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The Billionaire Who Couldn't Forget Her.
The Billionaire Who Couldn't Forget Her.
Author: Chinny

Chapter One

Author: Chinny
last update publish date: 2026-06-30 03:46:48

The Rain Had No Mercy. 

The rain had no mercy that night. 

It came down over Lagos in restless sheets, swallowing the city beneath a silver curtain that blurred headlights, softened skyscrapers, and washed hurried footprints from flooded sidewalks before they had a chance to settle. The wind rattled windows and bent the palm trees lining the hospital driveway as if reminding everyone that nature had never cared for human plans.

Inside St. Catherine's Hospital, life moved to a different rhythm. 

Monitors beeped.  Stretchers rolled across polished floors.

Doctors hurried through brightly lit corridors with determined expressions that revealed neither exhaustion nor hope.  Pain had become another department in the building. And tonight, it found Amara Okafor again.

She pushed through the automatic glass doors, already drenched despite the umbrella she had tried to hold over herself and the little girl in her arms. Rainwater dripped from the hem of her navy-blue gown, forming tiny pools beneath her sandals as she hurried toward the reception desk. 

Her breathing came in shallow bursts.

Not because of the run, but because of fear. 

Lily rested her shoulder with unusual silence. 

Normally, the six-year-old would have complained about the rain, asked why clouds cried so much, or tried to count the ambulances outside.

Tonight, she barely had the strength to keep her eyes open. 

Her tiny fingers clung weakly to Amara’s blouse. 

“Mummy…” the voice was barely audible. “I’m sleepy.”

Amara kissed her damp forehead 

The heat startled her all over again. It felt as though she was touching boiling water. 

“No, my sunshine,” she whispered, forcing warmth into a voice trembling under invisible weight. “Stay awake for me, my baby. Just a little longer.”

Lily nodded faintly. “Okay Mummy, I will try.” Those words shattered something inside Amara. Children should never have to try so hard simply to stay awake. 

She reached the reception counter and placed her handbag on the polished surface, struggling to catch her breath. 

A woman in her forties adjusted her glasses before looking up.

“Good evening ”

“My daughter…” Amara began, then shaking and swallowed. “She has a very high fever. She's been vomiting since afternoon, and she's having trouble breathing.”

The nurse immediately stood.

“Let me see her”

She gently touched Lily’s forehead.

Her expression changed. 

“How long has the fever been this high?”

“Almost three hours.”

“Have you given her anything?”

“Yes, paracetamol.”

“And no improvement? ”

Amara slowly shook her head. The nurse turned serious. “She needs to be seen immediately.”

Relief almost brought tears to Amara’s eyes. 

For one safe second, she believed they were safe. 

The nurse began typing rapidly

“Name?”

“Lily Okafor.”

“Age?”

“Six”

“Mother’s name?”

“Amara Okafor.”

The keyboard clicked steadily. 

Then…

The nurse stopped. She printed a form. 

“There will be an admission deposit before treatment begins.”

Amara stared at her. “I'm sorry?”

The nurse repeated what she said calmly.

Everything after that became strangely quiet. 

From the rain outside to the people walking behind her. 

The ringing telephones.

Even Lily's breathing.

It all faded beneath one impossible number.

Her fingers tightened around the strap of her handbag.

"There must be some mistake."

"I'm afraid there isn't."

"I don't have that much."

The nurse sighed.

"I'm sorry."

Amara quickly emptied her purse onto the counter.

A small bundle of naira notes. Coins. A sewing tape.Loose buttons.

A tiny packet of biscuits she had forgotten to give Lily after school.

Nothing else. She counted the money anyway.

Once. Twice. Three times. As though hope might appear between the notes if she looked long enough. It never did.The nurse looked genuinely sympathetic. "It's hospital policy."

Amara's lips parted, but no words came. She had always believed hard work could solve almost anything. When her husband No. She corrected herself. When Ethan left.

She had learned to survive without depending on anyone. She opened a tiny tailoring shop.

Worked late into the night. Accepted every alteration. Every school uniform.

Every bridal repair. Every emergency order. She had skipped meals so Lily could have milk.

Walked instead of taking buses. Repaired the same sewing machine three different times because replacing it wasn't an option. She had done everything right. Everything.

Yet tonight… None of it was enough.

Her daughter needed help. Money stood between them and that help. She looked toward Lily again. The child's breathing had become uneven. Her tiny chest rose and fell too quickly.

Amara felt panic climb into her throat. "Please." The word escaped before she realized she had spoken. The nurse lowered her eyes. "I wish I could."

"I'll pay."

"I know."

"I always pay."

"I believe you."

"I'll sign anything."

"I understand."

"I'll leave my phone."

Silence. "My sewing machine." The nurse's face softened. "I don't have the authority."

Amara slowly bent to her knees. Not because she wanted pity. Because desperation had stolen pride. She wasn't even sure what she was doing at that moment.  A young couple waiting nearby turned to look. An elderly man removed his glasses. Even the security guard glanced away, uncomfortable with witnessing another person's breaking point.

"Please," Amara whispered.

"My daughter…” Her voice cracked. "...she's all I have." For the first time that evening,  the nurse reached across the counter. Not to collect money.

To gently squeeze Amara's trembling hand. "I'm truly sorry." Those words hurt more than refusal. Because they were sincere. Before either woman could speak again, the sound of tires stopping outside echoed through the reception hall.

Moments later, the automatic doors slid open. A gust of cold air swept inside, carrying the scent of rain and expensive cologne. Several staff members instinctively straightened. The security guard nodded respectfully. The receptionist beside the main desk smiled, "Good evening, Mr. Cole." The man acknowledged her with a slight nod. He was tall enough to command attention without asking for it. His charcoal suit fit with effortless precision. A silver watch rested beneath the cuff of his tailored sleeve. Confidence followed him quietly, not the loud confidence of someone trying to prove himself, but the settled assurance of a man who had already conquered too many rooms to count. Ethan Cole. Founder and CEO of Cole Dynamics. One of the youngest billionaires in Africa. Business magazines called him a visionary. Employees called him demanding. The public called him untouchable. None of those titles mattered in the next few seconds. Because as Ethan accepted a folder from the hospital administrator and casually looked across the reception hall, his eyes stopped.

A woman knelt on the polished floor. Her hair was damp from the rain. Her shoulders trembled beneath a simple navy-blue dress. A little girl rested against her chest. Something about that woman reached across seven silent years and gripped his heart before his mind could understand why. He frowned. No… it couldn't be.

Slowly...

Very slowly...

The woman lifted her head and their eyes met. The world around them disappeared.

Amara felt every forgotten memory return at once. University classrooms, Shared dreams, cheap roadside suya, late-night conversations. Promises whispered beneath Lagos skies. The ring he never got to give her. The goodbye she never understood. Across the room, Ethan forgot why he had come to the hospital. His heartbeat, usually steady even during billion-dollar negotiations, betrayed him. Impossible. Yet there she was. Not in memory. Not in regret. Standing barely ten feet away.

Alive.

Real.

Amara looked at him with eyes that no longer carried the warmth they once thought was home. 

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