Divine Justice
there was a time
when i called them brothers.
we moved together,
laughed together,
broke bread together.
but the moment of truth always comes.
one chose loyalty,
the other chose noise.
he picked the snake with the silver tongue,
thinking smoke would cover the lies.
said, “my mom’s sick, i need to take care of her.”
but i caught him instead —
laughing, smoking with that snake.
betrayal don’t always roar.
sometimes it whispers excuses.
that was the last straw.
i cut him.
clean.
no anger, no tears — just clarity.
and when i walked,
others followed.
because real always recognizes real,
and leadership don’t need a crown.
fast forward, a year gone.
he comes back saying,
“you were right.”
and i smiled.
not out of spite,
but because the universe always finds a way.
you don’t have to wait for the sweetness of lady karma,
she finds you when it’s finally your turn.
forgiveness?
yeah, it lives in my chest.
but don’t confuse forgiveness with access.
forgiveness means i release the weight,
i free myself from carrying hate.
but it don’t mean i hand you the keys again.
you already showed me what you do with trust —
you trade it for nothing.
you took my heart and traded it for nothing?
the price of loyalty, vision, and love
must’ve meant nothing.
so now you watch from the shore.
and sit in the loneliness of the bed you made.
because me and mine?
we keep moving forward.
eyes ahead, steps sharp.
we don’t wait, we don’t circle back,
we don’t beg the weak to keep pace.
the ones who can’t carry their own weight
get left behind.
that’s divine justice.
you had a seat at the table,
and you threw it away.
there is no second plate,
no second chance.
just the echo of what you lost,
and the sight of us rising higher
while you boys stay at base camp.
i didn’t have to stoop low,
the universe rose for me.
Makaveli Out.
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