Cape Maclear — Yasmin, Makata, and Chad

Cape Maclear — O Yasmin, o Makata e o Chad

📍 Cape Maclear, Malawi

The day started with delivering the Benfica jersey to Mr. James, poor guy, he kept messaging me every twenty minutes so I wouldn't forget. Mr. James was the manager of a lodge near ours, but a better-looking one (the lodge). He had welcomed us on the first night with genuine joy at our presence. Then we walked to Otter Point, at the end of the bay. It was a small national park, which seemed more like an effort to prevent the village from expanding beyond that point. Tomek and Diego went hiking, which gave us photos from the top of the cliff, while Fernando and I stayed on the lower, flatter part, at lake level. The vendors chased the Tomek/Diego duo; they know where the gold is. I had already shared that Cape Maclear isn't dazzling gastronomically, but yesterday we discovered a good restaurant. When I say “discovered,” I'm being literal, because it wasn't easy. “Where can you eat really, really, really well here?” I asked a man on the street on the way back. “Lois Makata,” he said without hesitation, eliciting a smile and a slight closing of eyes from the friends beside him. “Okay, and where is it?” “You just have to go back, you'll see it right, right in front of you, you can't miss it.” Okay. We walked and kept asking for Makata. “Further ahead,” they said, until someone replied, “You've already passed it.” Damn. This Makata place was a house that looked abandoned, closed, and without any, absolutely no, advertising or allusion to anything on the outside. I shouted, “Are you open?” “Yes, we are,” they shouted back from behind the fifty locks that secured the door. When they finally managed to open the doors, a boneless chicken cooked with vegetables awaited us, which tasted like life itself. We didn't leave without ensuring they could deliver dinner to our cabins. We'd have Uber Eats from Lois Makata, except she would have to find us, and that would certainly be easier. The afternoon was lazy by the lake, near our cabins, and that's when we had the big moment of the day. Yasmin returned, the guy who saved us yesterday from the “kayak shipwreck,” and without speaking a word of English, he told us everything. He came to thank us for our retribution yesterday. He wore the Benfica jersey and he was glorious: in his humility, his gratitude, his courage. He disarmed us like a mozer, he dribbled past us like a chalana. Yasmin was huge, and we were moved. I also received a special souvenir from my travel partners on this third leg, and what great company they've been. After dinner, we went to the local bar, Salalanga, to watch Real Madrid vs. Man City. There were only three people and little excitement, because Real was winning 3-0. Then we returned home, to end the day with a conversation with Chad about politics in Malawi. We heard his frustration at not being able to do anything against corruption and, at 31, apparently having given up on being able to change things for the better. My place was to listen, and that's what I did.

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