KNEEL FOR NO ONE: Once A Servant, Now A Billoniare
KNEEL FOR NO ONE: Once A Servant, Now A Billoniare
Author: P. Writes
CHAPTER 1
Author: P. Writes
last update2026-05-27 15:02:41

The coffee hit him square on the chest before the apology ever left her mouth.

It scalded through his white work shirt in the time it took him to gasp. He pressed his notepad against the wet fabric more from shock than any practical reason, and the stack of files he'd been carrying fanned across the corridor floor like a deck of dropped cards.

"Watch where you're going!"

He bent slowly, gathering the papers one by one. The woman who had collided with him stood over him without bending. Her heels were the kind that cost more than his monthly salary and she wore them like weapons.

"I'm sorry, ma'am," Elias said. His voice was level. He had trained it to be.

"You should be." She adjusted her blazer. "These are new shoes."

He looked at her shoes. They were spotless. The coffee had gone entirely on him.

"Yes, ma'am."

"And learn to use the service corridor. That's what it's there for."

She walked away and she didn't look back once.

Elias gathered the last of the papers, rose to his full height which was considerable, and stood alone in the corridor of the forty-second floor of Prescott Capital Group. The building's air conditioning hummed overhead. From the glass wall behind him the city sprawled thirty stories below, silver and indifferent.

He was thirty-two years old. He had a degree in Economics from the state university that sat in a drawer at home because it had never once opened a door for him here. He had worked at Prescott Capital for six years as a facilities coordinator, which was the title the company had given to the man who kept the building running and whose name nobody used unless something was broken.

He tucked the files under his arm and walked to the service corridor.

"She complained," Kevin said, barely looking up from his station.

Elias set the files on the counter. "Who did?"

"The woman from the forty-second floor. Landis. Helena Landis." Kevin's voice carried the tone of a man delivering bad news he was privately enjoying. "Said you bumped into her. Said you were rude about it."

"I apologised."

"She said you were rude," Kevin repeated, with emphasis, as if the distinction needed underlining. 

Elias looked at him. Kevin Marsh was the facilities manager, which meant he sat at a desk and managed the people who actually did the managing. He was a small man who wore large suits and spoke loudest in rooms where nobody was likely to disagree with him.

"I'll speak to her," Elias said.

"You won't." Kevin shuffled a paper that didn't need shuffling. "Doris from HR will handle it. You'll get a written note in your file. This is the second one this quarter." He paused for effect. "One more and we revisit your contract status."

Elias said nothing for three full seconds.

"She spilled her coffee on me," he said.

"I wasn't there, Elias."

"No," Elias agreed. "You weren't."

He picked up his clipboard and walked out before Kevin could find another sentence to punish him with.

Outside the building at half past five, the evening traffic moved in slow mechanical streams.

Elias stood on the pavement waiting for the crosswalk signal, his damp shirt cold now against his chest, and his phone buzzed with a message from his younger sister, Cora.

Mama's procedure was moved to Friday. Doctor says she needs the deposit before Wednesday or they can't hold the slot.

He stared at the message for longer than necessary.

Then he typed back: I'll handle it.

He stared at those three words after he'd sent them. He always sent those three words. Cora always replied the same way.

Her reply came quickly: You always say that.

He put the phone in his pocket and crossed the street.

The deposit was four hundred thousand naira. He had forty-seven thousand in his account. The math was not complicated. It was just cruel.

He took the long route home. He needed the time between the world and his front door.

The apartment was on the third floor of a building that had working electricity four days out of seven and a landlord who appeared precisely on the first of every month with the energy of a man who had never missed a payment in his life and expected the same enthusiasm from others.

Mrs. Briggs from the ground floor was standing at the base of the staircase when Elias came in.

She was sixty-three and the kind of woman who had seen enough of life to call it exactly what it was.

"That man came again," she said, meaning the landlord's representative. "I told him you were at work. He left a note."

"Thank you, Mrs. Briggs."

"Third time this month, Elias."

"Yes." He started up the stairs.

"Your mother doing any better?"

He paused on the second step. "She's holding on."

Mrs. Briggs nodded slowly. "I'll put some soup outside your door later. You look like a man who hasn't eaten since morning."

She wasn't wrong about that either.

He went upstairs and sat on the edge of his bed in the flat that smelled of old walls and effort.

The landlord's note was a single page with a highlighted amount. He folded it without reading it and placed it beside the previous two on the kitchen table.

His phone rang. It was not a number he recognised.

He answered.

"Is this Elias Cole?" A man's voice. Professional. Measured. The voice of someone who spoke for a living.

"Yes."

"My name is Solomon Briggs." A pause. "Not the woman downstairs. Different family entirely. I represent an estate and I've been looking for you for some time." Another pause, deliberate this time. "I wonder if you might be available to meet tomorrow morning. There are some matters regarding your father that require your immediate attention."

Elias went very still.

"My father," he said carefully, "died when I was four."

"Yes," Solomon Briggs said. "That's precisely what we need to discuss."

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  • CHAPTER 44

    The private jet landed at Starlight City's exclusive airstrip a bit after sunset. Elias held Sera's hand during the whole flight down, their hands joined with the level of comfort of newlyweds who had been through hell together and still stayed strong. The moment they opened the doors, the warm evening breeze brought in the familiar scent of the city that was a combination of ocean, concrete, and endless possibilities. Standing ready on the tarmac were Grace, Cora, and a very small, and quite discreet, security team.Grace was the one who came out first and immediately pulled Sera into a tight hug and then did the same to Elias. "It's really great to see you again. The house was so quiet without you two."Next was Cora and the excitement was literally written all over her face. "We have dinner ready. It's not really anything special, just a family meal. Grace made stew, and I took care of the bread."Sera's eyes lit up. She was still a bit weary from the trip but very much glowin

  • CHAPTER 43

    The morning after their wedding, the honeymoon started when a private jet took Elias and Sera to a beautiful island villa located away from the main area of the Caribbean archipelago. There were no security guards inside the villa, just a tiny, trusted crew who watched the area from a distance. It was the first time in months that they were really alone. When it was sunrise Sera in a simple sundress and barefoot, came out onto the white beach. The ocean wind was gently blowing her auburn hair. Elias was not far behind, slightly lifting the sleeves of his white linen shirt while keeping his eyes on her as he had done all the previous years with that same quiet, intense look. When she turned around and saw his face, she smiled at him with that slow soft smile that always managed to make his heart beat faster."Come here, husband," she whispered. He made his way to her quickly and held her tightly. Their kiss was long and slow, filled with the feeling of happiness and freedom that

  • CHAPTER 42

    On the wedding day, the sun shone brightly over Starlight City. Soft sun rays entered through the window drapes while Elias was still fixing his tuxedo cufflinks near the window. The garden was changed into a paradise-like setting white roses and green ribbons entwined round a simple wooden arch near the lake, lanterns gently hanging from trees, chairs laid out in a nice semicircle on the green grass. It was private and personal, just like they had dreamed it.In the next room, Sera was with Grace and Cora, the door was not closed completely. He heard her chuckling as they assisted her with the last details. The feelings inside his chest were getting bigger and deeper, the very emotions that had been slowly built up after every raid, every betrayal and every quiet stolen moment. This was the day she would become his wife. Not through the power of alliances and empires but because they had selected each other amidst the fire and the shadows.A gentle knock came and that made him

  • CHAPTER 41

    The atmosphere in the private wing of the Helen Cole Memorial Hospital was very calm on the day Sera was finally allowed to go home. Only two days had passed since her rescue and she had quite amazingly regained her health. The doctors were sure that her mental toughness, the excellent care she received, and the relentless spirit of a woman who had managed to survive through ambushes and power struggles over the years were the reasons behind it. The bruises were almost gone. The internal bleeding was controlled. She was walking with a little stiffness, even asking to do it without help. In the corridor, Elias stood and waited, his one heartbeat as regular as it was before the kidnapping. When Sera came out of the room in casual, stylish clothes, a cozy gray sweater and leggings, he was so deeply in love with her that even three steps were not enough to reach her, and then he hugged her. She seemed as if she was made of wax as she hugged him back, face hidden in his neck,

  • CHAPTER 40

    The rain hadn't stopped since Sera was taken. It was almost accusing as it kept pounding on the windows of Cole House, changing the lovely gardens into a muddy mess. Elias was in the war room, running on empty, looking at the wall of monitors with the live feeds from each team in Starlight City."Still no news Southern industrial corridor," Marcus's voice was hardly audible over the comms. "They cleared two more decoys. Constantly changing her location, sir. They're quite professional."Elias felt his hands tightening painfully by his sides. Every moment without Sera was like a further stabbing of a knife to his heart. "Let's try the route to the meatpacking plant," Elias rang out, dangerously low. "And the abandoned rail yard. The Shadow Council's known hideouts. We'll be ruthless this time."Grace looked in, holding coffee and sandwiches which she had made with some effort. Her hair was silver and messy, her eyes were red from worry and tears not yet shed. Behind her, Cora was loo

  • CHAPTER 39

    The black envelope seemed so heavy to Elias as if it was made of lead. The knife that had pinned it to the garden path still shone under the string lights, almost mocking the wedding preparations, that very spot was full only a few hours ago. Sera's phone was left broken next to it, the last text message still illuminated on the cracked screen: I went out for a breath. Find me when you are done.The words of the Shadow Council's letter kept echoing in Elias's head as he reread it: Deliver the complete Cole File by dawn or she dies slowly. No address. No immediate requirements apart from the threat. Just silence and the woman he loved had been taken from their own house."Marcus," he said, his voice deep and with a hint of anger. "Mobilize everyone, all our entire forces. The Pascal loyalists. Diana's people. Close the city even. No one sleeps until we find her."Marcus gave a quick nod and started to give orders at a fast pace. So fast that within a few minutes, Cole House, which h

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