From the moment Martin met Lydia, he was enthralled. She was fiery, independent, and utterly resistant to his persistent pursuit. But beneath her defiance, a quiet attraction simmered. After relentless attempts, Lydia finally let her guard down, and what began as a chase turned into a love that consumed them both. But even the strongest love can crack under the weight of betrayal. A single mistake-born of tangled emotions and forbidden temptation-tore them apart, leaving Martin shattered. And yet, against all odds, he chooses to forgive, offering Lydia a second chance at the love they once shared. Will their rekindled love be strong enough to withstand the scars of the past, or will history repeat itself, tearing them apart for good?
Martin looked up from the booklet containing the restaurant's menu to the chocolate skinned woman whose face held an impassive expression, dressed in the hotel's dress code for waitresses – a black LBD with the establishment's name engraved in thick gold thread on the left side of her chest.
Her thick hair was pulled away from her face into a spongy bun on top of her head. Her dark eyes stared back with blank impatience at him.
"Your order, sir." came her accented voice again with a sliver of impatience like she had somewhere else to be.
He stared dumbly at the woman watching him flatly.
A hand snaked to his and gave a gentle shake meant to snap him out of his reverie. "Martin, your order?"
Martin blinked once, then snapped his gaze to the ivory skinned, slender woman sitting in front of him. Suddenly she paled in comparison to the impatient woman awaiting their order for the past ten minutes.
He cleared his slightly dried throat, directing his gaze to the leather-bound booklet containing the restaurant's menu. "I'll have a medium rare steak – with the red wine sauce and a bottle of wine. This one's almost empty." He muttered before staring at his date, "What would you like, Genevieve?"
"The same with his – only I'd like mine with a side of salad tossed with lemon dressing." She replied, sipping her champagne.
Lydia gave a curt, understanding nod and asked politely, "Would you prefer yours like his, then. Medium rare?"
"No. God, no!" she cried, smiling a little. "I'd like mine rare. Thank you."
The waitress gave another nod and turned for the kitchen. Martin's eyes followed the woman's retreating figure; his gaze was still on her even as Genevieve cleared her throat to get his attention. Not that he heard – he was too absorbed with his thoughts.
The thin heel of Genevieve's stilettoes connected sharply with his shin with such force he doubled over with a muted groan and a lowly uttered expletive. He raised his head and pinned her a frigid glare, one she returned with a smile of her own.
"Good. That got your attention." She said sweetly. "You seemed to have been gone an awful long time, Martin. I was worried."
"Were you?" he asked with a sardonic raise of his brow, the pain she administered to his shin had faded to a dull, indistinct throb. "You can hardly blame me for admiring her. She appears to have qualities you greatly lack."
The sweet smile on Genevieve's pale pink lips vanished and her eyes narrowed at the insult, along with jealousy and irritated annoyance. "Really? What would those qualities be?"
Martin reclined heavily against his chair, a mild taunting smile brushed his lips, "For one thing, she's not a child in a woman's body throwing infantile tantrums highly irritating in nature."
Genevieve rose as gracefully as she could whilst pinning Martin an icy stare which he received with mild amusement. "She won't bat an eyelash your direction, Martin. All your efforts will be useless. That I can tell judging from her behavior."
"Leaving already? Lunch is yet to be served." He commented easily with a raised brow. "I thought you'd be difficult to go out with. You know, after all that chasing and tiresome wooing. Yet here we are... you're leaving first without even taking a bite of what you ordered."
Genevieve leaned forward, her blue eyes hardened to glaciers of ice as she spat with calm venom, "Fuck you, Martin."
"Thank you."
She scoffed in disbelief.
Martin watched her fast-retreating figure thoughtfully. He honestly thought she'd be worth it although knowing her tendencies to behave foolishly most of the time.
He wasn't going to chase after her, if that was what she was thinking. The sound of the food cart wheeling behind him drew his gaze to the waitress in black and against his will, Martin smiled slightly as she approached his table.
Lydia wheeled the cart to a stop, curiosity avid on her face as she asked, "Where's the lady?"
Martin reached for the bottle of wine and popped it with ease. "She left." He replied simply, setting the bottle gently in front of him.
"Why? If you don't mind me asking?" she inquired, plating the food with expertise.
"A disagreement ensued and we quarreled. Prompting her to take her untimely leave." He watched her closely, "I was staring at you and she got jealous. Simple as that."
Lydia paused and snapped blank eyes to the man. "Ịnụkwa." She muttered under her breath, shaking her head slowly. "What do I do about her food? Shall I have it packaged for you?"
"How about you have the meal with me instead? I'd rather prefer your presence to hers." He invited.
Lydia gave him a polite look with a subtle hint of mockery in her accented voice, "Yet you took pains to invite her here. No, thank you. Unfortunately, sir, I prefer to have my food properly cooked before eating it. This doesn't qualify as cooked in any way. It's practically coated with spices and dripping with blood once sliced open. All in the name of "perfect texture and juiciness." If you understand where I'm coming from."
He laughed at her bluntness which lasted for a full minute and two seconds.
Lydia scowled slightly. There was nothing amusing in what she said. "Then if you will excuse me, sir. I'll have this packaged and brought to you shortly."
Martin stopped her with a hand over hers, partially engulfing it in a firm yet gentle clasp. "Please stay. I insist."
Lydia's gaze landed on the hand over hers then reached with her free hand to gently pry it off. "It is strictly against the rules for the staff to fraternize intimately with the customers, sir. Pardon me, but you'll have to eat that uncooked meat and salad all by yourself." She gave him a patronizing smile "Excuse me." With that she wheeled the cart back to the kitchen.
Martin stared back at his plate with a contemplative pause and after a while, a brief laugh left his lips. He liked her frankness.
*
Lydia slid the plate on the steel counter "Esiri, I need this packaged for Table 12 by the window." At Esiri's narrowed stare, Lydia smiled coyly "It's time for my break."
She left the woman and scanned the vast room which made up the kitchen then walked up to a woman with lush raven curls tucked into a thin hair net, leaning forward to whisper into her ear, "Have lunch with me."
The woman started with a gasp and whipped her head to see who it was, "I told you to stop doing that. I'm bloody jumpy."
Lydia giggled "Sorry."
The woman narrowed mocking eyes at her, "No, you're not."
"No." she said unrepentantly. "Have lunch with me, Susannah. I want to talk."
"Alright, let me finish up here."
Lydia glanced to the left as something caught her attention, "Sure. I'll get the chips from Toran and we could get coke from the vending machine on the way."
"Ok."
Lydia moved to Toran, a cinnamon skinned boy two years her junior, getting hot fries from the deep fryer unto a large paper plate which she deftly snatched, ignoring his protests.
"I was about to eat that." he whined.
She gave an indifferent shrug, "Fry another. I doubt Brennan knows what goes down here from his office." Lydia leaned forward with an impish smile on her face and a voice to match, "Unless you tell him the usual way... on your hands and knees."
Toran grabbed her arm, encasing it in a rough grip. "I told you not to tell anyone." He whispered fiercely through clenched teeth, glancing swiftly around the kitchen bustling with staff and clanging of pots and food with rich aroma to make sure nobody overheard her.
Lydia smiled, sliding one hand into the soft thick, dark brown curls of his hair and gripped it tightly, "And I didn't, nwa m. But push me and I might." She whispered in a clipped voice. Her gaze moved to the hand on her arm "Your hand."
He released her immediately, his face contrite "Sorry. I'm sorry." Toran muttered, dropping his gaze to the pile of potatoes. "I know you were joking. It's just a sore topic."
Lydia watched him sympathetically, "I'm sorry too. That was insensitive of me. Your secret is safe; and I never betray those who have secrets with me...that's you amongst others, mm?"
He nodded slowly. "Thank you."
"Alright." She kissed his cheek affectionately and pulled away with a smile. "Don't let me keep you." Lydia glanced over her shoulder to see Susannah untying her apron and tugging the flimsy net off her head, tucking it into her pocket before looking up with bright green eyes and giggled.
She walked up to her and took the plate from Lydia, "Ready when you are."
"Thank God." Lydia entwined their fingers together. "Let's go."
They left the kitchen and walked a short passage before opening a door leading to the staff break room. Susannah got the coke from the machine along with a chocolate bar for Lydia. They found a recently vacated table and sat on it, munching the warm fries and coke, chatting and laughing.
The conversation turned to Susannah's dick of a boyfriend whom Lydia didn't like but maintained a certain level of civility with because of Susannah. He always made Susannah conscious of her size and it irked the hell out of Lydia. She had told Susannah bluntly that that was her nature and if he had a problem, Susannah should give him the boot.
"Stop trying to make me feel better." Susannah said ruefully.
"I never tell someone anything to make them feel good about themselves when it's the obvious truth. That fool has been blind since birth so you can't possibly blame him for his stupidity and his malfunctioned, condensed brain that's clogged with toxic garbage." Lydia replied smartly.
Susannah watched her closely with thoughtful silence. Lydia's bluntness had gotten her into an altercation with Brennan a while ago which had her almost fired on the spot. It had taken her a long time and a series of pleading on Susannah's part for Brennan to take her back. He had apologized and Lydia did too – both level-headed enough to look each other in the eye cordially.
"You wanted to talk to me about something?" she prompted.
Lydia's face brightened. "Ehen... thank you for reminding me, o jare. A man and a woman came by today... a date, I think. I got their orders and left to tell Julia. When I came back with their order, the lady had left which was appalling since she was just there for like, give or take, ten minutes before she vanished. I asked the man where she had gone and he simply said: 'We had an argument so she left.' Can you imagine?"
Susannah frowned slightly in thought, "Why did they argue?"
Lydia pushed her empty coke can aside with a mild look of disgust, "He said it was because of me. I asked him what I should do about her order, if he'd like it packaged. He told me to have the meal with him and I told him 'No!' point-blank. I prefer my meat thoroughly cooked; not one still dripping with blood. At times people appall me, the choices we make... sometimes I wish we were created without free-will."
Susannah smiled at Lydia's words, her emerald eyes soft in thought, "I don't think He wanted puppets for children, hence the free-will."
Lydia scoffed. "We're better off without it. The world would be a less shittier place than it already is."
Susannah nodded slowly with a small smile, "I think you're wrong."
Lydia watched her and a slow smile inched her lips, stretching it into a grin, then a laugh, "You want me and you to argue here?"
Susannah chuckled, "No. Not here. When we get home, maybe."
Both women laughed heartily. Lydia took the bar of chocolate and tore it open then divided it, pushing the other half to Susannah who stared at it with reluctant longing.
"Oga, eat it. Nothing will happen to you." She pushed the treat closer to her. "Eat."
Susannah stared at the wrapper then reached for it reluctantly, noticing that Lydia didn't share it equally; hers was a tiny bit bigger. "This isn't equal... mine's a bit bigger."
Lydia widened her eyes briefly with feigned surprise all the same stuffing the rest of her treat into her mouth with a toothy grin before Susannah could think of switching it. "Really? I had no idea o."
Susannah chuckled, shaking her head as she took a bite of the bar with secret relish.
From the Martin met Lydia, he was enthralled. She was fiery, independent, and utterly resistant to his persistent pursuit. But beneath her defiance, a quiet attraction simmered. After relentless attempts, Lydia finally let her guard down, and what began as a chase turned into a love that consumed them both. But even the strongest love can crack under the weight of betrayal. A single mistake-born of tangled emotions and forbidden temptation-tore them apart, leaving Martin shattered. And yet, against all odds, he chooses to forgive, offering Lydia a second chance at the love they once shared. But forgiveness isn't without its challenges. Old wounds refuse to heal, and long-buried secrets and oppositions threaten to surface, putting their fragile connection to the test. Will their rekindled love be strong enough to withstand the scars of the past, or will history repeat itself, tearing them apart for good?
Dear readers, this book has resumed daily updates. It took Sabrina three whole years to realize that her husband, Tyrone didn't have a heart. He was the coldest and most indifferent man she had ever met. He never smiled at her, let alone treated her like his wife. To make matters worse, the return of the woman he had eyes for brought Sabrina nothing but divorce papers. Sabrina's heart broke. Hoping that there was still a chance for them to work on their marriage, she asked, "Quick question,Tyrone. Would you still divorce me if I told you that I was pregnant?" "Absolutely!" he responded. Realizing that she didn't mean shit to him, Sabrina decided to let go. She signed the divorce agreement while lying on her sickbed with a broken heart. Surprisingly, that wasn't the end for the couple. It was as if scales fell off Tyrone's eyes after she signed the divorce agreement. The once so heartless man groveled at her bedside and pleaded, "Sabrina, I made a big mistake. Please don't divorce me. I promise to change." Sabrina smiled weakly, not knowing what to do...
After hiding her true identity throughout her three-year marriage to Colton, Allison had committed wholeheartedly, only to find herself neglected and pushed toward divorce. Disheartened, she set out to rediscover her true self-a talented perfumer, the mastermind of a famous intelligence agency, and the heir to a secret hacker network. Realizing his mistakes, Colton expressed his regret. "I know I messed up. Please, give me another chance." Yet, Kellan, a once-disabled tycoon, stood up from his wheelchair, took Allison's hand, and scoffed dismissively, "You think she'll take you back? Dream on."
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Natalie used to think she could melt Connor’s icy heart, but she was sorely mistaken. When at last she decided to leave, she discovered that she was pregnant. Even so, she chose to quietly leave his world, prompting Connor to mobilize all of his resources and expand his business to a global scale—all in a bid to find her. But there was no trace of Natalie. Connor slowly spiraled into madness, turning the city upside down and leaving chaos in his wake. Natalie finally surfaced years later, with wealth and power of her own, only to find herself entangled with Connor once again.
It was supposed to be a marriage of convenience, but Carrie made the mistake of falling in love with Kristopher. When the time came that she needed him the most, her husband was in the company of another woman. Enough was enough. Carrie chose to divorce Kristopher and move on with her life. Only when she left did Kristopher realize how important she was to him. In the face of his ex-wife’s countless admirers, Kristopher offered her 20 million dollars and proposed a new deal. “Let’s get married again.”