Episode 1

My name is Nathan and for the past twenty years, I’ve called the streets my home. I’m 36 now, but my body feels like it’s pushing 60. Maybe it’s the cold. Maybe it’s the hunger. Or maybe it’s the ache that comes from being forgotten by the world.

I wasn’t always like this. I was born just like any other child—into a family, into a name, into a place I once called home. But something happened… something I can’t even remember. All I know is, I woke up on the cold steps of a train station when I was just sixteen, and from that day forward, I became invisible.

No one sees you when you’re dirty. No one listens to you when your clothes smell. No one cares when you’re coughing blood behind a dumpster.

But that night… everything changed.

It was raining. The kind of rain that cuts like needles. My tattered blanket was soaked. My stomach had been empty for two days. The soup kitchen had closed early. I was about to lay my head near the trash bin behind Rosewood Hospital when I saw him.

A man _dressed like he owned the world—was stumbling in the dark.

His expensive suit was soaked, and blood dripped from his forehead. He held his chest and gasped for air, struggling to speak.

I could have ignored him. People ignore me every day. But something in me—something I didn’t understand**—moved me to crawl toward him.

“Hey… hey! Are you okay?” I shouted over the rain.

He collapsed.

I rushed to him. His wallet slipped from his hand. Inside, I saw his name: **Mr. Elijah Greene.** And beside that, a photo of a little girl. His daughter?

His pulse was fading.

I had no phone, no money, nothing. But I had legs. And I had desperation.

So I dragged him—inch by inch—through the mud, through the rain, all the way to the front doors of Rosewood Hospital.

The guards didn’t believe me at first. They called me “mad” and tried to chase me off. But when they saw Elijah’s bleeding body, they panicked and called the doctors.

I watched from outside the glass doors as they wheeled him in, yelling for blood, oxygen, surgery.

Nobody thanked me.

Nobody asked for my name.

I sat there for hours. Shivering. Bleeding. Waiting to know if he’d make it.

When the doctor finally came out, he looked straight past me. “He’s lucky,” he told the nurse. “Another five minutes, and he would’ve died. Whoever brought him in saved his life.”

I felt a tear fall down my cheek.

Not because he lived. But because for the first time in twenty years, I felt like I existed.

I stood to walk away. I didn’t want anything. I just wanted to disappear again, like always.

But then—

“Nathan?”

I froze.

No one had called my name in years. I turned around.

The voice wasn’t from the doctor, or the nurse, or any staff member.

It came from a woman standing near the corridor, holding Elijah’s wallet. Her eyes were wide. Confused. Shocked.

“Do I… do I know you?” she asked, walking slowly toward me.

I shook my head.

But then she said it again. This time, her voice trembling. “Nathan? Nathan Graham?”

I blinked. Graham? That was my surname. The one I barely remembered.

“Who are you?” I asked, my throat dry.

She opened her mouth, but before she could speak, a nurse rushed out, whispering in her ear.

She gasped, looked back at me with fear—and then turned and ran inside the hospital.

I stood there, staring after her.

What just happened?

How did she know my name?

Why did she call me… Graham?

And how did she look so much like… like my face?

I glanced at the hospital window and caught my reflection.

And then I saw it.

The man I saved—Elijah Greene—looked just like me.

Same jaw. Same nose. Same eyes.

My heart dropped.

What kind of cruel joke was this?

Was I seeing things? Was my mind breaking?

Was this man… somehow connected to me?

As I turned to leave, my heart pounding with questions, two men in black suits walked past me into the hospital.

One of them said to the other, “We have to keep this quiet. If he finds out the truth, everything will collapse.”

I froze in the rain.

EPISODE 2

I didn’t sleep that night.

How could I?

The man I saved… the billionaire in that hospital bed… looked exactly like me. But richer. Cleaner. Healthier. His life seemed like a mirror I was never allowed to see until now.

I kept hearing her voice.

“Nathan Graham?”
That name… my real name.
No one had called me that since I was a child.

I hadn’t remembered my surname until she said it.

So… who was she?

And how did she know me?

By morning, I was still outside the hospital. My body numb. My mind spinning.

Then suddenly, a car pulled up—a dark, black SUV with tinted glass. Two men stepped out.

The same men in black suits from last night.

They didn’t look like doctors.
They looked like men who made problems disappear.

One of them looked around like he was searching for something. Or… someone.

I ducked behind a taxi and watched.

He pulled out a phone and dialed.

“Sir, we have a problem,” he said coldly. “The homeless man who brought Mr. Elijah in… he saw something.”

A pause.

“Yes, I’m sure. He was standing right outside when his sister-in-law screamed his name.”

Sister-in-law?

I almost dropped to the ground.

That woman… she was married to Elijah?

But how could she know me?

How could she—?

“Good. We’ll handle it,” the man continued. “But if he ever comes near this hospital again, bury him. And make it look like a street fight.”

He hung up.

I gasped, hand over my mouth.

They were planning to kill me.

For what?

For saving someone’s life?

Or… because they were hiding something they didn’t want me to find?

I didn’t wait.

I ran.

LATER THAT DAy

I hid under a bridge by River Avenue, shivering, scared, and starving.

I had only one person I could trust.
Mr. Cole — an old, blind man who sold roasted groundnuts near the train station. He didn’t have much, but he always shared what little he had.

“Why do you look like a ghost that saw another ghost?” he asked, handing me a wrapper and a bottle of warm water.

I told him everything.

From the billionaire in the rain to the woman who called my name… and the men who wanted to bury me

He sat quietly, rubbing his old fingers together.

Then he said something that shook me.

“Twenty years ago, a wealthy couple came to this city. The wife was pregnant with twin boys. But one night, the house was set on fire. They said only one child was found.”

I stared at him.

“One of the staff told me,” he continued. “The second baby… was never seen again. Some believed he was kidnapped and dumped. Some believed he died. But the rich couple kept it secret to protect their business.”

I couldn’t speak.

Could I be that child?

Was Elijah my twin brother?

“Look at your face, Nathan,” Mr. Cole whispered. “You think it’s a mistake that man looks just like you?”

FLASHBACK… A MEMORY RETURNS

I was six.

I saw fire.
Screams.
My hand held tightly by someone in a dark coat.
Running.
Smoke choking me.

Then everything went black.

My heart pounded. I fell to my knees. The memory hit me like a stone.
Was I… stolen?

Was I abandoned?

All these years of pain…

All these nights of begging for bread…

While my brother wore Italian suits and flew in private jets?

God… why me?

Tears burned my eyes.

But even worse…

Why would someone want me dead now?

BACK AT ROSEWOOD HOSPITAL

Inside the VIP room, Elijah slowly opened his eyes.

His wife sat beside him, holding his hand.

“You’re okay,” she whispered, forcing a smile. “You passed out. They said your heart stopped for a second.”

He nodded weakly.

Then he looked around.
“Where is he?”

“Who?”

“The man who saved me,” Elijah said. “The face I saw in the rain… he looked like me. Exactly like me.”

His wife’s hand froze.

She looked away.

“Elijah,” she whispered. “There’s something… you should know. About your past.”

But before she could speak, the door flew open.

The man in the black suit entered.

He gave her a sharp glance.

“Ma’am. A word. Now.”

She stood, eyes wet with tears, and followed him outside.

The man grabbed her arm roughly.
“I told you—keep your mouth shut. If he finds out he has a twin, the inheritance war will destroy the company.”

“I don’t care about the company!” she snapped. “He deserves to know the truth! That Nathan is alive—”

He slapped her.

She gasped.

“Say that name again,” he growled, “and you’ll be next.”

She clutched her cheek, heart racing.

The man walked away, leaving her trembling.

SAME NIGHT… BACK UNDER THE BRIDGE

I was curled in a corner when I felt something drop on my chest.

A letter.

I looked around.

No one.

I opened it.

Inside was a single line:

“You don’t know the truth… but the truth knows you. Leave now. Or they will bury you before sunrise.”

I stared at the words, shaking.

Who sent it?

Why warn me?

And what truth were they trying so hard to bury?

Suddenly, headlights shined toward the bridge.

A car slowly pulled up.

I ducked behind the concrete wall.

The door opened.

Two shadows stepped out.

One of them whispered, “That’s where he sleeps. Make it fast.”

Gunshots echoed in the dark.

I covered my ears, crawling in panic.

They were here…

To silence me.

But why is my life worth killing for?

And why does my face look like the man on the hospital bed?

I ran.

Through the mud, through the glass bottles, over the broken wood.

The bridge echoed with gunshots.

They were looking for me. Hunting me. All because I saved a man’s life—a man who might be my brother.

One of the bullets scraped my arm, but I didn’t stop. Pain wasn’t new to me. But the fear of death? This was different.

Who were these men?

Why did my face threaten them?

Why did they want me gone so badly?

I found shelter inside an abandoned shack near the rail lines. I sat with my back pressed against the wall, holding my bleeding arm and breathing like a hunted dog.

And then…

It happened again.

Another memory.

This time, I was younger. Maybe three.

A warm bedroom.

Two cribs.

Two babies.

A woman smiling and singing a lullaby. Her soft hands stroking my forehead.

Then, the door burst open.

Screams. Fire. Running footsteps. My blanket torn off. A sharp pain to the back of my head.

Darkness.

My eyes widened.

The twins were real.

I wasn’t imagining things.

I wasn’t going mad.

There really were two of us. Two boys born on the same day. Two babies in that burning house.

And I was the one stolen.

MEANWHILE, BACK AT THE HOSPITAL…

Elijah sat upright in bed, staring at his reflection in the glass. He hadn’t spoken in hours. His wife, Clarissa, sat in the corner, fidgeting.

“Elijah,” she finally said, voice shaking, “do you remember anything? About your childhood?”

He looked at her with tired eyes.

“Why do you ask?”

She hesitated.

Then slowly, she walked to him and touched his hand.

“There’s something you were never told. Something your family… covered up.”

“What?”

She leaned closer.

“You weren’t born alone.”

He blinked.

“What?”

“You had a brother,” she whispered. “A twin.”

He froze.

Clarissa continued. “There was a fire. They found only one baby… and they told the world the other didn’t make it. But some of us… we believed differently.”

Elijah stood up from the bed.

He walked to the mirror and stared at himself.

“That man… in the rain. The one who saved me.”

Clarissa nodded. “He’s not just anyone.”

She placed a photo on the table.

It was a faded image—two babies in white.

One of them had a tiny mark behind his ear.

“Your mother said it was a birthmark shaped like a star.”

Elijah reached behind his ear.

Nothing.

He looked at her.

“Find him,” he said. “I need to see him again.”

Clarissa took a step back.

Tears welled in her eyes.

“I tried. But they’re trying to kill him.”

SOMEWHERE IN THE CITY…

A woman entered a dark house.

She was old, gray-haired, her eyes sunken with secrets.

Her name was Mrs. Evelyn

She had once been the housemaid in the billionaire’s mansion. But when the fire happened twenty years ago, she disappeared into silence.

Tonight, someone had slipped a photo under her door.

A photo of a man in rags.

Nathan.

She clutched her chest.

“It can’t be,” she whispered. “He’s alive?”

Then her phone rang.

A voice on the other end warned:

> “If you speak about the past, your son dies tomorrow. Keep your mouth shut, old woman.”

But Evelyn wasn’t afraid.

Not anymore.

“The past is back,” she muttered. “And this time, it’s wearing the face of the forgotten.”

BACK TO NATHAN

I wandered into a small pharmacy, holding my bleeding arm. I didn’t have money, but the woman at the counter looked at me with pity.

She cleaned the wound and gave me a painkiller.

“What’s your name?” she asked.

I almost lied.

But something in me was tired of hiding.

“Nathan Graham.”

Her eyes widened.

“I’ve heard that name,” she whispered. “From a woman. A maid. She said she once served a wealthy family… the Grahams. There was a boy with a birthmark behind his ear. He was stolen.”

My throat dried.

I slowly turned around.

She handed me a mirror.

“Check behind your left ear.”

I did.

And there it was.

A faded star-shaped mark.

My legs gave way. I slumped to the ground.

Tears dropped from my eyes.

All these years…

I had begged.

I had suffered.

I had starved.

While my twin lived like royalty.

But he didn’t know.

He had no idea.

He wasn’t the enemy.

The real enemies… were those who kept us apart.

Those who buried the truth and built empires on lies.

FLASH TO THE MEN IN BLACK

“Sir, bad news,” one of the men said over the phone. “He knows now. The twin is alive. And Elijah is asking questions.”

The voice on the other end was calm.

But dangerous.

“I told you,” the voice replied. “If Elijah finds out about the inheritance clause, we lose everything.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Then bury both of them.”

I stood on a bridge, staring down at the cars passing below.

Suddenly, a black car pulled up behind me.

Doors opened.

Two men stepped out.

One held a gun.

I turned slowly, heart pounding.

But before the man could speak, a voice echoed from the other side—

> “Touch him… and I’ll expose everything.”

I turned.

It was Clarissa _Elijah’s wife—standing with her phone up.

Recording.

“I know the truth,” she said coldly. “And the world is about to know too.”

The men froze.

My eyes locked with hers.

And I whispered, “Tell me… who am I?”