"Evelyn!" Mama Kike's voice echoes from the hallway. She's the cleaning supervisor, a round woman whose bark is worse than her bite. "Are you still washing that toilet?
Be fast! We get three more floors before four o'clock!"
"Yes, ma!" I call back, dunking my rag into the bucket of bleach water that's turned my hands two shades lighter than my arms.
The bathroom gleams now(spotless, perfect, exactly how rich people expect their toilets to look). Never mind that the person who cleaned it hasn't had a proper meal since yesterday afternoon. Never mind that while I'm scrubbing their shit, literally, my mother is at the market trying to sell enough provisions to keep the lights on for another week.
I gather my supplies and step into the hallway just as a group of corporate women click past in heels that cost more than my monthly earnings. They don't look at me. I'm furniture to them. Invisible labor.
I prefer it that way.
The elevator dings, and I wheel my cart inside, pressing the button for the seventeenth floor. My phone buzzes in my pocket(a text from my younger cousin, Salie).
"Aunty says you should buy paracetamol on your way home. She is having a headache again."
My chest tightens. Mama's headaches have been getting worse. Last month, the doctor said it was stress. This month, he said we need to run tests. Tests we can't afford.
I text back: "Okay"
The elevator opens, and I push my cart into another world of glass offices and leather chairs. This floor houses the executive offices(the real money. I'm not usually assigned here, but Mama Kike said someone called in sick).
I start with the conference room, wiping down the massive table where people probably make decisions about millions of naira without blinking. There's still coffee in some of the cups, pastries half-eaten on plates. I wrap the leftovers in a napkin and slip them into my bag. Mama will appreciate the meat pies.
Waste is a sin when you've known hunger.
I'm finishing the windows when I hear a deep male voice approaching.
"-don't care what the board thinks. If they can't deliver the numbers, replace them."
I freeze. That voice carries the kind of cold certainty that makes people lose jobs. I duck behind my cart, hoping to finish and leave before-
The door swings open.
Three men in expensive suits enter, but my eyes lock on the one in the center. Tall. Dark suit tailored so precisely it looks like it was sewn onto his body. Face carved from stone(sharp jawline, intense eyes, lips pressed into a line that suggests smiling is a foreign concept).
He stops mid-sentence when he sees me.
Our eyes meet.
Something flickers across his face-surprise? Curiosity? It's gone so fast I think I imagined it.
"You're the cleaner?" His voice is exactly what I expected: deep, controlled, used to being obeyed.
"Yes, sir." I straighten up, gripping my rag. "I'm almost finished-"
"Leave the windows. Clean my office instead."
The two men with him exchange glances. One of them(older, with gray at his temples)frowns. "Mr. Sterling, your office was already-"
"I want it cleaned again." His eyes haven't left mine. "Now."
My heart pounds. This is weird. Rich people are weird, but this feels... different.
"Yes, sir," I say, because what else can I say?
He walks past me, and I catch the scent of expensive cologne,something woody and dark. The kind of smell that probably costs more than my rent.
His office is at the end of the hall, behind double doors with his name engraved on a gold plaque: Leonardo Sterling, CEO.
Of course. The big boss himself.
I've heard stories about him from the other cleaners. The kind of man who fires people before breakfast and doesn't lose sleep over it.
I push my cart inside, and my breath catches.
The office is massive. His desk is a slab of dark wood that looks imported from somewhere expensive. Everything is already immaculate.
There's nothing to clean.
He sits behind the desk, watching me with those intense eyes. The other men have disappeared.
"Sir?" I venture carefully. "Your office is already very clean-"
"Then dust something."
I blink. "Sir?"
"You heard me." He leans back in his chair, fingers steepled under his chin. "Do your job."
This is insane. But I need this job, so I pull out my duster and pretend to clean already-clean surfaces. The silence stretches between us, heavy and strange.
"What's your name?" he asks suddenly.
I glance at him. "Evelyn. Evelyn Adesua."
"How long have you worked here?"
"Six months, sir."
"And before that?"
"Different places. Offices. Hotels. Wherever they're hiring." I move to the bookshelf, dusting spines of business books I'll never read.
"You're a hard worker."
It's not a question, but I answer anyway. "I don't have a choice, sir."
"Everyone has choices."
I turn to face him, and something in my chest snaps. Maybe it's exhaustion. Maybe it's the weight of Mama's medical bills. Maybe it's this man sitting in his palace of glass and leather telling me about choices.
"With respect, sir," I say, my voice steadier than I feel, "when choosing between feeding your family and starving, that's not really a choice. That's survival."
His eyebrows rise slightly. The first real expression I've seen.
"You speak your mind."
"Only when pushed, sir." I turn back to my dusting. "Most times, I'm invisible. It's safer that way."
"Invisible," he repeats, like he's testing the word. "You're not invisible."
I don't know what to say to that, so I say nothing.
My phone buzzes again. I try to ignore it, but it buzzes twice more in quick succession. Emergency pattern. My stomach drops.
"Answer it," he says.
"Sir, I'm working-"
"Answer it."
I pull out my phone with shaking hands. Three texts from Salie, each more frantic than the last.
"Sister come quick!"
"Mama fainted in shop!"
"We are on our way to the hospital!"
The phone slips from my fingers.
Leonardo Sterling is standing before I even realize he moved. He catches my phone before it hits the ground and hands it back to me, his fingers brushing mine.
"What's wrong?" His voice has shifted-less command, more... concern?
"My mother." I can barely form words. "She collapsed. They're taking her to the hospital."
I'm already moving toward my cart, my mind racing. Which hospital? How will I pay? How will I get there fast enough?
"Wait." His hand catches my arm. "Which hospital?"
"I-I don't know yet, I have to call-"
"Call. Find out. Then I'll take you."
I stare at him. "Sir?"
"You heard me. Find out where she is. My driver will take us."
"I can't-you don't have to-"
"Miss Adesua." He looks at me with those intense eyes, and I see something in them I didn't expect: humanity. "Call. Now."
My hands tremble as I dial Salie. She's crying, her words tumbling over each other. "General Hospital, sister. For Yaba. She never wake up, she just-"
"I'm coming," I interrupt. "I'm coming now."
I hang up and look at Leonardo Sterling(billionaire, CEO, a man who lives in a different universe from mine).
"General Hospital, Yaba," I whisper.
He nods once and pulls out his phone. "Biodun, bring the car to the front entrance. Now." He ends the call and looks at me. "Let's go."
"Sir, I don't understand why-"
"Neither do I." He opens the office door, gesturing for me to move. "But your mother needs you, and standing here debating won't help her. Move."
I move.
We don't wait for the elevator,he leads me to the emergency stairs, taking them two at a time while I struggle to keep up. My mind is in chaos. Mama. Hospital. This strange billionaire who's suddenly acting like he cares.
The black Mercedes is waiting when we burst through the lobby doors. Leonardo opens the back door himself and practically pushes me inside before sliding in next to me.
"General Hospital, Yaba," he tells the driver. "Fast."
The car shoots forward, and I grip the leather seat, my entire body shaking.
"She's going to be okay," Leonardo says beside me.
"You don't know that." My voice cracks.
"No," he admits. "But panic won't help her. Breathe."
I try. I fail. My chest is too tight.
His hand covers mine on the seat. .
"Breathe," he says again, softer this time.
And somehow, impossibly, I do.
We don't speak for the rest of the drive. His hand stays on mine, an anchor in the storm. I don't understand this man. I don't understand why he's helping me. But right now, I don't care.
All that matters is Mama.