LOGIN"Some things are meant to be ruined, Stranger. I'd like to ruin your innocence"..... Becca is a "Good Girl" with a clear plan: finish her Home Science degree, keep her head down, and live by the Word. Her life is a collection of modest skirts, silent prayers, and the steady hum of her sewing machine. But when Josh—the untouchable "King of NUAT"—stumbles into her textile lab bleeding and hunted, Becca’s carefully stitched world begins to unravel. Josh is ambitious, dangerous, and hiding a secret that could burn the entire campus to the ground. He didn’t mean to drag the quiet "Church Girl" into his war, but after one desperate, stolen kiss in a dark closet, the damage is done. To the campus, she’s his new obsession. To his enemies, she’s the perfect leverage. Now, Becca is no longer a ghost in the halls. She’s a target. With a sinister voice from the shadows claiming that "Stitches don't hide secrets," Becca must decide if she can trust the man who used her to survive—or if the boy she saved is the one who will ultimately destroy her. In a jungle like NUAT, even the purest soul can get caught in the thorns.
View MoreBECCA'S POV
The first groan didn't sound like a student. It sounded like a man dying.
I froze, the rhythm of my Butterfly sewing machine snapping like a broken thread. Before I could lock the door, he was there. Josh. The boy who owned every girl’s dreams on campus, stumbling into my lab, covered in blood and looking like a beautiful, fallen angel.
He didn't ask for help. He took it.
When the men with the heavy boots pounded on the door, Josh didn't just cover my mouth. He pinned me against the cold wood of the storage closet, his body a wall of hard muscle and desperate heat.
Then, he kissed me.
It wasn't a request; it was a robbery. It tasted of iron and expensive mint. My religious upbringing screamed for me to push him away, but my body—hungry and ignored for twenty years—melted. For a heartbeat, I wasn't the 'Good Girl' nor was I the church girl. I was a woman drowning in the scent of a man who was clearly bad for my soul.
"Be quiet," he whispered against my lips, his thumb grazing my jaw in a way that made my knees turn to water. "Unless you want us both to die right here."
Josh’s hand didn’t move from my waist. If anything, his grip tightened, pulling me so flush against him that I could feel the erratic, heavy thud of his heart through his ruined silk shirt. The scent of him was overwhelming—sandalwood, rain, and the raw, metallic tang of the blood soaking into his side.
The footsteps outside stopped. A shadow blocked the sliver of light beneath the closet door.
"I know you're in this block, Josh," the voice from the hallway drawled. It was as smooth, like oil over a blade as it was sinister. "Don't make this messy. You have something that doesn't belong to you."
My breath hitched, a tiny sound of pure terror. Instantly, Josh’s lips were back on mine. This wasn't a distraction anymore; it was a desperate silencing. He tasted like a fever. His tongue traced the seam of my lips with a command that made my brain go blank.
I was a 300-level student who could recite the chemical composition of synthetic fibers, but I couldn't remember how to breathe. My hands, originally raised to shove him away, found purchase in the damp fabric of his shirt. My fingers curled into the expensive material, anchoring me as the world narrowed down to the heat of his mouth and the dangerous vibration of his chest against mine.
He pulled back just a fraction, his forehead resting against mine. His eyes were dark, hooded, and focused entirely on my mouth. "If you scream," he whispered, his breath hot against my skin, "we both lose. But if you stay quiet... I’ll make it worth your while."
The threat outside moved on, the heavy thud of boots fading toward the back exit of the lab. But the danger inside the closet was only growing.
Josh’s gaze dropped to the pulse jumping in my neck. He leaned in, his lips grazing the sensitive skin just below my ear. "You're shivering, Becca," he murmured, his voice a low, gravelly vibration that sent a different kind of chill down my spine. "Is it fear? Or is it because no one has ever held you like this?"
I gasped, my back arching slightly as his hand slid upward, his palm hot against the small of my back fondling my breasts. The "Amazing Grace" I had been humming earlier was a distant memory. This was a different kind of ritual.
"You're a monster," I managed to choke out, though my voice lacked any real sting.
"I'm a man who's about to bleed out on your floor," Josh countered, his eyes flashing with a mix of pain and arrogance. He shifted, a hiss of agony escaping him as his wound protested. He slumped slightly, his weight pinning me more firmly against the wall. "But if I’m going down, I might as well enjoy the view."
He reached out, his thumb tracing the curve of my lower lip, which was still swollen from his kiss. "Tell me, Stranger... does the curriculum cover how to patch up a fugitive? Or should I just keep distracting you until the lights go out?"
ADA'S POVThe dining room of my father’s house in Banana Island always felt like a fortress. Tonight, the heavy mahogany table was laden with Rice, plantain, stew cooked with assorted meat and offals, and grilled croaker fish, the scent of home cooking temporarily pushing out the humiliation that had been tracking me all week. I had come home for the weekend to heal my wounds and pretend, even for a second, that my life wasn't spinning completely out of control.Here, I was Ada Williams. The only daughter of a shipping tycoon. A prize, not a nuisance."You're barely touching your fish, Ada," my mother said, elegantly patting her lips with a linen napkin. She looked at me with that sharp, analytical gaze she used for everything from charity boards to business alliances. "Is Chief Adeyemi's family still pushing for that ridiculous butteryellow and emerald color palette? Because if they are, your father can make one phone call and—""It's fine, Mummy," I lied, my voice tight as I aggress
THIRD PERSON POV The showroom of Maison de Soie located in Victoria Island was a sanctuary of silent, obscene wealth. It smelled of expensive French lavender, Lemon zest, and the crisp, starchy scent of imported tulle and other fabrics. Thick, cream-colored fluffy rug swallowed the sound of footsteps, and the floor-to-ceiling mirrors reflected rows of mannequin torsos draped in ivory silk, white Chantilly, hand-beaded lace, and crystals that caught the morning sun. It was a place meant for blissful, exotic and expensive brides. For Ada, it was an exciting moment. For Josh, it was a waiting room. Josh sat on a plush, velvet armchair in the corner of the private fitting suite, his long legs stretched out in front of him. His head was down, his thumb idly flicking upward against the glass of his phone screen, scrolling through sports highlights he wasn't even processing. He wore a simple black t-shirt and dark baggy jeans, looking entirely detached from the multi-million naira busines
BECCA'S POVTwo days of staring at the sterile white ceilings and hearing the mocking hum of the hospital generator had done nothing to dull the ache in my heart. When the two police officers walked into the ward, their heavy boots scuffing the linoleum, I braced myself for the handcuffs. I braced myself for going back into the the cell. I braced myself to set my face on the brutal policeman who had assaulted me. After everything—the scathing remarks from sister Mary, the Fellowship suspension, the old man's murder, the loss—jail felt like the natural next step in my ruin.Instead, the older officer just adjusted his belt, barely looking me in the eye. "Rebecca? You’ve been cleared. You are free to go."I stared at them, my throat dry. "Cleared? How? By who?""Investigation is concluded, you were clearly not at the crime scene at the time of the murder," the younger one muttered, already turning toward the door. "Case dismissed from above. Pack your things."They left without another
Josh’s POV I tore through the front doors of my father's mansion, tracking mud and rainwater across the pristine marble foyer. My chest was still heaving and burning, the adrenaline from my father's office vibrating in my hands."Where is Ada?" I demanded, my voice cutting through the quiet house like a whip.The head housekeeper jumped, her eyes darting to my soaked clothes. "Master Joshua... Miss Ada hasn’t returned since you both left this morning. We assumed she was with you."I didn't answer. I pulled my phone from my pocket, my wet thumb slipping against the screen as I dialed her number. It rang once. Twice. Three times. The moment she picked up, I didn't even give her room to breathe."Where the hell are you?" I hissed."Josh?" Her voice sounded slightly muffled, followed by a faint rustle of music in the background. She sounded defensive, already hiding behind her usual shield of grievance. "Why are you screaming at me? You left me at the restaurant like a madman! My mother












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