Chuka sacrificed everything to save his family from the shame and danger of his younger brother Nnamdi’s betting debts, only to be betrayed and abandoned by those he trusted most. When he’s given a miraculous second chance at life, Chuka decides to flip the script, exposing family secrets and reclaiming his destiny. The stakes: survival, dignity, and the truth behind the family’s darkest lies.
Olamide’s classmates are dead, and the whole market wants his blood—after years of brutal bullying that cost him his eye. As police drag him in, battered and alone, every parent screams for justice, but only he knows the twisted truth behind the explosion. Did the blind outcast finally snap, or is the real killer hiding behind a mask of innocence?
When Nnenna Okafor vanishes, her parents' perfect world shatters—only to discover her body turned into sausages in Baba Tunde’s butcher shop. But as the police dig deeper, secrets claw their way out: the killer’s confession is chilling, but a schoolgirl’s whisper blows the case wide open—was the real murderer living inside Nnenna’s own home all along? In a town where love hides more than hate, who can you trust when your family wears a stranger’s mask?
For seven years, Olamide hid in the shadows as Tunde’s ‘deaf’ girlfriend—never knowing he only loved his childhood sweetheart, Morayo. Humiliated and betrayed on her own birthday, she finally regains her hearing and learns the painful truth: she was just a practice love, never the main event. Now, with her secret out and her heart in pieces, will she find the courage to walk away before Tunde locks her in his golden cage forever?
Zainab thought she escaped Suleiman’s torment after secondary school, but seven years later, her worst nightmare returns—not just to haunt her, but to claim her as his wife. Every touch reminds her of old scars, yet his hold tightens with every secret, every betrayal, every whispered apology. When a shocking truth about her identity and Suleiman’s first love comes to light, Zainab must choose: survive as a replacement, or fight for her own freedom—even if it means risking everything, including the child she never planned to have.
On the day of my final WAEC exam, answer sheets begin to mysteriously appear in my locker—each one perfect, each one impossible to explain. Teachers, scientists, even village elders gather, suspecting juju, cult, or government secret, but nobody fit break the curse. When I finally ask the locker to reveal itself, the truth it writes shakes me to my core—will I survive the answer to my own question?