In the highlands of central Kenya, a by-election has quietly redrawn the political map. President William Ruto's ruling party lost the Ol Kalou seat to a party that barely existed a year ago, led by the man Ruto's government impeached as Deputy President. The defeat is not merely local — Mount Kenya is the republic's largest voting bloc, and history shows that those who lose it tend to lose the presidency. What emerges is a familiar human story: power consolidated too quickly, and the ground beneath it shifting before the next reckoning arrives.