
HER LOVE BETWEEN LUXURY AND DANGER
Chapter 7
(Evelyn POV)
I shouldn't be excited about scrubbing toilets, yet here I am.
Wednesday evening arrives with the usual chaos(bus delays, traffic that turns a thirty-minute trip into ninety minutes, and the persistent ache in my lower back that's become my constant companion).
But underneath the exhaustion, something flutters in my chest.
I'm going to see him again.
Leo.
The thought makes me feel foolish. He's not interested in you like that, I tell myself firmly while climbing the stairs to Sterling Towers' service entrance. He's just being kind. Rich people do charity sometimes. It doesn't mean anything.
But then I remember his text: "Because when I look at you, I see someone fighting a war they didn't choose."
Nobody has ever looked at me and seen a fighter. They see a cleaner, a poor girl, someone to pity or ignore.
Leo sees something else.
"Evelyn!" Mama Kike's voice cuts through my thoughts. "You dey dream? Go collect your supplies! We no get all night!"
"Yes, ma." I shake myself and grab my cart from the supply closet.
Tonight's assignment: executive floor. My pulse quickens.
The elevator ride up feels longer than usual.
Two other cleaners are with me(Ngozi and Patience), both older women who've been doing this for years.
"I hear say you don catch big fish," Ngozi says with a sly smile, her Igbo accent thick. "The CEO himself dey help your mama."
Word travels fast.
"He was just being kind," I say firmly.
"Kind?" Patience laughs. "Rich men no dey just 'kind' to poor girls. Especially fine girls like you. He want something, mark my words."
"He doesn't want anything. He said so."
They exchange knowing looks that make my face heat.
"Shebi na so them dey always start," Ngozi says sagely. "First na help. Then na gifts. Then na... other things."
"It's not like that," I insist, but my voice lacks conviction.
Because what if it is? What if Leo's kindness comes with expectations I can't meet? What if Mama was right to be suspicious?
The elevator dings. Executive floor.
The hallway is mostly empty, offices dark except for-
My heart jumps.
Light spills from Leo's office at the end of the hall.
He's still here.
"Hey Ladies!" Mama Kike appears from nowhere, clipboard in hand. "Ngozi, you take the conference rooms. Patience, you do the breakroom and kitchenette. Evelyn-"
She pauses, giving me a strange look.
"-you do the CEO office. He say specifically he want you."
Ngozi and Patience exchange significant glances.
"Yes, ma," I manage, my mouth suddenly dry.
I push my cart toward his office, each step feeling surreal. Through the glass walls, I can see him at his desk, head bent over paperwork, one hand running through his hair in what looks like frustration.
He's taken off his suit jacket. His sleeves are rolled up, revealing forearms that-
Stop it, Eve. Stop looking at him like that.
I knock softly on the doorframe.
He looks up, and the transformation is immediate. The frustration smooths away, replaced by something warmer.
"Eve." He says my name like it matters. "Come in."
I wheel my cart inside, hyper aware of how small and shabby it looks in his pristine office.
"Good evening, Mr. Sterling-"
"Leo."
"Leo," I correct, the name still feeling too familiar. "Should I come back later? I don't want to disturb-"
"You're not disturbing me." He stands, and I'm reminded again of how tall he is, how he seems to fill the space. "In fact, I was hoping we could talk."
My stomach flips. "Talk?"
"About your mother's treatment." He gestures to the chairs facing his desk. "Please, sit."
"Sir-Leo-I'm working. I can't just-"
"Five minutes." His tone is gentle but brooks no argument. "Sit."
I perch on the edge of the chair, gripping my knees. He doesn't go back behind his desk. Instead, he leans against it, facing me, close enough that I catch his scent-that expensive cologne that probably costs more than my monthly salary.
"I had the medical account set up," he says, pulling a sleek black card from his pocket. "This is linked to the account. You can use it at any hospital or pharmacy for your mother's treatment."
He holds it out.
I stare at the card-matte black with silver letters spelling out my name: EVELYN ADESUA.
"I can't take that," I whisper.
"You already agreed to accept help."
"Help, yes. But this..." I gesture at the card. "This is too much. It's too... permanent. Like I'm yours or something."
His eyebrows rise. "Like you're mine?"
Heat floods my face. "I didn't mean-that came out wrong-"
"Eve." He's smiling now, a real smile that transforms his face from intimidating to devastating. "This card doesn't make you mine. It makes your mother healthy. There's a difference."
"Is there?"
The smile fades. He studies me with those intense eyes.
"You really think I'm trying to buy you?"
"I think rich men don't give poor girls two million naira without wanting something in return. That's just how the world works."
"What if I told you the world is wrong?"
"I'd say you're naive. But you're not naive. You're a billionaire. So there must be something you want."
Silence stretches between us. His jaw works like he's fighting with himself.
Finally: "You want to know what I want?"
"Yes."
"I want to have dinner with you."
I blink. "What?"
"Dinner. A meal. The thing people eat in the evening." His tone is light, but his eyes are serious. "I want to take you to dinner. Get to know you better. That's what I want in return for helping your mother."
My mind races. "That's... that's it? Dinner?"
"That's it."
"Why?"
"Because I find you interesting."
"I'm not interesting. I'm a cleaner who lives in Bariga and eats garri for breakfast."
"You're a woman who works two jobs to support her family, who has more pride than sense, and who stands in my office telling a billionaire he's wrong about the world." His smile returns, softer this time. "That's interesting to me."
I should say no. Every survival instinct I have screams to say no.
"One dinner," I hear myself say. "That's all."
"One dinner," he agrees. "For two million naira of medical care. I think I'm getting the better deal."
Despite everything, I laugh. "You're definitely getting robbed."
"Worth it." He hands me the card again. "Please. Take it. Use it for your mother. The dinner invitation stands separately,you can reject that and still use the card. They're not connected."
I take the card slowly. It's heavier than it looks.
"Thank you," I whisper. "I know I keep saying it, but-"
"Then stop saying it and show me instead."
"Show you how?"
"Have dinner with me. This Saturday. Let me see the world through your eyes for one evening."
Saturday. Three days away.
"I work Saturday evenings."
"Call in sick."
"I don't call in sick. I need the money-"
"I'll pay you double what you'd make at the market." He holds up a hand before I can protest. "Don't argue. Consider it payment for the dinner. You're giving me your time, I'm compensating for the work hours you're missing. Fair trade."
It's not fair. Nothing about this is fair. But Mama needs medication, and turning down money because of pride is a luxury I can't afford.
"Fine," I say. "Saturday. But nowhere expensive. I don't have clothes for fancy restaurants."
"Wear whatever you want. I'll pick you up at six."
"You don't know where I live."
"Then tell me."
I give him my address in Bariga, watching his expression carefully for judgment or disgust.
There's none. He just types it into his phone.
"Six PM Saturday," he confirms. "Now you should probably start cleaning before your supervisor thinks I'm distracting you from work."
"You are distracting me from work."
"Then I'll be quiet." He returns to his desk, but I catch the smile playing at his lips.
I busy myself with dusting, acutely aware of him ten feet away. The silence should be uncomfortable, but it's not. It's... companionable, almost.
"Can I ask you something?" His voice breaks the quiet.
"Yes?"
"Rico Blaze. How did you meet him?"
I glance at him. His expression is carefully neutral, but something in his tone suggests the question matters.
"Some men tried to bother me at the bus stop. Rico scared them away and walked me home." I spray cleaner on his bookshelf. "Why?"
"Because Rico Blaze is dangerous."
"He didn't seem dangerous to me. He seemed kind."
"Eve." Leo sets down his pen. "Rico runs half the street gangs in Lagos. He's involved in everything from extortion to smuggling. He's not someone you should be around."
"He saved me."
"He has an angle. Men like Rico always have angles."
"And men like you don't?" I turn to face him fully. "You're paying my mother's medical bills and taking me to dinner. Should I assume you have an angle too?"
His jaw clenches. "That's different."
"How?"
"Because I'm not going to get you killed!"
The words explode out of him, raw and fierce. He stands abruptly, running a hand through his hair again-that gesture of frustration I'm starting to recognize.
"Rico Blaze's world is violence and crime," he continues, voice tight with something that sounds like... fear? "People around him get hurt. They disappear. They die. I don't-" He cuts himself off.
"You don't what?"
He looks at me, and the intensity in his eyes steals my breath.
"I don't want that to happen to you."
The air between us feels charged, dangerous in a completely different way than Rico's world.
"I barely know him," I say softly. "He walked me home once. That's all."
"Keep it that way." It's not a request.
"Leo, you can't tell me who I can and can't talk to."
"I can when it's someone who could get you killed."
"I survived twenty-three years in Lagos without your protection. I think I can handle myself."
"Can you?" He moves closer, and suddenly he's right there, close enough that I have to tilt my head back to meet his eyes. "Because from where I'm standing, you're a woman who walks home alone at night through dangerous streets, works herself to exhaustion, and doesn't know how to ask for help until she's drowning."
"I'm not drowning."
"You were three days ago. When your mother collapsed and you had no way to pay for her treatment. If I hadn't been there-"
"But you were there!" My voice rises. "And so was Rico. And I'm grateful to both of you. But that doesn't mean either of you gets to control my life!"
We're inches apart now, both breathing hard, anger and something else crackling in the space between us.
"I'm not trying to control you," he says, voice dropping to something dangerous and soft. "I'm trying to protect you."
"I don't need protection."
"Everyone needs protection."
"From what? Rico? Or you?"
His eyes darken. "What's that supposed to mean?"
"It means maybe you're not as different from him as you think. You're both powerful men who showed up in my life suddenly and decided I needed saving. Maybe you both have angles. Maybe I should be careful of both of you."
Something flickers across his face.
He steps back, the distance between us suddenly cold.
"You're right," he says quietly. "I apologize. I overstepped."
The anger drains out of me, leaving only exhaustion. "Leo-"
"You should finish your work. I've distracted you enough."
"I didn't mean-"
"Saturday. Six PM. The dinner invitation still stands, if you want it." His voice is formal now, the warmth gone. "But I understand if you'd rather not."
He returns to his desk, focusing intently on his papers.
Dismissed.
I turn back to my cleaning, my chest tight with confusion and regret. Why did I snap at him like that? He was just concerned. Rico's reputation isn't a secret,even I've heard whispers about the street king who rules through fear.
But something in Leo's intensity scared me. Not physically.I don't think he'd ever hurt me. But the way he looked at me, like he has some claim...
That scared me because part of me wanted to let him claim me.
I finish cleaning in silence. When I'm done, I pause at the door.
"Leo?"
He looks up.
"I'm sorry. I shouldn't have compared you to Rico. You're nothing alike."
His expression softens slightly. "And I'm sorry for acting like I have the right to tell you what to do. You're correct-I don't."
"But you're also correct that I should be more careful. Lagos is dangerous. I forget that sometimes."
"Don't forget it." His voice is gentle again. "Please."
"I won't." I grip my cart. "Saturday. Six PM. I'll be ready."
The smile that breaks across his face is worth every confused emotion churning in my chest.
"Good night, Eve."
"Good night, Leo."
I leave his office feeling like I've just navigated a minefield blindfolded.
Mama Kike is waiting by the elevators, arms crossed. "Thirty-five minutes to clean one office. You must think say I be fool."
"I'm sorry, ma. He wanted to talk about-"
"I no care what he want to talk about." But her expression isn't angry, just knowing. "Listen, Evelyn. I don see this thing before. Rich man, poor girl. E dey always end the same way."
My stomach drops. "How does it end?"
"Either him family go destroy you, or him go use you finish and throw you away. Sometimes both." She softens slightly. "You be good girl. No let hunger make you foolish."
"It's not like that, ma."
"That na wetin them all dey talk. Just remember say I warn you."
She walks away, leaving me with her words echoing in my head.
Either his family will destroy you, or he'll use you and throw you away.
In the elevator down, I pull out the black medical card, running my thumb over my embossed name.
Two million naira for my mother's life.
One dinner for a billionaire's curiosity.
What did I just agree to?
My phone buzzes. A text from Rico.
Rico: "Evening, Eve. How was work?"
I stare at the message, then at the floor number counting down.
Two powerful men. Both interested. Both dangerous in their own ways.
And me, caught in the middle, with no idea how this story ends.
I text Rico back: "Exhausting. But good."
Rico: "Need a ride home? My driver can come get you."
Before I can respond, another text arrives. From Leo.
Leo: "I've arranged a car service for you. The driver will be waiting at the service entrance to take you home. Non-negotiable."
I look between the two messages.
One from a gangster offering protection.
One from a billionaire demanding it.
I should be annoyed. Instead, I'm...
Confused,flattered and terrified.
Me to Rico: "I have a ride, thank you. But I appreciate the offer."
Me to Leo: "Thank you. You didn't have to."
Leo: "I know. Sleep well, Eve."
The elevator opens to reveal a sleek black car waiting at the curb, just like Leo promised.
The driver(a kind-faced older man named John-opens the door for me). Like I'm someone important.
I slide into leather seats that probably cost more than my entire flat and stare out the window as Lagos streams past.
Tomorrow, I'll use the medical card to pick up Mama's medications.
Saturday, I'll have dinner with a billionaire.
And somehow, I'll figure out how to navigate this new world I've stumbled into.
A world where I'm no longer invisible.
A world where that might be the most dangerous thing of all.