Across the courtyard, in a cramped single room, sat Sipho. He was a tailor, precise and quiet, his eyes holding the kind of sadness that came from being judged too quickly. He had a limp from a childhood accident, and a birthmark that stained the left side of his face like a spilled inkwell. The neighborhood children called him “Mhlophe,” the scarred one. He rarely left his room except to buy thread or deliver a finished suit.
They didn’t speak. They didn’t need to. Sipho watched her move—the sway of her hips, the way she tapped her foot to the bassline. Thandiwe glanced at him—the way his good hand rested on his knee, the way he closed his eyes when the chorus hit.
That song, Love Me The Way I Am , was his secret prayer. He’d listen to the lyrics about acceptance, about not demanding change from a lover, and his chest would ache. He imagined a woman who would see past his limp, past his face, into the careful, gentle man who stitched beauty into seams. Lucky Dube - Love Me -The Way I Am-
When the song ended, she ladled a generous portion of maize meal into a bowl, topped it with gravy and spinach, and placed it in front of him.
“For you,” he said.
“Mine too,” he whispered.
She was standing in her doorway, wiping her hands on her apron. When she saw him approach, she didn’t flinch. She just looked at his face, then into his eyes. Across the courtyard, in a cramped single room, sat Sipho
Weeks later, on a night when the power stayed on and the neighborhood was alive with noise, Sipho finished stitching a yellow dress. He wrapped it in brown paper and walked across the courtyard. Thandiwe opened her door, and he handed it to her.