One night, a fire broke out in the grain storage. While others ran for water, Kpkuang walked into the flames. When the smoke cleared, the fire was gone—and so was he. Only on the scorched ground remained a single carving: a figure with no face, walking toward a sun that never set.
Some say he was a spirit. Others say a traveler cursed to never belong. But all agree—the stranger Kpkuang was never truly a stranger. He was just passing through, the way silence passes through a crowded room. the stranger kpkuang
His eyes held no malice, only distance—like a man watching a shore he'd long since sailed away from. He traded carvings for bread, never asked for shelter, and slept with his back against the baobab tree. One night, a fire broke out in the grain storage
He spoke little, and when he did, his words carried the weight of forgotten languages—soft consonants, vowels that seemed to bend the air. Children called him the stranger , but the elders whispered a different name: Kpkuang , the one who walks between rains. Only on the scorched ground remained a single
No one in the village remembered when Kpkuang first arrived. He simply appeared one mist-hung morning, sitting on the old well at the edge of the thorn fence, whittling a piece of driftwood into a shape no one could name.