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Chapter 6 - THE BOY WITH THE CAMERA

I see him before he sees me.

Rooftop. Third building from mine. He smokes cheap weed and records sunsets like they owe him something. I watch him through my curtain slit — daily. He's not a threat. Not yet.

But the camera bothers me.

It's small, probably second-hand. He holds it like it's sacred. Shoots anything that moves — birds, kites, clouds… sometimes, people.

Once, he points it in my direction. Just once.

That's when I start walking slower past his building. Let him catch the pink of my scarf. Let him wonder.

Let him think I don't notice him noticing me.

Let him feel seen.

---

I still write in red ink.

The notebook's getting full. Page edges curling like secrets whispered too long. The scarf from Sunday is folded beneath my pillow. I haven't washed it.

It smells like fear.

Sometimes, I sniff it before bed. Not because I'm proud — but because I need to remember that I'm still in control.

Control isn't power. It's restraint.

Lesson five taught me that. But this new boy — the one with the camera — he's pulling something loose. Not because he's dangerous. But because he's curious.

Curious boys are harder to shake.

Curious boys ask the wrong questions.

---

Friday. I see him again.

He's closer this time. Same street. Hands in pocket. Camera swinging like an afterthought. He hums a song I know — a Brymo track.

I freeze.

He doesn't see me, but my chest knots. Brymo is too close. Brymo is the man I almost didn't punish. The one with a voice that nearly softened my hands.

I don't like patterns repeating themselves.

So I change the rhythm.

I follow him.

---

He walks toward the back of the student complex. Somewhere quiet. I keep my distance — not too close, not too far. He sits beneath a mango tree and opens a sketchpad.

Not a camera.

A sketchpad.

I didn't expect that.

His fingers move fast — not perfect, but passionate. I inch closer, step by step, until I see the outline of a girl with headphones.

Soft pink scarf.

Head turned away.

I stop breathing.

---

"Do you like it?" he says without looking up.

My heart slams against my ribs.

He knew.

He knows.

I force a laugh. "That's me?"

He shrugs. "I draw what I can't forget."

A pause.

He finally looks up, eyes sharp like mirrors.

"I've seen you," he says quietly. "You move like… you're hiding something."

I smile — not the sweet kind.

The kind that comes with a warning.

"And what if I am?"

He smiles back, and it feels like war.

"Then I'll keep watching."

---

That night, I don't sleep.

I pull out the notebook. Flip past flames and lessons, blood dots and names crossed out. I reach a clean page and write:

> Lesson six: Some threats don't come with knives.

They come with eyes that refuse to look away.

I draw a camera lens.

Then I shade it dark.

Like it's blinking.

Like it knows.

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