Ah, dear compatriots, let us speak of the most fashionable temptation in Gishushu. It began, as these stories often do, with innocent window shopping.
There it hung in prime display, a sleek, towering G+12 trouser, shimmering under the Kigali sun like a young man freshly introduced to designer fabric. It did not merely exist; it announced itself. Heads turned. Conversations paused. Even the hurried slowed their steps, if only for a moment.
"What a beautiful piece,” murmured passersby. "Look at the trim, the finish, the modern texture.” It was the kind of admiration usually reserved for things that promise to redefine a horizon or at least a wardrobe.
The trouser, naturally, understood its moment. It stood with quiet confidence, seams aligned, posture impeccable, as though fully aware it had already secured a place in the city’s imagination.
Many walked past more than once. Something about the cut felt ambitious. Not wrong, not flawed, just daring in a way that invited a second look. A quiet question lingered: would it truly fit? But admiration has a way of softening doubt, and life moved on.
Still, the trouser had presence. Days passed, yet attention returned, almost involuntarily. There it remained, unchanged, unbothered, irresistible. Its fabric seemed to glow with renewed confidence, as though each glance strengthened its appeal.
Curiosity grew. A closer look followed. The fabric felt premium, smooth to the touch, firm in structure, promising durability and distinction. This was no ordinary garment; it was an experience waiting to happen. And yet, somewhere in the collective mind, a small voice persisted, perhaps a little more time.
Then came the consultations. Friends, advisors, and the ever-wise garment technologist gathered in spirited agreement. "It’s a remarkable piece,” they declared. "Bold. Visionary. Not everything great reveals itself immediately.” Some added, with knowing nods, that true elegance often requires a leap of faith.
And so, in a moment fueled by vision and persuasion, the pull proved irresistible. The trouser was taken home.
"If it doesn’t fit perfectly,” came the confident resolve, "the diet will adjust accordingly. And if not, the best tailor in town will make it fit.”
Well. The diet, it seems, has not delivered. And the trouser has since been sent away for emergency refitting. All ears now remain close to the ground, waiting to hear whether the tailor succeeds.
In the meantime, the very trouser that once seduced boardrooms and stirred the envy of window shoppers now sits exposed at the tailor’s workshop - a quiet monument to the risks of falling for what dazzles in the window while ignoring that persistent inner question: but does it actually fit?
One hopes that next time, diets will not be trusted as the primary tailoring strategy, especially when the adjustments are required after three years. There is always the possibility that the tailor, after careful inspection, may simply recommend a new purchase altogether, citing fabric stretched beyond repair.
Perhaps, in the end, what is most needed are not impressive trousers, but fitting ones, before they are worn in public.
And yet, hope remains: that when the trouser returns, as it surely will, its appeal will carry an even greater distinction. Not just for how it once captivated from the window, but for how well it ultimately fits.
The writer is an ideator and alternative development financing strategist.