LOGINThe Flashback
Seconds later, he disappeared into the storm. Amara watched the black SUV pull away until its taillights dissolved into the curtain of rain.
Only then did she realise the receptionist was walking toward her with a different expression.
The woman smiled warmly.
“Mrs Okafor…”
Amara frowned.
“Yes?”
“You can take your daughter to the emergency ward now.”
Confusion flickered across her face.
“I… I don't understand.”
“The payment has been made”
Amara stared.
“What payment?”
“The admission deposit.”
She instinctively reached for her purse.
“No… there must be a mistake.”
“There isn't.”
“But I have not paid”
The nurse's smile grew gentler.
“No”
She paused a little, looking at Amara directly into the eyes.
“You didn't,”
Amara’s heartbeat quickened
“Then who did?”
The nurse glanced toward the rain outside, where the black SUV had already vanished.
“I believe…” she said softly, “the gentleman who just left asked us not to tell you.”
Amara felt the floor shift beneath her.
Ethan. After seven solid years. The first thing he had done was save her daughter.
For several long seconds, Amara simply stood there.
The words refused to settle in her mind.
The gentleman who just left...
There had only been one gentleman.
Only one man who could still make her heart forget everything she had spent seven years teaching it to remember.
"Ethan..." she breathed so quietly that even she barely heard herself.
The nurse mistook the whisper for confusion.
"He asked that treatment begin immediately."
Amara lowered her eyes to Lily.
The little girl's breathing had become more labored.
Questions could wait.
Pride could wait.
Even the past could wait.
Nothing mattered more than the child in her arms.
"Where do I go?"
The nurse pointed toward a brightly lit corridor.
"Emergency Pediatrics."
"I'll show you."
Within moments, another nurse arrived with a wheelchair.
"I can walk," Amara said automatically.
"We know you can," the younger nurse replied gently.
"But you've been carrying her for a long time."
Only then did Amara notice the burning ache in her arms and shoulders.
She carefully lowered Lily into the wheelchair.
The child stirred.
"Mummy.."
"I'm here."
"Don't cry."
Amara blinked in surprise.
"I'm not crying."
Lily reached up with weak fingers and touched her mother's cheek.
"There are tears."
Amara hadn't even realized they had begun to fall.
She smiled through them.
"They're happy tears."
Lily nodded sleepily.
"I like those better."
The nurses exchanged quiet glances.
One of them discreetly handed Amara a tissue.
As they disappeared into the corridor, the automatic doors opened once again.
This time it was not Ethan returning.
It was Vivian Morgan.
Elegant as always.
Her cream-colored suit looked as though it had never encountered rain despite the storm outside.
Diamond earrings caught the light each time she moved.
She removed her sunglasses and immediately noticed the unusual tension among the reception staff.
"Is everything alright?"
The receptionist smiled politely.
"Yes, ma'am."
"I'm here to see Mr. Cole."
The administrator hesitated.
"I'm sorry... he left just a few minutes ago."
Vivian frowned.
"He left?"
"Yes."
"I thought he was attending the board chairman's medical review."
"He did."
"So why the excitement?"
The receptionist looked toward the pediatric corridor before she could stop herself.
Vivian noticed.
Years of navigating boardrooms and family politics had taught her to observe what people accidentally revealed.
"What happened?"
The receptionist smiled awkwardly.
"Oh... nothing important."
That answer told Vivian it was very important.
"What happened?" she repeated.
The administrator finally answered.
"Mr. Cole helped a woman whose daughter needed emergency treatment."
Vivian's expression remained pleasant.
Inside, curiosity sharpened.
"A stranger?"
"I believe they knew each other."
Something cold settled quietly inside her.
"Knew each other how?"
"I'm not sure."
Vivian smiled graciously.
"Thank you."
She turned and walked toward the private elevators.
The moment the doors closed behind her, the smile disappeared.
Ethan rarely involved himself personally in strangers' problems.
He donated millions through foundations.
He funded hospitals.
He built schools.
But he almost never stepped into individual situations.
If he had tonight...
Then whoever that woman was...
She mattered.
Vivian slipped out her phone.
"Michael."
"Yes, ma'am."
"I need you to find someone."
"Who?"
"I don't know her name yet."
She paused.
"But I intend to."
Meanwhile, on the fifth floor, Dr. Femi Adebayo adjusted his stethoscope as he entered the examination room. Lily lay on the hospital bed, connected to a monitor that softly beeped beside her. Amara stood nearby, fingers tightly intertwined. The doctor offered a reassuring smile.
"I'm Dr. Adebayo."
She nodded.
"I'm Amara."
"And this brave young lady?"
"Lily." The doctor walked over to the bed.
"Hello, Lily." The little girl managed a sleepy wave.
"Hello."
"I hear you've been making everyone worry."
"I didn't mean to." The doctor chuckled.
"I believe you."
He gently examined her eyes.
Her throat, breathing, then he listened carefully to her chest.
His smile faded, not dramatically, but enough for Amara to notice.
"When did the coughing begin?"
"This afternoon."
"And the fever?"
"A little before that."
"Has she complained about chest pain recently?"
"No."
He nodded thoughtfully.
"We'll need some blood work."
Amara's stomach tightened.
"Is it serious?"
"I'm not ready to say."
He smiled again, softer this time.
"But you brought her in at the right time."
Those words gave Amara something she hadn't felt all evening.
Hope, not certainty. Just enough hope to breathe again. A nurse entered carrying medication.
"We're starting treatment immediately." The doctor turned back toward Amara.
"I'll come speak with you once we have the results." After he left, silence settled over the room.
Machines hummed quietly. Rain tapped against the large window overlooking
Victoria Island. Lily slowly reached for her mother's hand.
"Mummy?"
"Yes, sunshine?"
"Who was that man?"
Amara froze.
"What man?"
"The one downstairs." Her voice remained weak, but curiosity had returned.
"He looked at you like.."
She struggled to find the words.
"...like he already knew you."
Amara looked away. Children noticed far more than adults expected.
"He was an old friend."
"From school?"
"Yes."
"Did he stop being your friend?" The innocent question pierced straight through years of carefully buried memories. Amara forced a smile. "Sometimes life takes people in different directions."
Lily considered that.
"Maybe life got lost." Amara laughed softly despite herself.
"What do you mean?"
"If life took you away from your friend..."
Lily yawned.
"...maybe life forgot the way."
Moments later, the medication finally began to work. The little girl drifted into peaceful sleep.
Amara remained beside the bed, gently brushing curls away from Lily's forehead.
Only when she was certain her daughter was resting did she allow herself to think about Ethan.
Seven years.
Not one phone call.
Not one explanation.
Not one goodbye.
Yet tonight… without asking for gratitude...
Without even speaking more than a few sentences...
He had quietly paid for Lily's treatment.
Why? The Ethan she remembered had always been generous. But generosity wasn't the same as unfinished love or unfinished pain. She closed her eyes. Somewhere beneath the sound of the rain, another memory returned.
A younger Ethan.
A university library.
His notebook was covered in business ideas.
The way he had looked at her that day.
The operating room fell into complete silence.The tiny tracking device rested in the technician's gloved palm.No larger than a grain of rice. Yet it had silently dictated Ethan's life for seven years. David took a slow breath."Can it transmit?"The technician nodded grimly."It transmits.""It also receives."Richard closed his eyes."As I feared."David frowned."What do you mean, receives?"The technician placed the chip under a digital microscope.A magnified image appeared on the screen."It's far more advanced than anything commercially available.""It isn't just a tracker.""It can remotely activate.""Activate what?"The technician hesitated."We don't know yet."A chill spread through the room.Hours later, Ethan slowly opened his eyes. The ceiling above him was unfamiliar. Soft lights. Private medical equipment. A faint smell of antiseptic. He tried to sit up.Pain exploded through his shoulder."Easy."The voice stopped him.He turned.Richard Cole sat quietly beside the
The roaring blades of the helicopter drowned out every other sound on the expressway. Traffic had come to a complete standstill.People climbed out of their vehicles, filming the burning ambulance from a distance. News helicopters were already circling overhead.Live broadcasts had begun."This is Channel 8 News reporting live from the Lekki Expressway, where an explosion involving an ambulance has just occurred. Witnesses claim billionaire Ethan Cole was involved in the rescue..."But no one was paying attention to the cameras.Not David.Not Amara, whose car had just screeched to a halt after following the GPS tracker.And certainly not Richard Cole.The man the world had buried three years ago knelt beside his unconscious son. For a brief second, his composure broke.He gently touched Ethan's blood-soaked face."My boy..."His voice was barely a whisper."I'm so sorry."David had never seen Richard Cole in person before. Yet there was no mistaking him. The photographs.The recovere
The ambulance's siren wailed as it sped through Lagos traffic.Inside, Lily sat on the stretcher clutching her teddy bear. The woman in the nurse's uniform smiled reassuringly."You're very brave."Lily nodded anxiously."Is my daddy hurt badly?"The woman gently squeezed her hand."The doctors are helping him.""We're taking you to him."Lily looked out the rear window."I hope he isn't scared."The woman's smile faltered for the briefest second.Then she looked toward the driver."Faster."Back at St. Catherine's Hospital, Ethan was already in his SUV before David finished giving orders."I've got the ambulance's registration."David climbed into the passenger seat."It was stolen yesterday.""Track it.""I'm trying."Ethan slammed his foot on the accelerator. The tires screamed against the pavement. Behind them, six security vehicles followed. His phone rang. Unknown number.He answered instantly."If you've touched my daughter..."A soft chuckle interrupted him."Your daughter."T
"Daddy."The single word echoed inside Ethan's heart long after Lily let go of him. He looked at her with tears in his eyes."I've dreamed of hearing that for years..." His voice cracked."..without even knowing it."Lily frowned."Why are grown-ups always crying?"Ethan laughed through his tears."Because sometimes..."He gently kissed her forehead."...our hearts become too full."She smiled."I like making your heart full”"You already have."She slipped her tiny hand into his."Can we still feed the pigeons?"He nodded."Of course."As they walked toward the hospital garden, neither of them noticed the man in the baseball cap watching from behind a newspaper stand.He lowered his camera. Pressed the call button on his phone."The girl trusts him now."A cold voice answered."Good!""That makes tonight easier."Inside Amara's hospital room, David spread several photographs across the table."These were recovered from security cameras around the warehouse."Amara leaned closer.Most
David didn't wait.He grabbed the printed photograph, the recovered email logs, and rushed out of Cole Dynamics. For the first time in years, he ignored every traffic law. If the evidence was real.., everything they believed had just changed.St. Catherine's HospitalEthan stood outside Lily's room, unable to take his eyes off the little girl sleeping peacefully inside.His daughter.He silently repeated the words over and over, afraid they would disappear if he stopped. Amara walked up beside him carrying two cups of coffee."I thought you might need this."He accepted it with a grateful smile."I don't think l've ever needed coffee this much."She laughed softly.It was the first genuine laugh either of them had shared in years.For a brief moment, they looked exactly like the young couple they had once been."So..."Amara asked gently."Are you angry?"Ethan turned toward her."At who?""Me."He looked genuinely surprised."Why would I be angry with you?""Because I never told you.
The morning sun spilled across the private garden behind St. Catherine's Hospital.For the first time in days, the rain had stopped.Lily sat on a wooden bench feeding pieces of bread to a family of pigeons while one of the nurses watched over her from a respectful distance.Inside the hospital chapel, Ethan stood alone. He wasn't praying.He was trying to find the courage to ask a question that had haunted him all night. A quiet voice broke the silence."You've been standing here for almost twenty minutes."He turned.Amara.She looked exhausted, but there was a softness in her eyes he hadn't seen since university."You wanted to talk.""I did."Neither of them spoke for several seconds.The silence wasn't awkward.It was heavy with seven years of words that had never been said.Finally, Ethan looked at her."I've remembered something."Amara frowned."What?""The night before graduation."She smiled faintly despite herself."You insisted we buy roasted corn instead of going to that







