CHAPTER ONE590Please respect copyright.PENANAwTD2ncVt4I
The sun lingered on the horizon, drenching Kisumu city in a molten glow, its golden light spilling through the jacaranda trees that framed the girls' school compound like a living watercolor. Evening prep had ended, but the air still thrummed with life—laughter weaving through conversations, the hurried rhythm of shoes scraping against gravel paths, the sharp command of a dorm captain’s whistle slicing through the dusk. Yet amidst the swirl of routine, Kimberly stood apart, her thoughts adrift, her feet unwilling to carry her back to the dormitory just yet. The world beckoned—soft, mysterious, and full of possibilities.590Please respect copyright.PENANAjADb1bLnDB
The bell had rung, but her mind was still swimming—half in her Chemistry notes, half lost in that dreamlike place between fatigue and thought. 590Please respect copyright.PENANAx1yyhTz31C
She drifted toward the northern edge of the compound, where the stone wall stood—BERLIN WALL, the older girls called it with a mix of reverence and warning. The name felt like a dare, borrowed from the streets, where it meant movement, revelry, life. But here, the wall was none of those things. It was still. Silent. A contradiction passed from one generation to the next without question. It was forbidden to get too close, but no one really enforced it. Still, no one really did either. 590Please respect copyright.PENANAMek3AnA2pe
Girls learned early. They didn’t ask. They didn’t approach. They simply obeyed. The Berlin wall wasn’t avoided because of anything known—but because of everything unknown. It was a presence, not a place. A whisper in the fabric of the school, respected like an old superstition. Girls walked past it quickly, heads high, conversation dropping just for a moment—long enough to acknowledge it without acknowledging it at all. The place was simply... avoided. Like a haunted house no one believed in but everyone respected.590Please respect copyright.PENANA8KF6y4UeqD
She wasn't trying to break any rules. She wasn’t searching for trouble—just solitude. She just wanted quiet. The edge of the school compound, near the wall, always seemed quieter, had a peculiar hush to it, as though the rest of the school had chosen to forget it existed. Conversations never lingered there. Footsteps rarely paused. The silence felt different from the usual kind, heavier, untouched. She liked it that way.590Please respect copyright.PENANAOb1lnynpD2
As she walked along the wall’s edge, dragging her fingers lightly along the rough stone, careful not to stray too close lest one of the prefects spot her from a distance, something snagged at her hand. A small crack between two blocks—barely noticeable. She paused, leaned closer, and saw a folded piece of paper sticking out just enough to catch the corner of her sleeve.590Please respect copyright.PENANAg1SV0n5L3O
Curious, Kim tugged it free and unfolded it slowly.590Please respect copyright.PENANAFsQZ6vddtm
Paper.590Please respect copyright.PENANALBv5SECP6m
Kim hesitated, glanced around. No one was watching.590Please respect copyright.PENANAJK9896YljM
She knelt and pulled it out slowly, the paper damp at the edges, slightly curled from being hidden away. It was folded with surprising precision. She opened it, bracing for something ordinary—a stray receipt, maybe, or one of those hastily scribbled classroom notes that never quite made it to their intended hands. —but what she read made her go still.590Please respect copyright.PENANAOwHjgfBqEv
The handwriting was beautiful—elegant, swirling loops and carefully crossed t’s. It read:590Please respect copyright.PENANAO1dIXnoxpc
"To the one who whistles when passing— I don’t know your name, but I know your rhythm. You always come after second prep; steps steady, familiar. Your laugh cuts through everything—even the teachers’ voices. It makes me look up.590Please respect copyright.PENANAI613FRDpNb
I know this will probably never reach you. But writing it feels like opening a window where there was only a wall.590Please respect copyright.PENANAGU8yiHknCI
If, somehow, you see this… leave something blue in the bougainvillea. I’ll know."590Please respect copyright.PENANAYcSwlTJYx8
—S
Kim read it twice.590Please respect copyright.PENANAHXju9zKE9g
Three times.590Please respect copyright.PENANAENp2VlGv6o
The letter wasn't addressed to her—but it had been hidden here, on their side of the wall. That meant someone from her school had written it. A girl. “S.” Could be anyone—Sharon? Sylvia? Stacy?590Please respect copyright.PENANAPW2VVET79J
Who had she written it for?590Please respect copyright.PENANA28S7E7oNZy
And more importantly—why?590Please respect copyright.PENANAJEoSUJFoTk
Kim stared at the letter, her fingers tracing the edges of the worn paper, as if touching it might somehow reveal more than just the ink on the page.590Please respect copyright.PENANAjnH254SvHx
What was S hoping for?590Please respect copyright.PENANAePv0FsEWN6
A message to a stranger—the kind that’s sent into the world without expectation, like tossing a bottle into the ocean? Or was this deliberate, a secret communication meant for someone who knew to look?590Please respect copyright.PENANAUXM9mWJ57P
The way it was hidden, wedged in the rough stone, careful yet not too obvious—S had wanted it to be found. But by whom? And why?590Please respect copyright.PENANARucWjWeUUY
Was it longing? A quiet rebellion? A challenge?590Please respect copyright.PENANA9sCOSlB6hc
Kimberly exhaled, suddenly aware of the weight in her hands. This wasn’t just a folded piece of paper—it was an unanswered question, waiting for her to make sense of it.590Please respect copyright.PENANAAwpm5e8XRA
And that was the thing about unanswered questions.590Please respect copyright.PENANAPt0wH0MukJ
Kim glanced at the bougainvillea. Purple blossoms sagged wearily under the weight of early evening, but no blue object stood out among them. Not yet.590Please respect copyright.PENANArWXknjsdUR
She felt a strange flutter in her chest—not jealousy, not quite excitement either. It was something older than that. A question.590Please respect copyright.PENANA2stlf9PU3l
She looked up at the wall, now glowing faintly gold in the sunset. It no longer seemed so cold or silent. Suddenly, it felt like something was watching from the other side. Or waiting.590Please respect copyright.PENANAUEATHj0ZfW
Kim tucked the letter into her sweater, heart beating faster than it had all day. She looked up at the wall again. Tonight, it didn’t feel just like a boundary.590Please respect copyright.PENANAq87FVVwYvQ
It felt like a secret.


