Carthage Atlantica – Opening Excerpts

Cover design for my alternate history novella Carthage Atlantica

These are the first two chapters from my newest novella, Carthage Atlantica, an alternate-history story about ancient Carthaginians from North Africa discovering North America (“Atlantis”) in 200 BC. You can purchase the full novella on Amazon.

If you wish to hear these chapters read aloud, check out this reading by Brian Cole on YouTube.

Chapter One

200 BC, in an alternate timeline

The deckhouse door slammed open as the navigator barged in, his russet-brown face soaked with sweat. “Baal-Hammon be praised, we’ve sighted land at last!”

Isceradin’s cup of wine slipped down from his grasp as he took in the sailor’s words. It took his wife Arishat’s lightning reflexes to catch it before it could shatter on the floor. Not that he would miss it too much if it did spill and break, since the liquid was well over halfway to turning into vinegar at this point. Another week at sea, and they would have nothing left to drink unless they figured out how to turn seawater fresh.

Baal-Hammon be praised, indeed.

Gisco, the stout old captain, rose from his bench and laid both hands on the navigator’s shoulder. “Are you sure you haven’t gone mad?”

“You should see for yourself, Captain,” the navigator said. “One could mistake it for nothing else!”

Little Nikkal tugged on Isceradin’s arm, her eyes gleaming with innocence and wonder. “Did they really say they’ve found land, Abba?”

He gave his daughter’s crown of curly black hair a playful rub. “We can only hope so. Let’s find out for ourselves.”

Together, Isceradin and his family followed the captain and navigator out of the deckhouse to the bow of the galley and squinted at the western horizon. It first appeared as a green line on top of the dark blue sea that grew thicker with every rhythm of the drivers’ drumming. From underneath the drumming and the sailors’ chanted shanties, there rose the frantic cawing of distant seagulls.

“You see, beloved? I told you the gods would always be at our side,” Arishat said.

“Either that, or fate has been kinder to us than usual,” Isceradin said.

He wrapped his arms around his wife’s waist and pecked the black tattooed lines on her mahogany-skinned cheek with his lips. She repaid the favor, and then their mouths locked together in an embrace tighter than the one they made with their arms. Although they had been wed for eighteen years, Isceradin had been away at the war with Rome for fifteen of those years, so Isceradin had come to savor every moment of affection like this.

“Yuck, Abba and Amma!” Nikkal cried out with her tongue sticking out.

Isceradin withdrew from the kiss with a sheepish grin. “Sorry, little one, we forgot you were watching.”

Gisco slapped Isceradin’s shoulder with a laugh. “The girl’s got to find out about those things sooner or later, my Iberian friend. And I can’t say I blame you, either. It’s a good occasion to get another taste of that sweet, dark Carthaginian flesh, isn’t it?”

The captain winked with a jab of his elbow into Isceradin’s ribs. For his part, Isceradin’s only reply was a low groan. No matter how much he considered himself a citizen of Carthage, having wetted his blade with Roman blood many times under none other than Hannibal Barca himself, Carthage would never let him forget his family’s Iberian roots. Not that he could hide them, either. Given his light tan complexion and wavy brown hair, most people would sooner confuse him with a Latin or Greek than a typical Carthaginian from Africa. For that reason, he would always appear a foreigner among his own countrymen.

Nikkal walked up to the ship’s gunwale and jumped to get a better look at the approaching landmass. “What are we going to call this place, Captain?”

“Ever heard of the story of Atlantis, young one?” Gisco answered. “This Greek philosopher named Plato wrote about it a long time ago. He said they lived on a continent in the middle of this very ocean before the god Baal-Saphon—whom the Greeks call Poseidon—sank it to punish them for their greed. So, maybe we’ll call it Atlantis in honor of that?”

“What if there are people living there?” Arishat asked. “They might have a name for it already.”

The captain held his hand over his eyes as he scanned the coastline. “If there’s people over there, I don’t see any sign of them. Not even one trail of campfire smoke coming from the trees. But, even if they were, it would probably take a while to learn their language so we could ask them. Learning languages is never quick, you know. So, we’ve got to call the place something until then.”

Isceradin shrugged. “Atlantis is as good a name as any, I suppose. Though, in the end, it’ll be up to the Sophets to decide.”

“Then I’ll pitch it to them once we reach land.”

The drivers sped up the pace of their drumming, causing the ship to accelerate towards the awaiting shore. It was the foremost of a fleet of seventy that cut westward through the sea, the violet image of the fertility goddess Tanit dancing with outspread arms on their billowing sails. Together, their drumming, chanting, and the splashing of oars merged into a cacophony as festive as any banquet back in Carthage.

When the water beneath them had faded from dark to light blue closer to the coast, all the fleet wheeled around so that their sterns faced land before backing up. Each jolted as their keels began slicing through the alabaster beach. Sailors threw down the gangplanks, and everyone aboard the vessels filed down to the sand whooping and praising Baal-Hammon and the other gods of Carthage for their merciful fortune.

From the largest and grandest of the fleet strutted Absalon and Himilco, both of whom the Senate of Carthage had appointed as Sophets to govern this new colony. Numidian youths kept the two elders cool with ostrich-plumed fans while spearmen in bronze breastplates marched before and behind them. Once the trumpets had summoned all the people onto the beach, they arranged themselves into an audience encircling the Sophets like spectators at a Greek theater.

Absalon, after taking a deep inhale of the salty air through his nostrils, was the first to speak. “My people, once citizens and subjects of Carthage, none of us can overestimate the gratitude we owe our gods for our safe passage here. Many back home said we could not make it to the end of the western ocean alive, and yet here we are, without having suffered even one casualty to the best of our knowledge.”

“And yet, our journey has only begun,” Himilco said. “We have much work to do. We have land to clear, crops to grow, and a city to build. We trust that, with all our hard work, we can claim this land for Carthage and bring forth a new age of power and prosperity for our civilization. May Baal-Hammon and all the gods continue to watch over us!”

A Gallic servant handed the pair the banner of Carthage, which hung from a mast-like cross and displayed the icon of Tanit in purple, and they planted it into the sand together. All in the audience thundered with applause.

“But first, we must learn more about this new world we’ve landed on,” Absalon said. “Who among you offers to scout for us?”

From within the crowd, Isceradin raised his hand. “I’ll lead a party inland until sundown. We’ll take note of everything this country has to offer, and maybe see if there are any human inhabitants. Then we’ll make our way back.”

Nikkal pulled at his hand. “But what if you run into trouble, Abba?”

Isceradin held his daughter up in his arms and squeezed her with loving firmness. “Then they’ll send more men to rescue us if things get too bad. But don’t you worry, if the gods have kept us alive across a whole ocean, they shouldn’t let us down here on this new land either.”

Beyond the far side of the beach, the thick greenery of deciduous trees such as oak, hickory, and chestnut rose as a towering wall. There was no telling what—or who—awaited in the shadowy depths of the forest. And, in truth, the gods had let Carthage down before. They wouldn’t have lost two wars with Rome had that not been so, despite all the sacrifices the priests had made—including the lives of dozens of noble-born children. But then, who had the heart to trouble their own child with such worry?

Isceradin gave his wife and daughter another kiss each. “If I don’t come back before sundown, keep praying for me. I’ll need all the blessings I can get.”

Chapter Two

It was not the first time Phameas had ventured into a forest. He, Isceradin, and most of the men who now made up their troop had trudged through more of that than he cared for when they were marching through northern Iberia and Gaul on their way to Rome. The muggy summertime warmth, the brushing of foliage against his face and limbs, and all the squealing mosquitoes which kept pelting his skin with itching dark bumps, were like unpleasant memories that had come back to haunt him after almost twenty years.

Back in Europe, they had to keep constant watch for packs of ravenous wolves, giant brown bears, and most of all the local Gauls, those white-skinned barbarians who were always skulking around for heads to lop off with their broadswords and claim as trophies to mount on their huts’ walls. Did such savage beasts and men lurk in the darkness beneath the woodland canopy here as well? Or maybe even worse? What was the Senate back in Carthage thinking when they sent men to this faraway place without knowing what even lay in wait?

Then again, perhaps that was the whole point of exploration. When Dido and her Phoenician expedition came to Africa to establish the trading colony that would become Carthage six centuries ago, they would have undertaken similar risks. And, it had to be admitted, back in those days, it was the very native Africans from whom Phameas and most other Carthaginians were descended that those Phoenician colonists had to fear.

So far, an hour had passed since the scouting party first penetrated the forest from the beach. Other than the occasional scurrying small creature or fluttering bird, they had yet to spot anything of interest. If nothing else, the profusion of trees here would make plentiful timber for building the new colony. Phameas had overheard some suggesting the name Atlantis, after the legendary continent that had sunk under the sea, but he would have preferred something that didn’t imply an eventual doomsday. On the other hand, “New Carthage” had already been given to a colony set up on the southern Iberian coast, and he’d be hard pressed to think of something more imaginative himself.

Another mosquito buzzed too close to Phameas’s neck for comfort. He slapped it down into a tiny pulp. “This remind you of home, Iberian?”

Isceradin snorted. “For the last time, my family is from the southern part of the peninsula, near New Carthage. It’s scrubland over there, not dense forest like this. You of all men should know that, Phameas.”

“Sorry, then, my officer. It’s only that I’m still getting used to the thought of you bedding my sister.”

“Really? You’ve had eighteen years to ‘get used to it’. And, not to boast, but she couldn’t be better off nowadays. If there really are any natives here, she’ll make quite a killing selling her textiles to them.”

“If they have anything worthy to buy them with.”

An unpleasant whiff slithered into Phameas’s nose. It was the stench of decayed flesh, like a body that lain on the battlefield for too long. Something must have died nearby. He unsheathed his falcata and probed the undergrowth with it, following the smell the way a bloodhound might.

Something cracked under his sandal. Bone. Right there, where the rotting stink was strongest, a whole human skeleton lay. Blood and scraps of flesh were still clinging to the remains, and the skull had cracked in half to reveal moldy, wrinkled fragments of brain tissue. Even after all the Romans and others he’d mutilated as a soldier of Carthage, Phameas recoiled from the sight with a yelp, nausea pouring into his insides.

“We’ve got to go back!” he said. “I’m not walking around here any longer!”

The other scouts huddled close to him, gasping and stuttering with horror as they looked upon the morbid remains. Even Isceradin’s face blanched a shade paler than usual. With a grimace, the Iberian knelt over the bones and picked up a wooden stick that lay near the skull. Hafted to it was a flint point stained dark red with dried blood.

“There are people in this land, we know that from this,” Isceradin said. “But it appears they’re still using stone tools.”

“That might not be too bad for us,” one of the other soldiers said. “It means that, if we get into trouble with them, we can hit them harder than they hit us.”

“But we don’t want to get into trouble with them,” Phameas said. “We ought to head back and stay away from those savages. I knew coming here was a bad idea!”

Isceradin held his palm out. “Hold on, we don’t know for sure how this man died. He might have been a criminal they put to death. Even if he’s a war casualty, one side might have the nobler cause. We can’t assume they’re all savages to be avoided.”

“Maybe, but I still wouldn’t want to mess with them. I say again, we should get back to camp. All those in favor?”

Phameas and almost everyone else in the party but Isceradin raised their hands, waving them about.

With a shake of his head, the Iberian muttered something in his native language. “Fair enough if that’s how you all vote. But we could’ve pressed on to find fresh water, at least.”

As the party hiked over the tracks their sandals had already left in the damp and spongy earth, the forest interior grew darker, and not only because the sunbeams arrowing through the canopy had dimmed with time’s passage. If the tribes here were anything like the Gauls, or even those Iberians who prowled the peninsula beyond the areas under Carthaginian influence, they would be worse than the most rabid wolves. Even the more civilized nations could be treacherous, the Romans being the exemplar par excellence of that. It was an experience Phameas had hoped to have left behind in the past.

A whistling cry pierced the calm within the forest. All the Carthaginians halted. Phameas’s heart pounded like a stampede of feral horses across the grasslands of Numidia back in Africa, the sweat on his brow chillier than a breeze among the Alps. Ahead of him, leaves in the undergrowth rustled, with shadows flashing between the trees and bushes.

From the cover of the brush emerged men in deerskin loincloths and trousers. Their muscular, stocky bodies were of a bronze hue, perhaps a little darker than Isceradin, the Iberian, but much less so than the Carthaginians proper, with their faces and limbs striped with tattooed black lines. Their straight black hair was shorn into crests with feathers attached to them, and many had pieces of bone or ivory piercing their noses and ears. Gripping spears tipped with flint points, these strange men stared at the Carthaginian party with narrowed eyes.

Phameas held his empty hands up in a gesture of surrender. “We won’t hurt you, see? Please, I beg you, have mercy on us…”

The local warriors blinked at one another, whispering in a language Phameas had never heard in his life.

“I doubt they know a word of Carthaginian,” Isceradin said.

“Fair enough,” Phameas said.

He patted himself on his breastplate of toughened linen while looking into the eyes of the native man nearest him. “Phameas. My name is Phameas.”

The warrior squinted at him. “Fah-me-us?”

“Yes, Phameas!” Phameas tapped his correspondent on the shoulder. “And you?”

“Huh, ‘and you’?” The native had less luck pronouncing the Carthaginian right.

Isceradin shook his head. “He wouldn’t know what ‘and you’ means yet, Phameas.”

The foremost of the native troop, a tall man with a necklace of bear claws and teeth, pointed his finger up with a nod, as if he had figured something out. He then tapped his own breast. “Sukamek.”

“Sue-ka-meck,” Isceradin repeated while pointing to the man.

The one who called himself Sukamek nodded with a smile, and then pointed back to the Iberian.

Isceradin replied with his own name and hand to his breastplate. He then drew an invisible circle that, from their point of view, would include the whole Carthaginian troop. “Carthaginians.”

“Carthaginians,” Sukamek repeated. He then drew a similar circle around his own companions. “Inu’naabe.”

“In-new-knob-bay?” Phameas recited.

The other Inu’naabe men snickered among themselves, but Sukamek gave Phameas an affirming nod while touching his shoulder. “Phameas.”

It warmed Phameas inside to see that the native had gotten his name right. Assuming he understood it to be a name, of course. Regardless, Phameas showed his gratitude by touching Sukamek in turn while saying his name the best he could. This time, not one of the Inu’naabe even so much as sneered or tittered.

These strange locals, as primitive as their attire and weaponry may have appeared, didn’t seem like such a bad lot after all. There were civilized men out there who could be far less welcoming than them.

Sukamek turned to face the forest behind his band and waved his hand toward it, a clear signal requesting that they follow him.

“I think he’s inviting us to his village, or wherever they live,” Isceradin said. “It can’t hurt to pay them a quick visit before sundown.”

“If you say so,” Phameas said. “They do seem the hospitable sort.”

Even so, he had not forgotten the spear they had found near the rotting skeleton. Or how, with its flint point, it so closely resembled the spears the Inu’naabe warriors carried.

The Black Cross

Grayscale version of my illustration for “The Black Cross”.

1940

The uneven chopping of the rickety old fan was never enough to beat back the heat of a San Diego summer. I’ve been meaning to install a new one, but business hasn’t been too good for me since the big depression started. Most workdays see me baking in my little office for hours, waiting for a call, a visit, or anything else to liven things up. So far as the morning was proceeding, today looked like it wasn’t going to be much different from the usual.

I was ready to pour myself a glass of lukewarm bourbon for the slightest refreshment when Lizzie, my petite blonde secretary, chimed in with an announcement and a pearly smile. “Someone’s here to see you, Mr. O’Sullivan.”

I straightened myself in my chair and wiped the sweat off my brow. She held the door open, and there shuffled in a gentleman in a white robe with a tiny gold cross hanging from his neck. He was balding at the top, the hair on the side fading from black to gray, and his tawny complexion was typical for a Mexican or other mestizo. I don’t normally receive clients from the swarthier races, but my family’s always been Catholic, so as far as I was concerned, he would have been a brother by faith if not by blood.

“Well, well, it’s not every day I have a man of the cloth come down to my humble workplace,” I said. “Not that it’s an unwelcome change of pace, to be honest. How can I help you?”

The old priest entwined his hands with a calm smile. “Good morning to you, Señor O’Sullivan. Call me Father Manuel, of the Mission Santa Isabella, a little out into the countryside east of town. It’s small as the old missions go, I will admit, and not very remarkable until recently.”

“Until recently? How so?”

“I know a Frenchman by the name of Pierre Dupont who is like an explorer or antiquarian. He was in the Belgian Congo a year ago, and he was kind enough to donate to our establishment a special relic he’d uncovered there. But first, Señor, have you heard of the legend of Prester John?”

I scratched the back of my head. “Can’t say I recall the name.”

“They say he was descended from one the three wise men who visited baby Christ, ruling over a Christian kingdom hidden somewhere in the Orient. At first, people thought he was in India or perhaps Central Asia, but then the Portuguese started looking for him in darkest Africa. And now my friend Pierre believes he has located the ruins of Prester John’s kingdom, whence he obtained this.”

Father Manuel laid a photograph on my desk. Despite the picture’s murky quality, I could make out a dark artifact shaped like a thick cross or arithmetic plus sign, with an ovular human face sculpted in its center, standing on a stone altar amidst tropical vegetation. The face’s exaggerated features resembled those of a native African mask or idol, but situated on a cross like that, it did nonetheless recall the Crucifixion.

“Imagine, this holy Christian icon has lain rotting in the jungle, surrounded by pagan ignorance, for who knows how many centuries!” the priest said. “It is only by the grace of God that my friend Pierre has found it, brought it back to civilization, and entrusted our mission with protecting it. And protect it we have, until it went missing last night.”

I leaned forward. “Went missing? Any idea where it could have gone, Father?”

“That is where you come in, Señor. At first, we tried contacting the police, but they told us they were stretched too thin, and you know how they are with brown folk like us anyway. So, it is to you we turn. We need your keen eyes to examine the scene of the crime and find who may have taken the cross and why. If you can get it back, the mission would be most grateful.”

Father Manuel bowed his head with palms together as if in prayer. His case was more serious than what I usually received. This cross of his wouldn’t have been the first stolen article I’d been asked to retrieve, but it sounded much more significant than, say, a fancy necklace or a missing cat. The Lord Himself might judge me if I refused.

“I would be more than happy to help, but it’ll cost you a bit,” I said. “Nothing personal, it’s just business.”

“Oh, I expected as much, my child,” he replied. “How does five thousand sound?”

I could not help but grin like a schoolboy examining a shiny new toy he’d gotten for Christmas. “It’s more than what most folks offer me.”

“Excellent! You are truly blessed, Señor O’Sullivan. I must warn you, though, the scene is a bit grisly.”

For once, despite the summertime temperature, I felt a tingling chill in my back.

Continue reading “The Black Cross”

The Slave Prince of Zimbabwe – Excerpts

Book cover for The Slave Prince of Zimbabwe, designed by the author himself

Chapter One

Southern Africa, 1215 AD

Even as a slim crescent in the black heavens, the moon bestowed enough light upon the ramparts to give their layers of granite blocks a silver luster. These walls rose so high that not even the tallest giraffes of this far southern country could crane their necks up to look over them… or so Drazhan Khazanov imagined. Not that the man from the distant land known as Ruthenia had never seen grand architecture in his life, but after riding across wild savanna and hills for the past several days, he had not expected to discover such a colossal castle in this remote hinterland.

With defenses like that to scale, his mission would present more of a challenge than expected. Such would be the price of his freedom.

It was not like Drazhan had arrived unprepared. After tethering his donkey to an aloe tree, the Ruthenian removed a coil of rope from his packsaddle and stole up to the foot of the wall on the toes of his boots. He turned his head sideways twice to check if there were any glowing balls of guards’ torchlight drifting over the top.

Nothing. Drazhan unwound the rope, whirled one end above his head as high as he could, and flung it over the wall’s upper edge until he heard the faint clink of the attached grappling hook. He tugged to ensure it had found a secure purchase and then heaved himself up the rampart’s height, sprinting over its surface to propel himself faster.

Although the mighty fortification was almost twenty feet wide where Drazhan had scaled it, it did not have the parapets or crenellations that many others across the known world sported to shield guards or archers. Instead, his hook had caught onto one of several soapstone posts sticking up from the wall, those posts carved in the form of seated eagles, the heraldic birds of the Kingdom of Zimbabwe. Studying the wall again, the Ruthenian could not find any stairs or ladders connecting the top of the wall to the ground. Had the Zimbabwean palace’s architects ever intended for men to mount these defenses? Drazhan didn’t think so.

Still, it was a view that commanded awe, even at night. Within the space enclosed by the great ramparts sat several neighborhoods of thatch-roofed rondavels, many of which were separated from one another with shorter inner walls, built of the same stone as the outer wall.

Overlooking this entire complex to the southeast was a stout, knob-topped tower — the royal granary, as Drazhan recalled being informed. If he squinted through the darkness to the northwest, looking beyond the whole palatial enclosure, he could tease out the moonlit contours of an even vaster city of huts sprawling to the horizon, the smog left behind by evening cooking fires still floating over it.

Or, he wondered, did that burning smell have something to do with the orange firelight flickering through the open entryway within the outer wall further north of him?

The Ruthenian glided along the base of the wall until he was directly right above the entrance. Two men stood outside next to torches on posts, each man armed with an iron spear and a cowhide shield. Drazhan looked at the situation and reasoned he could possibly carry on his mission while leaving them alone. Could he work without them looking?

It would be safer to draw them away from the picture altogether, he concluded.

He unslung his bow and shot an arrow far into the distant blackness. While it flew, he hid from the men’s sight, lying flat down on the top of the wall. Then the guards, upon hearing the impact, hurried off to investigate where his arrow had hit. Perfect.

Drazhan hopped into a mopane tree at the rampart’s inner flank and climbed down into the enclosure’s dusty floor, careful not to let the leaves and branches scratch him too loudly. Having memorized the layout of the royal complex from his earlier scans, he tiptoed through a labyrinth of huts and inner walls, hovering his right hand above his sheathed saber’s hilt just in case things went sour. He squeezed himself through a gap in one of the interior walls — and suddenly found himself standing before the largest hut in the area, which sat alone within its own subdivision.

If Zimbabwean rulers were like those of every other kingdom in the world, this had to be their Mambokadzi’s bedchamber.

The Ruthenian stepped into the hut through an arched doorway framed with elephant tusks. Narrow rectangular apertures in the building’s earthen sides drew in enough moonlight to reveal a broad bed atop a gold-ringed ebony frame in the middle of the room. The lion-skin bedspread, fringed with leopard hide, rose and fell with gentle regularity over a form with curves like an hourglass.

Drazhan peeled off both the bedspread and cotton sheets for a better view at his mission’s target. He saw her voluptuous figure, dark and sleek as onyx, and unclothed except for the copper, ivory, and diamond-studded gold jewelry looped around her limbs, neck, and brow. Even the short, frizzy coils of her hair sparkled like the stars in the sky above. Beneath each of her eyes ran a short line of dot-shaped scarifications, which accentuated her beauty in Drazhan’s eyes, even if other Ruthenians would have considered it an ugly heathen custom. Small wonder his master wanted this woman in his harem!

Then Drazhan noticed something else, clutched between her fingers as she slept. A glinting dagger sporting three elongated blades, like a forked stiletto.

He would have to disarm her first. Holding his breath, he began by pinching the dagger’s hilt and sliding it out of her hands. Her grip tightened. Once it relaxed again, he inserted his fingertips under hers and pulled them open without any sudden jerks, releasing the weapon at last. She didn’t stir. He smirked with triumph and reached to touch the stiletto himself.

Something growled behind him. A pair of yellow dots blazed like twin flames in the shadows beside the bed, with bared fangs beneath them glistening wet with drool. The Ruthenian stepped back to the doorway and tore out his saber, brandishing it as a warning threat. Stepping into the light, the black leopard responded with a cough-like roar, launching hot spittle onto his face and flinging its front paw at him. Its claws sliced through the fabric of his tunic to cut the skin of his chest.

Drazhan staggered backward against a dresser as the feline assailant sprang for another attack. He thrust his fist into its nose. With a high-pitched yowl, the cat rolled on the floor away from him before leaping back onto its paws. Drazhan charged with his saber drawn.

Something flashed before his eyes and pried it out of his hands.

The Mambokadzi had caught the Ruthenian’s saber between the blades of her stiletto. With one flick of her wrist, she threw the sword past her bed.

The leopard lowered itself to the ground, tail lashing, glaring at Drazhan. When the woman patted its head, the beast relaxed into a resting posture like an obedient housecat.

“Restrain yourself now, Chatunga,” the Mambokadzi said. “You may eat later. First, I must know who our inopportune visitor is.”

She pointed her dagger at the Ruthenian, the middle of its three blades digging into his throat. “You heard me. Who are you and who sent you?”

He grinned with the desperation of a boy caught in misbehavior. “Call me Drazhan of Ruthenia. And it was the Sultan of Kilwa who sent me to, uh…”

The Mambokadzi’s facial muscles crinkled with disgust. “Oh, him? I know what that Swahili jackal wants. I even figured he’d go to any lengths to get it, after all the offers I’ve turned down from him. Though I’d have never expected him to send a pale European like you…”

“If you must know, Your Highness, I didn’t come all the way to these parts by choice. I was…brought here, against my will, through many changing hands. The Sultan promised that if I could deliver you to him, he’d give me back the freedom I’ve been robbed of for so long.”

Drazhan pulled up one of his sleeves to expose a dark red welt on his shoulder, one of many his body had collected ever since those Cuman raiders from the steppes had dragged him away from his village as a youth.

The Mambokadzi’s features softened, a twinkle of sympathy in her eyes. She withdrew her stiletto. “You poor soul. Nobody on Mwari Almighty’s earth should have to endure such abuse at the hands of men.”

“So, would you know of another way I could earn my freedom back?” Drazhan asked. “It isn’t like I can return to Kilwa and buy it from him without you. To a man like him, O Mambokadzi, you would be the ultimate trophy—as would your kingdom once you are joined.”

“Ugh, if only you could just put that greedy little lecher out of his misery. After all, a dead man can’t own a living one, can he?”

“But then one of his family would take his place as Sultan. And whomever they might be, they would never forgive me even if I were freed.”

“Oh, really? And how do you think my people would feel if you carried me off to your Sultan? Do you believe that they would let their Mambokadzi languish in a harem as his ‘trophy’ while he pilfers our wealth? And would you want them all to suffer just so you can be free?”

Drazhan opened his mouth, but no words could come out. No kingdom or people could be worth his freedom as one man. Nor should any woman, queen or not, be forced into a man’s possession. If so, he would be trading his own freedom for hers. Yet taking his master’s life didn’t seem like a better solution, especially if it led to that man’s grieving family seeking vengeance against his slayer.

The Mambokadzi’s full lips stretched into a sly smile. “If you can’t think of an answer to your dilemma, I might have one. You wouldn’t mind staying here a little longer, would you, Drazhan?”

He furrowed his brow. “What do you mean?”

“Let’s just say that I may know of a way to, ahem, ‘coax’ your Sultan into freeing you. It might not please him at first, and he might even fight it at first. But while he and I are negotiating our terms, you and I can get to know each other better. How does that sound, handsome one?”

She extended an arm to stroke the yellow hair flowing down from Drazhan’s fur-capped head, her eyelashes fluttering. Warmth swelled both in his cheeks and crotch. He chuckled. “If you say so, O Mambokadzi of Zimbabwe.”

“Call me Ruvarashe, or Ruva for short. Oh, and this would be my little cub, Chatunga. I’m sure you two will get along… won’t you?”

She gave her leopard an affectionate rub on its head, but the big cat’s luminous eyes were still drawn arrows aimed at their Ruthenian guest. He could swear he had heard the beast hiss through its fangs.

Drazhan shrugged. “I’m sure he and I will be able to cope with one another, eventually.”

“I must say, though, you could stand to sharpen your fighting skills while you’re staying with me,” Ruva said. “A big, strong warrior like you shouldn’t be so easy to disarm.”

“C’mon, you only caught me off guard. I could cleave any man’s skull past the chin if I wanted to, mark my words!”

Ruva cocked an eyebrow. “Sure, you could. We’ll see how you fare in practice against my soldiers over the coming weeks.”

Chapter Two

Many mtepe plied the azure waters east of Kilwa’s coast, driven by the breezes that pushed woven palm-frond sails. The shark-finned junks moored to the harbor within view of the Sultan’s palace dwarfed these native boats like whales amongst a vast school of herring. Shimmering steel rivers of armored soldiers poured from the wooden leviathans’ decks down wide gangplanks, flooding onto the piers and following the strutting, silk-robed officials.

Even when watching this arrival from the security of his balcony, in the balmy morning air, Sultan Hussein ibn Suleiman shivered with anger and dread like it was a far northern winter. They had promised to be more patient with him, to give him one more chance. They had no business coming here so soon, before he was ready. Nonetheless, he could not refuse them. He may have been the son of one of the greatest conquering Sultans in Swahili history, but they had the mightiest empire in the known world. It was no contest. 

If the Sultan had anyone to blame for the terrible situation in which he found himself, it was his damned Ruthenian bodyguard. What was taking that pale-skinned slave so long? He should have come back with the Mambokadzi at least half a month ago.

There was no more time to waste fretting. The Sultan’s visitors would be banging on his door any moment. Already, he could hear the chinking of their henchmen’s lamellar armor as they advanced along the palm-lined shore, parallel to the palace’s southeastern wall.

One of his younger servants dashed out onto the balcony with a papyrus scroll. “It’s from the Mambokadzi of Zimbabwe, Your Majesty.”

Underneath his umber skin, the blood drained from the Sultan’s face, chilling the air around him even more. “Can it wait? I have important business to attend to.”

After dismissing the boy, he hurried through the arched coral-stone hallways to the royal kitchen. “Fix up the most lavish breakfast you can! You have two hours!” he barked.   While his cooks went to work, the other servants laid down a long carpet on one side of the audience courtyard for the dishes to be placed. The Sultan took his seat at one end. Sweat streamed down his brow as his crossed legs continued to tremble.

Before long, servers were scurrying out with platters of fruit, fish, and fried mandazi pastries as his guests strode into the sunlight with their armed retinue. Foremost among them was a tall, clean-shaven man, the embroidered image of a gold-scaled, serpentine monster twisting over his blood-red hanfu. A proud sneer crossed his light yellow-brown face, as if sculpted that way by Allah Himself.

The Sultan spread his arms apart and bowed his head. “Salam aleikum to you, Minister Wong Dongxiang. You arrived on time for breakfast.”

He raised a porcelain cup for a serving girl, who began to pour a steaming hot cup of coveted Ethiopian coffee. In her haste, she sent half the scalding liquid cascading onto his knee. He winced and groaned, his anger quickly triggered amidst the other tension gripping him, but he compelled himself not to chastise her in front of the imperial minister.

Wong Dongxiang looked at the growing spread of food, a sneer crossing his face. “It appears you were quick to prepare this ‘feast’.”

“In my defense, you did return sooner than I anticipated,” the Sultan said. “I daresay you ambushed me before I was ready.”

“Before you were ready?” Wong folded his arms and began chuckling. “I take it you still haven’t had luck courting that Mambokadzi of Zimbabwe.”

“No, I am afraid she still hasn’t been receptive to my offers. Therefore, I’ve had to send one of my slaves to go fetch her for me. Normally I wouldn’t resort to such methods, mind you, but as you know, I am a desperate man.”

“Which explains all your delays, O Sultan of Kilwa. I speak for both myself and my Emperor when I say we’re on the sharpest edge of our patience with you. If one more year goes by without the repayment we’re owed, your little Sultanate will be blasted into dust.”

The Sultan’s messenger barged in again, still with the scroll in his hand. “Since you mentioned the Mambokadzi, that brings me to what she sent us today,” he said, looking up from the scroll. “She says she has Drazhan the Ruthenian captive, Your Majesty.”

The drinking cup plummeted from the Sultan’s hand, shattering into pieces while spilling coffee onto the rug. “Allah, damn it all!” he cried. “No wonder he hasn’t come back.”

“She says she’ll return your slave to you only if you surrender your pursuit of her once and for all,” the messenger said.

Wong Dongxiang snickered behind his thin lips. “Sounds like a scenario you should have accounted for. So much for your hopes of paying out from her treasury! Where will you find the spare coin for us now, O Sultan?”

Ever since he was a boy, the future Sultan, Hussein, had dreamed of and worked toward continuing his father Suleiman’s legacy as a conquering uniter of Swahili cities. Instead, so far, he had squandered his adulthood fighting his brothers over the throne. They were like hyenas over a carcass, to say nothing of how their squabbling had drained the Sultanate’s coffers. Had the Chinese not lent him coin and other aid, Hussein would have never secured his place as the next Sultan. Now he realized that by making those deals, he had taken himself—and his people—out of one series of relatively petty wars into the looming shadow of a far greater and permanent danger … annihilation. His efforts to bring the wealth of Zimbabwe under his power, with its beautiful young matriarch by his side, had backfired.

He should have predicted as much. If he could not trust any of his slaves or servants to take the Mambokadzi for him, the Sultan would have to do it himself. Now he knew who could help him best.

“All may not be lost, O Minister,” he said. “I see you’ve brought quite a formidable force with you, equipped with the deadliest weapons in the world. Or so it seems to me.”

“That is a fair assessment,” Wong said with a forced grin.

“Suppose you and I were to march on Zimbabwe together,” the Sultan said. “All its wealth will become yours as my repayment to you, and the Mambokadzi will be mine at last. What do you say?”

Wong Dongxiang pressed his fingertips together, his smile spreading even wider. “Assuming all goes according to your plan, I don’t see why that would be a poor investment on our part. You have a deal.”

The Sultan looked up to the heavens, with the sun scintillating near its zenith. “Then may Allah bless us both on our campaign.”

“Priestess of the Lost Colony” Available for Preorder!

Today, I am ecstatic to announce that my debut novel Priestess of the Lost Colony is now available to preorder from the publisher Open Books Press’s website!

A headstrong Egyptian priestess, her brother, their sacked colony—and a rescue mission. When Itawaret’s beloved Per-Pehu falls to the tyrannical Scylax, she and her brother Bek lead a mission to save her captured people and depose Scylax. Along the way, they run into all kinds of perils, friends, and foes—and beasts sent by an angry goddess. Set in ancient Greece 3,500 years ago, this is a tale blending magical realism with history, high adventure with discovery . . . and Itawaret’s determination to save her people while learning her heart’s desires and realizing her deeper purpose.

Mayhem in the Menagerie

This is meant to be a sequel to an earlier story of mine titled The Battle Roar of Sekhmet, which you can also read on this website’s blog.

Reference sheet for Takhaet, an Egyptian warrior who is the protagonist of my short stories “The Battle Roar of Sekhmet” and “Mayhem at the Menagerie”.

Egypt, 1345 BC

I crouched at the edge of our raft of woven papyrus and peered down at the dark green-blue water with harpoon in hand. Near the reeds along the river’s edge, there drifted a plump tilapia almost two feet in length. I licked my lips at the thought of chowing down on its succulent flesh. The fish would feed both Nebet and I for at least one whole day, if not two.

I stabbed after the tilapia. It escaped by darting over to the reeds where it vanished. Under my breath, I cursed Sutekh’s mischief for hexing my aim yet again. The aardvark-faced Lord of Chaos had caused me nothing but grief and disappointment since we had set out on the day’s expedition this morning.

Nebet, my niece of ten years, held up a line of rope with a hook that transfixed a tiny morsel of mutton. “You sure you don’t want to use the lure, Aunt Takhi?”

I gave her a half-serious scowl while accepting her lure with a grumble. I would always protect the child with my life, but I had to admit that she had grown into quite the smart mouth over the last few years.

I plopped the hook into the water. “I must have underestimated how rusted my fishing skills have grown. When I was your age, Nebet, I would put all the boys to shame at this!”

“Maybe find yourself a man who would do the fishing for you?” Nebet asked. “There should be plenty to go around, and most of them seem to like you.”

I raised my eyebrow. “How would you know that?”

“Whenever you go by, they always seem to look at you twice. And you know that old Vizier Ay from way back? I remember he sounded like he wanted you for himself.”

The memory of that shriveled husk of a man, that lecherous lackey of the false Pharaoh, flooded the inside of my mouth with a sour flavor. The passage of five years since we last crossed paths had not softened my distaste for him and his minions. I would sooner swim with crocodiles than occupy the same room as him.

“You have seen much more than any child your age should see, my little niece,” I said. “As far as men are concerned, the problem I have isn’t that I can’t attract any. If anything, they like me more than I like any of them.”

“Then maybe you like women more, Aunt Takhi?” Nebet said. “Maybe you could have another woman in place of a man?”

I rolled my eyes with a laugh. “No, no, I prefer men in the way you mean. It is only that I haven’t found a man worthy of our house. Maybe I should consult the priestesses of Hetheru. They might know why.”

For most of my life, it was Sekhmet I had served more than any of the other old gods or goddesses. Yet the stories held that Sekhmet, she of the lion mask and blood-stained gown, was in truth another guise of the loving bovine Hetheru. Perhaps calling upon my patron goddess would convince her to shift forms and answer my prayer for love.

“I thought there weren’t any more priestesses of Hetheru?” Nebet said. “The Pharaoh shut all their temples down long ago. Don’t you remember?”

She was right. Too often, my mind drifted back to the better days of my youth, before the false Pharaoh had assumed the throne and desecrated everything his righteous father had built and maintained. I had to return to the present, not think too much of the past or future, and get back to fishing.

I checked our hook beneath the water’s surface. The bait had disappeared, yet there was no fish still attached. They must had figured how to bite off the meat without getting themselves caught. How foolish I had been to let myself get distracted!

A wave rocked our raft from the side. Over by the far bank of the river, a man screamed while splashing and thrashing his arms in the air. Zipping through the water towards him was the bumpy, olive-brown wedge of a crocodile’s head.

Continue reading “Mayhem in the Menagerie”

Hunting for Womanhood

I wrote and revised this short coming-of-age tale for a creative-writing assignment back in the spring of 2013, during my studies at UCSD. The writing may be rough compared to more recent work I’ve posted here, but I’m still partial to the unique little world I created for it.

Mukondi Djata slipped out of her leather sleeping tent with a spear and machete in hand. A gold sliver of sunlight crept up from behind the eastern plains to stain the twilight sky red and warm the sleeping women’s camp. Despite this heat growing outside, streams of dread colder than spring water coursed within Mukondi’s veins. Her spear’s iron point ran longer than her feet, and she would need every inch of it for the test of womanhood that she would begin this morning.

The rest of the Djata clan’s camp stayed asleep in silence. Not even the most excitable of the little girls scampered between the tents before their older sisters, mothers, and aunts woke up yet. The crimson arrow-shaped head of Sambu the Allosaurus, the Djatas’ symbolic animal, emblazoned each tent. When she noted the emblem’s jagged teeth, Mukondi gulped down a mouthful of air. The last thing she needed now was yet another reminder of the First Hunt which lay just ahead for her.

The throaty and hoarse blare of a hollowed animal horn shattered the silence. “Mukondi? Are you coming?” It was her mother Dyese calling.

Mukondi jogged to the fat baobab tree which towered in the heart of the camp. Two other women, her mother and her elder cousin Azandu, awaited below the tree’s shade. Having reached her own womanhood six rainy seasons ago, Azandu looked exactly as Mukondi and every other Djata girl wished to look: tall and lithe, with firm muscles under skin as dark as a moonless midnight. Rings of fangs and claws from Azandu’s kills hung from her neck, something Mukondi also wished she could earn in years to come. As for Dyese, the hide shawl she draped over her shoulders marked her rank as the Djata clan’s matriarchal chieftain.

Dyese smiled as she patted Mukondi on the shoulder. “You can do it, my precious,” she said. “Oyosi Herself sees to it that you will.” She tilted her wizened face up to the sky where Oyosi Djata, the clan’s great ancestress, rested.

Mukondi pulled her mother’s hand off. “You told Nzinge that very same thing, didn’t you?”

“Don’t mention her again!” Azandu banged her spear’s butt against the ground. “You are smarter and wiser than your big sister ever was, Mukondi. You’ll succeed where she failed, trust me.”

A quivering Mukondi folded her arms together. “How can you feel so sure of that?”

Azandu groaned. “Look, do you want to be dropped off at a men’s village and grow crops in one place for the rest of your life? Or do you want to become a woman?”

“I am no man!” Mukondi pounded a fist onto her breasts.

“Then don’t whine like one. Now, while scouting last night, I spotted Sambu drinking from the river to the south.” Azandu pointed towards the southern horizon. “He might still prowl over there.” She laid her own hand on Mukondi’s shoulder. “When you meet him, you know what to do.”

“Aim for the breast or brain,” Mukondi recited. She sucked in a mouthful of air to swell her chest upward and smiled.

“One more thing before you leave, daughter.” Dyese pulled out from her hide belt the animal horn she had blown earlier and handed it to Mukondi. “It goes back to my mother’s mother. Blow it, and you shall lure Sambu towards you.”

“Isn’t that cheating?” Mukondi asked.

“Not at all, but use it sparingly,” Azandu said. “Blow it too many times together and Sambu will figure out what you’re up to.”

Mukondi slipped the horn under her own belt and bowed her head to Dyese. “I owe you so much for the gift, mother.”

Dyese wrapped her arms around her daughter in a gentle embrace. “You owe nothing at all. Now go forth on your First Hunt, Mukondi. You leave our camp a girl, but you shall come back a woman, with Sambu’s teeth in your hands. May Oyosi bless you.”

Mukondi hugged her mother back with all her strength while more tears dripped from her eyes. This could have been the last time in their whole lives that they would see each other. Mukondi rested her head against Dyese’s breasts while her mother in turn stroked her dreadlocks.

“If I do not come back alive, I shall always remain in your memories, mother,” Mukondi said.

After Dyese withdrew her warm arms from her daughter, the chill returned to sting Mukondi’s blood. Nonetheless she jogged away from the camp, looking back only once.

Continue reading “Hunting for Womanhood”

Arrows of Alodia

Maia of Alodia, the protagonist of my short story “Arrows of Alodia”. By the way, Alodia was the southernmost of three Christianized kingdoms that sprung up in Sudan during the Middle Ages, after the fall of the kingdom of Kush.

Japan, 1500 AD
The walls of the castle glowed pale yellow before the face of the setting sun, with blue shingles sparkling on its stacks of curved roofs. This radiance conferred onto the structure the semblance of a tall gold crown encrusted with lapis-lazuli gems. Atop a wooded hill it sat, overlooking the fields, forests, and scattered peasants’ villages like an emperor surveying his rural domain.

A young woman hiked up the series of stone steps which zigzagged up the hill’s northern slope, cradling in her arms a yew chest. Her hooded waist-length kimono and trousers, both dull green like the trees sheltering the path, protected her both from the evening’s damp chill and from any eyes which might be spying on her. Not that the woman had noticed anyone giving her a second glance so far, but nobody in her line of work could afford to let their guard down.

She reached the summit of the hill, strolled across the short bridge over the castle’s moat, and then paused to gaze over the countryside sprawling behind. The verdant beauty of the Japanese landscape would never leave her eyes in entirety, yet years of experience had scraped away much of its original allure. For underneath its lush and tranquil veneer lay a cutthroat and lawless world of cruelty and treachery. This would be the last evening she would spend in this land. The next day, she would set sail for civilization.

Among the irregular mass of rocks which built up the castle’s base, there stood a more rectangular slab as tall and wide as a man. The woman inserted her fingers along its edge and pushed it aside as if it were a regular Japanese sliding door. Ahead ran a narrow corridor lit with paper lanterns hanging from the ceiling, a small courtesy she had not expected.

Underneath the more pleasing scent of the cherry blossoms, there leaked the stink of dead flesh through the chest’s lid. The woman hugged it against her breast, with queasy nausea swelling in her stomach. Grisly as the odor was, it was only part of the price she had to pay for her upcoming escape.

Continue reading “Arrows of Alodia”