Billionaire Lady Comes Home Early… And Can’t Believe What She Sees Her Gateman Doing
EPISODE 1 —
The mansion at Kingsway Crescent was a palace built for silence. Its marble floors echoed only the sound of wealth heels clicking, champagne bubbling, and the hum of expensive cars gliding through the gate. But that afternoon, the silence was broken by something far less refined.
Mrs. Adesuwa Bello Lagos’ youngest female billionaire had returned home earlier than planned. Her board meeting in Dubai had ended abruptly, and rather than announce her return, she decided to surprise everyone.
Her husband, Demola, thought she’d be gone until the weekend. The staff assumed the madam wouldn’t show up till Sunday. Even the gateman, Musa, had no idea that his boss was already minutes away, her Rolls-Royce sliding silently through the back entrance.
Adesuwa always prided herself on discipline punctuality, control, perfection. But that day, destiny decided to show her something that would test all of that.
As she entered the compound, something felt… off. The front garden lights were off, even though it was already past 6 p.m. The sprinklers were running, but no one was there to manage them. And from the small quarters by the gate, she could hear faint music not the usual Hausa radio Musa played, but something different.
Curiosity pushed her closer.
The door to the gateman’s room was slightly open. Inside, she saw something that froze her heart.
Musa her loyal gateman of five years was kneeling on the floor. Not sleeping, not resting. Kneeling. Surrounded by open books, candles, and a large photo of her. Adesuwa’s photo. Her own face, cut from a newspaper article, placed on a mat with strange markings drawn around it.
At first, she couldn’t breathe. The smell of burning herbs filled the air. Musa’s lips were moving, murmuring in a language she didn’t understand. Her body trembled as she realized he was performing some kind of ritual.
She pushed the door open, her voice sharp and disbelieving.
“Musa!”
He jumped, his eyes wide in shock. The candle fell, the photo fluttered. For a long second, neither of them spoke.
“Madam Madam, you’re back?” he stammered, scrambling to his feet.
Adesuwa’s eyes burned. “What is this nonsense? What are you doing with my picture?”
“Madam, it’s not what you think!”
“Then what is it?” she snapped, stepping forward. “Explain why my own staff is doing… juju in my compound!”
He shook his head, tears already welling in his eyes. “Madam, please… I swear I was trying to help you. You are in danger. They want to destroy you!”
“Who?” she demanded.
But Musa just looked at her terrified, trembling, and desperate. “The people closest to you, Madam. They have already started.”
Adesuwa’s heart pounded. She wanted to dismiss it as superstition but deep down, something in her gut told her there was more to this story.
And before the night was over, she would realize that Musa wasn’t lying.
Not even a little.
EPISODE 2 —
Adesuwa stood in the narrow doorway, staring at Musa as if she could burn the truth out of him. The air between them was heavy the smell of smoke, fear, and something older than either of them could explain.
She finally spoke, her voice cold and steady.
> “Musa, you have exactly one minute to tell me why you’re doing this, or you will never step foot in this compound again.”
Musa dropped to his knees again, not to worship, but to plead.
> “Madam, please. Don’t send me away. If I don’t finish the prayer, they will know I talked.”
“They?” Adesuwa repeated, her voice trembling slightly. “Who are they, Musa?”
He looked around the small room as if the walls had ears. His lips quivered.
> “Your husband, Madam. Oga Demola. He is planning something bad. I hear him talking to one woman on the phone every night. He tell her that you will not make it to your next birthday.”
Adesuwa’s breath hitched.
> “Musa, do you realize what you’re saying?”
“Yes, Madam! That’s why I do this prayer! Not for evil, I swear by Allah. I go to Mallam in Agege, he say your star is under attack. I buy these herbs and start to pray before it is too late!”
Adesuwa backed away, her heart racing.
Her mind fought the words her husband, planning her death? No. Demola Bello was one of Lagos’ most respected businessmen. Charming, composed, the perfect gentleman in public. The media called them “Nigeria’s Power Couple.”
Yet… in the past few weeks, something had changed.
He’d grown distant.
He traveled more.
And last week, when she tried to surprise him at his office, his secretary had looked at her with something like pity.
She shook her head, trying to steady herself.
> “Musa, listen to me. If you ever mention this to anyone, you’ll lose your job. But if you’re lying…”
“I’m not lying, Madam!” he cried, tears running down his face. “You think I like to sleep near fire and herbs? I do this because the spirit world already move. If you don’t believe me, watch your husband closely. He is not the same man again.”
Before she could respond, her phone buzzed.
DEMOLA CALLING.
Her stomach tightened. She stepped out of Musa’s quarters, composing herself before answering.
> “Honey,” she said, forcing a calm tone, “you’re home already?”
His deep voice came through the line.
> “No, still in Abuja. You sound strange is everything alright?”
Her eyes darted back toward the small room.
> “Everything’s fine,” she lied softly. “Just tired.”
“Good. Get some rest. I’ll see you in two days.”
When the call ended, Adesuwa stood in the middle of her massive compound, unsure whom to believe her husband or her gateman.
That night, she didn’t sleep. She sat by the window, watching the gatehouse where Musa stayed, thinking about what she saw and what it could mean.
Then, at exactly 2:47 a.m., her phone buzzed again.
It was a message.
No name.
Just one line:
> “Don’t trust anyone in that house. Especially your husband.”
Her heart stopped.
And outside, somewhere in the shadows, Musa was no longer alone.
EPISODE 3 —
Sleep was a luxury Adesuwa couldn’t afford that night. The message still glowed on her screen like a ghostly warning:
> “Don’t trust anyone in that house. Especially your husband.”
She read it again and again until her hands began to tremble. The number was unknown. No profile picture. No clue. But deep down, she knew whoever sent that message had been watching her.
At dawn, she walked downstairs to the balcony that overlooked the driveway. The morning breeze carried the scent of hibiscus from her garden, but it didn’t calm her. Her thoughts were loud, tangled, dangerous.
Musa’s voice echoed in her mind.
> “He tell her you will not make it to your next birthday…”
That was just eight days away.
She went back to the gateman’s quarters, but the door was locked from inside.
> “Musa?” she called softly.
No answer.
“Musa, open this door!”
Silence.
She knocked again, harder this time. Then she pushed the door creaked open slightly. Inside, the small room was empty. The floor mat was gone, the candles scattered, and the newspaper photo of her face was torn in half.
He had vanished.
Her first instinct was to call security, but then she stopped herself. The message said not to trust anyone. Her entire household from the cook to the driver had been hired by Demola’s office. Suddenly, every familiar face looked like a mask.
Adesuwa knew she couldn’t survive in that house another night unless she found out what was happening.
So, she called someone she hadn’t spoken to in months Detective Folarin, a retired police officer who once handled a case for her late father.
“Madam Adesuwa?” His voice was rough but alert.
> “I need your help, Folarin,” she said quietly. “Something’s not right in my home. I think my husband is hiding something.”
There was a pause.
> “Where are you now?”
“In the house.”
“Leave there. Right now. I’ll meet you at the Orchid Suites in Ikoyi in one hour.”
But before she could pack, a black car rolled into the compound one she didn’t recognize.
Two men in dark suits stepped out, one carrying a brown envelope. They looked official too official. The driver approached her with a small smile.
> “Madam Bello? Good morning, ma. Oga Demola sent us. He say we should give you this.”
He handed her the envelope and walked back to the car. They didn’t wait.
Inside was a single sheet of paper printed with her husband’s company letterhead.
Her eyes widened as she read the first line:
> “Notice of Property Transfer and Power of Attorney.”
Demola had transferred all her assets to his name her company shares, her estates, her cars, everything. The documents were dated yesterday.
Her knees buckled.
He wasn’t just planning something.
He’d already started.
Before she could even process what that meant, her phone buzzed again. Another message from the same unknown number:
> “They’ve found Musa. He tried to run.”
“If you want to live, don’t go home tonight.”
Adesuwa’s breath caught in her throat.
Because just then, she heard footsteps approaching from behind slow, deliberate, echoing through the marble hallway.
And when she turned around…
It wasn’t Demola.
It was her housemaid, Titi holding a phone in one hand and a gun in the other.
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