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Sia was the most beautiful
girl in the country, so not surprisingly she already had
a lover. His name was Mamadi Sefe Dekote, or Muhammad, the
Silent Sword.
Mamadi had this praise-name because he owned a sword that
was longer than all other swords in Wagadu, which he honed
and whetted to perfection.
He could take a grain of millet, throw it up in the
air, and cut it in two with his sword before it reached
the earth. The sword
edge was so thin that it did not sing as he swung it in
the air but cut the air silently.
Thus it was called the Silent Sword.
What sort of a man was Mamadi? Listen! There was a rich man living in Wagadu,
named Wagana Sako, who had a very lovely wife. She was so famous for her beauty that she could
not help attracting lovers.
Does the flower call the butterflies?
Wagana Sako had built a high stone wall around his
garden, so high that no horse could jump over the wall,
except his own, Samba Ngarranja, the strongest stallion
in the country. That
stallion was never permitted to mount a mare, so afraid
was Wagana Sako that it would have offspring of equal agility.
There were no gates in the stone wall, no windows, no doors
anywhere. There
was only one way to enter Wagana Sako’s garden, that is,
mounted on the great stallion, Samba Ngarranja.
One day Wagana Sako was visiting friends in the country.
He had tied Samba outside in the garden.
However, Mamadi had followed him, riding his own
strong mare, who was in heat. While Wagana was drinking with his friends,
Mamadi quietly untied the stallion Samba and let him mount
the mare.
The course of fate cannot be stopped any more than
the seeds of the acacia tree.
The mare gave birth to a stallion, a worthy son of
Samba. For three years Mamadi waited, training his horse to jump over the
river and back, over hills and rocks, out of sight of Wagana
Sako. Then, one night, when Wagana had gone out for a drink
with friends, Mamadi—having watched him go—jumped over the
wall on his young stallion and visited Wagana’s wife.
Before Wagana came back, Mamadi was on his horse
and out of the fortress.
How does the caterpillar get into the pumpkin? How does the rat get into the grain store? Such a man was Mamadi. He was not afraid of Wagana’s wealth and influence.
Nor was he afraid of the giant serpent Bida and its
magic powers.
On the morning of the annual sacrifice, Sia Yatta-Bari
was made ready for the terrible ceremony. She was adorned by the women of the town as if she were going to
her wedding.
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