By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu
Africa’s Talking Drum: The Footprints Tortoise Could Not Erase
The old people of Nandala say every baobab remembers a story. This is the one they tell whenever friendship is placed on the scales against greed.

It was a land where baobab trees stretched their crooked arms towards the sky, antelopes raced the wind across the savannah, and every animal understood that friendship was wealth no drought could steal.
Among all the creatures of Nandala, none were closer than Tortoise and Antelope. They were an unlikely pair. Antelope was swift, open-hearted and generous. Tortoise was slow, thoughtful and blessed with a mind that could untie the tightest knot.
Whenever Antelope found sweet berries, he called Tortoise. Whenever Tortoise discovered medicinal roots, he shared them with Antelope. Their friendship became the kind elders pointed at whenever young ones quarrelled.
One dry season, when the rivers shrank and the grass turned the colour of old straw, the two friends wandered farther than they had ever gone in search of food.
Antelope suddenly stopped.
“Tortoise,” he whispered, brushing aside a curtain of thorn branches, “come here. I think the earth has hidden a miracle.”
Beyond the thorns lay a valley untouched by the drought. Green grass rippled in the breeze, fruit trees bent under their harvest, wild yams pushed through the rich soil, and a spring flowed quietly between smooth stones.
For a while, none of them spoke.
Then Antelope smiled.
“My mother used to say that the Creator never closes every door at once. Today, I know she was right.”
Tortoise dipped his hands into the cool water.
“If every thirsty animal finds this place tomorrow, it will become bare before the next moon.”
Antelope nodded.
“Then let this be our secret. We shall take only what we need and return thanks each time we leave. A greedy stomach has never learned the language of gratitude.”
“I give you my word,” Tortoise replied.
From that day, they visited the hidden valley only when hunger became unbearable. They harvested carefully and never wasted what nature offered.
Their secret remained safe. Or so Antelope believed.
One evening, as the sun melted behind the hills, Monkey swung down from a branch and laughed.
“My friends, every animal is growing thinner except the two of you. Have you discovered a place where the drought forgot to visit?”
Antelope chuckled.
“The forest rewards those who keep walking.”
Monkey scratched his head.
“You always answer a question with another journey.”
After he left, Tortoise looked at Antelope.
“You could have trusted him.”
Antelope shook his head gently.
“My father often said, ‘A calabash filled to the brim is carried with both hands.’ Some blessings survive only because they are protected.”
Tortoise said nothing, but the words settled uneasily inside him.
That night sleep refused to visit his eyes. As he stared at the stars, another voice spoke within him.
“Why should the valley belong to two? Why not to one? If Antelope were gone, no one would question how often I returned.”
He tried not to silence the thought. Instead, he fed it.
An old proverb says that the rat does not become trapped the day it sees the bait; it becomes trapped the day it begins to admire it.
A few days later, while searching for herbs near the edge of the forest, Tortoise met three hunters resting beneath an acacia tree.
One of them sighed.
“We have walked for days without finding game. Even the birds seem to have abandoned this forest.”
Another looked at Tortoise’s healthy appearance and narrowed his eyes.
“You don’t look like an animal that has been hungry.”
Tortoise hesitated. He remembered Antelope’s laughter beside the spring. He remembered the promise he had made.
Then he remembered the overflowing valley.
“If I showed you where animals still gather,” he asked quietly, “what would you give me?”
The oldest hunter smiled.
“We seek meat, not quarrels. Show us the place, and no harm will come to you.”
Tortoise lowered his head. At that moment, he traded loyalty for convenience without realising that betrayal always charges more than it promises.
The following morning, Antelope arrived at the valley carrying a basket woven from fresh reeds.
“I thought we should gather enough fruit for the old ones,” he said cheerfully. “Elephant has not eaten well for days.”
Tortoise forced a smile.
“That is kind of you.”
Before another word could be spoken, dogs barked from the hills. Branches snapped.
Suddenly, voices tore through the stillness.
“There! They’re heading for the spring!”
Antelope froze.
“Tortoise… hunters?”
Fear swept across the valley like a bushfire. Birds burst into the sky. Guinea fowls scattered into the tall grass. Monkeys screamed from the trees.
Antelope turned to his friend.
“How did they find this place?”
Tortoise opened his mouth, but guilt held his tongue captive. In that single moment, Antelope understood everything.
He looked at Tortoise, not with anger, but with a sadness that seemed too heavy for words.
“Do you remember the day I pulled you from the flooded stream?”
Tortoise nods.
“Do you remember the day I stood before Leopard and told him you were under my protection?”
Tortoise nods again.
Then Antelope says quietly:
“I never knew I should have protected myself from you.”
“You led them here.”
It was not a question. Before Tortoise could answer, Antelope leapt over the spring and disappeared into the forest with the hunters close behind.
By sunset the hunters returned empty-handed, cursing their wasted efforts before disappearing beyond the hills.
The valley survived but the friendship did not.
News travels through the forest the way smoke travels through the wind. Before another sunrise, every animal had heard what happened, and they gathered beneath the Great Baobab to hear Tortoise’s side of the story.
Elephant, whose memory stretched further than any living creature, looked at Tortoise and asked calmly, “My son, is what we have heard true?”
Tortoise stared at the ground.
“I was hungry.”
Elephant sighed.
“So was every animal here.”
“I was afraid the valley would one day be taken from me.”
Antelope stepped forward.
“And so you handed it to strangers?”
Tortoise’s voice trembled.
“I never wished you harm.”
Antelope looked at him for a long moment before replying, “The knife does not hate the yam, yet it still cuts it. Intentions cannot mend a wound once trust has bled.”
A murmur passed through the gathering.
Elephant waited until every whisper faded before speaking.
“When a branch breaks in the forest,” he said, “another may grow in its place. But when trust breaks between friends, even time struggles to join the pieces again.”
Tortoise finally lifted his eyes.
“Grandfather, what is my punishment?”
Elephant rested his trunk against the ancient baobab.
“I have lived long enough to know that no punishment we give you will equal the one you have already given yourself. From today, no one will stop you from walking among us, but neither can anyone be forced to trust you again. Remember this, Tortoise: footprints disappear after the rain, but betrayal leaves marks no season can erase.”

The meeting ended quietly. Antelope walked away without looking back. The others followed, leaving Tortoise standing alone beneath the old baobab.
Years passed, and the hidden valley remained green, the rains returned, and new friendships blossomed across Nandala.
Yet whenever Tortoise offered advice, animals listened with caution. Whenever he made a promise, they remembered another promise he had once broken.
Only then did Tortoise understand the wisdom he had ignored: a hungry stomach can be filled before sunset, but a broken trust may remain empty for a lifetime.
And that is why the elders of Nandala still tell their children, “The hand that shares your meal should never become the hand that sells your secret.” For wealth gained through betrayal soon fades, but the footprints it leaves upon the heart can never be erased.

Moral of the Story:
Trust is earned over years but can be destroyed in a single moment of greed. Betrayal may bring temporary gain, but it leaves a wound that time alone cannot fully heal. A loyal friend is a treasure beyond riches—once lost, no wealth can buy them back.
Comment Hook:
Have you ever been betrayed by someone you trusted, or have you ever had to forgive a betrayal? Share your experience in the comments. And if this story reminded you of someone, send it to them, because some lessons are too important to keep to ourselves.
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