Β SHEM
It had been a full week since Shem declared the lockdown, a necessary measure, or so he told himself. It was the only way he knew to keep Kaweme safe. She had summoned him earlier to likely put an end to the arrangement, clearly not seeing the need for it, yet he knew he made the right call.
Inside the house, she was secure. Inside the house, his job was easier.
But inside the house also meant he was around⦠them.
Around Kaweme.
Around Malaika.
And Malaika was growing on him like a wildflower in the cracks of a pavement.
He tried to avoid her. He really did.
But somehow she was always there, showing up in the gym just before him, never once late, never once missing. She only ever walked on the treadmill. Never jogged. Never did anything else. And she always picked the treadmill directly opposite where he lifted weights.
And she always⦠watched.
Like it was a show. Like he was in the show. Like her workouts were just an excuse.
It made him feel like he was under a microscope. But not in a bad way.
In a way that⦠fueled him.
On days he wanted to skip the gym, he still came. For her gaze. For the unspoken attention. For the subtle smile she gave sometimes, as if to say, βI see you.β
Every day, she wore a new gym outfit. Not just clothes, full looks.
Bright colors, coordinated scrunchies, soft perfumes, and that delicate gold jewelry on her wrist that had no business being worn to a gym.
She was soft. Frilly. Feminine.
And Shem was beginning to realize he liked it. All of it.
Today was supposed to be the last day of the lockdown, and he wanted to extend it, even though Kaweme had been counting down like a prisoner marking chalk on a wall.
βYou canβt extend it, Shem. Iβll lose my mind.β
He didnβt blame her.
Nothing strange had happened in days. The tails had fallen off. No more strange cars, no more shadows. It should have made him relax, but it didnβt.
It made him anxious.
Predators didnβt disappear, they changed tactics.
Still, the house had grown too quiet. Heβd dismissed the outside men. It was time for things to look normal again.
He was about to leave the gym, sweaty, shirt clinging to his body, when he heard a loud thump.
Malaika had tripped.
She yelped, her body sprawled awkwardly across the treadmill belt, ankle twisted at an angle. Shem rushed to her side.
βAre you okay?β he asked.
βI donβt know! I thinkβ¦ I think I sprained it.β
She winced as he touched it, her hand swatting his arm. βAh! It hurts!β
βOkay, okay. Calm down,β smiling despite himself. The fall didnβt feel like a big deal if she wasnβt a big baby.
βYouβre smiling! Youβre actually smiling while Iβm in pain,β she shot back, eyes narrowed.
Shem couldnβt help it. βYouβre dramatic.β
βIβm in pain!β she wailed.
He sighed. βAlright. Letβs go.β
βI canβt walk.β
βI figured.β Without another word, he lifted her into his arms, all heat and muscle, and carried her inside.
βThis is so embarrassing,β she muttered, hiding her face.
He set her gently on the living room couch. βStay there. Iβll get balm.β
A few minutes later, he returned with a balm and sat beside her, gently stretching the affected leg.
She screamed again. βYouβre trying to kill me.β
Shem smirked. βYouβve always been this fragile?β
βIβm not fragile. Iβm injured.β
βMm-hmm.β
They sat in silence for a moment, him rubbing balm into her ankle, her breathing steadying.
Then she said, βNow I canβt drive.β
βWere you going somewhere today?β
βYes, actually,β she said with a pout. βMaybe you should take me. Japheth is going out with Kaweme for cake tasting, menu sampling, and venue walkthrough. You know, all the coupley stuff. So you are free, and now that Iβve fallen, and canβt walk, I need someone to drive me.β
Shem gave her a look. βSo this whole drama was a setup?β
She gasped. βNo! I meanβ¦ maybe a little. But not really. I actually fell.β
βHmm.β
βI just thoughtβ¦ maybe you could help me, but if you canβt, I will understand, itβs fine, I can call a friend.β
βWhere exactly are you going?β
βThe Mall, to run errands. Bridesmaid accessories, body shapers, satin robes, candles, baskets, madness.β She grinned. βI just needβ¦ a helper. A backup driver. You.β
He stared at her.
βI sprained my ankle, not because I want to stress you,β she added, all innocence and glittering eyes.
Shem sighed, unable to resist her.. βFine. Iβll take you.β
βAre you sure? I donβt want to distract you from your duty.β
βGo bathe, Malaika. Go get ready. Just tell me when youβre ready to leave.β
βYay! Thank you!β she squealed, and jumped upβ¦
Shem blinked. βWait, I thought you couldnβt walk?β
She froze mid-step, then giggled. βOh. Adrenaline, or maybe the balm is working.β
And before he could say another word, she dashed out of the room, her laughter echoing behind her.
Shem sat there, balm still in hand, staring at the door, smiling.
This girl.
Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β
KAWEME
Some minutes later
Malaika stood in front of the mirror, holding up two outfits with the kind of desperation that came from not having access to her full wardrobe.
βI swear, Iβm going to lose my mind,β she muttered. βNothing fits the vibe today.β
Just then, Kaweme burst into the room with her own wardrobe emergency. βThis or that?β she asked, holding up a silk top in one hand and a floaty dress in the other.
Malaika lit up and snatched the floaty dress, but Kaweme held on to it.Β
βWhatever you wear, Japheth is going to like it. It doesnβt matter.β
βAre you helping me or helping yourself?β
Malaika rolled her eyes. βThis is you helping me. My whole closet is at home and I canβt get to it right now. So you, madam, need to hook me up.β
Kaweme turned, surprised. βWait, do you have a date?β
βNo, no, no,β Malaika said quickly. βNothing like that. I justβ¦ I have errands.β
βErrands?β
βYes. For you, I might add. Everything Iβm doing today is in service to your fabulous upcoming wedding. I asked Shem to take me out.β
βWaitβ¦ Shem?β
βWell, you donβt need him right? Japheth is taking you. So I made arrangements with Shem to help me, and he agreed.β
Kaweme narrowed her eyes. βSo why are you trying to look cute for Shem?β
Malaika gasped. βIβm not trying to look cute for Shem! Iβm trying to look cute for me.β
A beat of silence.
Then Kaweme smiled. βI see whatβs going on. You like him.β
Malaika didnβt even pretend. βI like him. I like him, I like him. And I think I can make him like me too.β
Kaweme flopped onto the bed, shaking her head. βWhat do you even mean?β
βIβve been going to the gym every day,β Malaika said, practically bouncing with glee. βYouβve seen it. And I always catch him watching me. Or maybe Iβm watching him and heβs not saying anything, which is basically the same thing. If he was irritated, he would have stopped showing up. But he keeps coming. So I think weβre watching each other now.β
Kaweme groaned, but Malaika was undeterred. βGirlβ¦ just give me something to wear. Something cute. I was supposed to go home yesterday to get clothes, but today is an emergency. Save your girl.β
βTo what end?β Kaweme asked, tossing her the dress. βLetβs say you get him to like youβ¦ what then? What if it gets serious?β
βWho says Iβm joking?β Malaika replied, slipping the dress over her head. βI like him. The guy is soβ¦β
βYou donβt know anything about him!β
βExactly. Which is part of the thrill. I like the package. I like the broody, quiet thing heβs got going. I like that he listens. I like the way he looks at me, like Iβm a puzzle wrapped in glitter. You know I love an audience.β
Kaweme couldnβt help laughing. βYouβre not okay.β
βIβm strategic. Today, I get to know him.β
βBy tricking him into driving you to go shopping?β
Malaika smirked. βThatβs what he thinks. But Iβve got other plans. This is not about shopping at all. It’s about unraveling the man behind the muscles.β
Kaweme shook her head, smiling. βI canβt even focus on your nonsense right now. Iβm just happy I finally get to go out. One week inside this house? I was beginning to hear voices.β
βYeah, about that,β Malaika said, flopping onto the bed. βWhatβs the plan now? Is Japheth still pretending everythingβs fine?β
βPretending?β Kaweme echoed. βMore like protecting. He says not to worry. He and Shem have set some kind of trap. Theyβre watching everything, but they donβt want me stressing about it.β
Malaika frowned. βThatβs wild. Because when Japheth said he was taking you out today, Shem told him he had a full schedule. Like, very full. He said something about today being the final move in whatever plan theyβve been building.β
Kaweme blinked. βWaitβ¦ and now heβs taking you out?β
βDonβt ruin this for me,β Malaika said quickly. βHeβs a multitasker. He can protect the country and still carry a girl to buy satin robes.β
βYouβre impossible,β Kaweme said, laughing. βStop distracting my brother-in-law.β
βToo late,β Malaika said, twirling. βMission already in progress.β
β————————————————————————————————————————
Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β SHEM
Today wasnβt supposed to be for babysitting, or for driving a girl who thought he looked mysterious. But here Shem was, parked outside the house, freshly showered, dressed in clean black jeans, a crisp black shirt, and boots. He didnβt wear cologne, never did, but he used antiperspirant. It was his version of effort.
The truth was, today was supposed to be the most critical day in their operation. He and his team had finally placed a tracker on the vehicle that had been following Kaweme. Today was the first leg of surveillance, to follow the trail, trace the route, and get to the real masterminds behind everything. He was meant to be behind his laptop, coordinating the sting and, when the time was right, alert his contacts in the police to move in.
But of course, things never happened that cleanly. He told himself today couldnβt possibly be the day they cracked it all open. It would take time, days, maybe weeks, so why deny himself a little lightness in the meantime?
Thatβs what he called it: practice. Practice for being a soft guy. He wasnβt going to let her affect him or lose focus.
Then Malaika opened the car door.
The scent hit first. Something floral and expensive. Her dress, God, her dress, was fitted, and fluttered just right. She smiled as she got into the car, the kind of smile that said she knew she was affecting him. He, in return, wore his best weapon: the unreadable face.
βSo where are we going?β he asked, as if his heartbeat wasnβt doing footwork drills.
She gave him the address. He typed it into the GPS and started driving, silently hoping she wouldnβt talk too much.
But of course, Malaika had other plans.
βSo, what exactly do you do?β she asked, turning to him. βI mean, apart from this secret agent thing. Kaweme said youβre a soldier. What kind of soldier?β
Shem kept his eyes on the road. βThe regular kind.β
βDo you go to war?β
βIβve been to war,β he said, voice steady. βBut Iβm mostly on strategy. Reconciliation. Investigations. Route planning. Logistics. Occasionally holding a gun.β
βOh, so youβre like an office soldier?β
Shem side-eyed her. βWeβre all officers. What are you saying?β
She giggled. βNo, you know what I mean. Like the difference between someone who flies drones and someone in the trenches.β
βIβve been in the trenches four times,β he said. βOnce during a terrorist infiltration at the border. It wasnβt just planning, we had to act.β
Malaikaβs eyes lit up. βOh my God. Thatβs likeβ¦ movie stuff. Youβre a hero. Everyone says Zambia is peaceful, but itβs people like you who make it so.β
Shem snorted. βYouβre very dramatic.β
βThank you,β she said proudly. βDo you want to know what I do?β
βI already know,β he replied.
βReally? What do I do?β
βNothing.β
Her mouth dropped. βExcuse me?β
βWellβ¦ you donβt go anywhere, you donβt do anything. Only someone with no job can pack all their things and justβ¦ move in with their friend.β
βSo Iβm just some spoiled brat to you?β she said, voice raised.
Shem lifted a shoulder. βDidnβt say that.β
She huffed. βIβm in a phase. Iβm figuring out my purpose.β
βHmm.β He paused, then asked, βWhat did you study in school?β
βMusic.β
That surprised him. βMusic?β
βYes. I love music. I actually produce beats, well, Iβm trying to be a music producer. But no one takes me seriously. They think Iβm just some rich manβs daughter playing around.β
Shem nodded slowly. βDo you put your stuff out?β
βI donβt know how. I mean, Iβve tried, but people just assume Iβm expensive. Or not good.β
βLet me hear it,β he said.
βWhat? No.β
βCome on. Play something.β
βYouβll laugh at me.β
βJust play it.β
She hesitated, then connected her phone to the car speakers. A smooth rhythm filled the car, layered, soulful, catchy. Shem found himself bouncing to the beat.
βThis is good,β he said, surprised. βWhy are you sitting on this?β
βI donβt know what to do with it,β she said, eyes downcast. βI justβ¦ I donβt like being sad. Talking about it makes me feel like a failure.β
βWell,β Shem said, βbeing an adult means talking about hard things. If youβre this talented, you canβt bury it. You need to be seen.β
She glanced at him. βLike how? What would you advise me to do?β
βFirst,β he said, βstart sharing your work, post it regularly. Stop hiding. Let the music speak.β
βAnd second?β
βGet feedback from professionals, not just friends. Look for collaborations with singers and put out your work frequently. People respect what they hear consistently.β
She smiled softly. βReally?β
βReally.β
Just then, he parked. βHere we are. How long are you going to need? So I know whether to wait or come back.β
βWhat? Youβre going in with me,β she said, blinking.
βThat wasnβt the deal. I donβt go shopping.β
She pouted. βSo youβre leaving me? With all the dangers outside?β
βNo one is trying to harm you. Youβre not a target.β
βWow. So Iβm just unimportant?β
Shem sighed, trying to hide a smile, but failing. βDo you want to be a target?β
βI want you to come in with me. Iβll buy you breakfast.β
βIβve eaten.β
βYour body burns calories fast. That food has been digested. Letβs eat first. Then you can leave.β
He gave her a look. βGirlβ¦β
She stepped out of the car dramatically and began limping toward the mall, clutching her ankle again like she had in the gym.
He turned off the engine, checked his phone, nothing urgent from surveillance, and stepped out. He caught up to her quickly and placed a hand on the small of her back.
She turned with glee. βOh my God. Thank you. I knew you wouldnβt abandon me.β
Shem smirked. βCan you walk properly now? I know youβre fine.β
She grinned. βNo. I need you. I really need you.β
Shem shook his head, knowing he had to let her win, and somehow he felt like he was winning too.
βLetβs go get your breakfast.β
Malaika with the dramaπ
This girl sha πππ
Malaika is extremely dramatic,but am sure am not the only one enjoying her drama, even Uncle SHEM TOOππ€£
These two ehn…π π