Okafor was born into a life most people only dream of, but to him, it often felt like a prison made of gold.
At thirty, he had everything the world admired. His name opened doors before he even reached them. Investors waited for his approval. Competitors feared his silence. His family’s estate stood on acres of guarded land, all glass, marble, and polished steel, rising over the city like a monument to power.
But inside those walls, Okafor felt less like a man and more like an heir being prepared for display.
Every morning began at 5:30, because that was how his father had raised him. Discipline first. Desire later. Feelings never. Chief Okafor believed greatness was built through control, and he had spent his life turning his son into the next version of himself.
Breakfast was served at a long table that could seat twenty, though most mornings it held only three people: Okafor, his father, and his mother.
His father sat at the head, reading reports with the cold focus of a man who had conquered too much to be gentle. His mother sat beside him, elegant and quiet, managing the family image with a smile that could soften any scandal before it reached the public.
Okafor sat between them, wearing a suit that fit perfectly and a life that did not.
“You’re late,” his father said one morning without looking up.
“It’s 7:01,” Okafor replied.
“Then you are one minute late.”
There was no anger in his father’s voice. Only precision.
His mother stirred her tea. “You have investors at ten. And dinner with the royal family tonight.”
At the mention of the royal family, Okafor’s jaw tightened.
Princess Diana.
The woman he was expected to marry.
The arrangement had been made years earlier, long before Okafor had any real say in his future. It was not just a marriage. It was an alliance. The Okafor empire would merge influence with the royal family, strengthening both sides for generations.
To everyone else, it was perfect.
Diana was beautiful, educated, graceful, and trained from childhood to carry attention like a crown. When she stood beside Okafor, they looked like power made human.
But perfection, Okafor had learned, could feel very empty from the inside.
That evening, the royal dinner was held in a palace hall lit by chandeliers that glittered like captured stars. Guests moved over polished floors, conversations flowed easily, and every detail—from the flowers to the cutlery—looked as if it had been planned months in advance.
Okafor arrived in a tailored black suit, polite and unreadable.
Then he saw Diana.
She stood near the center of the room in a gold gown that moved like liquid light. When their eyes met, she smiled and stepped toward him.
“Okafor,” she said warmly. “You’re late.”
“I’m on time.”
She laughed softly. Even her laugh sounded trained—never too loud, never careless.
“You look beautiful,” he said, because it was expected.
“And you look exactly like a man who would rather be anywhere else,” she replied.
For one second, honesty passed between them.
“Do you ever get tired of it?” he asked quietly.
“Of what?”
“This performance.”
Diana glanced around the room, still smiling for anyone watching. “It is not a performance. It is responsibility.”
“To whom?”
“To everyone who depends on us.”
That was the difference between them.
Diana accepted the life she had been given.
Okafor questioned it.
During dinner, their families discussed investments, alliances, and future plans. Their fathers spoke like generals preparing for war. Their mothers made sure the conversation stayed smooth.
Then Diana’s father finally said what everyone had been circling.
“The wedding should not be delayed any longer.”
Okafor’s father nodded. “I agree.”
All eyes turned to Okafor.
His mother added gently, “This union is long overdue.”
Okafor set down his glass.
There it was again. His future, laid out like a contract waiting for his signature.
“Perhaps,” he said slowly, “we should take more time.”
The room cooled.
“Time?” his father repeated.
“Yes.”
“For what purpose?”
Okafor hesitated. How could he explain something he barely understood himself?
“I want to be sure.”
His father’s expression hardened. “Sure of what? This is not a gamble. This is your future.”
“That is exactly why I want to be sure.”
Silence fell.
Then Diana spoke.
“I think caution is not a weakness,” she said calmly. “If we are to build something that lasts, it should not be rushed.”
Okafor looked at her.
For the first time, he felt grateful to her.
Later that night, standing alone before the floor-to-ceiling windows of his room, Okafor stared down at the city. From that height, everything looked small and simple. But his life was not simple.
A soft knock came.
His mother entered.
“You embarrassed your father tonight.”
“I wasn’t trying to.”
“But you did.”
She walked closer. “You must understand, Okafor. This life is bigger than you.”
“I know.”
“Do you?”
He turned to her. “Because it feels like my life isn’t mine at all.”
She sighed. “It is yours. But it comes with responsibilities.”
“What if I don’t want them?”
For a moment, her composure slipped. Then it returned.
“Wanting has nothing to do with it.”
After she left, Okafor remained by the window for a long time.
He had wealth, power, influence, and a future everyone envied.
Yet something was missing.
Something he could not name.
Something money could not buy.
The next day, after another suffocating board meeting, Okafor did something he had not done in years.
He drove himself.
No driver. No security. No planned route.
He simply drove through the city until the glass towers faded into smaller shops and warm streetlights. The air changed. People laughed openly here. Vendors called out to customers. Music played somewhere in the distance.
It felt alive.
He had no plan to stop anywhere, but then he saw a small restaurant tucked between a pharmacy and a fabric shop. It was modest, almost hidden, with warm light spilling through the windows.
Something made him park.
Inside, there were no chandeliers, no marble floors, no forced politeness. Just wooden tables, a small television in the corner, the smell of good food, and people eating like they had earned the right to rest.
Then he saw her.
Ada.
She came toward him with a notepad in her hand, wearing a simple uniform. Her hair was pulled back, her face free of heavy makeup, but her eyes were warm in a way that felt unfamiliar to him.
“Table for one?” she asked.
“Yes,” he said.
She led him to a table by the window and handed him a menu.
“Take your time.”
Then she walked away.
No lingering. No attempt to impress him. No special treatment.
Okafor watched as she moved between tables with quiet efficiency. She laughed softly at something an old customer said. She refilled water without being asked. She carried tiredness with grace.
When she returned, he still had not opened the menu.
“Ready to order?”
“What do you recommend?”
She tilted her head slightly. “That depends. Are you hungry or just tired?”
The question caught him off guard.
“Is there a difference?”
“Yes.”
He thought about it.
“Tired,” he admitted.
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