THE LION,THE LEOPARD AND THE JACKAL
In the golden savannas of the Serengeti, where the sun painted the grass in fire and the wind carried the scent of power, three mighty beasts ruled—each feared, each respected. Kiboko the Lion, king of the plains, was strength incarnate. His roar shook the earth, and none dared challenge his rule. Ndege the Leopard , swift and silent, struck from the shadows, his claws like daggers. He was the ghost of the night, unseen until it was too late. And then there was Kicheche the Jackal —smaller, weaker, but with a mind sharper than a hyena’s teeth. He watched. He waited. And he schemed. Kiboko and Ndege had long been rivals, each believing himself the true sovereign of the land. Their clashes were legendary—roars echoing through the valleys, fur flying in the dust, neither willing to yield. Kicheche, meanwhile, slunk between them, whispering in each ear when the other was not listening. "Ndege," he purred one evening, as the leopard stretched beneath the acacia tree, "Kib...