The air in the mansion was thick with disbelief. Chief Bamidele’s words still echoed in the marble dining room like thunder long after the storm had passed.
“I’m leaving half of everything to Mary,” he had said. And now that Mary had returned—with receipts, recordings, and truth in hand—the battle had begun.
But what the chief didn’t know was that the war had already started without him.
Three days after Mary returned, someone broke into Mr. Oketola’s law office. Not to steal money. But to find the will.
The safe had been tampered with. Nothing else touched.
Luckily, Oketola had moved the final document to a secret deposit box as the chief instructed. But this was no random act. It meant someone in the family was willing to destroy evidence to stop Mary from inheriting a kobo.
Chief’s phone buzzed. It was a private message from Oketola: “They know the will is final. They’re getting desperate.”
He stared at the message in silence. His hand trembled slightly. Then he looked out the window at Mary, who was tending the garden like she had always done—calmly, humbly.
She didn’t even know how much was at stake.
Later that night, Bamidele called a family meeting again—this time with security present.
“I’ve been kind,” he said. “But now you’ve tried to break into my lawyer’s office. If I see even a whisper of criminal intent again, I’ll press charges.”
Abike stood. “This girl has charmed you into destroying your own bloodline!”
“This girl,” he repeated, rising slowly from his seat, “was the only one who stayed when you all left. She was the only one who cried when I coughed. She was the only one who asked if I was okay. You were calculating what to inherit. She was trying to save what’s left of my life.”
Then Kola stood.
“She’s not who you think she is,” he said darkly.
Everyone turned to him.
“What do you mean?” Bamidele asked.
Kola reached into his jacket and threw a file onto the table. “Check it.”
The chief opened it.
Inside were photos. Grainy, old. Newspaper clippings. A police report. Then he saw it—Mary’s real surname.
“Mary Alake Adio… daughter of Felix Adio.”
He frowned. “That name… sounds familiar.”
Kola folded his arms. “It should. Felix Adio was the security officer that took the fall for your embezzlement scandal 27 years ago. He was fired, disgraced, jailed—and died shortly after release. You never even looked back. Mary is his daughter.”
The room went dead silent.
Mary stood at the back, frozen.
She didn’t deny it.
“I was eleven when my father was dragged out in front of our neighbors,” she said softly. “He cried all night. He said he was innocent. But no one believed him. Not even you.”
The chief swallowed hard.
“I didn’t know—”
“No. You didn’t care,” she cut in, her voice rising slightly. “I swore I’d never forget what happened. But I didn’t come to destroy you. I came to watch you. And what I saw… was a broken man who had no one. Not even himself.”
Adaora gasped. “So this was revenge?!”
“No,” Mary said, shaking her head. “It was supposed to be. But something changed. I saw the man my father once served. Not the empire-builder. The human being.”
She turned to the chief.
“You’re right. They don’t love you. They love your wallet. But me? I loved the version of you that made jokes when you were sick. That smiled when I brought pepper soup. That apologized for using too much sugar. I didn’t want your money. I wanted you to have someone real before it was too late.”
Tears brimmed in Bamidele’s eyes.
But before he could speak, the lights cut out.
Complete darkness.
Then—
Gunshot.
Screams.
Someone had fired inside the house.
Chaos erupted.
Guards rushed in. Mary was dragged behind the kitchen counter. Abike yelled for help. Kola ducked. The chief stumbled, clutching his side—a graze wound to the shoulder.
Then came the voice.
From the hallway. Cold. Male.
“Give me the will.”
A man in black, face masked, walked into the living room holding a pistol.
The guards aimed—but hesitated.
Mary looked at the gunman—and gasped.
She recognized the voice.
It was someone from inside.
It was the cook.
The man pulled off his mask.
“Sorry sir,” he muttered, not meeting Bamidele’s eyes. “They paid me too much to say no. The will… where is it?”
Bamidele winced in pain, trying to stand. “You’ll shoot an old man for paper?”
“No, sir. I’ll shoot anyone for what you’ve created. Greed. Hatred. I’ve been here ten years and never got a raise. But I was offered ₦5 million to burn a file.”
Mary stepped forward, slowly. “Don’t. This is not who you are.”
He raised the gun at her. “Don’t make me.”
Suddenly—
Police sirens wailed outside.
The house had been under silent watch since the break-in at the law firm.
The gunman panicked. Tried to run.
But the guards tackled him.
It was over.
But not really.
Because now the truth was out.
Mary was the daughter of the man Bamidele once allowed to fall. His family had hired someone to destroy the will. He had narrowly escaped death in a twisted plan by those closest to him.
And Mary?
Mary had come for revenge… and found something worse …….
To be continued …..
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