Neutral POV
The morning air had that classic Nigerian boarding school smell—kind of a mix of stale disinfectant, chalk dust, and soggy bread. The sun wasn’t really shining; it was glaring down, hot and cranky, over the cracked pavement of St. Gideon’s College. Morning assembly just wrapped up, and the boys buzzed back to their hostels like disturbed bees.
Zayne walked slower than most back to his class. His hoodie stuck to him, even in the heat, with its hood pulled low over his forehead. Some folks called him moody, others thought he was creepy. Most just didn’t even notice him anymore.
Except for those who couldn’t stand silence.
"Oya na! Look who’s dragging himself across our holy ground!" someone shouted from behind.
Zayne barely turned around. Didn’t need to.
Kingsley Obilor.
Every school has a Kingsley. Loud guy. Laughs like a goat. Thinks he’s the prince of SS2B. He wasn’t big, but he had a crew. Boys in fake designer belts sneaking in snacks on visiting days. His laughter was infectious if you weren't the target.
"Guy! You always wear that hoodie like you’ve got some secret demons. You be winch?"
His boys burst out laughing. The sound echoed all around.
Zayne just kept walking.
Then, a chalkboard eraser hit the back of his hoodie.
He flinched but didn’t turn.
His hands clenched tight in his sleeves.
He could totally draw Kingsley. Just once. One little glyph to scare him into silence for a month.
But no.
He promised himself he’d only draw when he had to.
Zayne slipped into the classroom, heartbeat slow but steady, like someone who’d accepted he was drowning. He took a seat at the back by the window, his sketchbook still deep in his bag.
The others filtered in. Phones buzzing under desks, Bluetooth speakers sneaking in some beats. The “StormCruz” crew strutted in like they were in a Netflix series. Five boys in spotless sneakers, gold chains, and fancy tote bags with their t****k handles printed on them. They ran a secret streaming page called ShadowCruze, where they rated glyphs, reposted trends, and told exaggerated stories about hauntings, kisses, and hexes.
Kanaan, the new kid, was already being welcomed. Laughing too loud, fist-bumping the ringleader, Seyi, whose dad owned clubs in Lekki.
Amara showed up five minutes later. She scanned the room, her eyes skimming over Zayne before darting away. She didn’t get why seeing him made her stomach twist like that. And she hated that she wanted to figure it out.
Zayne was watching her too. Not with longing—even though that was there, quietly—but with something heavier. Regret. The kind that folds into silence and just lingers.
Then Teni came in.
His crush.
Everyone has that one crush, right? Teni Akinwale was the bright light. Loud, dramatic, and just magnetic. She was on the debate team and had 14k followers on t****k, mostly for her dancing and funny skits where she played exaggerated teacher roles. She liked the outspoken guys, the smartmouths. Zayne had maybe said three words to her in two years.
Once, she borrowed his pen.
He still had it.
She walked in laughing with her friend Folu, holding up a phone to Amara.
"Check out this video! Someone used the mirror glyph at Queens High again. Her crush fainted in assembly! They say it really works!"
"That #ShadowLove stuff is fake jare," Folu said.
"You say that because you can’t draw," Teni shot back.
Zayne looked away.
He knew how to draw.
Too well.
Mrs. Olowokere walked in next, looking tired and stressed, not at all mystical. She didn’t notice Zayne's sketchbook or seem to know about the glyphs, the trends, or even #ShadowLove. She was there to teach Visual Literature and remind them to keep their uniforms neat.
"Your first assignment is to create a symbol that represents truth. Not facts, but truth. Something real for you. You’ll work in pairs."
Some groans filled the room.
"Zayne Adeyemi," she said, checking her list. "Amara Obasi."
Silence hung in the air, thick like someone just pulled an invisible thread.
Students looked up. Kingsley snickered. Seyi raised an eyebrow.
Amara walked slowly to Zayne’s table. She didn’t sit down. Not yet.
Zayne looked up at her. The last time he looked into her eyes this close was the day he made her forget.
Two years ago.
Dormitory window. Late at night. The moon cutting through the room like a knife.
Deji—Zayne’s older brother—had just gone missing. Disappeared after his third glyph drawing.
Zayne found his sketchbook three nights later, hidden under Deji’s bed, wrapped in a torn pillowcase, still warm.
That night, Zayne saw something.
Something not human.
Something watching him through the mirror.
Amara was the only one to notice Zayne’s change. She came to the boys’ dorm window, whispering through the mosquito netting.
"What happened to him, Zayne?"
And Zayne, shaking and clutching the sketchbook, whispered back:
"He drew truth. And now something’s drawing him."
Then he made a choice.
He drew a glyph on the window between them.
A memory glyph. To erase himself from her.
Tears streamed down her cheeks as she forgot his name. As she blinked at him like he was a stranger.
"Why am I here?" she’d asked.
Zayne didn’t say anything.
Just walked away.
Now, in the classroom, Amara was sitting there.
She didn’t speak.
He didn’t either.
But the air was thick with memories.
Across the room, a quiet girl named Riri watched them through her oversized glasses. She always sat alone. The type of girl who knew more than she let on. A silent fan of the #ShadowLove trend, she ran an anonymous page that documented drawings she found around school—even before it was trendy.
She scribbled something in her notebook:
"He remembers her. But she only dreams of him. Page 2. Glyph of regret."
Zayne tried to focus, but the sketchbook in his bag trembled again.
Seriously.
It buzzed softly. Like a trapped bug.
He placed his hand on it.
A whisper brushed against his thoughts.
"Draw the truth."
His fingers itched.
He couldn’t resist.
Opened the book.
The drawing had already started coming to life.
Ink spreading. Lines he hadn’t drawn.
A figure at a desk. Amara beside him. A shadow behind them.
But this time—the shadow had eyes.
Human. Familiar.
Watching.
The ink twisted into letters below the drawing:
"Page 3. She must not remember."
His head buzzed. The room felt like it was tilting.
He stood up, grabbed his bag.
"Excuse me, ma, I’m not feeling well."
Mrs. Olowokere, busy pairing Teni and Kanaan, nodded absentmindedly.
Zayne rushed out.
Down the hall.
To breathe.
As he moved, whispers echoed in his mind.
Deji’s voice.
"Once she remembers... you won’t just lose her. You’ll lose yourself."
Outside, Amara watched him leave. Again...
And in her sketchbook, untouched for weeks, a new drawing appeared.
One she didn’t create.
Zayne.
Crying.
At the edge of a lake.
And behind him—
Her.
Drowning.