HER LOVE BETWEEN LUXURY AND DANGER
img img HER LOVE BETWEEN LUXURY AND DANGER img Chapter 3 GANGSTER IN THE RAIN
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Chapter 7 DANGEROUS TIES img
Chapter 8 A HEART THAT DOESN'T HAVE TIME FOR LOVE img
Chapter 9 RICO OBSESION BEGINS img
Chapter 10 BILLIONAIRE'S CURIOSITY img
Chapter 11 WORKPLACE SPARKS img
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Chapter 3 GANGSTER IN THE RAIN

(Evelyn POV)

The last thing I need tonight is to die in the street.

But judging by the three men blocking my path and the way their hands hover near their waistbands, death might not be taking requests.

It's past eight PM, and I'm trying to make it from the bus stop to our flat in Bariga without incident. The rain started twenty minutes ago(the kind of Lagos downpour that turns roads into rivers and makes regret pool in your shoes). I'm soaked through, my bag clutched to my chest, and now this.

"Fine girl," the tallest one says, stepping closer. His breath smells like cheap gin and bad decisions. "Where are you going?"

I keep my eyes down, trying to walk around them. "Please, I just want to go home."

"We won't hurt you." Another one laughs. "We just want to talk to you."

This is a lie. Men who just want to talk don't corner women in dark streets during rainstorms.

I calculate distances. Our flat is three streets away. There's a woman who sells suya two corners back,if I scream loud enough, maybe someone will come. Maybe.

"I don't have money," I say, which is true. After buying Mama's medication today, my purse has exactly two hundred naira and a half-empty bottle of hand sanitizer.

"Who is talking about money?" The tall one reaches for my arm.

I jerk back and slam into someone behind me.

Large hands grip my shoulders, steadying me. A voice, deep and surprisingly calm, speaks over my head.

"You boys lost?"

I twist to look up at my accidental savior.

He's tall(taller than the men threatening me)with broad shoulders under a black jacket that's somehow stayed dry despite the rain. His face is all sharp angles: strong jaw, high cheekbones, eyes that catch the streetlight like amber. A thin scar cuts through his left eyebrow.

He looks dangerous in a way that makes the three men suddenly look like boys playing dress-up.

"This does not concern you, boss," the tall one says, but his confidence has cracked.

"I'm making it my concern." The man's hands are still on my shoulders. "The lady clearly wants to go home. So you're going to step aside and let her."

"And if we don't agree?"

The dangerous man smiles. It's not a nice smile.

"Then we'll have a different kind of conversation. The kind that ends with you explaining to your mothers why you're missing teeth."

Silence, except for the rain drumming on zinc roofs.

The three men exchange glances. Some unspoken calculation happens. Whatever they see in this stranger's face makes them decide survival beats pride.

"We are joking," the tall one mutters, already backing away. "We are sorry."

They disappear into the rain-soaked night like roaches when the light comes on.

I released a breath I didn't know I was holding.

The man's hands drop from my shoulders, and immediately I miss their steadiness. I turn to face him properly.

Up close, he's even more striking. Rain has plastered his dark shirt to his chest, outlining muscles that suggest gym membership isn't his only form of exercise. His hair is cut low, neat. Gold chain glints at his neck(expensive, but not flashy). He's watching me with those amber eyes, concern etched in the slight furrow of his brows.

"You okay?" he asks.

"Yes. Thank you." My voice shakes slightly. "You didn't have to-"

"Yes, I did." He glances down the street where the men vanished. "It's not safe for you to walk alone this late."

"I don't have a choice. I live here."

"Where?"

I point vaguely. "Three streets that way."

"I'll walk you."

"You really don't have to-"

"Miss." He's already moving, positioning himself between me and the street. "I just scared off three men who wanted to hurt you. Walking you home is the easy part. Come."

There's something in his tone:authority mixed with genuine care that makes me fall into step beside him.

We walk in silence for a moment, rain creating a curtain around us. I study him from the corner of my eye. He walks like someone who owns the street, confident but alert, his eyes constantly scanning.

"What's your name?" he asks suddenly.

"Evelyn. Eve."

"Eve." He says it slowly, like he's memorizing it. "I'm Rico."

"Thank you, Rico. Really. I don't know what would have happened if-"

"Don't think about it." He glances at me. "You do this walk every night?"

"Most nights. I work in Victoria Island, but we live here, so..."

"Victoria Island." He sounds thoughtful. "That's a long commute."

"Three buses, if traffic is good. Four hours total." I hug my bag tighter. "But the pay is better there than here."

"What do you do?"

"I clean offices." I wait for the judgment, the subtle dismissal that always comes when I tell people my job.

It doesn't come.

"Honest work," he says instead. "Harder than most of the jobs where people sit in air-conditioning and push paper."

I look at him, surprised.

He catches my look and smiles(a real one this time, warm and slightly crooked). "What? You thought I'd look down on you?"

"Most people do."

"Most people are idiots." He steps around a puddle, then offers his hand to help me across. His palm is calloused, warm despite the rain. "I respect people who work hard. Rich people didn't make this city,people like you did."

There's a story behind that statement, but I don't ask.

We turn onto my street. The familiar sight of our weathered building makes my shoulders relax slightly.

"That one," I point to the flat on the second floor, where a dim bulb flickers in the window. "That's home."

Rico studies the building with an expression I can't read. "You live alone?"

"With my mother and my younger cousin." I pull out my keys. "Thank you again, Rico. Really. I don't know how to-"

"Don't thank me." He looks down at me, rain dripping from his face. "Just promise me you'll be more careful. Take a bike home, not the bus. Don't walk alone after dark."

"Bikes are expensive-"

"Eve." His voice softens. "Your safety is worth more than money."

Easy to say when you have money, I think, but his eyes are so earnest that I just nod.

"I'll try."

"Good." He hesitates, like he wants to say something else. Then he reaches into his pocket and pulls out a card(simple, black, with just a phone number embossed in gold). "If you ever need help. Anything at all. Call me."

I take the card,feeling the expensive weight of it. "Who are you, exactly?"

The crooked smile returns. "Someone who doesn't like seeing good people get hurt."

It's not really an answer, but before I can press, a voice calls down from the window above.

"Evelyn! That you?"

Salie's head pokes out, her braids wrapped in a silk scarf. Her eyes widen when she sees Rico.

"Yes, it's me!" I called back. "I'm coming up!"

When I turn back to Rico, he's already stepping away, melting into the rain and shadows.

"Wait-" I start.

He pauses, looking back. The streetlight catches his face, highlighting the scar, the strong jaw, the amber eyes that seem to see too much.

"Be careful, Eve," he says softly. "This city is beautiful, but it eats gentle people. Don't let it eat you."

Then he's gone, disappearing around the corner like he was never there.

I stand in the rain, staring after him, the black card heavy in my hand.

"Sister!" Salie's voice breaks my trance. "Come inside before you catch a cold! And who is that fine man?"

I climb the stairs slowly, my mind spinning. Two men in two days. Two impossibly different men who both looked at me like I mattered.

Leonardo Sterling with his corporate towers and cold precision.

Rico Blaze-I look at the card, there's no last name, just "Rico" and a number with his dangerous smile and protective hands.

I don't understand what's happening to my life.

When I enter our flat, Mama is sitting at the small table, sorting beans. She looks better than yesterday(color back in her cheeks)but I can see the exhaustion still clinging to her like a second skin.

"Mama, you should be resting," I scolded, dropping my bag and stripping off my wet wrapper.

"Resting won't pay bills," she says mildly. "Salie, bring a towel for your sister before she gets sick."

Salie brings a thin towel, but her eyes are bright with curiosity. "Sister,who is that man who walks you home?"

"Just someone who helped me." I dry my hair roughly. "Some men were bothering me at the bus stop. He scared them away."

Mama's hands still over the beans. "What kind of man?"

"Nothing serious, Mama. Just area boys trying their luck." I force lightness into my voice. "The man chased them off. I'm fine."

"Thank God." Mama makes the sign of the cross. Evelyn, I have told you that your working place is too far. Find somewhere closer-"

"Mama, we've talked about this. The pay at Sterling Towers is better than anything I'll find here." I sit beside her, helping sort beans. "Plus they paid your hospital bills. I can't just quit now."

"About that." Mama's voice goes quiet. "That man(the one who paid my hospital bill,is he your boss?"

"Sort of. He's the CEO." I focus on the beans, picking out stones. "He was... kind."

"Kind men don't give out eighty thousand naira for stranger hospital bills," Mama says shrewdly. "What does he want from you?"

"Nothing, Mama. He said he wanted nothing."

"Hmm." Mama's tone says she doesn't believe that for a second. "Just be careful, my daughter. When big men do big things, they always want something back. Just make sure you know what you are doing."

Her words settle uncomfortably in my chest. Because she's right, isn't she? In my experience, nobody gives without expecting returns.

But when I remember Leo's hand on mine in the car, his steady voice telling me to breathe, the way he paid without hesitation...

I don't know what to think.

"I'll be careful," I promise.

We sort beans in comfortable silence. Salie turns on the small TV(an ancient thing that only gets three channels and some Nollywood drama fills the room with dramatic music and dubbed English).

My phone buzzes.

Unknown number: "Did you make it home safely?"

My heart jumps. I know that direct tone even through text.

Me: "Yes, Mr. Sterling. Thank you for asking."

Leo: "Leo. And good. Your mother's test results should be ready tomorrow. I've asked them to send me a copy as well,I want to ensure she gets the right treatment."

Me: "You don't have to do all this."

Leo: "I'm aware. I'm choosing to anyway. Get some rest, Eve. Tomorrow is a long day."

The text ends there. I stare at my phone, at his name-Leo(glowing on the screen).

"Who is that?" Salie peers over my shoulder. "Ah ah! The First man? Sister, what is happening? First that dangerous-looking fine man, now the CEO man texted you? You have two toasters?"

"Salie, mind your business." But I'm smiling despite myself.

Toasters. As if. These men don't want me,they want... I don't even know what they want.

But I slip both cards(Leo's business card that I took from his office, and Rico's mysterious black card)into my purse like talismans.

That night, I dream of amber eyes and steady hands, of expensive cologne and rain-soaked streets, of two men who saw me when I was invisible.

I wake up confused.

            
            

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