From home to the bridge
Mansa is eight years old, lives in the Boseja neighborhood in Maun, Botswana, and leaves home every morning at seven ten. The route never changes. It never does. She walks out the door, turns left, crosses the patch of waste ground where the dogs sleep piled against the block wall, and crosses the bridge over the Thamalakane — the river that borders the east of Maun, which sometimes holds water and sometimes holds dust. From the bridge you can see the trees on the other bank and, on a clear morning, the orange reflection of the sun on the mud. Mansa doesn't look at the view. What she looks at is Rra Otsile's shop, right past the bridge on the right.
Rra Otsile is seventy, has a shop the size of a shipping container, and has the habit of keeping a strawberry Chappie for Mansa every day. Chappie is a cheap gum, artificial flavor, waxed paper that sticks to your fingers. In Botswana you can buy it at any tuck shop for a few coins. For Mansa it's part of the route: bridge, shop, "Ee rra" — good morning, sir —, gum, school. If he doesn't have strawberry one day, Mansa takes the grape one without a word. But you can tell.
Sometimes she stops for a moment and tells him something she read in a wildlife book her science teacher loaned her. Rra Otsile listens, nods, and asks: "Is that true?" Mansa nods, serious, and keeps walking.







