While Queer Urban scholarships in Africa has tended to privilege the unique everyday practices of inhabiting urban spaces and the spatial logics attendant to it, few, if any, have attempted to explore the myriad of contestations of sexual subjectivities at the point of inhabiting the city. Using Nairobi city as an example, I am to explore how queer individuals negotiate the in-between spaces of the city and the moments of lingering and pauses between spaces and how these transient experiences account for how they construct their own subjectivity. Primarily, I wonder, what sorts of positionalities and intensities accrue when Nairobi queer bodies inhabit spaces of the corridors, dark alleys, staircases, elevators, and the bus stop as they transition from one point to another. Here, I am to show, that reading and contextualizing these connected and disconnected liminal spaces, reveal a deeper understanding of how queer individuals restructure the spaces that they occupy in order to account for, and narrativise their lives in light of the socio-political conditions in Kenya.