The Baboons Who Went This Way and That

The Baboons Who Went This Way and That by Alexander McCall Smith Page A

Book: The Baboons Who Went This Way and That by Alexander McCall Smith Read Free Book Online
Authors: Alexander McCall Smith
Ads: Link
for my child!” she exclaimed. “Everyone would laugh at me.”
    The guinea fowl seemed rather taken aback by this reply, but he did not give up.
    “Will you make me your child just at night?” he asked. “In the mornings I can leave your hut very early and nobody will know.”
    Pitipiti thought about this. Certainly this would be possible: if the guinea fowl was out of the hut by the time the sun rose, then nobody need know that she had adopted it. And it would be good, she thought, to have a child, even if it was really a guinea fowl.
    “Very well,” she said, after a few moments’ reflection. “You can be my child.” 
     
    The guinea fowl was delighted and that evening, shortly after the sun had gone down, he came to Pitipiti’s hut. She welcomed him and made him an evening meal, just as anymother would do with her child. They were both very happy.
    Still the new wife laughed at Pitipiti. Sometimes she would pass by Pitipiti’s fields and jeer at her, asking her why she grew crops if she had no mouths to feed. Pitipiti ignored these jibes, but inside her every one of them was like a small sharp spear that cuts and cuts.
    The guinea fowl heard these taunts from a tree in which he was sitting, and he cackled with rage. For the new wife, though, these sounds were just the sound of a bird in a tree.
    “Mother,” the guinea fowl asked that night. “Why do you bear the insults of that other woman?”
    Pitipiti could think of no reply to this. In truth there was little that she could do. If she tried to chase away the new wife, then her husband would be angry with her and might send her away altogether. There was nothing she could do.

    The bird, however, thought differently. He was not going to have his mother insulted in this way and the following day he rose early and flew to the highest tree that overlooked the fields of the new wife. There, as the sun rose, he called out a guinea fowl song:

    Come friends, there is grain to eat!
    Come and eat all this woman’s grain!
    It did not take long for the new wife to realize what was happening. Shouting with anger, she ran out into the fields and killed Pitipiti’s guinea fowl and his friends. Then she took them back to her hut, plucked out their feathers, and began to cook them.
    Mzizi was called to the feast and together he and his new wife ate all the guinea fowl at one sitting. It was a tasty meal and they were both very pleased with themselves for having made such a good start to the day.

    No sooner had they finished the last morsel than Mzizi and the new wife heard the sound of singing coming from their stomachs. It was the guinea fowls singing their guinea fowl songs. This, of course, frightened the couple and they immediately seized long knives and stabbed at their stomachs to stop the noise. As the knives pierced their skins, bright blood flowed freely and they fell to the ground. As they fell, from out of the wounds came the guinea fowl and his friends, cackling with joy at their freedom. Soon they were back in the field, eating the last of the grain that was left.

    Pitipiti was pleased that she no longer had to suffer the taunts of the new wife. She now owned her husband’s cattle and because of this there were many men waiting to marry her.All of them, of course, were happy at the thought that they might marry a wife who had such a clever and unusual child.
     
     
     
     

 

 
     

2
A Girl Who
Lived In A Cave
    A girl who only had one brother liked the place where she and her parents lived. There was a river nearby, where she could draw water, and the family’s cattle enjoyed the sweet grass which grew by the riverside. The huts were shaded from the hot sun by the broad leaves of the trees, and at night there was a soft breeze from the hills, which kept them cool. Passers-by, who called in to drink water from the family’s calabashes, would say how much they envied that quiet place, and how their own places were so much drier and dustier.

    Then

Similar Books

The Pendulum

Tarah Scott

Hope for Her (Hope #1)

Sydney Aaliyah Michelle

Diary of a Dieter

Marie Coulson

Fade

Lisa McMann

Nocturnal Emissions

Jeffrey Thomas