Mag-log in
By the time my shift ended, I felt it everywhere. My feet, my back, even my head. The kind of tired that doesn’t go away with sleep.
“You good?” Tasha asked, already halfway out the door.
“Yeah,” I said, grabbing my bag. “I’m straight.”
She looked at me like she didn’t believe it, but she ain’t push. “Get home safe.”
“I will.”
I stepped outside and the city hit me all at once. Cars passing, music playing from somewhere down the block, people laughing like life wasn’t heavy. DC at night always had energy, whether you had it in you or not.
I pulled my jacket tighter and started walking toward the stop. My phone buzzed in my hand. Same number. Third time tonight.
I flipped it over without answering.
Some things don’t need to be revisited.
I was almost past the corner when I noticed him. At first it was just somebody leaning against a truck, head down, minding his business. I wouldn’t have looked twice if something in me didn’t already feel off.
Then he lifted his head.
And just like that, I knew.
I should’ve kept walking. I really should have.
“Keisha.”
I stopped.
It wasn’t even a choice. My body just did it before my brain could catch up.
Slowly, I turned around.
“Malik.”
Saying his name felt strange. Familiar, but not in a comfortable way.
He pushed himself off the truck, taking a step closer but not too close. Like he knew better.
“You look good,” he said.
I let out a small laugh. “You don’t get to say that.”
His expression didn’t change much, but I could tell it landed.
“Ain’t nothing wrong with me saying you look good.”
“It is coming from you.”
Silence sat between us for a second. Not awkward. Just heavy.
“I been calling you,” he said.
“I know.”
“So you just not answering now?”
“I’m not answering you.”
He nodded a little, like he expected that. “You changed your number?”
“No. I just stopped picking up.”
Another pause.
He glanced toward my job, then back at me. “You still working there?”
“Yeah.”
“You always cared too much.”
“And you never cared enough.”
That did it.
I saw it in his face. That quick shift. Like I hit something real.
“That’s not how it was,” he said.
“That’s exactly how it was.”
He looked like he wanted to say more, but I wasn’t giving him the space to clean it up.
“You left,” I said. “No conversation. No explanation. Just gone.”
“It wasn’t like that.”
“It felt like that.”
That mattered more anyway.
A car drove past, bass shaking the ground a little. Neither of us moved.
“I didn’t have a choice,” he said finally.
I shook my head. “Everybody got a choice.”
“Not with this.”
“This what?” I asked.
He hesitated, and that hesitation told me everything I needed to know.
“Exactly,” I said. “You still can’t even say it.”
“It’s not something I can just say out here.”
I laughed, but there wasn’t anything funny about it. “Then when were you planning to say it? Because you had five years.”
His jaw tightened, but he didn’t snap back. That almost made it worse.
“You didn’t ask,” he said.
I stared at him for a second. “I shouldn’t have had to.”
That one sat there.
Because we both knew it was true.
I crossed my arms, trying to keep myself steady. “Whatever you got going on now, that’s your business. But don’t come back acting like we just picking up where we left off.”
“I’m not,” he said. “I just wanted to see you.”
“You saw me.”
That should’ve been it. I meant for it to be.
I turned to leave.
“If you knew why I left,” he said behind me, “you wouldn’t be talking to me like this.”
I stopped again.
I hated that I did, but I did.
“What does that even mean?” I asked without turning around.
“It means you don’t know everything.”
I turned back slowly. “Then say it.”
He looked at me, really looked this time, like he was weighing something.
“I can’t. Not like this.”
I let out a breath, shaking my head. “You see? This is exactly what I’m talking about.”
“It’s not that simple, Keisha.”
“It never is with you.”
That old frustration started creeping back in, the kind I thought I left behind.
“For once,” I said, quieter now, “just be real.”
“I am being real.”
“Then say it.”
He didn’t.
And that was my answer.
I stepped back. “Yeah. That’s what I thought.”
“Keisha—”
“No. I’m done with this.”
I turned and started walking again, this time not stopping right away.
“Keisha.”
I slowed, but I didn’t turn.
“If you knew the truth,” he said, “you wouldn’t even be standing there right now.”
Something about the way he said it made my chest feel tight.
I looked back.
“What is that supposed to mean?”
But he was already getting into his truck.
Engine on. Lights cutting through the street.
Same as before.
Leaving.
I stood there longer than I should have, watching him pull off like it didn’t take him years to show back up just to disappear again.
I told myself I didn’t care.
That I was over it.
That whatever he had to say didn’t matter anymore.
But as I walked the rest of the way to the stop, one thought kept circling in my head whether I liked it or not.
What could he possibly have been hiding that whole time?
And why did it feel like it still wasn’t over?
Keisha didn’t leave that night.But something inside the apartment changed permanently after the folder.The illusion of safety was gone now.Not physical safety.Narrative safety.Before tonight, she still believed one of them had to be telling the truth.Now she understood something worse:Both of them probably were.At least partially.And partial truth was far more dangerous than lies.The red folder sat on the kitchen table between them untouched.Neither of them wanted to look at it again.But neither could put it away either.It felt radioactive now.Malik stood near the sink silently while Keisha sat at the table staring at the profile sheet.Emotionally vulnerable to damaged male presentation.The accuracy of it kept making her skin crawl.Not because it insulted her.Because it reduced her.Turned empathy into predictability.“You really wrote this?” she asked quietly.Malik didn’t answer immediately.“I wrote parts of it.”The honesty hit harder now.Not softer.Keisha laug
Malik didn’t move away from the door.For a second neither of them spoke.The tension between them had changed again.Not intimacy.Not fear.Control.Keisha saw it clearly now.Every conversation since last night had revolved around information Malik chose to release slowly.Enough truth to keep her close.Never enough to let her stand fully outside his version of events.“What’s in the folder?” she repeated.Malik’s eyes stayed on hers.“You don’t need to read it.”The answer made her pulse spike immediately.“That’s not what I asked.”“I know.”Keisha laughed once under her breath, disbelieving.“There it is again.”“What?”“That thing you do.”Malik frowned slightly.“You answer around things instead of through them.”His jaw tightened.“Because not everything helps once you know it.”“No,” Keisha snapped. “You don’t get to decide that for me.”Silence hit hard after that.Malik looked exhausted suddenly.But now she couldn’t tell how much of that exhaustion came from fear and how
Keisha left the apartment anyway.Not to run.Not even to think clearly.Just to feel something normal again.The hallway outside Malik’s unit smelled faintly like bleach and old carpet.Somebody downstairs was arguing over music too loud through a half-open door.A delivery driver passed her carrying grocery bags.Ordinary.Everything looked painfully ordinary.And somehow that made the fear worse.Because none of it matched the atmosphere inside the apartment.Keisha stepped outside into the afternoon heat and inhaled deeply.The city moved around her in layers.Cars rolling past.People crossing intersections.Phones ringing.Laughter somewhere nearby.Real life.Concrete life.She needed that.Needed noise.Needed randomness.Needed proof the world still functioned normally outside Malik’s orbit.Her phone buzzed in her pocket.Keisha froze instantly.Then got angry at herself for freezing.Slowly, she pulled it out.Unknown Number.Again.Her stomach tightened before she even ope
The realization settled between them slowly.Heavy.Poisonous.Keisha stared at Malik while her heartbeat thudded unevenly against her ribs.“You think she’s right.”Malik looked exhausted by the sentence before he even answered it.“I think…”He stopped.Started again.“I think people can damage each other enough to stop seeing reality clearly.”“That’s not what I asked.”“I know.”Keisha watched him carefully.Because he still wasn’t denying it.And that terrified her more than the messages.More than Alina.More than the hidden files.The apartment suddenly felt like a place where certainty went to die.Another silence stretched between them.Then quietly:“What actually made you start believing her?”Malik leaned back against the counter slowly.His eyes drifted toward the window.“Things repeated.”Keisha frowned.“What things?”“Conversations.”A pause.“Arguments.”Another.“Specific phrases people said without knowing each other.”The chill returned immediately.Keisha crossed
The message stayed on the screen while neither of them moved.Keisha’s fingers tightened instinctively around the phone.Across from her, Malik looked like someone bracing for impact he already saw coming.“You knew she’d do this,” Keisha said quietly.Malik exhaled slowly through his nose.“I hoped she wouldn’t.”“That’s not the same thing.”“No.”The apartment felt smaller now.Compressed by tension.Keisha looked back down at the message.You should ask him what happened the night I disappeared.Not died.Not left.Disappeared.The wording mattered.Everything about this situation felt built on wording.On implication.On emotional precision.She hated that she was already beginning to think like that too.“What happened?” she asked again.Malik leaned back against the counter, eyes fixed somewhere past her shoulder.For a moment he looked genuinely exhausted.Not mysterious.Not guarded.Just tired of carrying something alone.“It was after one of our fights,” he said quietly.Kei
By noon, the apartment no longer felt like a place people lived.It felt like a waiting room.Not for safety.For impact.Keisha sat near the window scrolling through her phone without actually reading anything on the screen.Every few seconds her attention drifted back toward Malik.He had barely moved in over an hour.Still sitting at the dining table.Still staring at that second phone like it contained a bomb disguised as silence.No new messages had come through.And somehow that felt worse.Keisha hated that she was already adapting to this atmosphere.Listening for vibrations.Watching his reactions.Measuring tension.It made her feel absorbed into something she didn’t fully understand yet.“You ever think about changing your number?” she asked finally.Malik gave a tired half laugh without humor.“She’d get the new one.”Keisha frowned.“How?”“I stopped asking that question a long time ago.”That answer irritated her immediately.Because it sounded defeated.Like he had surr







