The Boy and the Lake by Femi Salami
When a child goes missing in a West African village, two friends dare to explore the forbidden Lake. Image generated with OpenAI My name is Gabriel, and my favorite place in the whole wide world is the dusty path by the little river behind our house. That's where I go to think, and to sing. Everyone in Oyo knows the song. You hear bakers singing it as they knead dough, and farmers humming it in the fields. It goes: "Under the orange tree, that is where we play. We are happy, we are cheerful. Under the orange tree. Orange, Orange, Orange." No one knows what it means. There isn't a single orange tree in Oyo! But it's cheerful, and it sticks in your head like honey. My partner in crime is Lara, from the village across the bridge. She's braver than any boy I know, with eyes that are always plotting. Our favorite game is trying to sneak past the grim-faced guards at the entrance to the Lake of Oyo. We've never made it. The Lake is old and solemn. Every ye...