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Chapter 2 - Chapter 1

Anna

The glow of her phone lit up the room long after midnight. Annabella Chioma Obi—Anna to her followers—sat cross-legged on her bed in the small off-campus lodge she shared with her roommate. The hum of Lagos traffic bled faintly through the window, mixing with the occasional laughter of students outside. Notifications poured in faster than she could scroll: likes, retweets, mentions, hashtags spinning her name into trends.

Her latest post—a thread questioning the suspicious contracts behind one of Nigeria's power companies—was everywhere. She should have been satisfied. She should have put the phone down, slept, and gone to her lecture in the morning.

But instead, her draft folder was open.

And at the top of it: Micheal Obinna Igwe.

Everyone knew the name. The billionaire businessman who built empires across the continent, whose face had graced Forbes Africa, CNN, and the glossy covers of financial magazines. Interviews with him were rare, but when they happened, the world listened. He was power wrapped in an immaculate suit.

And he was untouchable.

At least, that was what everyone believed.

Anna's lips curved as she stared at the name. Untouchable was just another word for unchallenged. And unchallenged was exactly the kind of man she lived to expose.

"Anna, are you mad?" her roommate Onyi muttered from the desk, pushing her glasses up her nose. She had paused mid-assignment, eyes narrowed at Anna's glowing phone. "That man runs multi-billion-dollar companies across the continent. Is it safe for you to go after him recklessly online?"

Anna tilted her head, a smirk forming. "That's the point. Nobody dares question him. That makes him the most dangerous of all."

Onyi groaned, leaning back in her chair. "You act like this is Nollywood. This isn't some fine-boy politician you can shame into silence. This one—he'll silence you."

Her words should have landed like a warning. Instead, they only stoked the fire already burning inside Anna. Danger had always tasted like adrenaline, and her followers—her army of voices—were hungry for answers.

Anna glanced back at her phone. Her fingers hovered above the keyboard, a spark itching at her to press send.

One more post. One more spark near gasoline.

She smiled to herself, ignoring the tightening in her chest that might have been fear—or excitement.

"Let him come," she whispered.

And with one reckless click, she sent her words into the night.

The Next Morning

Her phone was buzzing before dawn. By the time sunlight stretched over the city, Anna's post had crossed one hundred thousand impressions. Her notifications were a storm—retweets, comments, private DMs. Some cheered her courage. Some mocked her recklessness. Some warned her to delete the post before it was too late.

And then there were the messages that made her pause.

Cold, faceless accounts. No profile pictures. No names.

Careful what you're digging into.

Not every door you knock on should be opened.

He sees you.

Anna's throat tightened as she scrolled through them. A shiver of unease slithered down her spine. For a heartbeat, she considered deleting the post.

But then she caught her reflection in the cracked mirror above her desk—her chin lifted, her eyes steady. Fear was what they wanted. And she refused to give them that satisfaction.

Instead, she typed a fresh reply beneath her own post:

If truth scares you, then maybe you're the ones with something to hide.

Her finger hit send.

Outside her window, Lagos roared to life.

Somewhere else in the city, Micheal Obinna Igwe's silence was breaking.

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