Victoria Okoro believed the world was like a big market where everything was based on exchange and the only real currency was self-interest. From her office on the 25th floor of the Okoro Tower in Ecoy, [music] she could see all of Legos spread out before her like a mat, a tangled web of roads, wires, and signals all leading back to one main idea.
Everyone was interested in only what they could gain. Love, loyalty, kindness. Those were just fancy words that didn’t truly exist. Her ex-husband had taught her that bitter lesson in a courtroom that smelled of betrayal and expensive perfume. Her business partners reminded her of it every day with their polite, sharp smiles that hid evil intentions, greed, and deceit.
At 38, she was a queen of business, a giant [music] in finance, and a woman who had built a fortress around a heart she wasn’t even sure was still beating. Her fortress on this hot Tuesday afternoon was the back seat of her custom-made Range Rover. The cool recycled air inside the car separated her from the chaos outside on the third mainland Bridge.
A truck carrying yams had fallen over and traffic was completely blocked. The air is heavy and choking. Horns blared loudly in anger and frustration. Victoria barely noticed. She was on a call with her lawyer. Her voice was sharp and cold like the champagne she had at lunch. No, Joseph. The prenuptial for the next one will be even stricter. I want a rule that says if he even dreams about another woman, he loses everything, even his shadow.
We can’t make that legal. Then find me a lawyer who can. She ended the call and threw her phone onto the clean leather seat beside her. A sigh escaped her lips, not of sadness, but of deep bone level tiredness. Life was just a game, a boring, predictable game of chess where everyone acted like a king or queen, but was really just a pawn.
And she, Victoria Okoro, was tired of winning. Then she saw him. He stood between the rows of stopped cars like a ghost battling in the heat. He wasn’t begging in the loud, desperate way other beggars do. He was simply there, existing. A tall, painfully thin man who looked like a strong wind could break him into two.
But it wasn’t the man himself who caught Victoria’s attention. It was what he carried. Strapped to his chest in an old faded baby carrier made from a woman’s wrapper were two tiny babies. Twins by the look of them. Their small round faces were red from the heat. Their little fists curled near their cheeks. They looked so small, so fragile, so helpless against the harsh backdrop of the jammed bridge.
The man Samuel Edunlay was trying to shield his children from the sun with his own body. Turning himself so they could stay in the shade. With a rag that was once white, he gently wiped the sweat from their foreheads. He wasn’t looking at the rich people in their cars. His whole world, his entire focus was on the two little lives resting against his chest.
[music] He whispered softly to them. His voice was lost in the noise of honking cars. But the care and his actions shone brightly through the oppressive heat. Something cold and sharp twisted inside Victoria’s stomach. Her skeptical mind immediately began to calculate. The children are props. It told her, “A trick, the perfect sympathy act.
No one can refuse starving babies. She had seen it all before. She had built her empire by spotting such performances, by seeing the angle, the motive, the trade. But then the man did something that didn’t fit the pattern. He reached into a small torn bag by his side and pulled out a plastic bottle.
He opened the cap and ignoring his own dry lips, wet the rag again and gently touched it to each baby’s mouth. He didn’t take a sip himself. Not one drop. His love for them was a shield, a promise, a quiet sacrifice made in the middle of a concrete hell. For the first time in 10 years, Victoria Okoro felt an emotion that wasn’t boredom, anger, or suspicion.
[music] It was a flicker of something dangerously close to pain. The image of the father and his children was like a mirror showing her own empty life. A life full of wealth and possessions, but with no real meaning. The sight of his pure love felt like an accusation, a painful reminder of what she didn’t have. Then the cold, bitter part of her came back to life fiercer than ever.
“It’s a lie,” she told herself. “It has to be a lie. It was all an act, and he was simply better at pretending than other beggars.” A cruel, sudden idea grew in her mind, born from her boredom and her bitterness. She would test him. She would prove that his kindness was fake, just a performance before asking for money.
She would tempt him with something huge and watch him fail, confirming her belief that the world was just as she saw it, a pit of greed. “Kunlay,” she said sharply. Her driver, startled, looked at her through the rearview mirror, stopped the car properly. “I’m getting out.” “Madam, here it’s not [music] safe now,” she ordered.
The door opened and a wave of heat and noise rushed over her. Dressed in a silk pants suit [music] that cost more than the average car on the bridge. She looked like a figure of wealth and power. People stared. She ignored them. She walked straight towards the man, her heels clicking loudly on the hot road. Samuel saw her coming and instantly pulled his babies closer, tightening his hold on the carrier.
He expected her to shout, “Wave him away, or maybe throw a few wrinkled naira notes from a distance.” He didn’t expect this woman, who looked like she was made of diamonds and ice, to stop right in front of him. “What is your name?” she asked. Her voice wasn’t harsh, but it carried no warmth either. “Samuel Ma,” he stammered, nervous under her piercing gaze.
“And the children? David and Deborah Ma. They’re 5 months old.” Victoria’s eyes shifted to the babies. “They were so tiny. They look hungry. You look hungry.” Samuel’s pride hurt, but he couldn’t deny the truth. He hadn’t eaten a proper meal in 2 days. Saving the little money he made from small jobs to buy their baby formula, he simply nodded.
Staring at the ground, Victoria reached into her Chanel handbag and took out her wallet. Samuel’s heart jumped with hope. Maybe she would give him 500 or even a thousand naira. That would be enough for food, at least for today. But Victoria didn’t pull out money. Instead, she took out a small piece of black plastic. the American Express Centurion card, also called the black card.
It was a symbol of endless wealth, a card most people only heard about in stories. She held it out to him. “I want you to take this,” she said calmly. Samuel stared at the card, then at her face, confused and unsure. “Ma, I I don’t understand.” “It’s a credit card,” she said slowly, as if explaining to a child. “There’s no limit.
I want you to take it and go to any store you want. Buy whatever you need for you and the children. Food, clothes, medicine, even a hotel room for a month. Anything. Then tomorrow at noon, meet me in the lobby of my building. She pointed to the shining Okoro Tower in the distance. [music] You can return the card to me then. Samuel was speechless.
This had to be a trick, a cruel joke by the rich to mock the poor. But why, Ma? Why would you do this? Victoria looked at him, her eyes cold and unreadable like polished stone. She was testing his love. She was sure it wasn’t real. She wanted to see him waste the money on things like a flat screen TV, gold chain, or expensive shoes.
She wanted him to prove her right, that everyone was greedy behind their mask of goodness. Consider it an opportunity, she said softly, the words bitter in her mouth. An experiment. Don’t disappoint me. She pushed the card into his hand. It felt cold, heavy, and strange, like something from another world. Before he could say anything more, she turned and walked back to her car.
The doors closed with a quiet final thud. The Range Rover began to move forward as traffic slowly cleared, leaving Samuel standing alone on the bridge, surrounded by noise and heat, holding a key to a world he had never known, and facing a test he didn’t even understand he was taking. For a long time, after the sleek Range Rover disappeared into the river of traffic, Samuel Adakunlay simply stood there, a statue of disbelief in the oppressive heat.
The world around him, the blaring horns, the shouts of hawkers, the thick humid air faded into a dull, distant roar. In his palm, the black card felt heavier than a block of gold, colder than a shard of ice. It was an artifact from another universe, and he was terrified it would either vanish or electrocute him. His first instinct was to run, to find the woman and give it back, to tell her he wasn’t part of her game.
But then, a soft whimper came from his chest. David was stirring. His tiny face creased with discomfort from the heat. Deborah shifted in her sleep, her breathing a little too shallow for his liking. [music] They were his reality. They were all that mattered. The card wasn’t a joke or a trick. It was a responsibility, a terrifying sacred trust.
With a deep breath that did little to calm the frantic drumming [music] in his chest, Samuel began to walk. He had no destination in mind, only a direction, away from the bridge, away from the life of uncertainty, if only for a few hours. He walked for nearly an hour, the baby’s a precious warm weight against his body. The card clutched so tightly in his hand that its edges dug into his skin.
He ignored the stairs of passers by who saw his ragged clothes and the impossible priceless card in his hand. His first stop was not a fancy restaurant or a designer store. It was a med plus pharmacy. [music] Its green cross, a symbol of hope. He entered and the blast of air conditioning was so sudden and so cold it made him gasp.
The young woman behind the counter looked at him then at the babies. her professional smile tightening with suspicion. Samuel ignored her. He moved with the singular focus of a desperate father. He went to the baby aisle, his eyes accustomed to scanning for the cheapest possible option, now scanned for the best. He picked up a large tin of the most reputable infant formula, the one with all the added vitamins he had only ever read about.
He grabbed the largest pack of diapers, not the ones that leaked after an hour, but the soft, absorbent kind. He found baby rash cream, a bottle of infant paracetamol, a gentle baby soap, and a small soft bristled hairbrush. He looked at the items in his basket. A treasure trove of basic care he could normally never afford all at once.
His hands trembled as he walked to the counter. “Is that all?” the cashier asked, her tone flat. Samuel nodded, his throat too dry to speak. He placed the items on the counter and then with a deep breath slid the black card towards her. The woman picked it up, her eyes widening as she felt its weight and saw the unfamiliar prestigious design.
She looked from the card to Samuel’s frayed shirt. And back again she called her manager. The manager, a stout man with a skeptical frown, examined the card. Then Samuel, “Is this yours?” he asked, his voice laced with accusation. “A woman?” she gave it to me, Samuel said. his voice barely a whisper.
“Please, just just try it,” the manager sighed, clearly expecting the machine to decline. He tapped the card. The machine beeped. “Approved.” The silence that followed was deafening. The cashier packed his items with a new flustered difference. Samuel took his bag of treasures, his [music] heart pounding a chaotic rhythm of relief and fear, and walked back out into the heat.
His next stop was a large supermarket. The sheer overwhelming abundance of the place made him dizzy. Isles and isles of food, clothes, and goods. He felt like an intruder, a ghost haunting a feast. But the thought of his children, of their empty stomachs, propelled him forward. He bought more formula, enough for weeks.
He bought new feeding bottles, a sterilizing kit, soft cotton blankets, and a stack of simple two white baby clothes. Then, for the first time, he thought of himself. His own stomach was a hollow, aching pit. He walked past the aisles of gourmet cheeses and imported wines, his eyes seeing them as if they were museum exhibits.
He went to the bakery section and picked up a loaf of sliced bread. He bought a jar of ground nuts, a bunch of bananas, and a large canister of clean bottled water. That was it. No steak, no roasted chicken, no expensive meal, just simple life sustaining food. Before he left, he saw a plain dark blue t-shirt and a pair of simple black trousers on a sail rack.
Thinking of the meeting with Victoria in the Grand Okoro Tower the next day, of the dignity he wanted to have for his children’s sake, he added them to his cart. The checkout was another difficult moment of suspicion followed by stunned acceptance. As he left carrying his bags, the weight was no longer just the babies, but the clear proof of his strange fortune.
He had everything he needed for them. But he was still on the street. His final mission was to find a place to sleep. Not a five-star hotel with a swimming pool and room service, but a safe place with a soft mattress, good windows, and doors. Separated from the city’s noise where the babies can rest and sleep peacefully for just one night.
He walked past the grand intimidating entrances of the city’s most expensive hotels, Rison blew in the federal palace, his heart sinking with the certainty that they would never let him through the door. He eventually found what he was looking for on a quieter side street, a modest, clean looking guest house called the Palm Rest.
It wasn’t luxurious, but the sign promised hot water and secure rooms. The man at the reception desk was kind, his eyes falling on the sleeping babies with a gentle expression. Samuel asked for their cheapest room for one night. [music] He paid with the card. There was no doubt this time, only a quiet, curious respect.
The room was small and simple with a bed, a small table, and an adjoining bathroom. To Samuel, it was paradise. He gently unwrapped his children from their carrier and laid them on the clean white sheets of the bed. They look so tiny, so perfect against the fresh linen. [music] He worked carefully. He washed the new bottles and cleaned them completely.
He prepared a bottle of the new nutrient-packed formula for each of them. He woke them gently. David and Deborah [music] drank greedily, their eyes fixed on their father’s face. For the first time in their short lives, their bellies were truly completely full. Then he bathed them in the small but clean bathroom.
Using the gentle baby soap, he washed away the dirt of the city. He dried them with a soft towel he found in the room and dressed them in their new clean clothes. They smelled of soap and innocence. He laid them back on the bed, and they fell into a deep, peaceful sleep unlike any he had seen before.
With his children safe and sound, Samuel finally sat down on the floor, leaning his back against the bed. He opened the loaf of bread and the jar of ground nuts and ate his first proper meal in what felt like a lifetime. Meanwhile, in her clean, quiet penthouse overlooking the twinkling lights of Lagos, Victoria Okoro was not at peace.
Her phone had been buzzing off and on all afternoon. Each buzz was a notification from her bank’s personal assistant service. She had expected alerts from Gucci, from the Wheat Baker Hotels restaurant, from an electronic superstore. Instead, the list that populated her screen [music] was a long list of the ordinary, a record of pure, unfiltered need.
Transaction alert. Med Plus Pharmacy Marina 28,550 naira. Transaction alert. Shopright the Palms 54,200 naira. Transaction alert. Pepto Yaba 12,800 naira. Transaction alert. The Palm Rest Guest House, 18,000 Naira. She stared at the notifications, her brow wrinkled. The amounts were insultingly small.
The locations were painfully ordinary. There was no flash, no greed, no hint of the selfish splurge she had been so certain would happen. She had given a starving man a key to the world’s treasure, and he had used it to buy diapers, baby formula, and a room in a budget hotel. The results weren’t just wrong. They felt like a personal criticism, a quiet, powerful statement that her entire worldview was built on a foundation of lies.
She felt a cold, unfamiliar, not forming in her stomach. It was an anger. It wasn’t disappointment. It was something far more terrifying. It was the first crack in the fortress she had built around her heart. A crack through which a sliver of painful, blinding light was beginning to shine. The test wasn’t over, but she was starting to fear that she was the one who was failing it.
Sleep for Samuel was usually like a thief. Something that came briefly, stole bits of rest, but never gave peace. He would sleep on bus stop benches or inside unfinished buildings, always half awake, listening for danger. His body curled protectively around the babies on his chest. But in the quiet, safe room of the Palm Rest Guest House, sleep was a blessing.
It came deeply and quietly, washing away the tiredness that had built up in his body. For the first time in more than a year, he slept without fear. He woke up to the soft golden morning light shining through the curtains. [music] The first thing he heard wasn’t the noise of traffic or the early morning call to prayer, but the calm, steady breathing of his children.
He turned his head on the pillow he hadn’t even realized he’d used and saw them. David and Deborah were still sleeping peacefully on the bed beside him. Their tiny chests moving up and down together in their clean clothes. Their skin looked bright and healthy after a proper bath and a full meal. They looked like little angels.
A wave of love so strong and deep rushed through him that it took his breath away. This single peaceful night was worth more than all the money in the world. He knew his time was short. The miracle would end [music] at noon. He couldn’t afford to waste even a minute. After feeding and changing the twins, he put on his new clean clothes.
When he looked at himself in the small bathroom mirror, he was surprised. The man looking back was still thin, and his face still showed signs of struggle, but the dirt and hopelessness that once covered him were gone. There was a quiet pride in his eyes. the look of a man who had managed [music] against all odds to care for his children.
With the babies safely settled, he left the guest house and stepped into the busy morning of Lagos. His mission was no longer just to survive. It was to build a small, fragile path toward a better future. His first stop was a bigger baby supply store in Surueri. He walked past the fancy cribs and expensive strollers and went straight for the things that truly mattered.
With clear purpose, he began to shop. He bought a little bit more of the best baby formula, thinking about how long it would last. He bought diapers in the next size up. He bought teething rings, a baby thermometer, [music] and a nasal cleaner. Then he saw it, a strong, well-made twin baby carrier. It had padded shoulder straps and proper head support for two babies.
[music] It was nothing like the worn piece of cloth he had been using. a rough sling that hurt his back and didn’t protect the twins well. It was costly. But he knew it wasn’t just a luxury. It was something important for their safety [music] and his strength. He added it to his cart without hesitation.
Next, he went to a shoe store. The old flip-flops he wore had souls so thin they barely protected him from the burning ground and sharp stones of the streets. He bought a pair of simple, strong black leather walking shoes. He put them on right there in the store, and the soft comfort beneath his feet felt so new, so kind that he almost cried.
[music] His final stop was a small, messy shop that sold all kinds of things from bags to electronics. He bought a strong, waterproof backpack, big enough to hold all the baby items, replacing the torn plastic bags he usually carried. He also bought a simple secondhand Nokia phone and a SIM card. It wasn’t for internet or social media.
It was for survival, a way to be reachable if a job ever came his way. He had everything he needed. He had provided. He had prepared. He had been responsible. He turned to leave the shop. A quiet feeling of pride and peace settling in his chest. But then, in a dusty glass case near the door, [music] he saw them.
They were two small matching silver lockets, each shaped like a tiny heart. They weren’t shiny or expensive, [music] but they gave off a soft, gentle glow. A sudden thought, both tender and painful, cut through his careful plans. His wife, Funk, had once owned a simple locket just like these. It was the only piece of jewelry she had, a gift from her mother.
She had lost it during the chaos at the hospital, the day she died, giving birth to their twins. He imagined his children years later growing up with no memory of their mother, no connection to the woman who gave her life for them. He imagined giving them these lockets on their first birthday, a small, beautiful reminder in a life that had begun with so much struggle.
It was an unnecessary thought, even wasteful. The money could have been better used. But as he looked at the lockets, he wasn’t thinking about money. He was thinking about memory, about legacy, about love. He was thinking about his wife. With shaking hands, he asked the shopkeeper to show him the lockets. He bought both. In her penthouse, Victoria Okoro was like a storm trapped inside a silk suit.
She hadn’t slept. The string of alerts from the previous day had broken down her beliefs one by one. She had paced her apartment all night, the list of simple purchases repeating in her head. She tried to explain it away, to see it differently. Maybe it was part of a plan. Maybe he was pretending to be careful to earn her trust before asking for something big.
But the thought felt empty, like a weak excuse, trying to rebuild the walls he had unknowingly broken. Morning came with another round of alerts. Each one shaking her belief in her own cold logic. Transaction alert. Babies and beyond. So ruer 115,700. A large amount, but for a baby store, it meant he was buying in bulk, not wasting. Transaction alert. Ba shoes.
Teduo Show Market 15,500. Sensible shoes, not luxury brands. Transaction alert. Samsonite luggage and phones. IA 32,000. A backpack and a cheap phone. Useful things, not indulgence. She felt a confusing mix of frustration and something else. Maybe admiration, maybe respect. These feelings were so strange, she didn’t even know what to call them.
She had set a trap for a greedy man and instead found something pure and honest, and that frightened her. Then, just before 11:00, the final alert came. It was for the smallest amount yet. Transaction alert. Edwale and Sons jewelers 9,500. Victoria’s heart froze. Jewelry. A rush of bitter satisfaction filled her. This was it.
Proof that he wasn’t different after all. After all his careful spending on the babies, now he was buying for himself. A ring, a cheap chain, something shiny to reward himself. She felt triumph. The cynical queen had been right. Relief poured through her like a wave, so strong it almost made her sick. She had won. Her world snapped back into its familiar, ugly order.
The clock on her wall ticked toward noon. She sat behind her wide mahogany desk. The city of Legos stretching behind her like a silent empire. She fixed her face into a calm, unreadable mask, ready to deliver the final crushing judgment of her test. At exactly 11:55 a.m., Samuel at Akunlay, dressed in his clean t-shirt and trousers, his feet and new shoes, walked into the lobby of Okoro Tower.
The babies were nestled securely in their new carrier, sleeping quietly against his chest. The place was vast, a palace of wealth made of cold marble and shining glass. The air was cool, and the silence broken only by the low hum of business. People in sharp suits hurried past, their eyes sliding over him like he didn’t exist.
[music] He gripped the straps of his new backpack, the weight giving him strength. In his pocket, the black card felt like burning metal. Beside it, wrapped carefully in a piece of tissue paper were the two small silver lockets. He walked to the reception desk, his heart pounding hard in his chest, matching the steady heartbeat of the babies sleeping on him.
“I am here to see Mrs. Victoria Okaro,” he said quietly but firmly. “She is expecting me.” The receptionist, a young woman with a polite but distant smile, spoke softly into her headset. Her eyes flickered over Samuel. the clean but humble clothes, the twin baby sleeping peacefully on his chest, and something unspoken passed through her gaze.
Curiosity, pity, maybe even [music] respect. After a brief exchange on the call, she nodded. Mrs. Okoro’s personal assistant will be down to escort you up.” Moments later, the elevator door slid open and a man in a sharp tailored suit stepped out. His face was unreadable. He gave a small nod and motioned for Samuel to follow.
The ride to the 25th floor was silent. The hum of the elevator loud in the stillness. Samuel stood quietly holding his children close. His reflection in the mirrored walls showing a man trying to hold on to calm. When the doors opened, he stepped into another world. The office was enormous, larger than any room he had ever entered.
With one wall made entirely of glass, overlooking the sprawl of Legos. The morning sun poured in, turning the city below into a field of gold and steel. Behind a vast mahogany desk, sat Victoria Okoro. She looked different now, regal, powerful, perfectly composed. Gone was the woman in the car who had acted on impulse. Before him, sat a monarch in her palace.
“Mr. [music] Adakunlay,” she said, her tone measured and cool. “Please have a seat.” The chair, she indicated, was several feet away. Not an invitation, but a boundary. Samuel obeyed, carefully, adjusting the baby carrier, so David and Deborah remained asleep. Their tiny breaths filled the silence between them.
“You are punctual,” Victoria observed. “I appreciate that. I said I would be here.” Samuel replied quietly. “Good.” She clasped her hands together, studying him. “The card, please.” Samuel rose, pulled it from his pocket, and placed it gently on her desk. The black card looked small, almost meaningless, against the expanse of polished wood.
“Thank you,” she said, though she didn’t touch it. “I trust it served its purpose.” “It did, ma’am,” he said, emotion trembling in his voice. “You saved my children’s lives. I can never repay you.” Victoria gave no visible reaction. Her eyes were sharp, her posture perfect, but inside something flickered. Doubt. My bank kept me informed of your transactions, she said. Each word deliberate.
You were very practical. Formula, diapers, lodging, clothes. She leaned back, [music] her tone changing, strategic even. The word hung in the air. Cold, edged with suspicion. Samuel frowned slightly, not understanding. I only bought what we needed, ma’am. Almost, she said softly, her eyes narrowing. Except for one small purchase from a jeweler’s shop, the silence grew heavy.
Victoria’s gaze was sharp, probing, waiting for the lie. The selfish indulgence that would confirm her belief about desperate men. But Samuel didn’t flinch. He didn’t look away. “Yes,” he said at last, his voice steady. Victoria tilted her head slightly. “And what did you buy, Mr.
Adakunilay? After all that necessity, what little luxury did you think you deserved?” He didn’t answer with words. Instead, he reached into his pocket and withdrew a tiny tissue- wrapped bundle. Carefully, he unwrapped it and placed it on her desk. Two small silver heart-shaped lockets, identical, simple, beautiful, Victoria stared, the meaning eluding her for a moment.
They weren’t jewelry for himself. They weren’t meant to be sold. “What are these?” she asked, her voice quieter now. Samuel looked at the lockets, his eyes distant, but tender. When he spoke, his voice trembled with memory. My wife’s name was Funk, he said. She died giving birth to them. He looked down at the sleeping twins, his expression softening.
She used to wear a small silver locket just like these. It was her mother’s. She said it was her heart, worn on the outside. He swallowed hard. After she died, in all the confusion at the hospital, it was lost. I never found it. He paused, his eyes glistening. So, I bought these. so that when they’re old enough, each of my daughters will wear one, a piece of their mother, something to remind them that she loved them.
Before they even opened their eyes, he looked back at Victoria and for the first time she saw it, the unspeakable pain that lived behind his quiet dignity. “My children will never know their mother,” he said, his voice breaking. “They will never hear her voice or feel her touch. I bought these so that when they are old enough, I can give them something beautiful from her.
So I can tell them this was her heart and now it’s theirs to keep. I wanted them to have something, something that wasn’t about surviving, but about remembering love. It’s all I have left of her. The silence that followed was absolute. It filled the vast office, heavy and sacred. And in that silence, Victoria Okoro felt the fortress she had built around her heart.
not just crack, but explode. Every wall she had erected to keep the world out turned to dust. She had created this cruel little test to prove that goodness didn’t exist, that everyone had a price. But this man, this weary father, had used her endless money to buy not a symbol of greed, but a 9,000 naira monument to love.
It wasn’t just unexpected. It was devastating. Something inside her gave way. A sound escaped her throat. a choked, broken sob she could not suppress. Hot tears spilled down her cheeks, streaking through her perfect makeup. She didn’t wipe them away. The billionaire mask. The iron face of control shattered.
And for the first time in years, she was just a woman weeping for something pure she thought the world had buried. Samuel sat still, bewildered, his eyes soft with concern. He hadn’t meant to make her cry. He had only meant to tell the truth. When Victoria finally looked up, her face was a mess of tears and mascara, but her eyes held something new. “Clarity.
” “Get up, Mr. Adakonlay,” she said, her voice trembling, but steady. She stood, walked around her massive desk, and picked up one of the tiny lockets. It felt cool and fragile in her palm. “Real in a way few things in her world were.” “Your test is over,” she said, her voice shaking.
“But mine, I think mine is just beginning.” She looked at him then. really looked at him. Not at his worn shoes or the babies on his chest, but at the man himself, the father, the survivor, the heart. I own a block of apartments in Icia,” she said after a long pause, her voice regaining a quiet strength. “There for my junior staff. One is vacant, a two-bedroom.
It’s yours for as long as you need it.” Samuel’s lips parted, but no words came out. she continued. I also need a new head of maintenance for that property. Someone I can trust, someone responsible, someone who knows the value of things, not their price. The job comes with a salary and health benefits for you and your children. Her eyes softened.
Would you be interested, Samuel? He swallowed hard, his voice breaking with gratitude. Yes, ma’am. Yes, thank you. Don’t thank me, Victoria said quietly, turning the tiny locket over in her hand. I should thank you. You reminded me of something I thought was long dead. She turned toward the glass wall.
The city of Legos sprawled beneath her. Vast, alive, chaotic, beautiful. For years, she had seen it as a battlefield of transactions and power. But now, as the sun rose over the skyline, she saw it differently. A city made not of steel and greed, but of hearts. Millions of them, beating, [music] breaking, loving, surviving, and for the first time in a very long time.
Victoria Okoro felt like she was one of them.
