all off. Men and women screamed to the gods and scrambled up ladders. More men scrambled on people scrambling up ladders. But Sadogo pulled away another brace and two ledges fell, and in one blow, one punch, one rip, one bludgeon, bodies piled on bodies. A man he punched flew into the mud and was swallowed by it. Another he stomped into the water until it went red. And so he pulled down ladder after ladder and ledge after ledge. He leapt onto one of the few ledges left, slamming, jamming, and knocking men off, and jumped from one to another, then another till he was so high that to kill, he just threw people off. He jumped to the top of the well and caught two as they ran, grabbed them both by the head and slammed them into each other. A boy climbed up and ran into him. A boy nowhere near a man, a boy dressed in rich robes like his father, a boy who looked at him more curious than afraid. He touched the boy’s face with both hands, gentle, soft, like silk, then grabbed him and threw him down the well. Then he roared like the beast. The slave girl in the bucket was still hanging above. She said nothing.
Sadogo almost skipped all the way to this lord’s dwelling. Then he went to his room and fell to snoring in a blink. The buffalo was in the courtyard eating grass, which must have been foul tasting but he seemed to like it. He looked up and saw me wearing the curtain and snorted. I hissed and tugged at it, pretending that I could not take it off. Again, he did something that sounded like a laugh, but none of these horned animals can laugh, although who knew which god was working mischief through him.
“Good buffalo, has anyone come around to this man’s place? Any dressed in black or blue?”
He shook his head.
“Any in the colour of blood?”
He snorted. I knew he could not see the colour of blood, but something in this bull made me want to have sport with him.
“Alas, I think we might be watched.”
He turned around, then turned back on me and grunted long.
“If any man shows up in black and blue, or in a black cape, raise alarm. But do what you wish with him.”
He nodded up and down and gargled.
“Buffalo, before the sun goes we shall go back to the riverside for better bush.”
He gargled and swished his tail.
Inside the Leopard’s room was only a trace. If I wanted to, I could smell deep into the rugs, past the shit and sperm and sweat of him and the boy, and know where they went and would go. But here is truth: I did not care. All that was left in the room was what they did, nothing of theirs. Here is another truth. I did have some trace of care, enough to know they were going southwest.
“They leave before day burst,” said the lord of the house behind me. He wore a white caftan that did not hide that he wore nothing underneath. Old shoga? That was a question I did not wish to ask.
He followed me as I walked to Sogolon’s room. He did not try to stop me.
“What is your name, sir?” I asked.
“What? My name? Sogolon said there would be no names …. Kafuta. Kafuta it is.”
“Great thanks for the room you give us and the food, Lord Kafuta.”
“I am no lord,” he said, looking past me.
“You are the lord of this magnificent house,” I said.
He smiled but it quit his face quick. I would have said, Take me to her room, this is still your house, if I thought to enter her room was what he wished. He was not afraid of her; instead they seemed like brother and sister or sharers of old secrets.
“I shall go in,” I said. He looked at me, then past me, then at me, pressing his lips to appear unconcerned. I headed for her door.
“Will you follow?” I asked as I turned around to see him gone.
Sogolon did not lock her door. Not that any of the doors had locks, but I would have thought so of hers. Maybe every man believes that all an old woman has is secrets, and that was the second time I thought of secrets when I thought of her.
The smells in the room hit me first. Some I knew that took me out of