The village of Kivuli lay in a shallow valley, its thatched roofs huddling together like a quilt against the morning chill. A narrow river sang a lazy tune past the market square, where stalls of bright fabrics, spiced peanuts, and fresh produce formed a colorful maze. It was the kind of place where everyone knew each other’s birthdays and the gossip traveled faster than the wind
Samuel arrived there not by choice but by appointment. The wealthy tycoon, Mr. Harlow, had hired him as a personal assistant a tittle that meant Samuel got a generous stipend a silk wardrobe, and the freedom to spend his days judging the simplicity of village life from the shade of the old baobah tree He would stroll through the square with a half-smile, noting the “improper” way the women folded their napkins and the “excessive” chatter of the children.
Jojo, on the other hand, was already at the market before the rooster crowed Her family’s bakery, “sunrise Bakes” was the heart of the square. The scent of yeasty dough and cinnamon swirled around her as she arranged trays of golden roll, buttered croissant and amodest pile of orange-glazed pasties she had experimented with the night before. She live with her parents in a modest mud-brick house just beyond the well, and every evening she helped her mother knead dough while her father repaired the old wooden cart they used for deliveries