Under the sausage tree
The Thamalakane river is ten minutes on foot from the Boseja neighborhood where Mansa lives with her mother. In the afternoons, when she's allowed, she heads down to the bank and sits under a Kigelia africana — the sausage tree, with those huge fruits hanging like lamps from an invisible ceiling. There she does nothing useful. She throws stones into the water, watches birds, and reads.
The books come from Mma Kgosidintsi, her science teacher. Early forties, glasses, serious. She has a shelf in the classroom with African wildlife guides she rotates according to the student — because Mansa returns them read within three days and Mma Kgosidintsi already knows to have the next one ready. They aren't children's books: they're manuals with plates, scientific names, distribution maps. Mansa reads them with the same attention she gives to the three stones on her windowsill. Slowly. Without skipping pages.
What she reads sticks. She has the kind of memory her mother describes with a mix of pride and exhaustion: she remembers whole conversations, promises made months ago, the exact page where the martial eagle appeared. Sometimes on the way to school she stops at Rra Otsile's shop and tells him something she read. Rra Otsile listens carefully, gives her her daily strawberry Chappie, and asks: "Is that true?" Mansa nods, serious, and keeps walking.







