He turned.
He was confused at first. Then he recognized me. The fear crept in, but he tried to pretend it wasn’t fear.
“Yo—who the fuck are you?”
I didn’t answer.
I crossed the room in three steps. I slammed him into the wall hard enough to knock the air out of his lungs. His phone hit the floor and skidded under the bed.
He gasped, hands scrambling.
I grabbed his collar and lifted just enough to keep his feet from settling.
“Rule one,” I said calmly, “don’t touch what doesn’t belong to you.”
He tried to swing.
But that was a bad decision.
I let go with one hand and drove my elbow into his ribs. He folded with a sharp, ugly sound and dropped to his knees.
I stepped back and let him breathe just enough to stay conscious.
This wasn’t about pain.
It was about memory.
“You've been around Kenya,” I continued. “You thought proximity meant access.”
He coughed, shaking his head.
“Rule two, keep your mouth shut or I’ll make sure it’s wired closed.”
I kicked his leg out from under him, and he hit the floor hard, cheek cracking against the tile.
I crouched down, so he had to look at me.
“Don’t look at my girl,” I said. “Don’t speak to my fuckin girl.”
I stood and dragged him up by the back of his shirt, spun him, and shoved him face-first onto his bed. I pressed my knee into his spine
He started crying then.
“Please, man,” he said. “I promise– I promise to leave her alone.”
“I know you will,” I said. “That’s why you're still breathing.”
“You’re gonna change schools,” I told him. “Quietly. Quickly. No goodbye tour. No explanations.”
He nodded fast.
“You’re gonna forget her name,” I continued. “You’re gonna forget her face. And if I hear even a whisper that you remembered wrong…”
I let the sentence hang.
He sobbed harder.
I stood, straightened my hoodie, and stepped back.