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Rise of the Street King
Rise of the Street King
Author: Unattra3tive
Chapter 1 – Blood on the Pavement
Author: Unattra3tive
last update2025-09-10 06:26:40

The night air reeked of stale beer, sweat, and the sour tang of cheap gasoline. In the slums of Karimu Lane, every breath felt like swallowing rust. Streetlights flickered, half-dead moths clinging to their glow. The ground was littered with broken bottles and cigarette butts, trophies from a thousand nights of violence nobody remembered by morning.

Jayden walked those cracked pavements with his hands shoved deep into the pockets of his faded hoodie. His sneakers were worn to the sole, every step a reminder of how little he had. Hunger gnawed at his stomach like a beast. He hadn’t eaten since dawn. Not that it mattered most nights were the same.

A voice snapped through the air.

“Where you think you going, boy?”

Jayden froze. Ahead, leaning against a dented car, were three boys from Razor’s crew. Older, heavier, their eyes full of the kind of cruelty that fed on fear. Razor ran the blocks around here, and stepping through Karimu Lane without permission was like painting a target on your back.

Jayden knew the rules. Keep your head down. Keep moving. Pray they lose interest.

But tonight—tonight he had no choice.

“I ain’t looking for trouble,” Jayden muttered, adjusting his hood.

The tallest of the three smirked, spitting on the pavement. “Trouble found you.” He shoved himself off the car and started forward. His boys followed, cracking their knuckles, eager for blood.

Jayden’s heart pounded so loud he thought they could hear it. His fists clenched inside his hoodie pocket, fingers brushing the handle of the rusty pocketknife he carried. Not much, but better than nothing.

They circled him like hyenas. The tall one Musa, Razor’s right hand grinned wide.

“Razor said you’ve been running your mouth. Saying you don’t bow to nobody.”

Jayden’s jaw tightened. He hadn’t said those exact words. But he’d stopped paying Razor’s tax two weeks ago. That was enough.

“You got it wrong,” Jayden said, forcing his voice steady. “I don’t bow because I got nothing worth stealing.”

The smaller one snorted. “Then why you breathing?”

Laughter exploded. Then fists.

The first punch split Jayden’s lip. He staggered, tasted iron. Another blow slammed into his ribs, making him gasp. They shoved him back and forth, each strike heavier than the last, each kick sending him closer to the dirt.

He curled up, arms shielding his head. Pain exploded everywhere, sharp, unrelenting. The voices blurred into a single hateful rhythm.

“Stay down!”

“Teach him respect!”

“Break his teeth!”

And then something inside him snapped.

Jayden spat blood onto the pavement, eyes blazing. He wasn’t going to die curled up like a beaten dog. If he was going to bleed, he’d make them remember his name.

He surged up, pocketknife flashing. The blade caught the flicker of the streetlight as he drove it across Musa’s forearm. Blood sprayed, hot and dark, and Musa screamed, stumbling back.

Silence cut through the alley for one sharp second. Then chaos erupted.

“You stupid bastard!” one of them roared, lunging forward.

Jayden ducked the swing, slammed his shoulder into the man’s chest, and stabbed. Not deep just enough to make him howl and collapse. Fear flashed in their eyes now, the predator’s confidence broken.

But Musa wasn’t done. He came back with a roar, swinging a rusted pipe. The first hit glanced off Jayden’s shoulder, numbing his arm. The second smashed into his ribs, and Jayden felt something crack. He gasped, legs buckling.

He staggered back, knife trembling in his grip. His vision swam, ears ringing.

Musa raised the pipe again, eyes burning with murder.

Jayden whispered to himself, voice ragged.

“Not tonight. I ain’t dying tonight.”

He lunged, knife thrust forward with all the strength left in his battered body. The blade sank into Musa’s side. Musa’s eyes went wide, his pipe clattering to the ground. He staggered back, gasping, blood soaking his shirt.

The others froze.

“Shit he’s bleeding bad!” one shouted, grabbing Musa under the arm. Panic spread faster than fire. They hauled him up, cursing, and bolted into the darkness.

Jayden stood alone, chest heaving, knife dripping crimson onto the pavement. His hoodie was torn, his face a mask of blood and sweat. The alley was silent again except for the steady drip-drip-drip of Musa’s blood staining the concrete.

For a moment, Jayden almost dropped the knife. His stomach churned. He’d never stabbed a man before.

But as he stared at the blood, another feeling surged inside him. Not guilt. Not regret.

Power.

He wiped the blade on his sleeve, shoved it back into his pocket. The pain in his ribs was unbearable, every breath sharp. His lip split wider as he tried to smile.

Tonight, the streets had learned his name.

Sirens wailed in the distance.

Jayden’s eyes widened. The cops. Somebody must have called it in.

He staggered forward, forcing himself into the shadows. Every step felt like fire tearing through his ribs, but he didn’t stop.

Not tonight. He wasn’t going to be another body chalked out on the pavement.

As he slipped into the dark, his blood still dripping onto the ground, he whispered the promise that would carry him through every fight to come.

“They’ll remember me. Even if I gotta carve my name into their skin, they’ll remember me.”

And with that vow, Jayden vanished into the night, clutching his broken ribs—just as the cops burst onto the block. And one of them shouted words that made his blood run cold:

‘That’s him! Don’t let him get away!

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