
Overview
Catalog
Chapter 1
Chapter 1: The Will of the Dead
The polished marble floor of the Mthembu International boardroom reflected Tawanda’s face. He looked like a nightmare invading a dream. His jeans were shredded at the knees, caked with the red dust of the streets. His jacket was a thrift-store tragedy that smelled faintly of exhaust fumes and desperation. He stood in the center of the pristine room, his boots leaving a trail of grime on the white carpet.
Thabani Mthembu adjusted his silk tie and curled his lip. He looked at Tawanda as if he were a piece of trash that had crawled out of a storm drain. Nomalanga, perched at the head of the long mahogany table, sipped her espresso with a bored, sharp edged grace. The other board members shifted in their ergonomic chairs, their eyes darting between the street rat and the billionaire elites.
"Get him out," Thabani barked, his voice smooth like oil on hot metal. "The janitorial staff is in the basement. This is a private meeting for stakeholders."
Tawanda didn't move. He leaned against the glass wall and crossed his arms. The silence in the room stretched until it became a physical weight. He caught his reflection in the glass and grinned. It was a jagged, ugly grin.
"I heard there was a reading of a will," Tawanda said. His voice was raspy, unpolished, and loud. "My old man kicked the bucket. I figure I’m owed a front-row seat to the vultures picking at his bones."
Nomalanga set her cup down. The clink of porcelain against saucer echoed like a gunshot. "Your mother was a mistake, Tawanda. You are a consequence of that mistake. You have no standing here. Security will remove you now."
Two large men in grey suits stepped forward from the corners of the room. They moved with the synchronized efficiency of men who were paid to crack skulls. Tawanda’s body tensed. He hadn’t eaten a full meal in two days, but the adrenaline flowing through his veins was a potent cocktail. He shifted his stance, dropping his heels and leveling his weight, ready to launch a fist into the nearest throat.
"Wait," the attorney, a man named Tapiwa, cleared his throat. He looked nervous as he shuffled his legal papers. He pushed his glasses up the bridge of his nose and stared at the document before him. "The late Mr. Mthembu was very specific. This is a legally binding inheritance clause. Mr. Tawanda is not only a primary heir. According to Article Four of the trust, he is the sole successor to the majority stake of Mthembu International."
The air left the room. Thabani stood up so fast his chair toppled backward. It hit the floor with a hollow thud. "You are lying. That is impossible. He was a pauper. He died in a gutter."
"That is exactly what your father wanted you to think," Tapiwa muttered, his hands trembling. "Tawanda owns the company. The shares, the properties, the bank accounts. Everything. He is the absolute owner."
Tawanda pushed off the glass wall and walked toward the head of the table. He didn't rush. He savored the way Thabani’s face turned from pale to a dangerous, mottled purple. He walked right up to Nomalanga, who remained seated, though her eyes were wide with a mix of fury and genuine terror.
He leaned down, smelling the expensive floral perfume that cost more than his entire life’s earnings. He whispered, "It looks like the trash is moving into the penthouse, stepmother."
"You little street rat," she hissed, her voice low enough that only he could hear. "I will have you skinned."
"Try it," Tawanda laughed. It was a loud, boisterous sound that cut through the stifling corporate tension. "But keep in mind, I own the skin you're standing on."
Thabani surged forward, his face twisted into a mask of pure hatred. He grabbed Tawanda by the collar of his ragged jacket. The security guards hesitated, unsure if they should beat the new boss or follow orders from the man who had signed their paychecks for years.
"You think a piece of paper makes you one of us?" Thabani screamed, his spit landing on Tawanda’s cheek. "You are nothing! You are a beggar! I will make sure you don't live to see the sunset!"
Tawanda reached out and gripped Thabani’s wrist. He squeezed until he heard the subtle pop of a ligament. Thabani stumbled back, gasping, his hand dangling uselessly at his side. The boardroom erupted. Cries of outrage, threats, and demands for lawyers filled the air. Nomalanga stood up, her heels clicking aggressively against the floor, her eyes boring into Tawanda with the intensity of a predator who had just lost its kill.
Tawanda turned his back on them. He walked out of the boardroom, ignoring the chaos behind him. He pushed through the heavy glass doors and made his way to the elevator. He didn't stop until he reached the underground parking garage. The air was stale and smelled of oil.
He walked toward a rusted bicycle chained to a pillar, his mind racing. He had won the first round, but he could still feel the heat of their eyes on his back. He reached into his pocket to find his old, cracked phone, wanting to check the news, when a pair of bright headlights blinded him.
A black SUV roared around the corner of the concrete pillars. It didn't slow down. It accelerated, the engine screaming as it swerved directly toward him. Tawanda dove behind a support beam, the tires screeching against the concrete just inches from his boots. The SUV slammed into the pillar, the impact shaking the entire structure.
Before the dust settled, the driver's side door flew open. A man stepped out, a silenced pistol leveled at Tawanda’s chest. He didn't look like a corporate thug. He looked like a professional cleaner.
"Your father should have made sure you were properly disposed of twenty years ago," the hitman said, his voice cold and devoid of life.
Tawanda rolled across the floor, grabbing a heavy metal pipe from a nearby maintenance cart. He stood up, his heart hammering against his ribs, the street-fighting instincts he had honed over two decades flooding his brain. He wasn't just a CEO anymore. He was a target.
"You're going to have to do better than that," Tawanda yelled, his voice echoing in the hollow space of the garage.
The hitman cocked the pistol. The metallic click echoed like a death sentence. Tawanda tightened his grip on the pipe, his eyes locked on the suppressor. He didn't know who sent him, but he knew exactly where the order had come from. As the hitman tightened his finger on the trigger, the garage lights flickered and died, plunging them both into total darkness.
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