CHAPTER TEN155Please respect copyright.PENANAa5AqCPYdlC
Mary’s latest note was tucked inside a battered copy of Things Fall Apart in the library, slipped between pages dog-eared by a hundred anxious hands.155Please respect copyright.PENANAA9scIragtk
“Order meeting after lights out. Mercy absents. Prefects nervous. Watch for new patrols near the tank. –M”155Please respect copyright.PENANAQiMojChyyn
Kim read it twice, then passed the book to Seline under the table. Their eyes met for just a moment-enough to agree on the next step.155Please respect copyright.PENANA6EuoBMFufB
That evening, as the sky faded to indigo and the wall’s shadow stretched across the field, Kim and Seline moved quietly through the compound. They didn’t linger together-never enough to draw suspicion-but their paths crossed at just the right moments. A nod at the water tank. A glance near the bougainvillea. Each signal meant the plan was moving forward.155Please respect copyright.PENANA561TIvQ8qa
They didn’t have the Order’s reach or its old network of loyalists, but they had something better: information. Mary’s updates, June’s whispered hints about which teachers were restless, which prefects were wavering, and which adults might listen if approached the right way.155Please respect copyright.PENANAFU23YOJCLF
Seline, ever the observer, noticed that Mrs. Atieno lingered after evening prep, her eyes sharp but not unkind. Seline approached her, careful to sound casual.155Please respect copyright.PENANA8zPqZ5hS7O
“Madam, I heard some girls might be sneaking out tonight. Maybe someone should check near the tank? I just… don’t want anyone to get in trouble.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAXmU0mPB6o1
Mrs. Atieno’s gaze sharpened. She nodded, and Seline slipped away, heart pounding.155Please respect copyright.PENANAsUWrSAjWSz
Meanwhile, Kim made her way to the staffroom, her excuse ready. She needed to return a lost library book. As she waited for the teacher on duty, she left a folded note on the desk-unsigned, but clear:155Please respect copyright.PENANAwq9Uv4fxbm
“Some students are hiding things in the old storeroom. Please look tonight.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAVmLTkbqWvT
Back in the dorms, Seline quietly gathered a few trusted girls-ones who had suffered under the Order’s rules, or who had seen too much to stay silent. They didn’t talk about plans, not directly. Instead, they shared stories, piecing together a picture of what the Order had done, who had been hurt, and how the silence could finally be broken.155Please respect copyright.PENANAMs0CCy8V7y
The next morning, the school buzzed with news: a surprise inspection, a prefect caught out of bounds, a teacher who seemed to know more than she should. The Order was on edge, its members glancing nervously at each other, unsure where the next blow would come from.155Please respect copyright.PENANARsklELgtQi
Kim and Seline watched from the sidelines, careful not to celebrate too soon. Their actions were small, almost invisible, but each one nudged the balance of power. They weren’t just disrupting the Order-they were building something new: alliances with adults who cared, solidarity among the girls, and a quiet resistance that grew stronger with every secret passed through the wall.155Please respect copyright.PENANA56WJE1MXU8
In the golden hush of evening, as the jacaranda petals drifted down and the wall glowed in the last light, Kim and Seline knew they were no longer just outsiders. They were the ones changing the story-one careful move at a time.155Please respect copyright.PENANAZWILyDXeDH
June155Please respect copyright.PENANAj6dTq7CMG4
June moved through the corridors of Kisumu Girls’ with a kind of practiced invisibility. She wasn’t a prefect anymore, but the memory of her leadership lingered in the way teachers nodded to her in the staffroom, the way the bursar always smiled when she handed in club receipts, the way even the strictest dorm captain softened her voice when June asked for an extra blanket for a sick girl.155Please respect copyright.PENANA8gqAtcPj42
It was a power she wore lightly, never flaunting it, always careful. That afternoon, as the sun slanted through the jacaranda trees, June lingered near the staffroom door, pretending to check the noticeboard. She listened as Mrs. Atieno and Mr. Omondi discussed the latest rumors-something about missing library books and students sneaking out after prep. June tucked away every detail, every stray complaint, every mention of “unusual activity near the wall.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAcBhz4HEpI2
Later, in the dining hall line, she found herself behind Ruth, a junior prefect whose loyalties had always wavered. June leaned in; her voice low but warm. “You know, Ruth, sometimes it’s better to ask questions than to follow blindly. Things are changing. You don’t want to be on the wrong side of the story.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAyKMhc4URtS
Ruth glanced at her, uncertain, but June only smiled and moved on, leaving the words to settle.155Please respect copyright.PENANAnUq36M5juL
In the library, June found Mercy’s friend, Lydia, hunched over a stack of textbooks. June sat beside her, not speaking at first. When Lydia finally looked up, June said, “If you ever need to talk about… anything, you know where to find me.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAO82xE26IrE
She left a folded note in Lydia’s book, a simple message:155Please respect copyright.PENANAAxdgqLwabp
“Not everyone who leads is right. Not everyone who follows is safe.”155Please respect copyright.PENANA29XPwBWxKo
As dusk fell, June walked the edge of the compound, pausing near the wall. She watched as a group of Order loyalists huddled by the water tank, their conversation tense, their glances nervous. June caught the eye of one-a girl named Faith, who had once confided in her about the pressure to “keep things quiet.” June gave her a small, knowing nod. Faith looked away, but June saw the uncertainty flicker in her eyes.155Please respect copyright.PENANAiv6AoTHCOH
By the time evening prep ended, June had gathered enough whispers and fragments to piece together the Order’s next move. She passed a coded message to Mary, who would get it to Kim and Seline:155Please respect copyright.PENANA75mAIxXlOi
“Watch the water tank. Some are wavering-Faith especially. Staff are restless. The wall isn’t as silent as it seems.”155Please respect copyright.PENANATPMJIhVILv
June never claimed credit. She never needed to. Her influence was a quiet current beneath the surface, shifting loyalties, planting doubts, and gathering truths. In a school divided by stone and silence, June’s power was in the spaces between-in the trust she inspired, the doubts she sowed, and the secrets she carried from one side of the wall to the other.155Please respect copyright.PENANAhpCQjjf2lq
**********155Please respect copyright.PENANAkA64PAhPR1
Mary’s note arrived tucked inside a dog-eared math revision booklet, slipped onto Kim’s desk during afternoon prep.155Please respect copyright.PENANAgRent1ajL8
“Ruth is scared. She’s not sleeping. Prefects questioned her about the wall. She’s not loyal-just trapped. –M”155Please respect copyright.PENANAWHxK5dnj5G
Kim read the message twice, then slid it to Seline under the table. Seline’s purple pen tapped once, a silent agreement. They’d seen Ruth-her eyes ringed with worry, her laugh brittle, always glancing over her shoulder.155Please respect copyright.PENANANJnGpmFVJN
That evening, as the sky deepened to indigo and the jacaranda shadows stretched across the compound, Kim found Ruth alone by the water tank, pretending to fix her shoelace.155Please respect copyright.PENANAT2RL8bgXgU
Kim crouched beside her, voice low. “You don’t have to keep covering for them, you know.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAFaU5KhYc1A
Ruth’s hands stilled. “I don’t know what you mean.”155Please respect copyright.PENANA3JzmjkVPzo
Seline appeared, as if by accident, standing a few paces away. “We know you’re not like the others. You don’t have to be afraid.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAl8yWYofMX0
Ruth looked between them, her eyes wide and uncertain. “If they find out I talked to you-”155Please respect copyright.PENANAK3teLLFknQ
Kim shook her head. “We’re not asking you to betray anyone. Just… help us stop this. You know what they did last night. You saw who was there.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAVwcMUasblX
Ruth hesitated, then nodded, a tremor in her voice. “I just want it to end. I want to sleep again.”155Please respect copyright.PENANA0Qo5wLpBdy
Seline smiled gently. “Then you’re already on our side.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAWsouzYSqbu
Word spread quietly-Mary made sure of it. She whispered to another wavering prefect in the library, left a coded message in a borrowed textbook, steered frightened juniors toward Kim and Seline with a reassuring nod. Each new ally brought a piece of the puzzle: a name, a time, a warning about the Order’s next move.155Please respect copyright.PENANAAIhOaRJeTa
One by one, the Order’s unity frayed. Those who had ruled by fear now found themselves isolated, their commands met with silence or, worse, quiet defiance. The wall still stood, but the lines of loyalty had shifted; the old boundaries were blurring.155Please respect copyright.PENANAJsPThxZ3r1
By the end of the week, Kim and Seline had gathered a handful of former Order loyalists-girls who had once enforced the rules, now quietly helping to dismantle them. Mary kept the updates flowing, always a step ahead of suspicion.155Please respect copyright.PENANAAntf026u3P
In the hush before lights out, Kim looked around the dormitory and realized: the Order was no longer one solid wall. It was a crumbling line, and every new ally was a crack letting the light through.
155Please respect copyright.PENANAoYFf8eGfUc
June155Please respect copyright.PENANAZCBsMiIRU8
June’s presence in the group was always quiet, but tonight it was purposeful. She sat at the edge of the group, her notebook open, eyes flicking between Kim, Seline, and Mary as they whispered over the low hum of the dormitory’s evening routine.155Please respect copyright.PENANA4eE8Jwn6Cn
She listened first-always listening-while the others described what they’d seen: the new patrols near the wall, the prefects’ sudden interest in the water tank, the coded glances exchanged at roll call. When they finished, June spoke, her voice barely above a whisper.155Please respect copyright.PENANAIz3UApivmP
“They’re nervous. That’s why the patrols are doubling back, why Mercy’s group is splitting up instead of moving together. When I was in charge, we always rotated the routes after a scare. It makes them feel in control, but it actually leaves gaps-especially near the old storeroom and the back gate.”155Please respect copyright.PENANA97OGIt7YFJ
Kim nodded, scribbling notes in the margin of her Chemistry book. “So, if we want to move something-or meet someone-we do it when the patrols are changing over?”155Please respect copyright.PENANAZFdGKik6qr
June smiled, just a hint of pride in her eyes. “Exactly. And if you want to pass a message without being caught, use the library returns slot. Prefects rarely check it, and the staff only empty it in the morning.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAkyUG76DXs6
Mary, perched on the edge of her bed, added, “What about the teachers? Some of them are getting suspicious.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAn5hCmpGLQb
June leaned in. “That’s where timing matters. If you want a teacher to see something, make sure it happens just before evening prep-when they’re tired and less likely to ask questions. And always let them think it was their idea to investigate. Never push too hard.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAbwvk6dvkpQ
Seline, twirling her purple pen, asked quietly, “What about the Order’s loyalists? Some of them are scared, but they’re still watching us.”155Please respect copyright.PENANA5MZsY3hcpC
June’s expression softened. “Find the ones who hesitate before they speak. The ones who linger after meetings. Offer them a choice, not a threat. When I was in charge, the most loyal girls were the ones who felt trapped. Show them a way out, and they’ll help you-sometimes without even realizing it.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAzgMNoAttu6
The plan came together in whispers and glances: when to move, where to hide, who to trust. June’s experience turned their scattered ideas into a strategy-one that used the Order’s own routines and fears against them.155Please respect copyright.PENANAVWbC8QTDFG
As the bell rang for lights out, June closed her notebook and looked at the others. “Remember, they expect chaos. Give them quiet instead. That’s how you win.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAH367IICWxj
Kim smiled, feeling a surge of confidence she hadn’t known in weeks. With June’s guidance, the wall no longer felt impenetrable. It was just another obstacle-one they could outthink, one step at a time.155Please respect copyright.PENANAETSNnAFiY6
**********155Please respect copyright.PENANAMvA1XXeemA
June’s notebook was always half-hidden, its pages filled with careful notes and coded sketches of the compound. She sat with Kim, Seline, and Mary in the far corner of the library, where the smell of old paper masked their whispers.155Please respect copyright.PENANAsjfzPhvVTl
June tapped her pen against the page. “If you want to meet without being seen, do it during the changeover after evening prep. The Order always rotates patrols then-there’s a five-minute gap near the storeroom and the water tank. That’s your window.”155Please respect copyright.PENANA9BedHB7z3l
Mary nodded, committing the detail to memory. Seline glanced at Kim; her purple pen poised over her own notebook. “And if we need to pass a message?”155Please respect copyright.PENANABtEstPKcKc
June smiled faintly. “Use the library returns slot. Prefects never check it after seven, and the staff only empty it in the morning. If you need a faster way, leave a blue paper clip in the bougainvillea. That’s the old signal-no one outside our circle knows it means ‘urgent.’”155Please respect copyright.PENANAI4Rk6YMwkh
Kim leaned in; voice low. “What about the Order? If they realize we’re meeting-”155Please respect copyright.PENANAV2kW4Od1Jr
“They’ll try to flush you out by calling a surprise roll call or sending a prefect to ‘accidentally’ find you,” June said, her tone matter-of-fact. 155Please respect copyright.PENANAT5fWVcdFZv
“If that happens, split up. Never let them catch two of you together. Always have a cover story-water bottle left behind, library book to return, anything.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAFjOq8niJ2J
Mary’s eyes widened. “How do you know all this?”155Please respect copyright.PENANAZJrl6WP5WQ
June’s smile was almost sad. “Because I used to plan it. The same way they do now.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAJqWpyLoHjN
She outlined the rest:155Please respect copyright.PENANA9PzcchnJoQ
“Never use the same meeting spot two nights in a row. If you hear the phrase “sunflower duty” from a prefect, it means a sweep is coming-hide anything suspicious. If you need to warn someone fast, use the old storeroom window: a folded note taped to the inside means “danger-don’t come.”155Please respect copyright.PENANACYFQlC75ee
Seline scribbled it all down, her hands steady. Kim felt a strange surge of confidence. With June guiding them, the wall no longer felt like a prison. It was a chessboard-and they finally knew the moves.155Please respect copyright.PENANALxIe7Q0TkZ
As dusk crept in and the bell rang for evening prep, June closed her notebook and met their eyes. “Stay alert. Stay separate. And remember-timing is everything.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAOH40i7gF3W
The girls slipped away, each to her own path, their hearts racing not with fear, but with purpose. In the golden hush of the Kisumu evening, they moved as shadows-quiet, coordinated, and unseen.155Please respect copyright.PENANAQuHsEtUaOe
**********155Please respect copyright.PENANAat1xaFBD2B
June’s voice was always calm, even when the others’ nerves frayed at the edges. Tonight, she gathered Kim, Seline, and Mary in the shadowy alcove behind the old science block-a place the Order rarely patrolled, and where whispers could be swallowed by the hum of the generator.155Please respect copyright.PENANALwxNtSFd4T
She laid out the plan with the precision of someone who’d once enforced the very rules she now helped to subvert.155Please respect copyright.PENANAJZZJ67cKQr
“Listen,” June said, her finger tracing a map of the compound drawn in the dust on the floor. 155Please respect copyright.PENANAPjYW5Bj5aP
“The Order always retaliates in patterns. If someone gets caught near the wall, they’ll call a surprise roll call the next night-usually just before lights out. They’ll search bags, check for missing girls, and question anyone who looks nervous. That’s when you keep your heads down. Don’t volunteer. Don’t argue. Just blend in.”155Please respect copyright.PENANA4Y6dPK53dl
Mary nodded, scribbling notes in her margin. Seline’s purple pen hovered, ready.155Please respect copyright.PENANA1MffeNUlTd
June continued, “If you want to pass a message or move something important, do it right after evening prep, when the Order is busy reporting to the staff. That’s the only window when their guard is down. And never use the same route twice-rotate between the storeroom, the water tank, and the library returns slot. If they catch a pattern, they’ll set a trap.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAUpGxoi6ldB
Kim frowned. “What about the loyalists? They’re watching us more closely now.”155Please respect copyright.PENANA1r15IwVYnQ
June’s eyes narrowed, thoughtful. “That’s why you need a decoy. If you know the Order is planning a sweep, have someone unrelated-someone they’d never suspect-ask a loud question in the dining hall or start a harmless commotion. It’ll draw their attention away from the real meeting spot.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAL3ws4iItJs
She paused, letting her words settle. “And remember: they discipline by isolation. If they suspect you, they’ll try to separate you from the others-send you on errands alone, assign you to different dorm chores. Don’t let them. Always move in pairs, even if it’s just to fetch water.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAnRbAg8dJ2M
Mary looked up. “And if someone gets caught?”155Please respect copyright.PENANAoHuSIBHtNL
June’s voice softened. “If anyone is questioned, say as little as possible. The Order relies on fear and confusion. If you don’t give them a story, they can’t twist it. And if you have to take the blame, make sure it’s for something small-never the real secret.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAt6duASq8bu
Seline’s eyes shone with new resolve. “You make it sound like a game.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAB65xKzskaJ
June smiled, just a little. “It is. But we know the rules now. That’s how we win.”155Please respect copyright.PENANAYc2732YU8O
As the bell rang for lights out, the girls melted into the shadows, each carrying their part of the plan-every step calculated, every risk measured. With June’s guidance, their rebellion was no longer reckless. It was precise, invisible, and-most importantly-untouchable.155Please respect copyright.PENANAabE8CvU0uk
And in the hush that followed, the wall seemed to pulse with a new kind of energy-not just a boundary, but a silent witness to the quiet war being waged in its shadow.155Please respect copyright.PENANAIJbIxtOcMY
155Please respect copyright.PENANApvTTh2wRqa