CHAPTER NINE191Please respect copyright.PENANA3e3aRn5jxv
The wall’s shadow stretched long across the grass as evening settled over Kisumu Girls’. Kim and Seline sat on the edge of the netball court, their backs to the dormitory lights, their voices low. The air was thick with the scent of wet earth and bougainvillea, and the school felt unusually quiet-like the pause before a storm.191Please respect copyright.PENANAkqppHptmM7
The evening air was thick with the scent of jacaranda and the hush of secrets. Kim and Seline waited near the edge of the compound, where the wall’s shadow stretched long and the bougainvillea hid more than blossoms. The sky was bruised purple, the school grounds nearly empty except for the distant echo of laughter from the dorms.191Please respect copyright.PENANAVq0sGsfPFB
Mercy found them there, her steps careful, her face unreadable. She didn’t look like the powerful senior everyone whispered about-tonight, she looked tired, wary, and very much alone. She didn’t speak at first, just stood in the half-light, arms folded, as if weighing whether to trust them at all.191Please respect copyright.PENANAssCmVpc8iZ
Kim broke the silence. “You’re out late.”191Please respect copyright.PENANA4Zu8bhzG5H
Mercy gave a small, humorless smile. “So are you.”191Please respect copyright.PENANAXVM1tDxrmz
Seline’s purple pen twirled between her fingers. “Did you want something?”191Please respect copyright.PENANANWcYFaSdfJ
Mercy hesitated, glancing over her shoulder. “Things are… changing. People are asking questions. Some girls are saying things I never thought they’d dare say out loud.” Her voice dropped. “If someone were to… help set things straight, would that count for anything?”191Please respect copyright.PENANA9KMysiuRAz
Kim’s heart quickened. She kept her face neutral. “Depends what you mean by ‘help.’”191Please respect copyright.PENANAnKPHan6g1K
Mercy looked away; her jaw tight. “I know things. I know who’s been passing messages, who’s been meeting after lights out. I know which prefects have been covering for the Order-and which teachers look the other way. If I gave you names, dates, proof… I want your word I won’t be the one everyone blames when this comes out. I want protection. Or at least… not to be the face of the scandal.”?”191Please respect copyright.PENANA4idKlzCrNo
Seline’s voice was gentle, but her words were sharp. “You want to trade your silence for safety?”191Please respect copyright.PENANAVpdgICArIQ
“I want to trade what I know for a fair deal,” Mercy replied. “There are others more involved. Some of them-” her voice dropped, “-some of them deserve to answer for this more than I do.”191Please respect copyright.PENANAoZ1iUSRZk6
Kim kept her expression neutral. “You’d give us a scapegoat. Someone else to take the fall.”191Please respect copyright.PENANAk8nINUdWXs
Mercy hesitated, then nodded. “If that’s what it takes.”191Please respect copyright.PENANAlYR0P9YxrD
A long silence stretched between them, broken only by the distant call of a night bird.191Please respect copyright.PENANAEbDKOVQkZA
Seline finally spoke. “We can’t promise you’ll walk away untouched. But if you give us real evidence-letters, names, places, dates-and if you’re willing to testify if it comes to that, we can make sure your part is… minimized. You’ll step back from leadership. You’ll stay out of the spotlight. But you have to give us everything, Mercy. Not just what’s convenient.”191Please respect copyright.PENANA81gqnuqjkL
Mercy’s shoulders sagged, relief and resignation mingling in her eyes. “I’ll bring you what you need. Tomorrow. By the wall.”191Please respect copyright.PENANA5zhZIHcBKJ
Kim nodded. “If you try to trick us, or hold back, you’ll be on your own.”191Please respect copyright.PENANAXoSJkBB9T9
Mercy met her gaze, steady now. “I know.”191Please respect copyright.PENANAxsVugLqOb9
She slipped away into the shadows, leaving Kim and Seline alone with the weight of the bargain.191Please respect copyright.PENANAwzd9K3GMQB
Seline exhaled, her breath misting in the cool air. “Do you trust her?”191Please respect copyright.PENANA87ChkRYNUr
Kim shook her head. “No. But I trust what she wants. And that’s enough.”191Please respect copyright.PENANAh3scCJPFkY
As Mercy slipped away from the wall, her footsteps quiet on the damp grass, she let the night swallow her. The air was cool, heavy with the scent of jacaranda and the distant promise of rain. She kept her head down, but her mind was racing.191Please respect copyright.PENANA1RHBKAkRjt
It wasn’t the bargain itself that told her. It was everything around it-the way Kim’s voice never quite lost its edge, the way Seline’s fingers never stopped moving, twirling that purple pen as if it were a charm against bad luck. The way both girls kept their words careful, never naming names, never letting the conversation stray too close to anything that could be used against them.191Please respect copyright.PENANAUssGOXdlsa
Mercy had always been good at reading silence. Tonight, it was deafening.191Please respect copyright.PENANA4NeyGaJ7Z9
She replayed the scene in her mind as she walked:191Please respect copyright.PENANAUVHcZyKU68
The hush at the edge of the compound.191Please respect copyright.PENANA6IH3Oi0Pdd
The way Kim and Seline had been waiting, not surprised to see her.191Please respect copyright.PENANAPwdXvrrgee
How quickly they had shifted from caution to negotiation, as if they had been expecting her to come.191Please respect copyright.PENANAbCF0usbLKY
How Seline’s eyes had flicked to Kim, just once, when Mercy offered her deal.191Please respect copyright.PENANAbp55CgKlNy
That was all she needed.191Please respect copyright.PENANAL1mKqOcytz
These were the girls who had been behind the whispers, the sudden questions, the shifting loyalties in the dorms. They were the ones who had been stirring the pot, feeding the rumors, making the Order look over its shoulder. The ones who had forced her hand.191Please respect copyright.PENANA6hCLwnYc9F
Mercy almost laughed. It was so obvious now-how had she missed it? The little incident by the wall, the way they’d spoken to her, not as victims or bystanders, but as players. They were the reason she was here, offering names and secrets in exchange for a measure of safety.191Please respect copyright.PENANANRiwqPbGFC
She paused beneath the jacaranda, letting the shadows wrap around her. She didn’t feel angry, not yet. She felt… impressed. And wary. She would give them a chance, for now. But she would also watch them, just as carefully as they had watched her.191Please respect copyright.PENANArB09HqZ1ZQ
Because in Kisumu Girls’, secrets never stayed buried for long. And now Mercy knew exactly who to watch.191Please respect copyright.PENANAag2ytXpteF
**********191Please respect copyright.PENANAYMLakAXFtz
Mary had always been the quiet one in the dorms, the girl with the sharp eyes and the habit of scribbling in the margins of her textbooks long after lights out. Most girls thought she was just shy, or maybe a little odd. But Kim and Seline knew better. Mary saw everything.191Please respect copyright.PENANAVNTBW5uQ0V
It was Mary who first noticed the prefects gathering in the staffroom after prep, their faces tight with worry. It was Mary who heard the new code word-“sunflower”-whispered in the corridors, and Mary who slipped a folded note under Kim’s pillow when the rest of the dorm was asleep.191Please respect copyright.PENANAWqe1Sr0yUX
The Order is meeting tonight. Mercy’s not with them. Watch the eastern block after second bell.191Please respect copyright.PENANAcBkHirv0n6
-M191Please respect copyright.PENANAHX2TTsTqz4
Sometimes it was just a glance across the dining hall, Mary’s eyes flickering toward a cluster of prefects, her lips pressed into a thin line. Other times, it was a scrap of paper tucked into a library book, or a warning murmured in passing as she handed Seline a pen in class.191Please respect copyright.PENANAjrtUZ8Y7nK
“Don’t use the water tank tonight,” she whispered once, her voice barely louder than the scrape of a chair. “They’re waiting for someone.”191Please respect copyright.PENANAs3RJ1hUWgV
Because Mary listened. She lingered at the edge of conversations, blending into the background, piecing together fragments of gossip and stray complaints. She noticed when a teacher’s routine changed, when the Order’s loyalists started sitting together at meals, when a new rumor began to spread before assembly.191Please respect copyright.PENANAa0BK3fOJjq
She never asked for thanks. She never demanded to be included in the plans. She just watched, and listened, and passed on what she learned-always careful, always quiet, always a step ahead of suspicion.191Please respect copyright.PENANAEBf9kstf9s
Thanks to Mary, the girls avoided the Order’s traps. They knew when to stay away from the wall, when to keep their heads down, when to hide the evidence. When Mercy’s inner circle started searching bags after lights out, it was Mary who warned Kim to move the letters. When a prefect tried to corner Seline with questions about the blue paper clip, it was Mary who intercepted her in the corridor, steering her away with a whispered joke.191Please respect copyright.PENANAjtYDrJUfsp
In a world where secrets were currency and trust were dangerous, Mary was their invisible shield-the watcher in the shadows, the silent alarm. And as the tension in the school thickened, as the Order grew more desperate and the wall seemed to close in, it was Mary’s steady flow of updates that kept hope alive.191Please respect copyright.PENANAMlVSH05cLj
Because sometimes, the most powerful rebel was the one nobody saw coming.191Please respect copyright.PENANAPq7JIXWD3L
June191Please respect copyright.PENANAZOrgw6OdYE
June had learned long ago that true power didn’t always come from standing at the front of the assembly or wearing a prefect’s badge. Sometimes, it came from knowing which doors to knock on, which silences to fill, and which to leave undisturbed.191Please respect copyright.PENANAi5lA5qZSHN
She still walked the halls of Kisumu Girls’ with a certain ease, her presence neither loud nor invisible-just familiar. Teachers greeted her with a nod, administrators paused to ask about her university applications, and even the new prefects, some of whom had once whispered about her behind her back, now watched her with a mixture of respect and wariness.191Please respect copyright.PENANAtD9D4rD5qO
It was June who lingered in the staffroom after evening prep, offering to help sort out the mess of club rosters and exam timetables. She listened as the teachers grumbled about missing textbooks and late-night noise, and tucked away every stray comment about “unusual activity near the wall.” When Mrs. Atieno mentioned, almost offhand, that she’d seen a group of girls sneaking toward the bougainvillea after lights out, June simply nodded, storing the detail for later.191Please respect copyright.PENANAoYNU2DaRGr
She was careful, always. She never asked direct questions, never pressed too hard. Instead, she let people talk, let them believe she was just another senior trying to keep her record clean before term ends.191Please respect copyright.PENANAWUhxv253cS
But June’s true influence was quieter still. She knew which Order members were growing uneasy-who had started sitting further from Mercy at meals, who hesitated before following a command, who lingered in the library a little longer than usual, as if searching for a way out. Sometimes, she’d find them alone in the corridor, and she’d offer a wordless gesture of understanding-a brief touch on the arm, a sympathetic smile.191Please respect copyright.PENANAaHy6gez4Q9
“You know,” she’d murmur, “things are changing. You don’t have to go down with the ship.”191Please respect copyright.PENANA5biUoSabEu
Some listened. Some didn’t. But word spread that June was someone you could talk to-someone who wouldn’t judge, who might even help you find a way through the storm.191Please respect copyright.PENANAYsbh5ncdIg
When Kim and Seline needed a message delivered to a sympathetic teacher, it was June who made sure it reached the right hands. When Mary needed to know which staff, member was on duty near the wall, June found out without anyone suspecting. And when a wavering Order member finally decided to slip a note of confession under the deputy principal’s door, it was June who made sure it was written in a way that would be believed.191Please respect copyright.PENANAave9G7n5mu
She never took credit. She never needed to. June understood that sometimes, the most powerful moves were the ones no one saw.191Please respect copyright.PENANA8tiVesA3HB
And as the wall continued to cast its long shadow over Kisumu Girls’, June moved quietly through the twilight-her influence subtle, her alliances shifting, her loyalty always to the truth that waited, silent and patient, just beyond the stone.
arrow_back
THE WALL OF CARDS
more_vert
-
info_outline 資料
-
toc 目錄
-
share 分享
-
format_color_text 介面設置
-
exposure_plus_1 推薦
-
打賞
-
report_problem 檢舉
-
account_circle 登入
X
THE WALL OF CARDS
作者:
Eddie Otieno

篇 #30
When truth is dangerous, silence becomes a weapon.
喜歡 2
閱讀 187
書籤 2
campaign
催更 0
打賞
提出編輯建議

按此加載下一章
閱讀整本書: HK$249.6
X
每次催更後,作者都會收到通知!
smartphone100 → 催更
×
THE WALL OF CARDS
青少年
校園
冒險
最後更新: May 16, 2025
總字數: 45,891
總閱讀時間: 212 分鐘
作者:
friendship
mystery
secrets
schoollife
girl
boardingschool
genderbender
african
dualpov
kenyan
urbanlegends
hiddentruths
urbanlegend
epistolary-novel
comingofage,youngadultfriendsh
boundaries
kisumu
檢舉這個故事
×
寫下你喜歡這個故事的地方
×
對此喜歡的人