldn’t breathe. She couldn’t speak. She turned and fled, her vision swimming, Amanda’s cruel laughter ringing in her ears like the shriek of harpies. She stumbled up the stairs, past William’s shocked face, fumbling with the bedroom door handle, finally bursting into the room and slamming the door behind her, locking it with trembling fingers. She slid down the door to the floor, her body wracked with violent sobs. The luxurious rug beneath her felt like cold concrete from her past. Fiancée. Engaged since six. Destiny. Gutter rat. Prostitute. The words swirled in her head, a toxic whirlpool dragging her down. How could he? How could he hold her, love her, whisper promises, and never mention this? Was she truly just a distraction? Was everything he’d said and done a lie? The beautiful room, the sanctuary he’d built for her, now felt like a gilded cage built on deception. The weight of Amanda’s words, the terrifying history they implied, crushed her. She cried until her throat was raw, until her head throbbed, until exhaustion pulled her into a fitful, tear-stained sleep on the floor by the door. She didn’t eat. She didn’t drink. The day passed in a blur of despair. The sound of the penthouse door opening in the evening jolted Jessica awake. Dusk had painted the room in deep blues and purples. Her body ached from the hard floor and the emotional ravages of the day. She heard muffled voices downstairs – Scar’s deep baritone, sharp and questioning, and then Amanda’s voice, artificially bright and laced with malice. Jessica pressed her ear against the cool wood of the door, her heart pounding anew. "Sebastian! Darling, you’re back!" Amanda’s voice was syrupy sweet. "Did you have a productive day, burying bodies or whatever it is you do?" A tinkling laugh. "Oh, but wait! I met your little… project today. Jessica, was it?" A beat of heavy silence. Jessica could imagine Scar freezing, his senses on high alert. "What did you do, Amanda?" His voice was dangerously low, a growl that vibrated through the floorboards. "Me? Nothing!" Amanda feigned innocence. "We just had a little chat. Girl to girl. Or rather," her voice dropped, turning venomous and loud, deliberately carrying, "Lady to gutter trash! Hahaha! Oh, Sebastian!" Her laughter was sharp, hysterical, filled with cruel amusement. "I’ve seen the cheap little whore you replaced me with! Hahaha! Your taste has certainly… changed! From royalty to RAGS! A slum-dwelling prostitute! Is that what gets you hard now, darling? The stink of desperation?!" Downstairs, Scar’s world tilted. It wasn’t Amanda’s insults that terrified him; it was the knowledge that Jessica had heard them. He saw the trap Amanda had laid, the poison she’d injected directly into the heart of the only thing that mattered to him. The image of Jessica’s face, hearing those vile words – his Jessica, who carried the scars of the slums like hidden wounds, who had fought so hard for dignity – it unleashed a primal fear deeper than any enemy’s threat. The fear of loss. The terror of her pain, her disillusionment… her *leaving*. His carefully controlled composure evaporated. The feared King of Lagos didn’t think. He *fled*. He took the stairs two at a time, his heart hammering against his ribs like a frantic bird, a cold sweat breaking out on his skin. He skidded to a stop outside their bedroom door, seeing it firmly shut. The silence behind it was more terrifying than any scream. "Baby!" His voice was raw, stripped bare, cracking with panic. He pounded on the solid wood with his fist. *BAM! BAM! BAM!* "Open this door! Please, baby, open the door! Jessica!" The pleading, the raw desperation in his voice, was utterly alien to him. "Please! I need to talk to you! Let me explain! Please, open the door!" He pressed his forehead against the cool wood, his breathing ragged. Guilt, thick and suffocating, washed over him in a sickening wave. He’d been a fool. A coward. He’d buried the Amanda chapter, hoping it would stay dead, never imagining Jessica would be confronted with that toxic history in the cruelest way possible. He’d wanted to protect her from the ugliness, but his silence had become the weapon Amanda used against her. He slid down the door, mirroring Jessica’s position on the other side, his back against the wood. He could feel the faint vibration of her presence, the stifled sound of her breathing. He rested his head in his hands. "Jessica," his voice was a broken whisper now, muffled against his palms. "I’m sorry. God, I’m so sorry. Please… please just open the door. Let me see you. Let me…" His voice choked off. How could he explain a lifetime of obligation, violence, and a broken engagement born of madness? How could he make her understand that Amanda belonged to a past he’d thought buried, a past that meant *nothing* compared to what he felt for her? The thought of her silent tears, her shattered trust, the possibility that she believed Amanda’s lies… it was a physical agony worse than any bullet wound. He was hurt, terrified for her, and utterly confused about how to mend the devastation Amanda had wrought with just a few vicious words. The mighty Scar was brought low, not by an enemy’s bullet, but by the fear of losing the woman who had thawed his frozen heart. He sat slumped against her door, a fortress of muscle and power reduced to a supplicant, whispering pleas into the uncaring wood, waiting for a sign of life from the woman who held his soul captive on the other side. TO BE CONTINUED...
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  • I DO NOT BOAST I AM A CAPTAIN

    On darkest nights, mid-ocean wide,
    my boat and I with waves collide.
    Why, Poseidon, such disdain?
    Am I to blame I steer my reign?
    The storm will hurl us through the sky,
    then slam us down, yet still we try.
    I fear, but cry not out in pride,
    nor claim I rule this raging tide.
    Should I not reach the harbor near—
    the table waits for fish and cheer.
    If I don’t make it, someone grieves...
    That’s why, that’s why—I fight to leave!
    What marvels rise—I never tell,
    nor fear, nor hope where sea-storms dwell.
    No sailor bows to tales or fame,
    to say this wrecked boat bore my name.
    I DO NOT BOAST I AM A CAPTAIN On darkest nights, mid-ocean wide, my boat and I with waves collide. Why, Poseidon, such disdain? Am I to blame I steer my reign? The storm will hurl us through the sky, then slam us down, yet still we try. I fear, but cry not out in pride, nor claim I rule this raging tide. Should I not reach the harbor near— the table waits for fish and cheer. If I don’t make it, someone grieves... That’s why, that’s why—I fight to leave! What marvels rise—I never tell, nor fear, nor hope where sea-storms dwell. No sailor bows to tales or fame, to say this wrecked boat bore my name.
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 103 Views
  • SHE'S A SKY FULL OF STARS
    She's a sky full of stars
    A beautiful celestial map
    She's a universe of wonder in a velvet lap
    She's candlelight's flicker, such a radiant display
    Where the constellations cluster and playfully sway
    Sparkle resides within her eyes, do you see her cosmic gleam?
    It reflects galaxies woven in your waking dreams
    She is a nebula of passion right down to her fiery core
    There resides a burning with poems she's waiting to pour
    Watch the distant planets circling with mysteries that reside
    They carry secrets whispered softly on a starlit tide
    She's a supernova bursting in hot or cold
    Listen as her story is mystically spoken in her own world
    Gaze into her eyes if you dare to see
    The limitless expanse of what she could be
    She's a sky full of stars forever bright as sparkling's cast
    She's a treasure to be cherished-
    And a memory to eternally last
    SHE'S A SKY FULL OF STARS She's a sky full of stars A beautiful celestial map She's a universe of wonder in a velvet lap She's candlelight's flicker, such a radiant display Where the constellations cluster and playfully sway Sparkle resides within her eyes, do you see her cosmic gleam? It reflects galaxies woven in your waking dreams She is a nebula of passion right down to her fiery core There resides a burning with poems she's waiting to pour Watch the distant planets circling with mysteries that reside They carry secrets whispered softly on a starlit tide She's a supernova bursting in hot or cold Listen as her story is mystically spoken in her own world Gaze into her eyes if you dare to see The limitless expanse of what she could be She's a sky full of stars forever bright as sparkling's cast She's a treasure to be cherished- And a memory to eternally last
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 103 Views
  • They wanted to hide the Benue State genocide as usual, but there was a Verydarkblackman always waiting to expose them.
    They wanted to hide the Benue State genocide as usual, but there was a Verydarkblackman always waiting to expose them.
    Yay
    Sad
    2
    0 Σχόλια 2 Μοιράστηκε 152 Views
  • THE DEVIL'S MISTRESS
    PART 9
    The heavy silence left by William’s announcement didn’t lift. It pressed down on the sunlit bedroom, turning the golden warmth cold. Jessica sat frozen, the silk sheet clutched tightly around her, watching Scar’s rigid back. The shift in him was terrifying. The powerful, possessive man who had held her moments ago was gone, replaced by a statue carved from ice and tension. He hadn’t looked at her once since William spoke that name.
    Amanda.
    The name echoed in Jessica’s mind, sharp and poisonous. Who was she? What hold did she have over him that could shatter his invincible composure so completely? Jessica’s heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a gilded cage. Fear, cold and unfamiliar in this sanctuary, began to creep in.
    Scar finally moved. He stood up from the bed with a fluid, predatory grace that was devoid of its usual sensuality. He didn’t look at Jessica as he strode naked to a massive walk-in closet. Jessica watched, mesmerized and terrified, as he pulled on black trousers with sharp, efficient movements, then a crisp, white shirt that he buttoned with deliberate slowness, his fingers steady despite the storm Jessica sensed raging inside him. He buckled a sleek leather shoulder holster, sliding a heavy black pistol into place with a chilling finality. Finally, he shrugged into a perfectly tailored charcoal grey jacket. The transformation was complete: the lover replaced by the ruthless kingpin.
    Only then did he turn towards the bed. His eyes, when they finally met hers, were shuttered, unreadable. The warmth, the possessiveness, the *her* that usually lived in his gaze was buried deep beneath layers of cold control.
    "Jessica," his voice was low, rough, but unnervingly calm. "Stay here. Do not come out of this room. No matter what you hear. Understand?"
    The command was absolute. The underlying warning was clear. Jessica nodded mutely, her throat too tight to speak. The fear solidified into a cold knot in her stomach.
    Scar held her gaze for a beat longer, a flicker of something unidentifiable – protectiveness? Apology? – passing through his eyes before it was ruthlessly extinguished. He turned and walked out of the bedroom, closing the door firmly behind him. The soft click of the latch sounded like the sealing of a tomb.
    Jessica scrambled off the bed, pulling on the silk robe Scar had discarded earlier. It smelled like him, a small comfort that did nothing to ease the panic fluttering in her chest. She crept towards the door, pressing her ear against the cool, heavy wood. She could hear the low murmur of voices downstairs, too indistinct to make out words, but the tone was tense, charged.
    Downstairs, the opulent living room felt suddenly claustrophobic. William stood rigidly near the entrance, his face a mask of professional neutrality, but his eyes darted nervously towards the figure seated elegantly on the central cream sofa.
    Amanda.
    She was breathtaking. Dressed in a sheath dress of liquid silver that clung to her curves like a second skin, her dark hair cascaded in artful waves around a face sculpted with almost unreal perfection – high cheekbones, full lips painted a deep crimson, large, dark eyes fringed with impossibly long lashes. She looked like a fashion plate, a goddess descended into the mortal realm. She held a delicate porcelain cup of coffee, her posture relaxed, exuding an aura of supreme confidence. Yet, beneath the polished surface, an unnerving stillness radiated from her, like a viper basking in the sun.
    Scar entered the room, his presence instantly dominating the space. He stopped several feet away from the sofa, his hands clasped loosely behind his back, his expression impassive, but his eyes were chips of black ice fixed on Amanda.
    "Amanda," he stated, his voice devoid of inflection. "What are you doing here?"
    She looked up, a slow, dazzling smile spreading across her perfect features. It didn't reach her eyes. "Darling," she purred, her voice like velvet over steel. "Is that any way to greet your fiancée after five long years?"
    Scar didn't flinch. "That arrangement was terminated. Permanently."
    Amanda placed her cup down with exaggerated care on the glass coffee table. The delicate clink sounded unnaturally loud. "Terminated?" She gave a soft, tinkling laugh that held no humor. "By you? Because of one... little... mistake? You sent me away, Sebastian." She used his real name, a calculated intimacy. "Exiled me to that dreary clinic in Italy. Was that fair?" Her smile remained, but her eyes hardened. "Look at me. I worked so hard. Therapy, Sebastian. Sobriety." She gestured gracefully to herself. "All for you. To be worthy of you again."
    Scar’s gaze didn’t waver. A low growl rumbled in his chest, a sound of pure warning. "Don’t you think you’re a little late, Amanda? Things have changed. I have changed. I’ve moved on."
    The air crackled. The polished mask on Amanda’s face fractured. A flash of pure, incandescent rage contorted her beautiful features for a split second, her knuckles whitening where she gripped the edge of the sofa. It was gone as quickly as it appeared, smoothed over by a brittle smile. She rose gracefully, smoothing her dress.
    "Have you now?" she murmured, stepping towards him. She stopped just out of arm's reach, her dark eyes sweeping over him with possessive appraisal, then flicking dismissively around the room. "We shall see, Sebastian. We shall see." Her voice dropped, becoming a venomous whisper. "I’ve come back to take what’s mine."
    She didn’t wait for a response. With the regal bearing of a queen reclaiming her throne, she walked past him towards William. "William, darling," she said airily, as if the previous five years and her violent exile had never happened. "Be a dear and have my bags brought up. The usual suite, I assume is prepared?" She didn’t wait for an answer, brushing past him and heading towards the sweeping staircase as if she owned the place.
    William looked helplessly at Scar. Scar’s jaw was clenched so tightly a muscle spasmed in his cheek. He gave a single, sharp, almost imperceptible nod. William hurried after Amanda.
    Scar remained standing in the center of the living room, radiating a cold, dangerous fury that seemed to vibrate the very air. He didn’t move for a long time, staring at the space where Amanda had sat, the ghost of her perfume – heavy, floral, cloying – hanging in the air, a stark contrast to Jessica’s lighter, fresher scent.
    Upstairs, Jessica had retreated from the door, pacing the luxurious confines of the bedroom like a trapped animal. She’d heard the murmur of voices, the chilling clarity of that feminine purr, the unmistakable sound of footsteps ascending the stairs. Panic clawed at her throat. Fiancée? Exile?* The words screamed in her mind. Who was this woman? The fear for herself was momentarily eclipsed by a deeper, sharper pang – the fear of losing *him*, of this perfect, hard-won sanctuary being invaded and destroyed.
    Hours crawled by. Jessica heard muffled voices elsewhere in the vast penthouse, the sound of doors opening and closing. The luxurious room felt like a prison. She jumped violently when her own bedroom door finally opened.
    Scar stood there, framed in the doorway. The controlled mask he’d worn downstairs was still in place, but the strain showed around his eyes, in the tight set of his shoulders. He looked exhausted, haunted. He didn’t speak. He simply walked in, locked the door behind him, and crossed the room in three long strides.
    He pulled Jessica into his arms with a force that stole her breath. It wasn't a passionate embrace; it was desperate, almost fearful. He buried his face in the curve of her neck, his arms banded around her so tightly she could barely breathe, crushing her against the hard planes of his chest. He trembled, a fine, almost imperceptible vibration that terrified her more than any shout.
    "Sebastian?" Jessica whispered, her voice muffled against his shoulder.
    He didn’t answer with words. Instead, he lifted his head and captured her lips in a kiss that was unlike any they’d shared before. It was slow, deep, achingly tender, yet underpinned by a raw, almost frantic intensity. It was a kiss of claiming, of reassurance, of desperate need. He kissed her like a drowning man clinging to air.
    He lifted her effortlessly, carrying her to the bed. This time, there was no playful chase, no fierce claiming. He laid her down with heartbreaking gentleness. His touch as he removed her robe, then his own clothes, was reverent. He worshipped her body not with demanding passion, but with slow, lingering caresses that traced every curve, every scar, every inch of her skin as if memorizing it, as if it were sacred. His lips followed the same path – soft kisses on her eyelids, her temples, the pulse point at her wrist, the valley between her breasts, the sensitive skin of her inner thighs.
    He took her slowly, with a depth of feeling that stole her breath and brought tears to her eyes. His eyes never left hers, dark pools reflecting a vulnerability she had never seen. He moved within her with exquisite slowness, each thrust a promise, a plea. He murmured against her skin, words breathed like prayers into the quiet room.
    "I love you, baby," he whispered, his voice thick with emotion, rough with a fear he couldn't name. "I love you so much." He kissed her deeply again. "You are mine. Only mine." He held her gaze, the intensity almost painful. "I will protect you. With my life. Always."
    He repeated the words like a mantra as their bodies moved together in a rhythm that was pure, desperate connection. "I love you... mine... protect you..." It was a confession ripped from the deepest, most guarded part of his soul, a shield erected against the ghost that now walked his halls.
    Their climax, when it came, was a slow, powerful wave that washed over them together, a shared release that felt more like a merging of souls than a physical act. He held her through it, his arms like steel bands, his face buried in her hair, his body shuddering.
    Afterwards, he didn’t let go. He pulled her tightly against him, her back to his chest, his arms locked around her waist, his face pressed against the nape of her neck. His breathing gradually slowed, deepened, into the rhythm of sleep, but his hold never slackened. It was as if he feared she would vanish if he loosened his grip even slightly.
    Jessica lay wide awake in the circle of his arms, his words echoing in the silence.
    I love you.
    He’d never said it before. He was a man of actions, not declarations. His protection, his care, his fierce possession – that was his language. Hearing the words aloud, raw and vulnerable, spoken with such desperate intensity… it shook her to her core.
    The fear hadn’t left. It coiled cold and heavy beneath the lingering warmth of his love and their intimacy. Amanda’s chillingly beautiful face, her possessive words, her entitled invasion… they painted a picture of danger Jessica couldn’t yet fully see, but felt bone-deep.
    Something serious was happening. Something dark from Scar’s past had erupted into their fragile present, threatening everything. The man who feared nothing slept clinging to her like a lifeline. The confession of love wasn't just a gift; it was a warning.
    Jessica stared into the darkness beyond the window, the unfamiliar weight of Scar’s sleeping embrace both a comfort and a chain. His whispered promise, *"I will protect you,"* warred with the terrifying certainty that Amanda was a storm they might not weather.
    Who is she? Jessica thought, her mind racing, her body acutely aware of the man who loved her and the ghost who threatened them. *What did she do? What does she want?*
    The warmth of Scar’s body against her back couldn’t dispel the chilling dread. Amanda wasn’t just an ex-fiancée. She was chaos wrapped in silk. And Jessica knew, with a cold certainty that settled in her bones, that she needed to understand this enemy.
    And I will find out, she vowed silently into the dark, her hand tightening slightly over Scar’s where it rested on her stomach. The battle lines, unseen but deeply felt, had been drawn.
    TO BE CONTINUED...
    THE DEVIL'S MISTRESS PART 9 The heavy silence left by William’s announcement didn’t lift. It pressed down on the sunlit bedroom, turning the golden warmth cold. Jessica sat frozen, the silk sheet clutched tightly around her, watching Scar’s rigid back. The shift in him was terrifying. The powerful, possessive man who had held her moments ago was gone, replaced by a statue carved from ice and tension. He hadn’t looked at her once since William spoke that name. Amanda. The name echoed in Jessica’s mind, sharp and poisonous. Who was she? What hold did she have over him that could shatter his invincible composure so completely? Jessica’s heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a gilded cage. Fear, cold and unfamiliar in this sanctuary, began to creep in. Scar finally moved. He stood up from the bed with a fluid, predatory grace that was devoid of its usual sensuality. He didn’t look at Jessica as he strode naked to a massive walk-in closet. Jessica watched, mesmerized and terrified, as he pulled on black trousers with sharp, efficient movements, then a crisp, white shirt that he buttoned with deliberate slowness, his fingers steady despite the storm Jessica sensed raging inside him. He buckled a sleek leather shoulder holster, sliding a heavy black pistol into place with a chilling finality. Finally, he shrugged into a perfectly tailored charcoal grey jacket. The transformation was complete: the lover replaced by the ruthless kingpin. Only then did he turn towards the bed. His eyes, when they finally met hers, were shuttered, unreadable. The warmth, the possessiveness, the *her* that usually lived in his gaze was buried deep beneath layers of cold control. "Jessica," his voice was low, rough, but unnervingly calm. "Stay here. Do not come out of this room. No matter what you hear. Understand?" The command was absolute. The underlying warning was clear. Jessica nodded mutely, her throat too tight to speak. The fear solidified into a cold knot in her stomach. Scar held her gaze for a beat longer, a flicker of something unidentifiable – protectiveness? Apology? – passing through his eyes before it was ruthlessly extinguished. He turned and walked out of the bedroom, closing the door firmly behind him. The soft click of the latch sounded like the sealing of a tomb. Jessica scrambled off the bed, pulling on the silk robe Scar had discarded earlier. It smelled like him, a small comfort that did nothing to ease the panic fluttering in her chest. She crept towards the door, pressing her ear against the cool, heavy wood. She could hear the low murmur of voices downstairs, too indistinct to make out words, but the tone was tense, charged. Downstairs, the opulent living room felt suddenly claustrophobic. William stood rigidly near the entrance, his face a mask of professional neutrality, but his eyes darted nervously towards the figure seated elegantly on the central cream sofa. Amanda. She was breathtaking. Dressed in a sheath dress of liquid silver that clung to her curves like a second skin, her dark hair cascaded in artful waves around a face sculpted with almost unreal perfection – high cheekbones, full lips painted a deep crimson, large, dark eyes fringed with impossibly long lashes. She looked like a fashion plate, a goddess descended into the mortal realm. She held a delicate porcelain cup of coffee, her posture relaxed, exuding an aura of supreme confidence. Yet, beneath the polished surface, an unnerving stillness radiated from her, like a viper basking in the sun. Scar entered the room, his presence instantly dominating the space. He stopped several feet away from the sofa, his hands clasped loosely behind his back, his expression impassive, but his eyes were chips of black ice fixed on Amanda. "Amanda," he stated, his voice devoid of inflection. "What are you doing here?" She looked up, a slow, dazzling smile spreading across her perfect features. It didn't reach her eyes. "Darling," she purred, her voice like velvet over steel. "Is that any way to greet your fiancée after five long years?" Scar didn't flinch. "That arrangement was terminated. Permanently." Amanda placed her cup down with exaggerated care on the glass coffee table. The delicate clink sounded unnaturally loud. "Terminated?" She gave a soft, tinkling laugh that held no humor. "By you? Because of one... little... mistake? You sent me away, Sebastian." She used his real name, a calculated intimacy. "Exiled me to that dreary clinic in Italy. Was that fair?" Her smile remained, but her eyes hardened. "Look at me. I worked so hard. Therapy, Sebastian. Sobriety." She gestured gracefully to herself. "All for you. To be worthy of you again." Scar’s gaze didn’t waver. A low growl rumbled in his chest, a sound of pure warning. "Don’t you think you’re a little late, Amanda? Things have changed. I have changed. I’ve moved on." The air crackled. The polished mask on Amanda’s face fractured. A flash of pure, incandescent rage contorted her beautiful features for a split second, her knuckles whitening where she gripped the edge of the sofa. It was gone as quickly as it appeared, smoothed over by a brittle smile. She rose gracefully, smoothing her dress. "Have you now?" she murmured, stepping towards him. She stopped just out of arm's reach, her dark eyes sweeping over him with possessive appraisal, then flicking dismissively around the room. "We shall see, Sebastian. We shall see." Her voice dropped, becoming a venomous whisper. "I’ve come back to take what’s mine." She didn’t wait for a response. With the regal bearing of a queen reclaiming her throne, she walked past him towards William. "William, darling," she said airily, as if the previous five years and her violent exile had never happened. "Be a dear and have my bags brought up. The usual suite, I assume is prepared?" She didn’t wait for an answer, brushing past him and heading towards the sweeping staircase as if she owned the place. William looked helplessly at Scar. Scar’s jaw was clenched so tightly a muscle spasmed in his cheek. He gave a single, sharp, almost imperceptible nod. William hurried after Amanda. Scar remained standing in the center of the living room, radiating a cold, dangerous fury that seemed to vibrate the very air. He didn’t move for a long time, staring at the space where Amanda had sat, the ghost of her perfume – heavy, floral, cloying – hanging in the air, a stark contrast to Jessica’s lighter, fresher scent. Upstairs, Jessica had retreated from the door, pacing the luxurious confines of the bedroom like a trapped animal. She’d heard the murmur of voices, the chilling clarity of that feminine purr, the unmistakable sound of footsteps ascending the stairs. Panic clawed at her throat. Fiancée? Exile?* The words screamed in her mind. Who was this woman? The fear for herself was momentarily eclipsed by a deeper, sharper pang – the fear of losing *him*, of this perfect, hard-won sanctuary being invaded and destroyed. Hours crawled by. Jessica heard muffled voices elsewhere in the vast penthouse, the sound of doors opening and closing. The luxurious room felt like a prison. She jumped violently when her own bedroom door finally opened. Scar stood there, framed in the doorway. The controlled mask he’d worn downstairs was still in place, but the strain showed around his eyes, in the tight set of his shoulders. He looked exhausted, haunted. He didn’t speak. He simply walked in, locked the door behind him, and crossed the room in three long strides. He pulled Jessica into his arms with a force that stole her breath. It wasn't a passionate embrace; it was desperate, almost fearful. He buried his face in the curve of her neck, his arms banded around her so tightly she could barely breathe, crushing her against the hard planes of his chest. He trembled, a fine, almost imperceptible vibration that terrified her more than any shout. "Sebastian?" Jessica whispered, her voice muffled against his shoulder. He didn’t answer with words. Instead, he lifted his head and captured her lips in a kiss that was unlike any they’d shared before. It was slow, deep, achingly tender, yet underpinned by a raw, almost frantic intensity. It was a kiss of claiming, of reassurance, of desperate need. He kissed her like a drowning man clinging to air. He lifted her effortlessly, carrying her to the bed. This time, there was no playful chase, no fierce claiming. He laid her down with heartbreaking gentleness. His touch as he removed her robe, then his own clothes, was reverent. He worshipped her body not with demanding passion, but with slow, lingering caresses that traced every curve, every scar, every inch of her skin as if memorizing it, as if it were sacred. His lips followed the same path – soft kisses on her eyelids, her temples, the pulse point at her wrist, the valley between her breasts, the sensitive skin of her inner thighs. He took her slowly, with a depth of feeling that stole her breath and brought tears to her eyes. His eyes never left hers, dark pools reflecting a vulnerability she had never seen. He moved within her with exquisite slowness, each thrust a promise, a plea. He murmured against her skin, words breathed like prayers into the quiet room. "I love you, baby," he whispered, his voice thick with emotion, rough with a fear he couldn't name. "I love you so much." He kissed her deeply again. "You are mine. Only mine." He held her gaze, the intensity almost painful. "I will protect you. With my life. Always." He repeated the words like a mantra as their bodies moved together in a rhythm that was pure, desperate connection. "I love you... mine... protect you..." It was a confession ripped from the deepest, most guarded part of his soul, a shield erected against the ghost that now walked his halls. Their climax, when it came, was a slow, powerful wave that washed over them together, a shared release that felt more like a merging of souls than a physical act. He held her through it, his arms like steel bands, his face buried in her hair, his body shuddering. Afterwards, he didn’t let go. He pulled her tightly against him, her back to his chest, his arms locked around her waist, his face pressed against the nape of her neck. His breathing gradually slowed, deepened, into the rhythm of sleep, but his hold never slackened. It was as if he feared she would vanish if he loosened his grip even slightly. Jessica lay wide awake in the circle of his arms, his words echoing in the silence. I love you. He’d never said it before. He was a man of actions, not declarations. His protection, his care, his fierce possession – that was his language. Hearing the words aloud, raw and vulnerable, spoken with such desperate intensity… it shook her to her core. The fear hadn’t left. It coiled cold and heavy beneath the lingering warmth of his love and their intimacy. Amanda’s chillingly beautiful face, her possessive words, her entitled invasion… they painted a picture of danger Jessica couldn’t yet fully see, but felt bone-deep. Something serious was happening. Something dark from Scar’s past had erupted into their fragile present, threatening everything. The man who feared nothing slept clinging to her like a lifeline. The confession of love wasn't just a gift; it was a warning. Jessica stared into the darkness beyond the window, the unfamiliar weight of Scar’s sleeping embrace both a comfort and a chain. His whispered promise, *"I will protect you,"* warred with the terrifying certainty that Amanda was a storm they might not weather. Who is she? Jessica thought, her mind racing, her body acutely aware of the man who loved her and the ghost who threatened them. *What did she do? What does she want?* The warmth of Scar’s body against her back couldn’t dispel the chilling dread. Amanda wasn’t just an ex-fiancée. She was chaos wrapped in silk. And Jessica knew, with a cold certainty that settled in her bones, that she needed to understand this enemy. And I will find out, she vowed silently into the dark, her hand tightening slightly over Scar’s where it rested on her stomach. The battle lines, unseen but deeply felt, had been drawn. TO BE CONTINUED...
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  • The Air India plane crash.
    To some, it's just another breaking news story.
    To me, it was a soul-stirring reminder of how fragile and unpredictable life really is.

    Four lives. Four stories. Four powerful lessons changed how I see time, purpose, and grace of each moment.

    First: A family who had waited years to fulfil their dream of migrating to the UK.
    Life kept getting in the way, responsibilities, delays, and decisions.
    They finally made it onto the plane… but never reached their destination

    And I realized:
    We carry so many plans for “someday.” But if we keep waiting, someday becomes never.

    Second: A woman who was supposed to be on that flight. She arrived late. Missed the check-in. Pleaded to get on board but was denied. She was frustrated, angry, and defeated. Only to later realize: that delay was divine protection.

    We don’t always get what we want because God sees what we can not.
    Sometimes, His “no” is what keeps us alive.

    Third: A man who survived.
    The plane split in half, and he happened to be in the section that didn’t catch fire.
    He walked away, dazed and alive, from something no one thought survivable.

    It wasn’t luck. It was purpose. I was reminded of the verse: “There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens.” – Ecclesiastes 3:1

    It simply wasn’t his time.

    Fourth: And then those who didn’t make it. People with dreams. People with families. People with unfinished stories.
    They kissed someone goodbye that morning… not knowing it was the last time.

    Their lives remind us that time is not guaranteed. We’re not promised old age. We’re not promised later. What we have is now. A breath. A heartbeat. A chance.

    So, while you still have today..
    While you’re still breathing, still strong, still able, don’t waste it. Don’t wait for the “perfect” moment.

    Love now. Apologize now. Forgive now. Dream now. Speak now.

    Because life doesn’t always come with warnings. And sometimes… “next time” never comes.
    The Air India plane crash. To some, it's just another breaking news story. To me, it was a soul-stirring reminder of how fragile and unpredictable life really is. Four lives. Four stories. Four powerful lessons changed how I see time, purpose, and grace of each moment. First: A family who had waited years to fulfil their dream of migrating to the UK. Life kept getting in the way, responsibilities, delays, and decisions. They finally made it onto the plane… but never reached their destination And I realized: We carry so many plans for “someday.” But if we keep waiting, someday becomes never. Second: A woman who was supposed to be on that flight. She arrived late. Missed the check-in. Pleaded to get on board but was denied. She was frustrated, angry, and defeated. Only to later realize: that delay was divine protection. We don’t always get what we want because God sees what we can not. Sometimes, His “no” is what keeps us alive. Third: A man who survived. The plane split in half, and he happened to be in the section that didn’t catch fire. He walked away, dazed and alive, from something no one thought survivable. It wasn’t luck. It was purpose. I was reminded of the verse: “There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens.” – Ecclesiastes 3:1 It simply wasn’t his time. Fourth: And then those who didn’t make it. People with dreams. People with families. People with unfinished stories. They kissed someone goodbye that morning… not knowing it was the last time. Their lives remind us that time is not guaranteed. We’re not promised old age. We’re not promised later. What we have is now. A breath. A heartbeat. A chance. So, while you still have today.. While you’re still breathing, still strong, still able, don’t waste it. Don’t wait for the “perfect” moment. Love now. Apologize now. Forgive now. Dream now. Speak now. Because life doesn’t always come with warnings. And sometimes… “next time” never comes.
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