Omondi had a situation brewing in his chest.
Omondi, by normal standards, was a don. Sharp in class, meme lord in WhatsApp groups, and debate club chairman with a tongue slicker than cooking oil on a wet floor. The guy could argue a lion into vegetarianism. He was The Mbunge of ideas. Always ready with a punchline, a clapback, or a conspiracy theory about how HELB was run by his village enemies. But today? He was stammering like a broken FM radio.
Omondi was finished.
Kaput.
Roho ilikataa.
Why? Because he had fallen.
Not in a pothole — that was last semester — but in love. The kind of love that makes your intestines do press-ups. That makes your English betray you in public. That makes you write poetry at 2 a.m. and caption your WhatsApp status with things like “When the heart speaks, even logic kneels.”
Her name? Sharon. A girl as oblivious as a drunk mosquito during curfew. Beautiful in that quiet, irritating way. Smart, but clueless. The kind of girl who could solve calculus but wouldn’t notice a man was in love even if he sent smoke signals, carrier pigeons, and bought billboard space. You could light a Valentine’s Day candle in front of her and she’d ask if it’s a power outage. The girl was academically sharp but emotionally… kwaheri ya machozi.
For months, Omondi had dropped hints like a clumsy thief.
Carried her books.
Bought her smokie and kachumbari during breaks.
Gave her lecture notes, even the ones with his best handwriting.
Laughed at her dry jokes. Genuinely!
He even faked interest in “Korean dramas” and sat through ten episodes of men crying in slow motion. That’s real sacrifice.
But Sharon?
She just called him “my bestie”.
That cursed word.
The graveyard of ambition.
One Tuesday afternoon, after another group discussion where she said, “You’re like a brother to me”, Omondi almost applied for a transfer to Engineering. At least wires didn’t lie.
But the class had seen enough.
This wasn’t just heartbreak — this was a humanitarian crisis.
Led by Nancy the class rep (a girl who wore gossip like perfume), the entire class hatched a plan. They called it:
#MissionConfessAmaUfe
“Bro, enough is enough. If you can debate with a lecturer about capitalism at 8 a.m., you can tell a girl you like her.” Tony, His roommate urged.
It began with coded messages during lectures.
“Sharon, someone here has feelings for you. Not naming names but they’re wearing blue jeans and dying inside.”
Then, DJ Kev from Journalism class made it worse by dedicating “Nipe Nikupe” on the campus radio and saying:
“To the girl who keeps asking for notes but not seeing the love behind the font.”
Sharon, still, had no clue.
Just giggled and said, “Awww, love is in the air. Hope they get together!”
Omondi? He was shrinking. Even his shadow started avoiding him.
So, #MissionConfessAmaUfe entered plan b.
Phase 1: Subtle Hints
They strategically sat her next to him in every lecture.
Assigned them as partners for every project.
Even changed the Wi-Fi password to “OmondiLikesWanjiru”.
Her response? “Haha, funny joke. Who did this? Very creative.”
Phase 2: The Campus Choir Intervention
The music department “accidentally” serenaded her with “Sweet Love” by Rufftone as she walked to class.
She clapped. “Wow! You guys sound great! Free concert?”
Omondi nearly cried.
Phase 3: Desperate Measures
The entire faculty was now invested. Even Dr. Mwangi, the stoic Economics lecturer, sighed and said, “Child, just give him your number before we all retire.”
The janitor started mopping love hearts into the hallway.
The canteen mama only served her “couple mandazis”—stuck together.
Wanjiru: “Huh. Must be a new recipe.”
It wasn’t working. Finally, the day came to be upfront.
Friday, Common Room. 2PM.
He stood there, heart racing like a Subaru with no brakes, holding one lonely flower he had plucked from the library garden (because budget) in his “confession jeans” (the ones without holes). The class circled him like villagers about to witness a traditional cleansing ceremony.
Nancy cleared her throat like a witch doctor about to speak in tongues.
“Sharon, you’re here today because a certain young man has something to say. And we’ve had enough secondhand heartbreak on his behalf. Omondi, shoot your shot. Ama we help you!”
Omondi’s knees buckled.
But before he could talk, Peter the class clown shouted,
“Ukipigwa character development tunakuchangia tissues, bro!”
Laughter. Sharon looked confused.
Finally, Omondi stepped forward, cleared his throat like a man on death row, and said:
“Sharon… I like you. Not in a group member way. Not in a ‘bestie’ way. Not even in a ‘can-I-borrow-your-past-paper’ way. I’ve liked you for so long my crush developed roots. It has a title deed now.”
Silence.
Sharon blinked. Then tilted her head like a chicken that just heard someone say “nyama choma.”
“Wait… you mean… like… like like me?”
“Yes. I want to take you for chips kuku and sit across from you like two people in a poorly lit love story.”
Pause.
Then Sharon burst out laughing. A full-blown belly laugh that made even Omondi’s ancestors twitch from the embarrassment.
“Wueh! And here I thought you were just… super helpful! Omondi, I’ve liked you too! I just thought you were being… you know, nice! And I didn’t want to assume!”
The crowd erupted like a Sunday crusade.
Peter fainted dramatically. Nancy screamed like someone won a Range Rover. Even the lecturer passing by muttered, “Campus love. Wasting WiFi and potential.”
Sharon took the flower, twisted it between her fingers, and smiled.
“Next time, don’t send the whole class. Just ask.”
Omondi, feeling like a man who had survived the wilderness, nodded.
Sharon kissed his cheek lightly, proving that even the smoothest talkers sometimes need a village—and a very patient girl—to get love right.