Awa pressed her ear to Ngueleer’s bark as the ground shuddered—the village drumbeat had faltered and something was wrong. Dust and marigold petals rode a dry wind; the missing rhythm opened a question she could not ignore.
She moved because the world had moved first. The tremor under her palm felt like a finger tapping glass; it wanted attention. Her skin prickled. Her feet knew the old track even before she rose.
Ngueleer loomed over Ndioum like a patient guardian. The trunk was a room—scarred and knotted, the bark pressed with names and small offerings that had accumulated over generations. When the light hit its ridges at dusk, the tree threw long, slow shadows that pooled against the compound walls. Those shadows were not empty; they seemed to hold memory: people who had married beneath that canopy, rains that came late and once returned, voices that had faded and then were called back.
Villagers treated the tree as both neighbor and elder. Children ran the circumference tracing the roots with bare hands. Older women leaned in to press messages into its bark, the way one might tuck a letter into an old chest. Songs had been learned here and kept here; the drum’s voice had been the grammar that stitched the song to the tree.
When the sacred drums were whole, Ngueleer moved with them—subtle at first, then with a weight that made the earth seem to answer. That movement had once signaled blessing: good harvests, safe births, and nights where hunger shrank to an ember. Then, in a season remembered mostly in rumor, the drums fell silent. Pleasure turned to superstition; dancing became an old joke; the drums themselves were remembered like a missing tooth—noticed only when the mouth ached.
For most the story had softened into a tale for children. For Awa it pressed on her chest like a rumor she could not set aside. She did not believe in idle ghosts; she believed in listening. When the tremor came that night, it threaded under her fingers and the wind braided itself into words. "Something is changing," it said—not prophecy, but insistence.
The Festival of Drums approached and the village filled with a nervous brightness. Cloths were dyed, gourds polished, and djembes checked for cracks. Even the river seemed to quicken, reflecting the orange of dye vats and the hurried feet of those who would carry offerings.
Awa moved through that bustle with a different urgency. She watched how hands carried marigolds to the tree and how offerings were set like small promises at the roots. She listened to the griots tuning their voices, the way a string pulled taut before a bow fell. Every sound read like a map: which beat had gone missing, where a rhythm had slipped. The old maps hid in plain hearing, and Awa had trained herself to read them.
That evening, as dusk thinned to blue, the griots gathered and the drums began. The first beats rolled like distant hooves. Awa felt the rhythm push up through the floor of the compound and into her bones, a familiar pressure that should have calmed her.
Instead it tightened. The beat stuttered and then dropped. For a breath the compound held, listening for the singular thread that had been cut.
She had to know why. She would not let the bloodless hush become the answer.
The Girl Who Listened to the Wind
The sun leaned low over Ndioum. The Festival of Drums loomed and the village tightened with preparation. Women wove cloth; young men painted djembes; elders recalled names by the fire.
Awa sat under Ngueleer, ear pressed to bark. While others chased goats she kept company with hushes. Her mother once said, "Listen well, my child. One day the wind will tell you something important."
At dusk a faint tremor moved through the trunk. The wind sharpened; dust rose. Her breath stopped.
At the festival the baobab stood wrapped in cloth, offerings at its roots. The griots set the rhythm; the drums began—deep, patient, like a giant’s heartbeat. Awa’s pulse matched the beat.
And then—the tree moved.
It was not wind that made it sway but the drum. A shiver first, then a longer motion. The crowd hushed; the griots’ hands froze.
A heavy hush followed. The festival felt weighty with old demands. Awa knew this was a beginning.
The Curse of the Silent Drums
That night Awa sought Grandmother Fanta. "You saw it," Fanta said. Awa nodded. The elder told how a greedy chief stole the sacred drum and carried its song away; the land cursed itself and Ngueleer waited.
Awa chose to find it.


















