"I was never wrong.
Just never on time."
**********************************************
Knowledge is said to bring power.
That's what people believe.
That if you understand something well enough—
if you learn it, study it, repeat it—
eventually, it will work in your favor.
Kings rose because they understood when to act.
Empires fell because someone else understood where to strike.
Knowing has always separated those who lead… from those who follow.
But there's something people don't talk about.
Timing.
Because knowledge without timing—
is useless.
Sometimes worse.
Sometimes—
it's dangerous.
Let me ask you something.
You've heard the saying:
*curiosity killed the cat.*
But why?
Why would something as simple as wanting to know… lead to death?
Because curiosity doesn't stop.
It doesn't measure risk.
It doesn't wait for the right moment.
It pushes.
It reaches.
It forces you to see things—
you were never meant to understand yet.
Do you see where I'm going with this?
If you do—
then you already understand something most people don't.
If you don't…
that's fine.
It just means you're still living in a version of reality that hasn't been questioned yet.
A version that feels safe.
I used to live like that.
Unaware.
Unquestioning.
Safe.
Until the day I died.
Yes.
I had to die…
to understand.
Not everything.
Not at once.
Just enough—
to realize something was wrong.
That knowledge isn't just power.
It's consequence.
It's risk.
And once you see beyond it—
you don't go back.
Funny, isn't it?
That something as final as death…
could be the beginning of understanding.
So—
let me take you back.
To where it actually began.
Not with me.
But before me.
[Mombasa Hospital | August 25, 2005 – 9:45 PM]
The hallway was quiet.
Not peaceful—
controlled.
Fluorescent lights hummed overhead, casting a pale, steady glow across the empty corridor.
At the far end, a man stood with a phone pressed to his ear.
His posture was straight. Professional.
But his eyes—
focused.
Listening more than speaking.
"How is he?"
The voice on the other end was calm.
Too calm.
The kind that holds tension underneath.
Dr. Mwenyeji glanced at the file in his hand.
"He's recovering well," he said. "The surgery was successful. His condition is stable."
His eyes moved across the report.
"If everything continues like this, he should make a full recovery."
A pause.
Short.
Measured.
"When can he come home?"
This time—
the doctor didn't answer immediately.
His gaze stopped on a specific section of the file.
Just long enough to matter.
Not long enough to be obvious.
"I'd prefer to keep him under observation for a few more days," he said. "There are still tests I want to run."
Silence.
Longer now.
"If all goes well… he can be discharged the day after tomorrow."
"…Alright."
The voice softened.
Slightly.
"I'll come pick him up then. Thank you, Doctor."
"There's no need," Dr. Mwenyeji replied calmly. "I'm simply doing my job."
The call ended.
He lowered the phone slowly.
Exhaled.
His grip loosened.
For a moment—
he didn't move.
Thinking.
"Let's finish the rounds first," he murmured.
Then, almost under his breath—
"These kids…"
Before he could take a step—
the speakers crackled.
"Dr. Mwenyeji to Ward 7C, please."
"I repeat—Dr. Mwenyeji to Ward 7C."
He stopped.
A small smile formed.
Knowing.
"Speak of the devil."
He turned.
Slipped the file under his arm.
"Well…"
A pause.
Then:
"I suppose I should go see our little problem first."
His footsteps echoed as he walked down the corridor.
Measured.
Unhurried.
Completely unaware—
that this moment
was not the beginning.
Just the point where it became visible.
To be continued…
