So you do laugh, inquisitor.
This is not the first you have heard of shoga men. Call them with poetry as we do in the North; men with the first desire. Like the Uzundu warriors who are fierce for they have eyes for only each other. Or call them vulgar as you do in the south, like the Mugawe men who wear women’s robes so you do not see the hole you fuck. You look like a basha, a buyer of boys. And why not? Boys are pretty beasts; the gods gave us nipples and holes and it’s not the cock or the koo, but the gold in your purse that matters.
Shoga fight your wars, shoga guard your bride before marriage. We teach them the art of wife-being and house making and beauty and how to please a man. We will even teach the man how to please his wife so that she will bear him children, or so that he will rain all over her with his milk every night. Or she will scratch his back and curl her toes. Sometimes we will play tarabu music on kora, djembe, and talking drum, and one of us will lie as woman, and another will lie as man and we show him the 109 positions to please your lover. You have no such tradition? Maybe that is why you like your wives young, for how would they know if you are a dismal lover? Me and Kava only used our hands. I thought it was not strange, maybe because I still carried the woman on the tip. I once asked the witchman to cut it off, after my uncle forbade it. He looked at me with all his wisdom gone, and nothing left but puzzlement, a wrinkle between his brows, and his eyelids squeezing like a man losing vision. He said, “Do you wish for one eye as well, or maybe one leg?”
“It was not the same,” I said.
“If the god Oma, who made man, wanted you cut to reveal such flesh he would have revealed it himself,” he said. “Maybe what you need to cut away is the foolish wisdom of men who still make walls with cow shit.”
Two. The next day Leopard kicked me in the face and woke me up. I opened my eyes and looked at his face, his wild shrub hair and eyes, white with a tiny black dot in the center. I was more afraid of the man than the Leopard. His big head and shoulders a warning that he can still carry up a tree beasts three times as heavy. He stepped on my chest, a bow slung over his right shoulder and a quiver of arrows in his left hand.
“Wake up. Today you will learn how to use a bow,” he said.
He took me from the house, down the twisting trunks to another field that felt far away. We passed the little iroko tree where he let Kava fuck him. Beyond that, and beyond the sound of the little river, to another field of trees, so tall they scraped the sky and branches like spider legs all tangled together. Behind him the hair on his head went down to his neck, across his back, and down to a point and disappeared above his buttocks. Hair sprouted back on his thigh and went down to his toes.
“Kava said when he first saw you, he tried to kill you with a spear.”
“What a storyteller he is,” the Leopard said, and kept walking.
We stopped in a clearing, a tree about fifty paces away from us. The Leopard took off his bow.
“Are you his and is he yours?” I asked.
“What Sangoma says about you is true,” he said.
“That woman can go lick between the ass cheeks of a leper.”
He laughed.
“You’ll be asking of love next,” he said.
“Well, do you have love for the man, and does the man love you?”
He looked straight at me. Either he just grew whiskers, or I just saw them.
“Nobody loves no one,” he said.
He turned away and nodded at the tree. The tree spread its arms to welcome him and exposed a hole right near where the heart would be, a hole that I could see right through. The Leopard already had the bow in his left hand, the string in his right, an arrow between his fingers. Before I even saw him raise the bow, draw the string, release the arrow that went through the hole in the tree with no sound, he had already drawn and shot another. He drew and shot another, then handed me the bow. I thought it would have been light, but it was about as heavy as the baby in the forest.
“Follow my hand,” he said, and held it right to my nose.
He moved left and my eyes followed him. His arm went too far and I turned my neck to see if he was about to slap me, or some other little evil. Then he moved his hand right and I followed him with my eyes until I couldn’t see it.
“Hold it with your left hand,” he said.
“Your arrow,” I said.
“What of it?”
“It shines like iron.”
“It is iron.”
“All the Ku arrows are bone and quartz.”
“The Ku still kill children whose top teeth grow first.”
This is how the Leopard taught me to kill with bow and arrow. Hold the bow on the side of the eye you use less. Draw the bow from the side of the eye you use more. Spread your feet until they are shoulder wide. Use three fingers to hold the arrow on the string. Raise and draw the bow, pull the string to your chin, all in the quick. Aim for the target and release the arrow. The first arrow went up into the sky and almost struck an owl. The second struck a branch above the hole. The third, I don’t know what it struck but something squealed. The fourth struck the trunk near the ground.
“She is getting annoyed with you,” he said. And pointed to the tree. He wanted me to retrieve the arrows. I pulled the first out of the branch and the little hole closed up. I was too scared to pull out the second, but the Leopard growled and I yanked it quick. I turned to run but a branch hit me flat in the face. The branch wasn’t there before. Now the Leopard laughed.
“I can’t aim,” I said.
“You can’t see,” he said.
I couldn’t see without blinking, couldn’t draw without shaking, I couldn’t point without shifting to the wrong leg. I could release the arrow, but never when he said so and the arrows never hit anywhere I pointed. I thought of aiming for the sky just so it would strike the ground. Truth, I did not know the Leopard could laugh this much. But he would not leave until I shot an arrow through the hole in the tree, and every time I struck the tree, it slapped me with a branch that was either always there or never there. Night sky was heavy before I shot an arrow through the target. He grabbed arrows and started walking, his way of saying we were done. We went down a path that I did not recognize, with rock and sand and stone covered in wet moss.
“This used to be a river,” he said.
“What happened to it?”
“It hates the smell of man and flows under the earth whenever we approach.”
“Truly?”
“No. It’s the end of rainy season.”
I was about to say that he has been living with the Sangoma for too long, but didn’t. Instead I said, “Are you a Leopard that changes to man or a man that changes to Leopard?”
He walked off, stepping through the mud, climbing the rocks in what used to be a river. Branches and leaves blocked the stars.
“Sometimes I forget to change back.”
“To man.”
“To Leopard.”
“What happens when you forget?”
He turned around and looked at me, then pressed his lips and sighed.
“There’s no future in your form. Smaller. Slower, weaker.”
I didn’t know what to say other than “You look faster, stronger, and wiser to me.”
“Compared to whom? You know what a real Leopard would have done? Eaten you by now. Eaten everyone.”
He didn’t frighten me, nor did he intend to. Everything he stirred was below my waist.
“The witch tells better jokes,” I said.
“She told you she was a witch?”