Trilogy

$34.99

Set against the restless backdrop of Chicago, The Trilogy follows Elijah as he navigates loss, love, identity, and the dangerous space between who people believe you are and who you really are.

What begins as a personal search for answers slowly becomes a story about how perspective shapes truth—and how the same person can be remembered as both hero and villain depending on who tells the story.

Book One — Maybe It’s Me

Elijah’s world begins to fracture after a series of personal losses and broken relationships force him to confront a question that won’t leave him alone:

What if the problem is me?

Struggling with grief, guilt, and the pressure to keep moving forward, Elijah searches for meaning in the silence left behind. As friendships shift and love becomes complicated, he begins to realize that healing isn’t about finding easy answers—it’s about surviving long enough to ask the right questions.

The journey starts in the confusion of grief and self-doubt, where Elijah tries to understand whether he is the victim of circumstance… or the architect of his own downfall.

But every answer comes with consequences.

Book Two — Love Me Later

If the first book asks whether Elijah is the problem, the second explores what happens when love collides with ambition, secrets, and public pressure.

As Bailey rises to power in the world of professional sports and Elijah fights to rebuild his life, their relationship is tested by scandal, trust, and the weight of expectations.

Chicago watches.

The media watches.

And suddenly every decision becomes public.

Love begins to feel less like comfort and more like a battlefield where loyalty, reputation, and survival are constantly at odds. When the past resurfaces and threatens everything they’ve built, Elijah and Bailey must decide what matters more:

each other… or the lives they’re trying to create.

Book Three — Heroes & Villains

By the time the story reaches its final chapter, the lines between right and wrong are no longer clear.

Chicago has already chosen its version of Elijah.

Some see a man trying to grow.

Others see the same mistakes repeating.

In this world, heroes aren’t always good people, and villains aren’t always evil. Sometimes they’re just people making decisions they believe are necessary.

As buried truths come to light and relationships reach their breaking points, Elijah must confront the reality that intentions don’t erase damage—and silence can hurt just as much as betrayal.

This final installment isn’t about choosing sides.

It’s about living with the consequences of every choice that came before.

Because once the story is told…

someone will always decide who the hero was.

And who the villain became.

Set against the restless backdrop of Chicago, The Trilogy follows Elijah as he navigates loss, love, identity, and the dangerous space between who people believe you are and who you really are.

What begins as a personal search for answers slowly becomes a story about how perspective shapes truth—and how the same person can be remembered as both hero and villain depending on who tells the story.

Book One — Maybe It’s Me

Elijah’s world begins to fracture after a series of personal losses and broken relationships force him to confront a question that won’t leave him alone:

What if the problem is me?

Struggling with grief, guilt, and the pressure to keep moving forward, Elijah searches for meaning in the silence left behind. As friendships shift and love becomes complicated, he begins to realize that healing isn’t about finding easy answers—it’s about surviving long enough to ask the right questions.

The journey starts in the confusion of grief and self-doubt, where Elijah tries to understand whether he is the victim of circumstance… or the architect of his own downfall.

But every answer comes with consequences.

Book Two — Love Me Later

If the first book asks whether Elijah is the problem, the second explores what happens when love collides with ambition, secrets, and public pressure.

As Bailey rises to power in the world of professional sports and Elijah fights to rebuild his life, their relationship is tested by scandal, trust, and the weight of expectations.

Chicago watches.

The media watches.

And suddenly every decision becomes public.

Love begins to feel less like comfort and more like a battlefield where loyalty, reputation, and survival are constantly at odds. When the past resurfaces and threatens everything they’ve built, Elijah and Bailey must decide what matters more:

each other… or the lives they’re trying to create.

Book Three — Heroes & Villains

By the time the story reaches its final chapter, the lines between right and wrong are no longer clear.

Chicago has already chosen its version of Elijah.

Some see a man trying to grow.

Others see the same mistakes repeating.

In this world, heroes aren’t always good people, and villains aren’t always evil. Sometimes they’re just people making decisions they believe are necessary.

As buried truths come to light and relationships reach their breaking points, Elijah must confront the reality that intentions don’t erase damage—and silence can hurt just as much as betrayal.

This final installment isn’t about choosing sides.

It’s about living with the consequences of every choice that came before.

Because once the story is told…

someone will always decide who the hero was.

And who the villain became.