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Earth, Fire, Air, Water – Manu Herbstein

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Earth, Fire, Air, Water art by Amina Aileru

Good afternoon. This is the second of three lectures marking the sixtieth anniversary of the end of the old world.

Let me start with a persistent memory of a portent of things to come.

The night before, I had a nightmare. A salvo of missiles swept down through the darkness with fiery tails like those of comets. As they struck their target, Table Mountain exploded into a million fragments, sending a barrage of blazing molten shards up into the night sky and down into the bay. I woke to the dying echoes of my own screams, drenched in sweat, my heart pounding.

Some nightmares recur. This one didn’t; and yet I have recalled it practically every morning of the past sixty years. Rising from my bed I went to the window and looked up at the mountain, in bad weather a looming presence, on a sunny day, an old friend with a familiar wrinkled face. That nightmare came back to me and I gave thanks that it was no more than a bad dream.

And yet, what happened that first day was far worse; and what was yet to come was worse still.

Allow me to recap my first lecture. In it, I painted a picture of the world I lived in as a young man. It was a world of nations, rich nations and poor nations. Each nation was ruled by its own small rich and powerful elite, driven by greed and sustained by hubris. The nations had their differences with one another which sometimes led to war but, in essence, the rich of all nations controlled the world and its resources. The larger nations and also a few of the smaller ones had developed weapons of enormous destructive capacity called nuclear bombs. There were some four thousand of these, primed and ready to launch. The systems which were designed to control them were vulnerable to error and sabotage.

I showed you images and samples of the technology that enabled the rich to maintain their grip on power, including intercontinental ballistic missiles, the international space station and other satellites, aeroplanes, personal computers, television, smartphones, paper money, antibiotics and other drugs; and condoms. All of these became obsolete when the old world passed away.

Using maps I showed you what our part of the world looked like in those days. It was called the Cape Peninsula.

I lived in that old world for the first nineteen years of my life, so some of what I told you in my first lecture was based on memory; though not all. We did inherit at least one thing of value from the old world: the book. Books lived in libraries. Many libraries were destroyed but ours, where we are meeting today, survived. So, in preparing my first lecture, I was able to refresh and supplement my memory by referring to books.

My story this afternoon needs no books. It is based entirely upon my recollection of what happened sixty years ago this week, and in the months that followed.

That first morning I was sitting watching a soccer match on television.

My father was a professor of physics at this university. He was also the warden of a new ten-storey students’ hall of residence, Sol Plaatje Hall. It was well built. It is still standing down there, with two or three storeys exposed, depending on the tide.

We lived in an apartment on the top floor.

My father was in the conference room chairing a meeting of the hall staff, preparing for the return of the students after the summer vacation.

My mother came out of the kitchen and handed me her smartphone. She was also a professor. Her subject was geography.

“Yaw,” my mother said. “I’ve been trying to get Akosua all morning. No luck. Please try.”

Akosua was my elder sister. There were three of us, Akosua, Adwoa and me, Yaw. Those are Ghanaian names. My father and mother were both Ghanaians but the three of us were all born here. I grew up speaking English, but I can get by in Afrikaans and isiXhosa. Akosua was 24. She had finished a Masters degree and gone to London for a year to get some work experience and, I suppose, to have some fun. Adwoa was 22 and I was nearly 20.

The soccer match was at an exciting stage. I tried to reach Akosua but there was no reply. I guessed that she had switched her phone off or that her battery had run down.

Suddenly the television screen went blank and then the familiar face of a news announcer appeared. I groaned. I wanted to see the end of the match.

“We interrupt this broadcast with a breaking story. Reports are coming in of a series of major explosions at cities all over Europe and the United States. We’ll let you know as soon as we receive further news,” she said.

I paid no attention. Television in those days was full of violent events: terrorist attacks, wars and revolutions. My parents were interested in all that stuff, particularly my father, but I preferred sports.

The soccer match resumed, but a minute later the announcer was there again. I mouthed a silent curse.

“We interrupt this broadcast,” she said, “with live video footage which we are receiving direct from the International Space Station.”

The camera was aimed at North Africa and Europe. The image was clear; there were few clouds. Much of Europe was covered in snow. When we have our summer, they have their winter. Superimposed on the brilliant white background were five dark circular shapes, growing. Just then another appeared, quite suddenly, with a flash of fire.

They must have switched cameras. We now had an oblique view. Each object had a long stalk and a fluffy, cloudlike expanding head. The shape was familiar. I knew what they were, but the visual evidence was difficult to believe.

“Ma,” I called.

She came into the living room, wiping her hands on a cloth.

“What is it?” she asked.

Then she saw the image on the screen.

“My god!” she said and sat down next to me.

My mother was a church-goer. It wasn’t often that profanity escaped her lips. She pointed.

“Moscow! Warsaw!! Berlin!!! Rome!!!! Paris!!!!!” 

Remember: I told you that her subject was geography.

Then: “London! London!! Akosua!!!”

She bowed her head, covered her eyes and began to sob. I couldn’t remember ever having seen her cry like that before.

“Ma, it’s alright,” I said and put my arm around her shoulder and hugged her.

Stupid. Of course, it wasn’t alright. But I was just a boy of nineteen. Still a teenager. Not yet twenty.

She wiped her eyes.

“Yaw,” she said. “Go and call your father.”

I called him. He wasn’t pleased. He said he’d be five minutes. I said no, he should come at once. That was the first time I’d ever contradicted him and I’d done so in front of his staff. His eyes narrowed. But he must have seen that I was close to tears, so he came.

As we entered the apartment he spoke to my mother in Twi. That was their language. I could understand a little but I never learned to speak it. When it was just the two of them, that is what they spoke. There was more than a hint of anger in his voice.

“Adeɛ bɛn?”

She didn’t reply, just pointed at the television screen.

“Holy Jesus!” he said.

My father poured libation to his ancestors but beyond that, he had no religion. He knew the bible well. But he regarded it as just a collection of stories; great stories some of them, but just stories. He was a scientist. He called himself a rationalist and a humanist. He rarely swore. His father, my grandfather whom I never met, was a Presbyterian minister. If my father had uttered a swear word when he was a child, he would have had his mouth washed out with soap.

“Christ!” he said.

“Akosua,” my mother said. “She told me she was going to spend the morning at the Tate Gallery, looking at paintings and sculptures.”

He took out his smartphone.

“It’s no use,” she said. “I’ve been trying for the past hour. Yaw too.”

Then she got down on her knees facing the sofa on which she had been sitting. As if to pray. But she didn’t pray, at least not aloud. She just beat the cushions again and again. I still remember the look of anguish on her face. Then my father got down on his knees, next to her, put his arm around her shoulders and held her tight.

Turning to me he said, “Yaw. Go to the conference room and tell them to wait. Tell them I’ll be with them in five or ten minutes.”

There were eight or ten of them sitting around the conference table. My Dad’s chair, of course, was empty. I knew them all, or, at least, they all knew me.

“Yaw, is everything alright?” asked Sarah Fortuin, Dad’s deputy, the one who actually ran the hall while he was busy teaching and researching.

What could I say? Clearly, everything wasn’t alright. They usually switched off their smartphones during a meeting, so as not to be disturbed by calls. As I was leaving, I heard Derek, the driver, say, “Heh, look at this.” I didn’t stop to learn what he had found on his small screen.

Dad and Mom were sitting on the couch.

“Yaw, switch on the recorder,” Dad said.

“Now come and sit down.”

The screen showed a new bomb site, an island off the northwest coast of Africa, one of the Canaries.

“La Palma?” I asked.

Dad nodded.                                          

We had been there, on holiday, just a year before. La Palma was a volcano rising from the ocean floor, 4000 metres down, to a height of 2400 metres above sea level. A tourist guide had taken us to see part of a four-kilometre-long crack in the ground surface caused by a recent earthquake. He said that geologists predicted that the next earthquake would slice a huge chunk off the island and send it plunging down into the depths. This would generate a mighty wave—he called it a mega-tsunami—racing at eight hundred kilometres per hour towards all the cities on the rim of the Atlantic. As it hit land, the guide said, the wave might be as much as sixty metres high. Frightening! He delivered his well-rehearsed spiel with melodramatic pizzazz, laying it on real thick. We gaped. Dad gave him a generous tip.

Dad and Mom researched this afterwards and discovered that no serious geologist supported the story. We all had a good laugh at the way we had been conned. But now we had to think again.

We hadn’t begun to consider who or what might be responsible for the pandemic of exploding nuclear bombs. Truth to tell, we still don’t know. Some religious fanatic or crazy politician or soldier might have had some twisted motive for destroying one major city or even several, but why should this tiny island, with a population of less than a hundred thousand, be a target? It could only be because the evil genius responsible hoped to trigger that mega-tsunami, wiping out all the Atlantic coastal cities in one single economical blow.

Mom was still slowly, very slowly, coming to terms with the loss of her eldest child, my dear sister Akosua. But Dad’s thoughts had been diverted by the La Palma bomb.

“It’s ten,” he said. “The distance to La Palma is about 8000 kilometres. If the wave moves at 800 kilometres per hour, it will hit us at about eight this evening.”

Just then the announcer appeared on the screen.

 “All major communication links with Europe and America have failed,” she said. “The President has issued a statement calling for calm. He says the government is in full control and no one should panic. We will share any further news with you as we receive it.”

“Idiots,” said my father.

Then he said, “The tsunami will destroy the City and sweep across the Cape Flats. We need to give the alarm.”

He paced the length of the living room, deep in thought.

“Kwaku,” said my mother, wiping her tears. “Slow down. Think. If there’s no tsunami you’ll look a complete fool.”

 “You’re right. As always. But what’s the alternative? Do you remember the difficulty we had in getting to La Palma, via Accra and Dakar? It’s not a favoured holiday destination. We may be the only ones aware of the potential danger. If we say nothing and there is a tsunami, the death of thousands will be on our heads.”

When he returned from the conference room, he told us what had transpired.

Earth, Fire, Air, Water art by Amina Aileru

“I set the scene for them,” he said, “and asked them for their advice. They all took the danger seriously. Those who live down on the Flats are going to bring their families to higher ground, just in case. They’re all busy phoning.

“Yaw, I want you to go to the supermarkets with Derek. Stuff the big van with whatever we might need, rice, canned foods, candles, matches, soap. Nothing perishable. Don’t bring it here. Derek will fill the van’s tank and then take the van with supplies to the upper campus. You come back here.

“I’m going to pass the buck. I’ll phone the vice-chancellor and ask him to call an urgent meeting of all the academic staff who are on campus.”

Then he said, “Adwoa. Where’s Adwoa?”

“She said she was going to meet a friend at the Waterfront,” I told him.

We tried to reach her on her smartphone but there was no answer.

“I guess she’s gone to see a movie and switched off,” I told them.

I was heading for the supermarkets. My father was going to see the vice-chancellor. My mother was on the edge of hysteria. Sarah came and sat with her. The images on the television were disturbing so we switched it off. There was one more essential job to do before we left. Dad called Accra. I heard his relief as his mother’s phone rang. Mom pulled herself together and spoke to her brother.

“Don’t waste a moment. Get in your car and head for the hills.”

I guess that many lives were lost in Accra that day. I hope that as a result of our calls our extended family there survived. But I don’t know. We never did hear from them again.

Events moved quickly. The vice-chancellor called the mayor. The mayor called provincial and national leaders. The police and the army and the radio and TV stations were mobilized. Soon there were long queues at banks and supermarket checkouts. Service stations began to run out of fuel. There were massive traffic jams as crammed cars made for higher ground. It was almost like a public holiday. Some sensible spirits drove to the Boland but many more made for UCT and Kirstenbosch. At UCT families spread rugs on the sports fields and when those were full the late-comers spilled onto what space was left on the campus roads. We made our temporary home in Dad’s office in the Physics Department. Adwoa found us there in mid-afternoon and took charge of Mom. Mom continued to try to reach Akosua even though we knew that there was no hope of ever seeing her again. Dad was busy, busy, busy, sitting in on meetings, planning, organizing. The satellite station continued to beam its pictures but they contained less and less information: the clouds from the individual explosions had coalesced, concealing the devastation below.

Our weather that day was perfect, clear sky, light south-easter. A day for the beach.

Dad sent me up to Rhodes Memorial with our cine camera. I was just in time to find a place at the low wall overlooking the Flats. Two wedding parties had come to be photographed but the crowd was too much for the photographer. I kept in touch with Dad and Mom and Adwoa, sending them pictures and videos over my cell phone. I scanned the Flats with my telephoto lens, picking out stragglers and looters. By this time everyone had seen the TV images. Strangers talked to one another. Some, like us, had lost family. All were deeply upset. A big guy next to me wondered aloud whether once the bombers had destroyed all the cities in the northern hemisphere, they would turn their attention to us. But there were sceptics too.

“This is a joke,” one loudmouth proclaimed. “This tsunami story is a ploy, invented by our corrupt leaders.”

The atmosphere was strange. We were waiting nervously for the opening of a performance which might or might not begin.

The sun disappeared behind Devil’s Peak and the shadow moved out across the Flats. The sea was calm. Robben Island was there, no doubt, awaiting its nemesis. Behind us, the steps were packed. The floodlights came on, illuminating the monument. Then almost at once, they went off. The crowd groaned in unison. But this was not the common power cut we had become accustomed to. Screams and shouts reached us from the mountainside. Then we saw it too. The great wave which was the tsunami came sweeping down from the north. It had struck the Koeberg nuclear power station, which supplied practically all the city’s electricity. That power cut was a portent of the dark future awaiting us. Having submerged Robben Island, the wave swept onto the City. There were shrieks as it passed through the Flats, destroying all in its path. Anguished voices cried out the names of suburbs: Milnerton, Maitland, Pinelands, Langa, Athlone, Hanover Park, Manenberg, Philippi. There was a mighty backwash and then the first wave was followed by another and yet another, not as high, not as strong.

For as long as I could remember, the Flats at night had been bathed in a sea of sparkling light; now there was nothing. Darkness descended upon our world.

I spoke to my father on my phone.

“Stay on,” he said. “Wait for the moon to rise and film what you can see.”

I ran the video I had taken on the camera’s screen. My neighbours gathered around. Our minds were numb. Then Christians began to sing hymns. I remember some lines from one of them.

“Away with our sorrow and fear!

We soon shall recover our home,

The city of saints shall appear,

The day of eternity come.”

Muslims cleared a space in the car park and performed a special, unscheduled salat.

“Allahu Akbar,” they called.

I had been chatting to the big guy beside me.

“I suppose that, for believers, religion is a comfort in a time like this,” I said to him. “What I don’t understand is how they can absolve the god they worship from responsibility for what we have just seen.”

That was a mistake. I learned then never to raise a religious issue with a stranger.

“What are you, an atheist?” he asked me. “This is the work of man, not God. God gave us free will and wicked men have abused it.”

He was bigger than me and older. I beat a retreat, choosing silence, just nodding my head as if I understood and agreed.

The moon came up revealing a scene of utter desolation. I shot my film and slipped away. The others were settling down for the night. They had nowhere else to go.

I stumbled down the mountain path, over the stile and into the UCT campus. My father had a large office. He had shunted his desk into a corner. My mother lay on the sofa, Dad on a camp bed and Adwoa on an inflatable mattress. The room was lit by two flickering candles. Mom made me an omelette on a small gas cooker. As I ate, I told them what I’d seen and showed them the video clips. Then I just lay down on a rug on the floor fully clothed and fell asleep… It had been a long day.

We woke at dawn to a new world. The campus was crowded with refugees. Leaving their families behind some set off on foot to see if anything remained of their homes. Others came to Jammy to join professors in a meeting called to assess the situation and formulate plans. The government and its agents, the police and army, were nowhere to be seen.

My father sent me with Derek to report on the condition of the South Peninsula. It was another glorious day. There was little traffic. The drive down through Constantia was as beautiful as I had always known it. It was easy to imagine that the events of the previous night were just a bad dream, like my nightmare. Then, as we reached Tokai there were patches of standing water where none had been before. Pollsmoor and the golf course below Steenberg were flooded. On the pavement of Boyes Drive cars were parked bumper to bumper. The tarmac was packed with families, camping. We parked the bakkie and walked. The night before I had seen the devastation of the northern suburbs by moonlight. This was worse. I knew Muizenberg quite well. I used to go there at weekends to surf. It had just one multi-storey building, an ugly block of flats. That eyesore was no more, not even an identifiable pile of rubble. The suburbs where all these people had had their homes had been wiped from the face of the earth. You might have heard your grandparents mention their names: Marina da Gama, Vrygrond, Lavender Hill, Retreat, Grassy Park, Montagu’s Gift.

A young man heard our astonished exchanges.        

“Where have you guys come from?” he asked.

I told him.

“Did the tsunami come right through here from Table Bay?” I asked.

“No man,” he said. “We had our very own tsunami. Imported from Indonesia, I reckon, like our ancestors. It came late, two, three in the morning, after the moon had gone down. It was only when the sun came up that we saw the full damage. Take a look with your binoculars. Total destruction, all the way to Mitchells Plain, Khayelitsha, Strandfontein, the Strand, Gordon’s Bay and miles inland. Man, tell me, what are we going to do? We brought food with us, just enough for a few days. And then?”

His wife or girlfriend came up and took his hand in hers. She was pretty. After sixty years I can still see her face, the tears in her eyes. I could have fallen in love with her if she hadn’t been taken already. She didn’t say a word, just shook her head again and again, as if she couldn’t believe what had happened.

I tried to imagine the scene in the early hours of the morning. There would have been no warning. This “Indonesian” tsunami must have wreaked havoc on its way to us: Maputo, Durban, East London, P.E, Knysna, Mossel Bay. The mouth of False Bay would have acted as a funnel concentrating its force. East of Muizenberg, nothing would have stopped it in its path across the Flats. But to the west, the all but irresistible tsunami must have met its match in the immovable mountain and bounced right back into the sea. The scene below told the story. The lower half of Jacobs Ladder at St. James was no more. The fancy houses of the rich on the upper slopes above the high water mark had survived unscathed. But they were now inaccessible from the Main Road which, together with the railway line, had been washed into the bay.

Yet now all was peaceful. The sea had no memory of what had taken hold of it only hours before. The lines of surf rolled in and broke on the rocks along the shore. Somehow, the tidal pools at St. James and Kalk Bay and the walls of the fishing harbour had survived; but the boats were gone.

We got back to UCT after dark, tired, hungry and depressed. Adwoa had been to town. She reported that the wave had destroyed the Gardens, flooding Parliament and ruining the contents of the National Library.     

The next morning dawned fine again but my father explained that we were working to an unknown dark deadline. Winds in the upper atmosphere, he predicted, would soon distribute the nuclear cloud. The earth would soon be wrapped in an opaque radioactive cocoon. We had to move the folk camped out on the sports fields indoors before that happened.

 It wasn’t easy. The communications on which we had depended were no more: no TV, no radio, no smartphones. We had to adapt. And quickly. The campus was a hive of activity. Jammy was the nerve centre. There were committees to allocate accommodation and fuel and plan the distribution of water and food. A trauma centre started giving advice and support to the many who needed it. The dead had to be identified, if that were possible and then quickly buried. So much to do, so little time. But there were many willing hands.

On the third night, I sat in the dark on the Jammy steps with Adwoa, remembering Akosua and chatting about the events of the past three days. Above us, Orion and the Southern Cross were bright and clear.

The next morning the sun failed to rise. That’s not true, of course. It must have risen, but to us it was invisible. A dark impenetrable cloud had enveloped the earth. While my father had power from the solar cells on the roof, he’d used it to print thousands of fliers with advice about the dangers of radiation. The darkness would pass, he promised, but until it did, no one should go outside. In every building, a responsible person should lock the outer doors and hide the keys.

In his lab, my father had two heavy anti-radiation suits, complete with hoods and gloves and boots. He put one on each morning and went for a walk with an instrument called a Geiger counter which, when switched on outside, emitted a series of rapid pings. When the pings slowed down, he told us, it would be safe to go out.

Picture us on this campus, thousands of refugees, all locked up in our separate buildings, in total darkness. Although it was still summer, it was bitterly cold. There were bound to be emergencies, a shortage of candles, a blocked pipe, an ill child, and a death. Once a day a messenger did the rounds, collecting and delivering urgent messages. That messenger was often me, wearing one of Dad’s suits. And if someone, a doctor or a plumber, had to move from one building to another, I would deliver the spare suit to him.

At least that made a change from the tedium. There was little to do. Until the bottled gas ran out, cooking consisted of warming tinned food. Water was reserved for drinking and washing hands. For two months we didn’t wash our clothes. We stank! The main problem was to keep our minds occupied. Candles were strictly rationed, so we couldn’t read. Dad organized lectures and storytelling sessions and debates. Those two months brought out the best and worst in us. Some were afflicted with anger or despair; others discovered skills as leaders and healers. Outside, black rain fell, loaded with radioactive dust. After a rainstorm the Geiger counter pinged and pinged.

At long last, the cloud thinned and a hazy sun appeared. The solar cells on the roof began to charge our batteries and we had light at night. Dad announced that we might go outside for an hour a day.

During the time of darkness, my sister Adwoa and I had become good friends. On our first morning out, we decided to go up to Rhodes Memorial. It was a shock. The trees were naked and the shrubs and bushes and wild grass had all died in the darkness. This captured our attention and it was not until we reached the Memorial that we looked out over the Flats. Try to imagine our astonishment. Table Bay and False Bay had joined in marriage. Judging from the buildings protruding from the water, the sea level must have risen ten metres. And that was the least of it. Both bays were full of icebergs, thousands of them, as far as the eye could see.

“What on earth?” was all I could say.

Adwoa, a scientist like our parents, had the answer.

“My guess is that some of the bombs were directed to the Antarctic Ice Shelf. It must have broken away. This is the result.”

In the two years that followed, those icebergs became smaller and smaller and fewer and fewer and eventually disappeared. They just melted into the ocean and as they did so, the sea level rose and rose. What had once been the Cape Peninsula became what we all know well, the two islands we call Hoerikwaggo and Autshumao.

That seems an appropriate point to bring this lecture to a close. In my last lecture, I shall tell you something about the years after this disaster, a period which started with no government, no police, no fuel, no salaries, no banks, no money, little food, bad water. It was on that shaky basis that we set out to build a new society, different from that of the old world, a society based not on greed and concentrated power but rather on fellowship and mutual help, a society in which today we all have work and in which we all share the rewards of our labour.

Now: any questions?                                                                                                        

END

Manu Herbstein was born near Cape Town in 1936. He left South Africa in 1959. He lived and worked as a civil engineer in England, Nigeria, Ghana, India, Zambia and Scotland. He has lived in Ghana since 1970. His first novel, Ama, a Story of the Atlantic Slave Trade, won the 2002 Commonwealth Writers Prize for the Best First Book. Two of his novels won Burt Awards for African Literature in Ghana. The Boy who Spat in Sargrenti’s Eye received the 2016 Creative Book of the Year Award of the African Literature Association.

Hidden Figures – Plangdi Neple

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Sanja stood atop the summit of the gods and surveyed the dusty plains of the world he belonged to. His eyes took in all its arid beauty, curbing his impatience with the habitual lateness of his peers. His mind saw visions of the world to come, mired in uncertainty and repeated disappointment.

And the weight of the safety of the people of that world rested on the shoulders of a man who had once been a god.

“You’re late.”

He turned to face the goddess whose presence brought forth thoughts of a cool, rainy day. Her hair hung down her back in thick black braids, and her golden dress shimmered with godly luminescence, as did her dewy ebony skin.

“I didn’t know we too were bound by the concept of time,” Ọ̀ṣun said, her lips pulling up in a teasing smile.

Sanja felt his cheeks heat up, and he smiled back. “I am living proof that we are. Especially now, when the lives of our worshippers are at stake.”

Her light laughter sounded like birdsong. “Don’t be so moody. It’s not like there’s a war coming.”

Sanja remained mute and watched as her bare feet moved toward him in a manner she knew was distracting and had worked many times before. Despite knowing his dark cheeks could not expose his arousal, he ducked his head. She pressed her lithe body along his slim one, letting her breasts brush his chest lightly.

“Your husband will be here soon,” he said.

She scoffed and walked ahead of him to the edge of the cliff. “That fat man? He’s not going anywhere, not when he and Oya are enjoying each other’s bodies.”

Sanja chuckled under his breath. All the gods knew of the eternal struggle between Sango’s two wives. He now understood why she was early and trying to seduce him. It was a ploy to soothe her bruised ego, which was visible in the tightness of her shoulders and the slight sheen of sweat on her neck.

But this was no place to placate a hurt goddess or pander to her whims, as was emphasized by the appearance of four other deities. The air crackled with power, and Sanja breathed in deep, wishing a thousandth time for the electric smell that would tickle his senses were he still a god. And to think, he had taken it for granted, when all he had now was the smell of wet mud and fresh grass to fill his nose.

“It is not every day an insect summons a lion,” one of the deities said as he tossed the edge of his dark wrapper to the side and tucked the corner in at his waist.

Sanja levelled an unimpressed look at the spider god.

“My age or standing does not make me less useful, and you know it. All it takes is one widespread thought, and the stories would say I killed you and took all your wives for myself.”

Anansi laughed and clapped his friend on the shoulder with his slim fingers. A brown spider came out of his long locs and regarded Sanja with unblinking eyes. Sanja returned his friend’s wide-toothed smile with one of his own and petted the spider as his eyes moved over the other deities who had appeared.

There was Egun, the thickset goddess from the south whose shaved head reflected the knowledge and wisdom she bestowed on her people, the same wisdom that had saved Sanja when the other deities had ordered his death to protect their secrets.

Her plump arms were held onto by a Djinn who Sanja had only met in passing during his divine days. He’d recognized the supernatural glow emanating from the Djinn’s fair skin while attending a moonlight festival. They’d acknowledged one another with a simple nod.

The lack of familiarity didn’t stop them from stepping forward and greeting Sanja with a chaste kiss.

“When I saw the summons, I was only too glad to know its purpose,” they said with a straight face and a twinkle in their pupil-less eyes. Their lean frame was covered in a long white tunic Sanja did not see the practicality in as the mountaintop was chilly.

Then he remembered, and a bolt of pain went through him. They were gods; he wasn’t.

“Yes,” another god with hulking muscles and many piercings said. “Your message was… interesting.”

“Strange as it may have sounded,” Sanja said, shaking out his robe to make it look like he cared less about the cold. “You still came.”

“This isn’t even a proper council,” the war god muttered.

“Why?” Ọ̀ṣun asked in a mocking tone, “Because you do not have any Elder to hold your hand?”

The god narrowed his eyes, and Sanja could see the beginnings of an argument they didn’t need, but one he would undoubtedly enjoy.

“As long as we’re here,” he said. “It’s a council.”

“Is that why neither Olorun nor any of the other òrìṣàare here?” Egun asked.

A tense silence fell. They all knew how eager the western gods had been to accept the new gods and their people, along with the insinuation that their way of life was the best.

“They made their choice,” Sanja said. “And now we must make ours.”

The air crackled again, and this time, Sanja wished he could disappear back into his mother’s womb from centuries before.

“I should have known you would be the leader of this mutiny,” Amadioha said, thunder crackling in his beard and white eyes.

Sanja felt a spark of anger in his chest. How dare he accuse him of being an upstart? Sanja had nothing to gain from being here, except perhaps a tryst with Ọ̀ṣun. But she always knew where to find him anyway, and him her.

“It’s not mutiny, and you know it. What I’m proposing is in all our best interests.”

“Ha!” the thunder god exclaimed. “You forget you are not a god anymore. We don’t care about you.”

Ọ̀ṣun winced, and Sanja’s fists balled of their own volition. The other deities watched with contemplative expressions.

“And,” Amadioha continued, uncaring. “What you are suggesting will require more work from us than we have ever done.”

Out of the corner of his eyes, Sanja saw Ọ̀ṣun roll her eyes. “Lazy goat,” she muttered.

A sneer painted Amadioha’s mouth, and he pointed at Ọ̀ṣun. “I do not need your whore to speak for you.”

Rage filled Sanja, and he saw red, growling and taking a step forward before a hand on his chest stopped him.

“Enough,” Anansi’s fourth companion said. Her voice was quiet and raspy, powerful enough to silence them all. She turned her petite frame on the angry thunder god.

“You come here and pass judgment on what we have only speculated. I myself may not be inclined to agree with him. But let us hear what he has to say first.”

Sanja watched with bated breath as the sparks around Amadioha’s face lessened and the god went silent. Relieved, he looked carefully at each divine face surrounding him to gauge their moods and how willing they were to listen to him.

And suddenly, he wanted nothing more than to have Amadioha screaming again. Because if he was, it meant less attention on Sanja, less pressure. Nobody could save him now.

“The òrìṣà have betrayed us.”

Never before had Sanja been so grateful to hear Ọ̀ṣun’s voice, not even in the throes of their passion.

“Is that not too harsh?” Anansi said, checking his reflection in a mirror he pulled from thin air.

“It is not.” Sanja finally found his voice. “If it is left to them and the other Elders, the rest of us would fade from existence, forgotten as only they are remembered.”

“And yet, I am here,” Amadioha said with barely concealed contempt, “among all of you.”

Hostility filled Sanja at the insult, and he saw the same anger reflected on the war god’s tawny face. To the thunder god, the slur was a way for Amadioha to keep him underfoot. To Sanja, it was a reminder of what he now was: powerless.

“If I am able to convince you who are as stubborn as the calf of the woman from which he was born,” he said, forcing down the bile that rose in his throat from the posturing, “everyone else would listen and see reason.”

Amadioha was silent, his face pensive. The pelt across his shoulders constantly shifted, from tiger to deer to panther, the mark of kings. Sanja knew his flattery had worked when the pelt stopped changing and the god’s shoulders relaxed. A large throne materialized behind him, precious jewels glinting in the bone frame.

“Alright. I will listen.” He sat on the throne and conjured up roasting corn, its sweet smell drawing Anansi and the small goddess’s fingers and mouths.

Sanja inclined his head respectfully and tried not to let the smoke bother him.

“Something is happening across the heavens, something that will reduce you to nothing if you are not careful. The foreigners in our land care for little else but power and control.”

“Eh, it’s the same for humans everywhere,” Egun interrupted with a wave of her jewelled fingers. “We knew this already.”

There were murmurs of agreement, and Sanja forced his irritation down and spoke through gritted teeth.

“They care for it at our—your—expense. To them, you are too much, as many as the grains of sand in one’s palm. They would rather you be forgotten, condensed in favour of the gods they perceive as superior.”

“But even in our humans’ minds,” the quiet goddess said, clapping her hands to remove flecks of corn. “Are we not the lesser?”

“We are no less important,” Anansi said, saving Sanja from an outburst.

“Don’t be a fool,” Amadioha said, crossing his legs. He looked almost happy. “We are a creation of human thoughts and their need for a sovereign being to believe in. What agency do we have over our perceived existence, let alone the hierarchy of our importance?”

Sanja blinked and felt his anger slowly creeping back, turning his body rigid and forcing him to cause his fingers to vibrate.

“So, you would rather we have our identities erased? Those pale foreigners would rather forget us because we are too much for them to remember to control.”

Sanja thanked the skies he had not forgotten to invite Egun. The goddess could not stand stupidity. That very moment, her eyes glinted in anger, her arms folded across her heaving bosom.

Amadioha only smiled, making Sanja’s heart sink.

“See his face now,” Ọ̀ṣun said with derision. “He knows if all the other minor deities fade from existence, he will not. E wori e bi igo epa.”

“Do not pretend to speak for those deities,” Amadioha said, wagging a finger at the goddess. He pointed at all the gods assembled, none of whom could look him in the eye. “You are all hypocrites. If you truly cared for the other gods, they would be here, deciding their own fate.”

The words were a blow to Sanja’s conscience, and he nearly staggered. Judging from Amadioha’s smirk, he did not hide his misstep well enough. Heat suffused Sanja’s cheeks, and he turned away from the gods and goddesses, his feet moving to the mountain’s edge, his mind wondering how Amadioha had come and managed to tear everything apart.

“What is it?” Ọ̀ṣun asked quietly. The other deities talked about mundane things behind them, Amadioha presiding over them on his throne.

Sanja didn’t reply immediately. He stared out at the plains, at the few people gathering herbs for their evening meal. Intermittently, they approached the mountain base, picking a few plants and genuflecting before moving away. The scene made Sanja smile. They must have seen the peculiar plant which grew wherever there was a gathering of gods. His hand quivered beside him, and he made a tight fist against the ground, the little rocks digging into his knuckles.

“He’s not supposed to be right,” he mumbled, looking into his lap. “He wasn’t even supposed to be here. And he just made me look like a fool.”

“You’re a god who became human,” Ọ̀ṣun said, rubbing his back. “You’ll always look like a fool to the rest of us.”

Sanja smiled a little at her bluntness. “Is that supposed to make me feel better? I’m the biggest hypocrite of all; not a god, not even a minor deity, just a man.”

Using a finger under his chin, she tilted his head up, looking straight into his eyes. “This is bigger than you or your pride. Just because Amadioha doesn’t care what happens doesn’t mean he can’t see the solution. Listen to him.”

Sanja shook his head.

“I saw it,” he replied in a whisper. “It just felt like too much, too much for a human to do. To gather that number of deities?” he hung his head and screwed his eyes shut.

Ọ̀ṣun made a low sound in her throat. “And you did not want another reminder of your humanity.”

Sanja had nothing to say, and they stayed that way for a long time, the sweet smell of roasting corn comforting them. A few thoughts went through Sanja’s head. The first was gratefulness for the humans who had immortalized him as a god hundreds of years ago, followed by resentment for those same humans. For if not for them, he would have died peacefully as a renowned king, instead of now being a deity who had been dethroned to flesh and blood when his worshippers’ cult died out.

Deeper resentment burned for the race he was trying to save, who would not even know his name or what he did for them. He would only be a footnote in an epic that did not exist.

“You have forgotten how to be human,” a voice said behind them, startling them out of their brooding. “And that is your problem.”

Sanja turned to find Egun pinning him with a disapproving look, her head shining in the light of the setting sun.

“What do you mean?” he asked with a frown.

“When was the last time you prayed?”

Hidden Figures art by Wuraola Kayode

Bile rose up in Sanja’s throat and he abruptly spun his head back towards the plains. That was the one thing he would not do. He was the one that should be prayed to. He was the one incense should rise for. To pray would be to give up every ounce of pride he had left. It would be to admit that he was what he feared: nothing.

“You think prayer makes you weak,” Egun said, ignoring his stubbornness. “But you forget it is merely mortals asking us to do things for them.”

Sanja stubbornly remained silent. Logic didn’t matter. Nothing could make him pray. He could feel Ọ̀ṣun’s eyes on him, making his skin prickle with awareness.

“Sanja—”

“Don’t,” he bit out. He turned to face Ọ̀ṣun and her beautiful pleading face. “If you say anything else, you’ll never see me again.”

Her face fell in disappointment. “So, you would condemn hundreds of gods and thousands of humans just to salvage your pride. You are no different from Amadioha.”

She stood and walked back to the gathering with Egun, leaving Sanja reeling in shock. To be compared to that…that…inconsiderate buffoon, and know the comparison to be true filled him with more shame than one person should ever have to feel.

With tears running down his face, he bid farewell to the last hold he had on his divinity, rose from his seated position to his knees, put his forehead to the ground, and prayed for the first time in a hundred years.

“Please, if you can hear me, come.”

His tears fell to the rocks beneath his face, hissing where they met the ground, their salty scent, a heady incense to deities far and wide. Power pressed against his skin as he felt them appear in their droves, extending far beyond the top of the mountain into the air around it, their magnitude blocking out the sun and their luminescence providing enough light to penetrate Sanja’s eyelids.

Sanja waited for the tears to cease before getting to his feet and opening his eyes to look at the crowd of beings he had summoned. The air bubbled with the amount of power emanating from them. There were those he knew personally, those he’d had dalliances with or once kept as friends. There were Bòòríí, Arusi, and the Vodun deities. There were even gods that he didn’t know existed.

The knowledge that he, an ordinary mortal, had summoned them all here set him reeling, though he knew some were filled with glee at his shattered pride. Amadioha and the other gods gaped at their number while Egun smiled at him, proud. Still, he could not find his voice.

“Why have you brought us here?”

Several tongues spoke at once and coalesced into one clear voice in Sanja’s head.

Sanja thought of what he could say, every flowery word that would make him sound like an orator of the gods. But there was nothing pretentious left in him anymore, nothing but the bare, honest truth.

“You are all on the verge of death,” he said.

A ripple of confusion passed through them, and whispers of “Die? How?” popped up from every corner.

“A time is coming when most if not all of you will be swallowed up by history and forgotten, left to become mortals and live out eternity powerless.”

Fear and pity showed on their faces. They all knew how he’d been forgotten and condemned to live as an immortal human. And none of them wanted to be him.

“You need to come together and fight for yourselves,” he continued.

“Have you seen the new people?” a voice in the multitude asked, and others murmured their agreement. “They have weapons and knowledge we have never seen.”

“That does not give them the right to erase us or what we stand for.”

Sanja could see how his words affected different factions. Faces closed off; those who believed the newcomers were better and would gladly serve under them. Eyes burned with pride and anger; those that would fight till their dying breath to preserve their land. And still, some were undecided, whose ambivalence would keep them too busy to care about what mattered.

“So, what do you suggest, o wise one?” a lilting, mocking voice asked. Sanja could see the speaker was a small creature with eagle wings and ram horns and a baby’s body covered in white tattoos. He reflexively forced his hand to twitch to dispel the anger building in him and turned from the creature.

He prayed a second time and opened his mouth after taking a deep breath.

“You need to remind your people that you still exist.”

“How?” The same lilting voice asked. “We are nothing but a manifestation of their thoughts.”

Sanja felt a hand on his shoulder and saw Anansi step forward out of the corner of his eye.

“Thoughts recur,” the spider god said, “and they evolve. Let the colourless foreigners see only the few, big strong gods they want, and let us be left in the darkness of their minds while at the forefront of our people’s, growing just as their minds and thoughts do.

“A day is coming when our people will need to fight back for our freedom and everything we want. Will they win with what they are allowed to know, with the little they are spoon-fed by those invaders, or will they win with this?”

He indicated their sheer number which was enough to block out even the sun. Sanja felt a prick of satisfaction as he saw understanding dawn on the faces of the deities. Anansi’s words had painted a better picture than he ever would have done.

Hours passed, which felt like a drop in the pool of eternity as the deities spoke among themselves and deliberated the merits of remaining unseen but influential forces of nature. He could see the faces of those who wore their jealousy like their burnished naked skins. They wanted — hungered for — the global recognition Anansi and his brothers and sisters were soon to receive.

But what gave him hope were the gods and creatures that began to disappear from the gathering — letting in pricks of moonlight and starlight — and the memories of gods old and new, whispering at the back of his mind.

Never forget.

A single tear rolled down Sanja’s cheek, and he turned and began to make his way down the mountain.

Plangdi Neple, is a Nigerian author whose work has appeared in Afritondo, Lunaris Review, and African Writer Magazine. He can be found on Twitter and Instagram as Plangdi Neple. When not reading or writing, he can be found watching old movies or sleeping.

King of Spirits – Tardoo Ayua

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A voice, calm and soothing, spoke from behind, “Hello Akombo”. He turned and saw a snake, green as the vegetation it was coiled in, almost invisible. “Who are you?” Akombo quivered, attempting to back away. Even as he spoke, the young man was shocked that a dangerous animal like a snake could have the power of speech.

“I am Ikyarem.”

“Oh, Ikyarem … I have heard of you”, he was suddenly relaxed. Ikyarem, according to legend, was a benevolent serpent who saved people in distress. Akombo had always been one to sense the presence of spirits and the forces of the supernatural so it was not all too surprising when the serpent told Akombo that he had been chosen by the spirits for a specific role. However, what he’d been chosen for came as a surprise to him; deciding who the new King of Spirits was going to be.

Tired of all the fighting to claim the title, one of the gods, Esu, suggested a novel way of choosing who the new king would be. Any of the spirits who wanted to become king would declare his intention to all in a gathering and then the rest of the spirits were to choose who they wanted by casting cowry shells. Whoever had the most cowry shells would become the new King. Akombo’s role in this process was to count.

“So, do you accept? You will be greatly rewarded.”

Akombo didn’t dilly-dally about the matter. He thought the spirits were truly wise to come up with this new way of choosing their leader, and he was eager to see how the proceedings would play out. Maybe he could introduce it to his kinsmen when he returned.

“I accept, Ikyarem. It would be an honour. I have one question though, why pick a mortal to count the cowry shells? Couldn’t one of the spirits do it?”

“I suggested that a mortal be the one to count because the spirits squabbled among themselves over who would do the counting. There is very little trust among us. You will get to see that very soon.”

“Oh ok… When should we depart?”

“Meet me here by twilight and I will take you to the land of the spirits.”

“As you say, Ikyarem.”

The snake slithered into the greenery and vanished.

Akombo went back home, ate, had a bath, and returned to the spot where he’d met the snake, eager for the journey ahead. He saw Ikyarem crawl out from the bushes, a darker green in the waning light of the sun, then it looked up at him and said: “Close your eyes and count to ten, then we will be in the land of the spirits.”

He did as he was told, “One, two, three, four…,” and when he opened his eyes, he was in a strange land. The ground was covered in deep red sand and the trees were much bigger and taller than any he’d seen before. In fact, everything looked much bigger, the moon was a white, fat melon in the night sky and the stars burned brighter than he had ever seen them shine.

Ikyarem crawled forward and Akombo followed, until they got to a roofless, large round structure, with smooth walls like the back of a calabash. He heard chatter coming from within. “This place is called Onokoni, the meeting place of the spirits. You will inform them of your acceptance of your role in the selection of a new King.”

“I see.” He wondered what the spirits would say.

“Now put me on your shoulder and enter.” Despite Akombo’s misgivings about placing a snake on his shoulder, even if it was one known for its benevolence, he lifted Ikyarem and placed the serpent on his left shoulder where it coiled and balanced.

He entered the building and was introduced by Ikyarem. They were all here, spirits he had heard about in tales beneath the moonlight, in songs during burials, in chants during births. There were also others he didn’t recognise. He could see pale humanoid beings, fat scaly creatures, a two-headed, gigantic spirit, a spirit covered in vines with about five different eyeballs in between them, among others.

A human-like spirit was addressing the crowd. It wore a long, striped robe and a hat that went round his head and stretched upwards, neatly divided in the middle by two colours, red on the left and black on the right. This was Esu, the architect of the new selection process.

He turned to Akombo and explained the process, adding that he would do the counting alone, without help from any of the spirits, but he was allowed to make one significant change to the counting process if he so wished. Then he introduced the candidates for the position of King of Spirits; Sango, Mami Wata and Kure, the Great Hyena.

Akombo saw Sango, muscular with fiery eyes and a cocky smile, wearing a black loin cloth. His chiselled face bore a rugged handsomeness that exuded charisma and danger. His skin was the rich brown of polished copper and his muscles flexed as he walked. He had a battle axe in his right hand, perhaps to show that he was always ready for a challenge.

Next, Akombo saw a beautiful woman, her skin fair and smooth like a mango just before peak ripeness, soft yet firm. She wore a sparkling green cloth around her breasts and another round her waist. Her waist was also adorned with coral beads, while a huge necklace made of colourful seashells sat on her neck. The most surprising accessory on her though, was the large boa, hanging from her shoulders down to her waist. Its skin was greenish yellow with large black circles. She was beautiful yet terrifying at the same time.

Then he saw the third spirit, a huge Hyena-like creature, walking into the centre of the room. this spirit’s fur was brown but adorned with black spots. Its legs were massive and muscular. It was called Kure the Great Hyena; it was the first to speak.

“I greet you all, divine eminences. I come here to declare my interest in becoming the new King of Spirits. I have one complaint, however. The three of us are mighty spirits, and it only goes to show that might is necessary for leadership. I propose that only mighty spirits be allowed to choose who the next King is. I don’t see why a minor spirit, like Ikyarem over there,” he pointed at the serpent, “should be part of the process. They amount to nothing. It would be laughable for them to have a say.”

The assembly went into an uproar, some spirits agreed while others expressed indignation.

Sango said “Are you worried, Kure, that you will not find any support from the minor spirits, whom you have bullied and hunted before? You are afraid of losing, aren’t you?”

The Hyena growled at the thunder god.

Mami Wata raised her hands up and said; “Everybody calm down. It is true that the minor spirits are weak but that is no reason why they shouldn’t make their choice. They outnumber the greater spirits and you should remember, Kure, that there is strength in numbers.”

“Hmmph!”

“So, it is agreed that the minor spirits will also cast their cowries,” Esu said, turning to face Kure.

The Hyena looked at the gathering and could see the anger in the eyes of a lot of the spirits.

“Yes, fine! They can participate. However, I have another condition. A spirit shall only become king if they get more cowry shells than the other two combined.”

The gathering went into another uproar. Surely this was a ploy. The Hyena knew he couldn’t win because he was not liked by the smaller spirits so he wanted to make sure that nobody won.

“Keep quiet!!! All of you, keep quiet and listen to me! If the winner doesn’t have more supporters than the other two combined, what happens if the losers and their supporters come together and attack the winner?! We will be back to square one, where fighting decides the King!” the Hyena grinned, knowing that he had made a good point.

Sango took his hand to his chin and considered what Kure had said. Mami Wata just looked on with a subtle smile on her face. The spirits murmured among themselves, then an ogbanje raised a hand. “I greet you all, and I have to agree with Kure. The winner must have a greater majority than the other two so that it doesn’t become a battle between all. We can agree that if nobody wins the selection process, another will be conducted.”

Esu addressed the gathering, “do you all agree?”

The majority cry was a resounding “Yes!”

It was decided. The winner had to get more cowries than the other two combined.

Ikyarem spoke:

“There is one more matter. Akombo has a very important role and it is possible that he will be exposed to danger, he will need to be protected for the period in which he will be here, and also the three spirits must swear not to harm him.”

The Hyena growled.

The god of thunder smiled.

The queen of the waters maintained her expression.

Then Sango said “That is a good idea. Who can protect Akombo while he carries out his duties? Whichever spirit is strong enough will be rewarded for protecting the mortal.”

Silence reigned in the hall, as the spirits looked at each other or elsewhere.

“I will do it; I will protect the mortal.” Everyone turned to the source of the voice. It was Egbonkeke, a spirit that looked like a woman. She was tall and muscular, her skin the colour of loamy soil. She wore a green lacy blouse and a skimpy skirt made entirely of coral beads. Sounds filled the hall as spirits spoke in hushed tones. Akombo asked Ikyarem who she was, and Ikyarem told him that she was a fearsome spirit but to some she was a protector. With her as his protector, he was in safe hands… Probably.

“It is decided then, Egbonkeke will protect the mortal,” Esu announced.

Kure added, “But know this, you must protect him with your life. If he dies and you’re still alive, I will kill you personally and eat your heart. Hahahahaha!”

Sango smiled and said “you are just horrible Kure, but I agree. If Egbonkeke fails to protect the mortal, she will die. That is the only way to make sure she takes the job seriously.”

Mami Wata said nothing.

“I accept to protect him with my life, and I expect my reward to be plentiful.”

“Of course,” Esu said then brought out three kolanuts.

“Each of you must swear not to harm Akombo during his stay in the spirit world. Come, take a kolanut and eat to be bound by your oath.”

Each of them took a kolanut, swore not to harm Akombo and proceeded to eat the nut.

“It is done then; the selection process will be carried out tomorrow night. The gathering has come to an end.”

The spirits left the hall, some flew out, others vanished and the rest walked out. Akombo and Ikyarem also departed, accompanied by Egbonkeke.

I’m sure you’re hungry and tired. We can go to the Feasting Hall and thereafter to the lodgings that have been prepared for you to sleep. No harm will come to you now and you can carry out your duty without fear.”

“That is reassuring, I can’t wait to be a part of it all,” Akombo could hardly contain his excitement as he thought of how each spirit will cast a cowry shell for the one deity they want to become king.

They were on a red trail that led to a structure which looked like a giant pot that had been turned upside down and affixed into the earth. Its colour was a washed grey, and the surface was designed with rows of shapes and dots, mostly squiggles and arrowheads. This was the Feasting Hall, where spirits often gathered to eat.

Beside the entrance, someone was waiting for them. It was Kure.

Arrival by Zaynab Bobi

“Come behind quickly, Akombo.” Egbonkeke ordered and stepped in front of him, taking a fighter’s pose.

“Relax, my dear Gbon. I just want to have a chat with him. I swore with kola that I would not hurt him so there is nothing to worry about.”

“This is highly irregular Kure, you shouldn’t be meeting with Akombo in such a manner—”

“Shut up worm, just because you brought him from the land of mortals doesn’t mean you suddenly have the power to talk to me in this way. I swore not to harm Akombo but you are a completely different matter. Now mortal, I intend to win the crown, you like meat, right? I know your people love eating meat a lot. Well, if you make me win somehow, I will provide you with all the bush meat you can imagine until the day you die.

“You will have a lifetime supply of all the meat you know and even the ones you don’t know. Antelope, grasscutter, pheasant, hippo, buffalo. I am the Great Hyena and I can bring it all for you. So, is it a deal?”

Akombo was tempted by the magnitude of the hyena’s promise. A lifetime supply of bush meat would certainly make his life easier. He could become a chief in his village, marry many wives, have a lot of property, and gain enormous respect from his peers.

“Thank you, but I will have to decline your offer Great Hyena. I am only com—”

“you’re a fool”, Kure said and left. Ikyarem saw him leave and knew he made a mistake. He should have added more conditions for the candidates to abide by. Who knows what other plans they would come up with? Extra care was necessary, going forward because there wouldn’t be any other gathering until the selection process.

They entered the feasting hall and Akombo saw a lot of enticing delicacies, some were familiar but the vast majority were not. Their strangeness didn’t reduce the desirability of the meals, the aroma alone was out of this world, literally.

“Don’t eat anything unless I tell you it’s good for you; you understand?”

“I hear you,” Akombo replied.

Egbonkeke went around and came back with a tray of pounded yam and some kind of soup filled with a lot of meat. Akombo stared longingly at the soup, and maybe Egbonkeke interpreted his gaze as suspicion because she said:

“Don’t worry, none of the meat there is human.”

Akombo suddenly bore a shocked expression on his face. Ikyarem assured him that he was in no danger and added “Enjoy the feast. I have some business to attend to.” Then he slid down from Akombo’s shoulder and crawled into the crowd of diners. The spirits were animated, talking about the selection process and who they would drop their cowry for. An Orisha said it would vote for Sango because he was strong and confident while an ndem was of the opinion that Mami Wata was the better candidate.

Ikyarem heard them as he slithered between them, getting an idea of who was the popular choice and trying to determine how the results could turn out. Suddenly he was grabbed by an Anjenu who asked him: “tell us Ikyarem, who would you prefer to become the king of spirits?”

He paused a bit then said “In the interest of all spirits I think Mami Wata would be the best. She acknowledged the strength of us minor spirits because we have the greater number. As a result, I believe she will most likely treat us favourably.”

The hall was quiet as spirits mulled over what the serpent said, even the Orisha that had previously indicated support for Sango seemed to be reconsidering its stance. After a moment the hall became lively again with talk of the selection process.

After the meal, they walked out of the hall where they were approached by Sango. “Mortal, it is an honourable thing you are doing. You should be proud of yourself but don’t follow the rules too strictly or you might get enemies you would rather not have. Some may bear a grudge if the outcome of the selection process doesn’t go in their favour. Make a wise choice.”

Was this a subtle threat? It certainly appeared that way and a threat from a spirit, no a god, was not something to take lightly. Akombo thought these things, but said instead, “Great Sango, your words are truly wise, however for the sake of the spirits and as you have said, this is an honourable duty. I must obey the rules fully, whoever is chosen must be made king as the rules dictate.”

The god frowned almost imperceptibly then smiled, “An appropriate answer, mortal. We shall see how things turn out and if you made the right choice.” With that, he turned and left.

The spirits are truly untrustworthy Akombo realised, remembering Ikyarem’s words earlier.

#

Akombo and his companions headed to the place that had been arranged for his slumber. The moon shone brightly above but the trees in the forest they were passing through were tall and grappled with the moonlight, creating an ethereal effect of pale light and shadow. Suddenly, Egbonkeke stopped.

“Is there a problem?” Akombo looked at her.

“We are being followed.”

Akombo turned around but saw nobody, Ikyarem stuck his tongue in the air for a few seconds then said: “you’re right. There’s three of them, two are by the side and one is directly behind us.”

“Come out! We know you’re there. What do you want?”

From the left, a noise startled them, when they looked, they saw a diminutive humanlike creature, it was covered in black gruel from head to toe. And it was smiling in a childish, mischievous manner. From the right appeared a pale man in tattered clothes, a deadpan expression on his face. And right behind them, a tree creaked, then croaked, and its branches became animated as if they were arms. Its bark cracked open in two places and within the crevices, Akombo saw… eyes?

“These are our attackers? A bush baby, a dead man and a tree spirit?”

The tree spirit spoke through another, longer fissure beneath the two that served as its eyes: “you don’t want to obey the demands of someone very powerful, and there are consequences for that, mortal. Heeheehee.”

The bush baby vomited the same black goo that covered its body just as Egbonkeke grabbed Akombo and jumped on a tree. The dead man vanished and appeared on one of the branches of the same tree, close to Akombo. He stretched out his hand to grab Akombo but Egbonkeke kicked the branch the dead man was on and he fell. He vanished before he hit the ground and appeared beside the tree spirit.

“Hold onto the tree tightly, I have to go and fight these spirits!”

“Will you be alright alone?” Ikyarem asked.

“I am Egbonkeke the terrifying, you don’t have to worry about me.” She smiled devilishly then jumped down and landed directly in front of the tree spirit. The spirit pulled its roots from the ground, the roots were clumped together in two pillars which served as its legs. The tree took a swing at Egbonkeke but she jumped to dodge it. Almost immediately, the bush baby spat some is its goo on the ground where she was going to land. Her feet fell into the goo and got stuck. The bush baby laughed hysterically.

“Now go and get the mortal, dead man whose touch brings death!” The dead man said nothing but looked at Akombo up in the tree. He vanished again and appeared on another branch just above his quarry.

Moaning as if he was hurt, the dead man stretched his hand out to strike but Ikyarem told Akombo to jump and as Akombo did, Ikyarem grew larger in size and acted as a cushion for him. The serpent was as large as a tree now and with Akombo on its back, it slithered away. The dead man looked at them languidly, as if trying to determine how close to them he should appear. The bush baby ran after them. Egbonkeke by now had gotten angry, and it showed. Her muscles flexed, her hair grew longer and became pitch black, swirling on their own like living strings. Her face broadened and her mouth widened, her teeth grew sharp and pointy. With immense force, she yanked one foot out of the goo and placed it on bare soil then did the same to the other.

Now free, she jumped through the air after the bush baby. It turned around too late as she kicked it into a tree with such strength that it became a mass of black goo on the tree trunk. The tree spirit and the dead man stood side by side ready to attack. Ikyarem told Akombo to get down because he would have to fight alongside Egbonkeke if they were to survive the night. Akombo asked him if he could win but the serpent said he had made his choice and that was most important.

Ikyarem slithered towards the tree spirit and coiled around it, binding it in place, the tree spirit dug into his flesh with its branches but Ikyarem tightened the embrace. The dead man appeared before Akombo, ready to strike but Egbonkeke kicked him away. The force of the kick tore the dead man in half but somehow it merged his body back together.

Standing up, the dead man moaned and ran towards them.

“You’re a dead man but you’re still just a mortal who was brought back to life. Do you know how many mortals I have killed?! Tens of thousands!” Akombo looked at Egbonkeke, aghast at her words, she caught his eyes briefly, then looked back at the dead man. “I will show you my true power!”

Her hair shot out towards the dead man and wrapped itself around him, then she stepped forward, nails as long as daggers, and grabbed the dead man’s head. She said some incantations and then crushed his skull. Her hair then let go of the corpse and it fell to the ground with a thud.

Egbonkeke turned her attention to the tree spirit and Ikyarem.

The tree spirit had dealt the snake a lot of blows and it looked like it probably wouldn’t last long. She jumped up to what counted as the tree’s face. Digging her nails into its bark she plunged her hand into the left eye which gushed out sticky brown liquid. The tree spirit screamed and its branches tried to grab Egbonkeke but she kicked at them, jumping off the branches and at a point along Ikyarem’s body. Her target was the other eye.

A branch struck her but she held on to it and from it jumped to the tree’s trunk, digging her long nails into it. She was close to the second eye now and she dug her right hand just beneath the second eye, and then she reached upwards. Again, a stream of sticky brown liquid flowed out, but this time, the tree spirit had been blinded. Ikyarem uncoiled himself from the tree’s writhing body and shrunk back to its regular size.

Egbonkeke picked Ikyarem up and turned away as the tree spirit thrashed about in pain. They met up with Akombo and continued their journey to where he would spend the night. She advised that Akombo stay in his lodgings till the night of the selection because it was unlikely that he would be attacked there.

The night they were waiting for arrived finally and Egbonkeke escorted Akombo and Ikyarem into the hall. Ikyarem told Akombo that he had a choice to make since he would be the only one in the hall to count, he had the ultimate power to decide what the results would be. Akombo felt the weight of the burden placed on him and was troubled, he had to think of something.

The spirits lined up outside the hall to cast their cowries in either of three calabashes, one had a carving of a fish, the other a hyena and the third, a lightning bolt. Esu announced that the process had begun and the spirits trooped in and out, placing a cowry shell in a calabash of their choice.

In about 3 human hours the casting of the shells was over and time for counting was to begin. Akombo thought hard about how he would use the power he had been given to make a significant change in the counting process. He decided to amend the rule by bringing the three calabashes out to where the spirits were gathered and in full view started to count: one cowry, two cowries, three cowries, four…

All the spirits saw the process of counting and all saw who had won. He made the announcement that Mami Wata had the most cowries and more than those of Kure and Sango combined. She was the new King, no… Queen of Spirits.

“I refuse! I refuse! This calls for war! I’m supposed to be the King!” the protest came from Sango and as he said the words, clouds teeming with flashes of lightning gathered. He was ready for the old ways, for war!

“Hahahaha! You see! That’s why I suggested that extra rule. You supported this new selection process Sango, and now you want to discard it? You want to fight us all because you don’t like the results? You can’t even take me on alone, not to talk of me and Mami Wata combined. Now look at all the spirits ready to defend their choice, how many can you alone fight?! Hahahaha!” the voice of Kure rang through the crowd of spirits.

The spirits looked at Sango and he looked at them, he saw in their eyes the readiness to protect their choice and to protect the process. He grimaced as his pride was wounded but ultimately, he relented, dissipating the dark clouds. The spirits shouted in joy over the success of this new form of selection, it was as if they were in control of their destiny for the first time.

Mami Wata thanked the spirits for choosing her and made her first proclamation as Queen, no spirit was to harm Akombo for as long as he lived. The spirits cheered in support, they respected and applauded Akombo’s forthrightness. Mami Wata also gave him a charm, in the form of a fishbone which could be used to catch any water creature and a pebble which protected him from harm whenever he held it.

“You did a fine job as a counter, mortal,” Egbonkeke said.

“Thank you, you also did a good job protecting me,” Akombo replied. She nodded and left.

With his duty done Akombo was taken back to the land of mortals by Ikyarem.

“Count to ten.”

“one, two, three, four…”

And he was back to the spot where he first met Ikyarem, the snake was in front of him and so he asked just before it left: “Ikyarem you risked your life to save me and to make sure the process went well. Do you really have that much faith in this new way of selecting your leader?”

“Yes Akombo, I truly believe that this new way is for the best. We minor spirits can finally be recognised by the major ones. And for now, only the major spirits are brave enough to indicate their interests but, someday, maybe even a minor spirit like me can become king.”

“Oh, I see, I hope it happens. Goodbye Ikyarem.”

“Goodbye, Akombo.”

They parted ways and Akombo walked home with Ikyarem’s words ringing in his head.

THE END.

Tardoo Ayua has had a strong interest in telling stories, especially of the speculative kind, since he was a child. He is a graduate of law from the University of Abuja and his favourite meal is fries. ‘King of Spirits’ is his first published story. 

Jon Menzi – Nos Jondi

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THE PROPHET JON

The light of the day was dying fast, like a beast in the field at the end of its life, struggling through the louvres, spotlighting the layer of dust that caked the glass panes. I stood, towards the end of the wall, peering out at the world beyond. Shadows slanted in all directions, differing shapes and sizes, various tints and grades of black and grey, infecting the world, dragging everything in it deeper into the oncoming darkness. Soon there would be nothing to see, imagination playing a part in what might be, memory recounting what actually was. Leaves rustled on the ground as an evening breeze riddled through the long grass, moving everything around in tight little swirls.

My eyes shifted back to the window panes, then to the wire mesh in front of them. Insects buzzed across it, frustrated at their failure to access the lights on in the room behind me. I took a deep breath but all I smelt was dust and earth, the smells carried listlessly by the continuing breeze outside. I turned my head, looking over my shoulder at the seats filling up. Today people were earlier, encouraged by the drop in temperature that day to seek warmth before the cold outside worked its way into their bones. The heaters were on, a fire burning steadily in the fireplace directly behind me. Tea, coffee, sandwiches and biscuits sat on a table at the back of the room. But no one had touched anything, their hands were empty. For they had not come for the bread offered by man but for the words of the Prophet. For man does not live on bread and crumpets alone but from each and every word that proceeds from the mouth and mind of the Prophet Jon.

            There had been more than one prophet though. That’s a problem you have when you’re a clone and everyone is as well. You all talk the same, sound the same because you generally come from the same primordial soup. Now there was only one, me. I was the one true prophet. The false ones were dead and buried, out in unmarked graves so no homage could be paid to them by their followers, scattered to the winds like cockroaches when the lights come on. I abhorred violence but the culling was a consequence of a natural sequence of events that had played out for the past thirty years. The first prophet appeared when I was ten and one every year after that. I appeared in the fifth year of the prophets and as time went on my predictions and visions proved to be stronger than all the other prophets combined. It didn’t take long after a prophet’s appearance to attract a following and just like a celebrity, the position came with status. I never had to ask for anything again, it was given to me without asking. My disciples made sure to lay the world at my feet, without me having to say a single word. As my ‘utterings’ increased in frequency and accuracy, so did my following. It triggered a negative reaction in the others, both those before and after me. Their power decreased in direct proportion to my gaining in strength. This led to accusations of devil’s magic on my part, accusations of me stealing their power and gifts through blood pacts with fallen angels. Nonsense of course, but not to them, how else could they explain what was happening to them and to me, especially since I was clearly the one benefitting from their loss?

         They must decrease while I must increase. I carried the world on my shoulders. I told them this (a poor choice of words, I admit in retrospect, but it was an uttering and something I had no control over). The truth was no one knew where the power we had to say the things we said came from. Like singing, you could or you couldn’t. The utterings were like the urge to pee. You did it. Period. No option, no choice about any of it. You could keep it to yourself, talk to walls but that only made the urge worse, building up like a mental geyser in your mind until you were babbling non-stop. That’s how everyone else knew you had the gift of prophecy. It seized you when you least expected. We knew things about the world that weren’t in books, things that we would have had to wander beyond our present stations in life to know and learn. Prophet is a misnomer; while prophecy was part of the gift, we could more accurately be described as teachers, custodians of knowledge, soothsayers and keepers of the secrets the Universe was ready to give up. That was power and power was addictive, something none of the other Prophets wanted to give up. That’s when the fighting started, different factions facing off in a bid to regain what they had lost. They had come to believe that if they killed me, the power that I had siphoned off for myself would somehow disburse and return to them. It was a theory that would never be proved because I saw it coming and I had the tools and means to defend myself. My following was the biggest in the city, not bigger than the rest of the other prophets’ groupings combined, but still a force to be reckoned with. We had the knowledge to outmatch and outclass the others. The war dragged on for three years, intense sporadic skirmishes all clumped into one tight mess, but in the end, we were victorious. The remaining prophets were all executed, a mere handful by the time the war ended, to discourage any future and potential rebellions. I had wanted a peaceful resolution but I had no power over blood that begins to boil in the veins of men, in need of periodic release. It was a dark part of me, us, that could not be tamed and that I had come to accept. In the end, there could be no challenge to established truths. All falsehood and attempts are the same, needed to be wiped out and erased, covered in sand and stones where time would assign them to oblivion and they’d eventually be forgotten, even by memory.

            The seats were almost full, wooden pews carved in the shape of half-moons and arranged in a radial pattern. I put a hand to the wall and pushed, moving backwards towards the gathering. It was a large room, but not large enough for all my disciples. These were the ones closest to me. They would take my teachings and teach them to the rest as gospel truth.  My eyes fell over the crowd, taking in all the faces, my face, repeated over and over. I knew that we were clones, that there was a ‘first’ us from whom we all descended but this was never really a concern for anyone except me. Trying for an answer to the question was like peering into a dark room, bad lighting all around and seeing nothing but objects cloaked in obscurity. The answer never came no matter how long I yelled or squinted.

            The room settled, faces turned towards the teacher, waiting earnestly for that evening’s lesson.

            “I am going away,” I began slowly. The reaction was as I had expected. Eyes widened, mouths dropped, hands squeezed together, feet shuffled forward, then back again.

            “Where are you going, Teacher?” A disciple on my left asked.

            “Somewhere I can’t tell you because I honestly don’t know.”

            Brows creased, confusion setting in.

            “But how is this so, Teacher?” another disciple from the back of the pews asked. “Don’t you know all things?”

            “Most things are not all things. And how does one know that things one claims to know are all things, when one can never really know how much there is to ever truly know?”

            Heads nodded, small smiles here and there. I had just dropped another pearl of convoluted wisdom they would mull over repeatedly in the days to come.

            “Will you come back?” another asked.

            “Yes, I will,” I lied.

            “Can we come with you?”

            “You cannot come where I am going. Those who I go to will not let you come.”

            One disciple shot to his feet, hand in the air, shaking it in a tight fist.

            “We’ll kill anyone who dares lay their hands on you!” he yelled. Others rose to their feet, clamouring their support. I held up my hands, the expression on my face sombre.

            “There has been enough blood spilled. He who comes is greater than I am. He has amassed more knowledge. We would not survive.”

            Hands dropped, the lines of confusion deeper this time.

            “Is he a prophet like yourself?”

            I shook my head.

            “He is something greater. He is something more, there before any of us ever were. When the time is right, he will reveal himself. He must increase, so I must decrease. Then the scales will fall from all our eyes and we shall have a deep understanding of things I can barely explain now.” A sadness I could feel like fabric against my skin, descended over the gathering.

            “But take heart and do not despair,” I said smiling, walking forward, shaking hands that had begun to tremble, raising my hand to eyes that had started to tear and to lips that had started to quiver. “I have seen a great light in the valley. We are going towards the state of being I have preached countless times over the year. Be steady and stay true to that faith.”

            The smiles returned and I raised my arms, wrapping them around two of my disciples and guiding them towards the table laden with drinks and snacks at the back of the room, everyone gathering around, laughing and smiling. The fear had passed but I knew it was far from over. I’d had only one vision the entire week, simply rehashing past messages to allay fears that I had lost the gift. All I could see when I closed my eyes was darkness spread across an empty horizon. The light was nowhere to be found.

JON 316

I can smell coffee and fresh bread in the air, although I am standing in a field of ankle high grass, the grass beginning to pollinate. Snow white butterflies float through this field and I am mesmerized for a few seconds, admiring their inborn will to be free, not asking anyone for permission to enjoy that freedom. I look up at the fading sky, almost three hours until the sun is swallowed up by the horizon. Maybe less. The days are shorter this time of the year and I know that the Prophet Jon is preparing for his daily teaching. I don’t know what he is going to tell his disciples, only he has the power of foresight. I’m sure it will be grand. Something to convince them that he is the one to fall on their swords for, the only true one remaining after the false ones were removed. I close my eyes and remember those days turning into night with the chaos that reigned. People were willing to kill for the truth, others died because of the lies. I know this because I saw it happen and then I saw the field, one thing after the other. Objects cannot occupy the same space and time even something as seemingly intangible as memory. I had to unlearn a long time ago, that time is not linear, rather a vibrating circle, the past, present and future occurring one after the other, like ripples on the surface of water caused by a stone, bouncing back and forth through the physical limitations of our state of being.

Now I can perceive the burnt smell of carcasses, the acrid smell of bombs, their vibrations as they fall to the ground, opening it up and wounding it over and over again. I have seen this all before, in the past and the future that came attached to it. I’ve never questioned these events, they must occur so that there is room for more perhaps, but that answer is never satisfactory because I know it is half the truth and maybe just all lies. I have lived here for many years, visiting the towns and communities in the surrounding areas, where the Communities of Jon live. These places are not like where the Prophet lives, they are more peaceful, more grounded, more in touch with a sense of purpose. They farm the land, work the mines, establish industries as they are needed and pay homage to the Creator, the primary consciousness of us all. I’ve lost count of how many there have been over the years but their end is close at hand too. I have seen the future attached to the present memory. They will die peacefully; Jon the Creator will grant them that. They will be swallowed up by clouds of fire and turned to ash. And after the great crushing, it will start all over again. I frown; a memory of trees growing tall and strong amidst the blood and bones laid to rest in a killing field. The grass has given way to forest, the sound of people laughing and singing but they look different. Their clothes are different, the times are different. But they have happened before. Time is a spot one keeps running on over again, a state of being that moves neither left nor right but back and forth. Energy thrown out into the Universe only to come back again like a boomerang, only to be thrown out again to come back again… I’m not sure how many ripples I have gone through but what I do know is that they become shorter when the Condensation is about to occur. The Condensation is what I call the moment the ripples finally stop. That’s when the skies turn black. And the ground red, soaked through and through with the blood of us.

FIRST JON

The sky below me rumbles; flashes of lightning to the far east, followed by a huge flock of birds fleeing the oncoming storm. My hands are folded across my chest, my head bent slightly. There isn’t much to look at this high up, what one generation of Jons called my ‘blinkering tower of arrogant ivory’. I wouldn’t try to remember how long ago that was. Either 2nd Jon or Jon III would know but I couldn’t be bothered to ask. It wasn’t important. What was important was that this timeline was wrapped up and the next one began without a hitch. That was all that mattered. It was why I had come here in the first place.

            The moon and Mars had been successfully colonized when I left Earth. I didn’t want any part in those oddball projects. Wastes of time. I mean, who spends millions of taxpayers’ money trying to terraform two planet sized dustbowls? Exoplanets had been discovered; habitable worlds were a dime a dozen. Life on Earth was not a fluke after all. It was everywhere and anywhere one turned their telescope. I was stationed out on Mars when I got the idea. Build a spaceship and find my own spot in the stars. Simple enough. Easier said than done but when you’re a software engineer, getting hardware to do what you want isn’t half as hard. I had to work in secret obviously and it was slow at first. I spent the rest of my entire first life putting my ship together, making sure it got to where I had picked out. Sure, there were expeditions carried out by the International Space Administration but those were light years from successful planetary exploration or colonization. Budget cuts. I wasn’t going to wait for that. A trip for one would be just fine.

            I died a few months before my ship landed on a small moon just beyond Pluto. My clone emerged from its pod and set about adapting to the environment. I won’t go into details but let’s just say creation is a lengthy and messy business. Steering evolution in a direction you want is mind bending, back-breaking, gut-wrenching and ball-busting work, and not all can do it. You need to be brilliant like I was. How did I do it? The answer lay with my cloning machine. I simply cloned myself over and over again; brilliance all around.

            Everything reaches a point of diminishing returns, the point where peak performance butts heads with inefficiency and counter-productivity sets in. Each cloning cycle could only produce thirty–three clones at a time before the ‘dumbing down’ effect set in. low IQs ran rampant, with those way below sixty becoming the norm. I had to supplement and complement my workforce with replicator technology, careful not to create a situation where a machine singularity occurred. I had no intention of making it that far only to become a slave to machines of my own creation.

            The planet was home to a variety of animals, nothing remotely approaching intelligent life on a human level. If natural history had taught us anything, it was that everything had its time. I catalogued every single life form, studied them all and determined those that could pose a potential threat in terms of achieving dominance. None have risen to the challenge. What I didn’t realize at the time, was that the greatest threat and challenge to my self-rule would be me.

            I established towns every five hundred kilometers, in different environments, forcing myself in all my forms to adapt. This would, I believed, make me more formidable, pushing my evolution further along faster. The possibility of what I would become was exhilarating. Whenever a clone died, its consciousness was filtered through the primary consciousness. The first clone was based on my original self but divided into three. This way there was more room for the uploads upon death. To avoid data saturation, similar experiences across time and space were deleted. Only that deemed consolidating was kept.

            One would think that because one has made oneself in their exact image, then the replicas would agree with everything the primary would say. I learned the hard way that was a lie. They may look like you, but in essence, every clone is eventually a different version of you. Like having a child, one cannot control what it will become during its life, be it long or short. Differences were going to arise, that they would do things at odds with the primary conscious.

            The first rebellion started in Settlement 143, a warm climate town. I had edited sexual urges from my DNA, in a bid to free myself from having to deal with them, a burden on my time I could not afford. The thought of pleasuring myself with ‘myself’ was not what I had in mind for my future. I had been raised Catholic and firmly taught that all self-pleasure was in fact self-abuse. I was at present asexual, had been for a long time. Settlement 143 demanded that they be allowed to override this, they had the mental impulses but they failed to actually materialize in the flesh. I told them that they were me and I was them, and as the Creator, they could not question decisions made by me for me. They refused to accept this and reverse engineered their tech to become fighting machines, bombing other towns into submission; those that would not take up their cause were annihilated into oblivion. I put them down eventually, their living memories shredded and trashed. It set me back a couple of decades but it was an invaluable learning curve. Laws were created, the Book of Jon codified and written in stone pillars in each settlement, placed in the town hall and the allegiance to the Creator grafted into their DNA.

            Inducing allegiance at a cellular level had its limitations too. You could only do that for a certain number of generations before it had a dumbing down effect as well, the clones becoming mindless slaves who did everything they were told without question. I didn’t need robot versions of me. I needed beautiful minds that mirrored my innovation and genius. Zombies would not do.    

             A movement on my left. Jon the 2nd wiped his nose, his handkerchief held tightly in both hands. I made a face.

            “What?” he said. “Don’t look at me like that. You’re acting like you’ve never had a cold before. I am you and you are me. You like to forget that.”

            “Thanks for the snotty reminder,” I said. “But you won’t catch me holding on to it like a Dear John letter after I’ve just used it. You want to spread that booger everywhere, is that it?”

            “And you’re a dramatic prick,” he said. He nodded at the window. “Getting antsy at things to come?”

            “Killing people in their hundreds isn’t something I want to get used to,” I said. “It’s not good for the soul or the mind. It’s how psychopaths are born.” Jon III appeared from a side room. He was carrying a tablet in his one hand, the other stuffed into his trouser pocket. He raised the tablet.

            “We determined that killing off generations at regular intervals eliminated the problems we encountered at the beginning. I doubt we came all this way to create another Earth, with all its wars and woes.”

            “The desire for autonomous rule is inherent in every human,” Jon the 2nd said after another hefty sneeze. “Whatever put us here must have met with the same problem and left us to our own devices. Humans still don’t know what to do with that desire, and they’ve still not figured out the best way to use freedom when they’re finally granted it. Too much of anything is a bad thing. Checks and balances are necessary, even if they come in the form of broken skulls.”

            “You can’t say you won’t control people and rule over them at the same time,” I said. “A contradiction of terms if there ever was one. I’ve never believed in that kind of thing. People don’t know what they are, who they are or where they want to go. Societies are moving parts of a whole, pulling and pushing in every direction all at once. That’s not progress, that’s stumbling about. By guiding this world, we provide it with a singular purpose, all geared towards the advancement of our ideals. Heaven or even the road that leads to it is not a democracy.”

            “A theocracy has been defined as dictatorship simply wrapped up in religious edicts,” Jon III said, swiping at his tablet.

            “We’re not gods yet but we’re slowly getting there,” I said. “I was able to conduct terraforming on the Abyssinian Plains yesterday by merely looking at drone footage.”

            Both Jons were clearly impressed. 

            “I can create some shift in weather patterns but not much,” Jon the 2nd said. “Work in progress.”

            “We’re all works in progress,” Jon III said. “Prophet Jon is ready for extraction and Jon 316 is safely in his bunker. The drones are on stand-by. I’m running last minute diagnostics.”

            I nodded, a heaviness weighing down on my chest. In the next couple of days, a lot of people were going to die. Parts of me. Over and over again. Idiosyncrasies aside, they were still all me. The three of us, me, Jon the 2nd and Jon III would be semi-conscious over the next three weeks as memories uploaded, sifted and sorted. After it was over, all three of us would have ascended to higher plains of existence. Certain things would make sense, changes would be made wherever changes needed to occur. And the new Jons that would be created out of the ashes of the old world below would discover that freedom came at a price. It was something they would never forget, part of their collective memory. Settlements 143 and others like it served as examples for subsequent generations. There would always be anomalies, I accepted that, rogue parts of me running amok, trying to challenge my established authority. But they were part of the bigger picture too, they served an important function. Sowing seeds of death so life anew could be reaped thereafter. A king was no king without his subjects, loyal or treacherous and every kingdom was built on blood and bones. Utopia didn’t exist simply because you wanted it too. You had to make it, brick by brick. Body by body. Yes, freedom came with a price, all paid for in blood.

            Another rumble of thunder and the sky darkened as a stack of rain clouds broiled through my field of vision.

            “Diagnostics done,” Jon III announced. “Machines are set and ready to go. Primary mainframe online, cerebral banks on stand-by.”

            I nodded.

            “Proceed.”

            He swiped at his tablet again.  A few seconds later, iridescent explosions flashed beneath the clouds below.

            It had begun.    

   

Nos Jondi/Peter-Paul Ndyani was born in 1982 in the Republic of Malawi. He was selected as mentee for the 2017 Writivism Mentoring Program, and his short story ‘In the Beating of the Storm’, appears in the 2017 Writivism Mentoring Anthology, ‘Transcending the Flame’ available at www.blackletterm.com. His short story ‘Present Darkness’ won Honourable Mention at The Roswell Award for Short Story Sci-Fi 2017 in Pasadena, California. He has published a Military sci-fi/fantasy trilogy with Silver Empire Publishers (Huntington, Alabama, USA)(now defunct) entitled Sanctum: Book I – Blood Brothers, Book II – A Quiet War, Book III – Annihilation.

      

The Birthing – Queen Nneoma Kanu

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The birthing began with the nwankpa demanding the shiny thing on the ekwu. Nwanyioma knew not to give in to such. Her duty was to her staff of power but she was obliged by law to tolerate the nwankpa – the rights of the foetus must be protected.  Having thus garnered this knowledge, the nwankpa sifted through Nwanyioma’s mind again, insisting that he be accorded the same rights as the umuada permitted to wield the speculum. Nwanyioma wished she had kept the nwankpa from seeing the speculum because she would need every scrap of will she possessed to resist the urge to give in to its demands. If the nwankpa pinched her, she would pinch it back.

No nwankpa had ever demanded for the speculum – it was sacred to the midwife who used it to dilate the canal between the worlds of ala mmuo and ala mmadu. It gave passage for the mother to receive her child; welcomed new life and paid homage to life departed. This foetus wouldn’t need it. The chosen ones did not.

Nwanyioma ignored the nwankpa and pirouetted to the corner of the birthing hut where an oil lamp burned. The foetus too, seeing that Nwanyioma paid it no mind, stopped lashing out from within its mother and retreated, bidding its return. Its breath soon faded into its mother’s womb until Nwanyioma could no longer tell the breath of the mother from that of the child.

She settled her curved length into a small wooden chair, her bole and limbs drooping on the sides. This style of wooden chair was quite common in birthing huts, it denied the midwife rest, one Nwanyioma needed at the moment. She leaned back against the mud-plastered wall to maintain her balance. The last birthing had been a peaceful one. The child had been born, freely and fairly, into the lowest order of the hierarchy; a kamharida. Her breath caught in her chest at the thought of the battle that lay ahead with this one. The chosen one. Each puff of breath she took felt like she was struggling for air.

The nwankpa returned again as suddenly as it had left, with nothing but mischief. As it appeared and disappeared over and over again, the membrane enclosing it bobbed up and down the in-between place of Urenna, its mother. Nwanyioma was not pleased with the progress of the birthing and the milky sap of agony running down the side of Urenna’s face was a testament to her angst.

No nwankpa had ever demanded anything of her that was beyond her power. She frowned, wondering why any of the nwankpa thought they had the right to demand anything before making their entrance into the Ripọblik. After all, ala mmuo where they came from was a place of order. She sucked her teeth at the thought of the divide between the spirit world and the human world, that place called the Unknown. That place where the nwankpa transitioned from was rife with tricksters; and those wily figures were to blame for her present situation. 

In her years of midwifery, Nwanyioma had come across many an nwankpa who had made attempts to usurp power in the Ripọblik before their birthing. The nwankpa made their demands quite alright; but they soon learned that in the Ripọblik, territorial hierarchy had to be established. Just as in the other territories around them, the nwankpa must not be allowed to infringe on the authority of the Ripọblik that they were born to govern. A child should never be above the authority of its father.

In that moment, she reminded herself to accept that the nwankpa sometimes failed to realise that various privileges were bestowed upon them as rulers of the Ripọblik. Why, she thought, as she shifted her frame on the chair, even her own son had been born a kamharida; his father had absconded when Nwanyioma announced to him that she was with child. It was unfortunate that her son’s eriri uwa, his link to its mother, had registered its father’s hesitation and its greed for power sprouted from a thirst to avenge Nwanyioma’s broken heart. In seeking revenge against his father, he had pushed his own demands to the point that threatened to bring anarchy into the Ripọblik.

 She’d been in the Ripọblik for a long time, and had learnt that the seed mothers, the mpkulu who visited her birthing hut, did not know many things. It was the duty of young maidens to prepare themselves for motherhood under the tutelage of the umuada. They were expected to plant their feet firmly and be ready to serve the Ripọblik when the time came.

 A full moon ago, Nwadi, an mpkulu whose child had been born a kamharida, indulged her long-throat for the choicest foods, engaged in the baby-mama dance and made sure to extort exorbitant gifts from well-wishers who surrounded her. Despite all the ceremonies and rituals to herald the child’s birthing, Nwadi had not taken out time to thoroughly sieve through the thoughts in her head before coming to Nwanyioma. Her long-held fear of suffering a ruptured womb before it was time for the birthing made its presence known as Nwanyioma aided her in bringing her seed into the world. Nwanyioma negotiated as best as she could with the child, but its mother’s fear had already palpated tension in her membranes that travelled through the eriri uwa to the foetus. The damage was done, and it was too late. He was a kamharida.

Nwadi had failed to guard herself from her fear-filled ruminations; and her lack of accountability to her child had nearly thwarted the umuada’s efforts in reworking the state. The Ripọblik had been in dire need of a new leader, and not only had Nwadi failed herself, she had also failed the umuada as well as the will and wishes of the people that elected them. The birthing of a merije was solely dependent on the mkpulu; and this was why the title, Nneka, Mother is Supreme, was so sacred that an mkpulu had to work hard to birth a worthy leader to earn the title.

Nwanyioma stretched out of her wooden chair, went to Urenna and turned her from side to side to ease her pain. Nwanyioma recalled when she was a young girl sleeping against her mother’s breasts in her chambers, and how her mother had told her the vision the umuada had for their people. The umuada was another arm of the settlement’s lineage and had fought alongside the umunna, their male counterpart, to replace the former separatist organisation; the State Union. Led by Ekenma, the umuada bore a dream to establish a new order in the Mba. In the new order, the Mba which would be made up of the umunna and umuada who would take turns to report the affairs of the settlement to the executive Council of Elders. This system would be based on a lottocracy where each legislative armwas chosen randomly each year. And although the umuada had been allies with their male counterparts, the umunna for thousands of years, the impact of their influence in the governance of the settlement was not felt as it should have been. Things changed when some of the umuada, led by Ekenma, protested against the lottocracy that excluded them. They migrated to the land of the Mirrored Ones in the 2030s, their exodus precipitated by how deep the ambitions of the Council of Elders ran among its own members. Their settlement was in chaos and the umuada sought to fix it. For years, they lived in the land of the Mirrored Ones in a bid to learn their ways of government.

Many, many years later, long after Ekenma and most of the umuada who started the revolution had passed away, their land carried the sorrow of Ala who wept for her children lost far away. The Council of Elders gathered, and a retinue of titled men along with some women whose mothers had remained in the settlement after the departure of the umuada, pleaded with them to return home. The return of the umuada to the settlement, again swept away the existing order when they presented a new totem, a measuring scale, to the executive Council of Elders. This time, they used the totem to measure out an equal amount of power that would go round each arm of the government in the Ripọblik. It was now impossible for power and authority to rest only in one group while the others groaned under the weighty influence of absolute power. This new democratic settlement, called the Ripọblik by the Mirrored Ones, the population with pale skin that once colonised them, was suggested by the umuada and adopted by the Council of Elders.

#

When the Council of Elders was formed by Chukwu, his intention was for sovereignty, not inordinate ambition, to rest with every member of the community. In order to establish this divine mandate, the umuada chose the best selection from Ala’s children, the nwankpa. The birthing, relating to the nwankpa, from which the next ruling class of the merije would emerge, was greatly revered by the Ripọblik. And because of this, the merije was ranked above the kamharida who could not be leaders.

The kamharidas had a longer lifespan and outlived the merijes; the merijes lifespan of forty had been decided by their foremothers as a reward for their strength and leadership; followers were in abundance but leaders were few. It was an honour, Nwanyioma’s mother had said, that the umuada were chosen to birth the number of merije decreed to exert power. It was an honour, Nwanyioma thought, as the last stage of birthing eclipsed over Urenna, that she was chosen to deliver the child of an mkpulumma, a well-bred seed like Urenna.

“Your son is one of the Chosen,” Nwanyioma said to Urenna, who smiled for the first time since the previous night when she had been brought in. Reassured, Nwanyioma probed her midsection.

 “Your firstborn child is almost here. He shall be crowned merije and we will name him Ahamefula, for his name shall never be lost”. She plucked a young leaf from her crown, pried open Urenna’s midsection and planted the leaf that would blossom till the fortieth year of the life cycle of Ahamefula. This signalled the traditional recording of the birth.

“Ahamefula is still so far away…”, Urenna agonised.

Taaaaa!” Nwanyioma cautioned her sharply. This was no place for nso ala. That would be a taboo. 

 She lifted Urenna’s upper body off the birthing mat while the woman supported herself with her elbow. Urenna, in between grunts, kept her gaze on Nwanyioma as she bore pressure on her lower body. Her eyes, sharp brown slits barely visible through the shock of hair plastered on her forehead, never lost sight of Nwanyioma. Nwanyioma too, kept her eyes on Urenna, never looking away, shaken, but hopeful.

“Nma! I would like one look at the shiny thing”, the nwankpa broke into Nwanyioma’s thoughts from within its mother’s womb as Urenna, exhausted, rested on her side.           

“Hush!” Nwanyioma cautioned. Her words pried into the core of Ahamefula’s ego and kept him quiet. She continued speaking, her words kneading Ahamefula’s ego until it swelled and burst.

“The speculum is for birthing the kamharida, for the ones who pray not to fall, those mere earthlings. Do you not know that your enterprise is higher than theirs?”      

“May I fall then!” Ahamefuna spat out the words from the depth of Urenna’s belly.

“May you not fall!” Nwanyioma countered. Her heart raced and her breath came quickly. She left Urenna’s side and paced to and fro to calm her troubled heart before turning to the corner of the room. She walked over and stooped to pick up the speculum off the ekwu, and examined the silvery tool with its distinct blade and handle. The tang and the finger ring were a bluish metal; the colour of the skies above and the river underneath in Chukwu’s dynasty. She ran her gnarled fingers over the smoothness of the tool before placing it carefully into the nkata she wove for her trade tools and charms.

At that moment, she heard the birthing drums rumble in the distance. In a public meeting held earlier between the Council and the Elders, the umunna had been informed about the expected arrival of the nwankpa. It was the duty of the umunna to welcome the nwankpa. The Council of Elders too had gathered at the mbari, Ala’s shrine, the smoke wafting above the rafters of the hut signalled their arrival.

“Nothing happened.”

“You did not speak to ajo chi, did you?” Nwanyioma questioned. She now had reason to suspect that an ajo chi had a hand in Ahamefula’s ambition and could not help but wonder if Ahamefula understood how deep ambition could destroy the pillars of the Ripọblik.    

Ahamefula became irritated at the mention of his notorious personal god. He burst out in anger. “You will not speak to me in that manner, Nwanyioma! You have no understanding. You are the keeper of the realm, not a merije. Do you care how we feel? Perhaps you do. You, like us, are only capable of one thing. I understand that one thing – fear. I smell it here. I also hear the igba drums in the distance. Do you hear the stomping on the earth, the drumming thumping in frenzy to signal my birth? You fear that you will let them down.”

 “But your mother—” Nwanyioma pleaded, exhausted.

Taaaaa, she has the strength of Ala, the totem of the python. Ala is with me. I am like the crescent moon that peeks at mere mortals from the skies. I shall make my arrival as merije when I want.”

“What have you become, eh Ahamefula?” Nwanyioma taunted. “An earthling?”

Ahamefula rumbled from within. “No!” he thundered. “Earthlings have ceased to interest me, and I will exhaust all possibilities not to return as one. No power in being an underling, a mere thing in the hands of the Council of Elders. I live for the power. Just as you, Nwanyioma. Tell me the power that you have does not go into your head.”

Taaaaa! May you not fall!” Nwanyioma rebuked Ahamefula.

“We shall have our own Ripọblik, you and I”, said Ahamefula in response. “I shall be most pleased to have you in my Council.”

 “May you not fall!” Nwanyioma rebuked, this time, she stomped her lower limbs on the red earth for emphasis and walked away from Ahamefula.

Ahamefula belched from the recess. The potion to ease the pain of the birthing mother was beginning to wear off. There was only so much the midwife could give to Urenna before it seeped into the foetus’s bloodstream. She’d already given her too much. That was probably why Ahamefula was rambling like a cock who had lost its head. It was a period of trial for her too, she had to stay strong in order to ward off temptation. If she could resist the foetus’s demands, then she had in turn produced a good seed. But if she gave in, then the Ripọblik was at the risk of annihilation.

“Chukwu made gods out of men,” Ahamefula puffed. “With the help of Our Mother Ala, they made us Igwes, Ozo title holders, okparas. Everything the eye sees, they made. But the jealousy and greed of man took away that power from us. But you and I know the story beyond that. Because it was the foolishness of man that caused Chukwu to wipe out the first generation. We threatened his universe and with the interference of some notorious beings, we destroyed what He created. I have been here before, once as an earthling a long time ago. I was born into the Igwe’s palace, not as royalty, but the illegitimate child of the king’s poor mistress. My mother hid me in the crevices of her hut, and seeing that my father paid me no mind, I took my leave of this world. Then when the Ripọblik came, I tried to return, but seeing it was your mother, a former mkpulu, tainted by the blood of one with pale skin, I retreated, again. I have waited and waited but you have refused to make the journey on the crossroads. It would be impossible for me to rule unless you bring me into the world.”

“It is time,” Nwanyioma said and returned to the birthing mat.

“Upon this day, and with the powers bestowed upon me by Chukwu and with approval of the Council, I welcome you. You have passed your test, therefore, you will not develop greed for the glittering things of this world. You will be able to tame your ego as a leader, it will not grow big enough that you will seek to usurp power. Your lineage will continue in our peaceful settlement. Iseee.”

Ahamefula suddenly fell into a deep sleep. He snored so loudly that Nwanyioma suspected that the cord had wrapped itself around the foetus’s neck. Ahamefula had moved too much during his testing. She knew she had to act quickly. Nwanyioma fed Urenna the last gulp from the birthing juice that hung from the vines above them. She shook the broad leaves above and more liquid escaped into a small calabash. She would fill Urenna up with the juice and make the delivery before the potion got to the foetus.

#

The sweet herb water turned bitter as soon as another contraction caught Urenna midway between drinking. Nwanyioma grabbed some herb twigs from above and snapped them into smaller bits, set it over the ekwu, the smouldering mass within burning the fragrant wood. The incense would ease some of Urenna’s pain.

“Take some more juice,” Nwanyioma cajoled. “We do not have all night to bring Ahamefula to us. If the foetus was female, I would have said she was wearing her adornment, rubbing ori and decorating her body with uli. She hoped her light banter would relieve Urenna as she made it through the travails of childbirth.

Nwanyioma also bore the burden of the birthing. The spiritual task of birthing was far greater than the secular roles of settlement which the women leaders of the umuada council carried out among their fellow women and the community at large. When their foremothers had made the pact with Chukwu to establish the Ripọblik, there was the agreement that none of the merije would live beyond forty years. This was because the tenets of the Ripọblik required each merije to live through the full life cycle of forty years before they were stripped of their power, knowledge and essence. Then began the samsara, the cycle of birth and death for the merije which accompanied them until they transitioned to the great beyond. In that way, the umuada made sure the seven pillars of the Ripọblik stood strong. Nwanyioma had lived long enough to see how the limitation of life expectancy made the merije take their responsibility as leaders of the Ripọblik seriously.

Art by Isabelle Irabor

Nwanyioma lifted her hands to the skies in gratitude. “Urenna, brace yourself for what is to come,” she said before prying into her womb to see the nwankpa that stubbornly remained hidden inside. Ahamefuna’s birthing had exhausted her. Nothing good comes easy, her mother used to say. Her bones ached as she eased Ahamefuna into the world. She called on Ala to give her strength.

She watched as the sac within Urenna ballooned out in a perfect circle. In the hazy fluid within, she saw Ahamefula. He had presented himself feet first. She sucked her teeth in anger. She probed the membrane to turn him around, but Ahamefula sank into the murky waters of his habitation and continued snoring. Ahamefula’s destiny presented itself as a lucky one, Chukwu had given him the seven divinities, but his personal will was weak.

A short time passed.

Then Nwanyioma recognized a different voice floating into the birthing hut. It most certainly was coming from Ala Oma, the hut next door. It was the Good Land, the place where the merije transitioned to the other realm. She told the mkpulu that the decision to take away their children was never an easy one, but it had to be done to maintain the Ripọblik. It also warded off their warring neighbours because the soldiers from the Ripọblik were always young and hot-blooded men. Ready to defend. Ready to fight. Ready to lead. 

Nwanyioma wiped the corner of her eyes. She leaned towards the carved door and listened again. She cracked the door open. The roll of drumming and accompanied singing that floated in from the small gathering outside was neither a farewell nor welcome song.

     Ijeoma, the guardian of Ala Oma, stood at the door. In one hand he held a gourd of akpuru achia, and with the other hand, he dug his staff into the red earth.  Behind him, the gentle throbbing of the igba drums urged the child to come to the Ripọblik because it was a sweet place, flowing with oil and good meat.

     “Are you clean?” Nwanyioma asked in her capacity as custodian of Ala’s omenala, the laws and customs that governed all their institutions. The guardian of Ala Oma who was not in good standing was not allowed close to new life within any of the four market days of the week. Not until the end of the Great Afor market day.

     “Yes, I have not seen any army ants.”

Nwanyioma sensed a different urgency as Ijeoma leaned closer and whispered his foul gin words. “The merije in my custody has not passed to the land of our fathers. Have you welcomed the nwankpa yet? I need the newborn’s caul.”

Nwanyioma looked back into the hut. Urenna kept well. She shook her head and let the visitor in. The chorus outside faded as she shut the door.

Ijeoma raised his gourd to the rafters of the hut after he peered into Urenna’s midsection. Nwanyioma was obviously having a difficult time with this one from what he saw.

“Take a sip and laugh”, he said, handing her the gourd. Nwanyioma took a swig. Her mouth had been so dry that the drink burned her tongue. The drink didn’t live up to its name. Akpuru achia indeed.She spat on the red earth and wiped her mouth. Ijeoma laid his staff on the floor, away from the birthing mat. They both had work to do.

          “Nwanyioma, it is time.”

Nwanyioma would have wanted to keep any other mkpulu as calm as possible while the merije passed away in Ijeoma’s chambers. But Urenna was strong, this was not the first time she would hear the death drums. She probed the membrane again and Urenna’s backache intensified as Ahamefula floated away from Nwanyioma’s prying hands. She grabbed Urenna’s sides to ease the weight of the child as another wave of contraction coiled around her waist like the limbless aju-ala when it wrapped itself around its prey. Urenna lay back on the mat as the wave of pain passed. She felt like she was suffocating as the sounds of the death drums in the distance turned into a tangible presence in the room.

Nwanyioma approached Urenna.

“Urenna, you can hear the death drums. They have played for too long. The merije must now join his brothers and fathers long gone. But he needs you.”

“You must understand the urgency,” Ijeoma said to Urenna. “You must agree to help the merije, he is having trouble with his transition. We need you to bring forth this baby, else…”                   

“His name is Ahamefula—” Nwanyioma snapped. She wanted him gone.

“You need to bring forth Ahamefula, he holds the key into the next world,” he said, then quietly retreated to a dark corner of the room as though he had read Nwanyioma’s thoughts.

“Urenna, you must do the needful now, so the waiting merije can journey well. He is impatient to leave. Do not think of rest just yet.”

Nwanyioma wiped the corners of her eyes. Something caught in her throat and she swallowed painfully. The akpuru achia was indeed beginning to take over her common sense.      

Urenna, her body wracked by pain, began to pray as her birth pangs progressed. “Oh Ala, mother of all children, help your son to return to the land of our fathers in the great beyond. His task is done. Let him go, and if it is his destiny to return, may he make the journey when his generation is long gone. I praise you. I thank you”.

Just then, Urenna’s birth pangs seemed to deepen and her moaning increased, urging Nwanyioma to take to delivering the child. This time, she was hopeful that the child would cooperate.

“The caul, we need the membrane,” Ijeoma called out to Nwanyioma from the recess. At that moment, Nwanyioma dug her hands into the groaning woman and pulled out the membrane. The entity looked like a universe of its own – the veins that criss-crossed all over, red and green, like the blood in their veins, the produce of their farms. It was shaped like an egg, made more visible to the eye as Ahamefula’s weight thinned out the sac.

Ijeoma rushed to Nwanyioma who turned away from Urenna to hand him Ahamefula’s membranous lining. Outside, he raised it to the skies then ran to Ala Oma where the merije waited for his transition.

Nwanyioma opened the birthing sac with all her devotion and attention. There lay the most innocent of children, his arms raised in front of his face. A loud cry from Ahamefula pierced through as the cold air swept over him. She separated the cord between the merije and his mother with the blade of an m̀kpà.

Once she had ascertained that his breathing was normal, Nwanyioma wrapped the child with a large strip of fresh banana leaves and laid him on the birthing mat to tend to Urenna as her body eased out the placenta. In a later ritual, Urenna would bury the placenta where other seed mothers would squat over and urinate on it, to ward off infertility.   

On one arm, Nwanyioma carried Ahamefula to her wooden stool, and with the other, she set a calabash before her. She filled it with warm water from the herb pot before soaking in a sponge made from dried coconut husks until it softened enough to be used on the newborn. Next, she made a herbal bath in the calabash, adding a broth of medicine that smelled like the earth. She kept a cup close by, it was filled with ude-aki, the black crude kernel oil that would provide relief for the coldness and discomfort associated with a night birth.

Urenna looked up joyfully when Nwanyioma brought Ahamefula to her and nodded her approval when Nwanyioma told her it was time to present the merije to the Ripọblik. Ahamefula was The Chosen. Not only was he a merije, he was also a caul bearer. His foetal abode had become the bridge that would aid his predecessor’s transition. It was uncommon for it to happen, but it did.

Nwanyioma, with the confidence of a guardian, swung the wooden door of the birthing hut open and cried to the waiting crowd:

Onye nuru akwa nwa

Me ngwa ngwa eeeee

obughi otuonye nwe nwa

Whoever hears the cry of a baby

should hasten up eeee

Not only one individual owns a child.

Nwanyioma received a few shakes on her shoulder in salutation for returning from the journey between life and death. She went to the mbari and presented Ahamefula to the Council of Elders before returning to the crowd. The people prevailed because Nwanyioma had prevailed. But amidst the drumming that had stopped abruptly and the celebration that followed, Nwanyioma’s attention was turned to Ala Oma. She had birthed the departing merije; his birth had been like that of an earthling, quick and without negotiations. For a fleeting second, she wished she could go and bid him farewell.

In the nearby hut, Ijeoma looked at the merije laid out on the pallet. The long lashes no longer fluttered and its mouth, once hidden by a thick moustache, slacked open in one corner.  His cord with the Ripọblik had been severed. Ijeoma ordered his porters to carry the merije out for the crowd to see. The terrible groan that rose from Nwanyioma’s bosom when she saw the departed merije was soon replaced with the joyous song of the crowd as they welcomed Ahamefula:

Onye nuru akwa nwa

Me ngwa ngwa eeeee

obughi otuonye nwe nwa

Whoever hears the cry of a baby

should hasten up eeee

Not only one individual owns a child.

#

Nwanyioma watches the child as he peeks around the mud walls of her hut. Usually, children spied on her because legend went that she was their mother and that they were born from the udara tree in her compound. It was said that when she sucked on the fruit, she swallowed its large seeds. Each fruit had five seeds. After a few moons, the seeds grew and at night, while the moon howled, she regurgitated and filled the village with children.

The child approaches her. The nwankpa looks familiar – the sharp angles of its shoulders, the dimpled place on its head. But she had delivered too many of them to remember. She leans forward to get a better look at the child. Then suddenly, the child rushes up to her. She is taken aback, and with her last strength, she springs up from her chair. He grabs her arm with a force bigger than his size and leads her to the bush behind her house. There he points to the herbaceous vines of yams, the seed crop of Ala. She glances at where he points to among the foliage. The plant flourishes among other tree roots. This plant is about twice his size.

Harvest time is near.

“Is that mine?” he asks.

“Who are you?” She questions, more out of incredulity at the audacious child than curiosity.

“I am Ahamefula. And you … are my mother.”

Queen Nneoma Kanu is a PhD student of Africana Studies. Her research involves African(a) fiction that explores the African experience both within the Motherland and in the diaspora. Her short story “Sixty-One” has appeared in Consciofiction Magazine. Her short story “Taffeta” was longlisted for the Afritondo Prize for Short Story 2021 and anthologized in The Hope, The Prayer, The Anthem in 2021.

Neyllo – Naomi Eselojor

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Neyllo

I am Neyllo, the last of my kind, transported to earth after my world was destroyed five years ago.

I recall lying in my nest when my planet shook. Another earthquake had swallowed the Zemonians in the western sector. Fifteen dead and forty injured. Split into twelve clans, Zemon was home to a species of clever and reserved herbivores. The abundance of nitrogen allowed our plants to thrive so much that less than one percent did not contain trees. Each day began with the rise of the red sun, a celestial beauty that more than half my people worshiped but millions of years after, our sun started to fail. One of my progenitors believed more in technology than in the red sun, believed more in intergalactic travel than forest hunts.

He foresaw the destruction of my planet and entrusted me with a Tridel – a seed that decoded the genetic makeup of my race.

On the planet’s last day, I was taken to the escape pod. Balls of flame rained down the atmosphere, setting our plants and our people on fire. Our strongest woven thorns served as shields, but they didn’t last. My progenitors bade me an agonizing farewell because they couldn’t come. They had a duty to protect Zemon or rather, to try and protect what was left of it.

On the 18th of March, 2244, my escape pod landed at Wazobia forest in Lagos, Nigeria.

After a few months of battling with illnesses, I found a spot to plant the Tridel, an inconspicuous location where no human would think to look. For many days, I nurtured the plant and envisioned the fierce joy I would feel when the embryos would form. Day and night, I watered it, groomed it, and watched it; sometimes, I simply basked in its sharp musk because it reminded me of home.

Then one day, a helicopter landed in the forest. From it emerged a plumpish human in a voluptuous attire; a man of power, I presumed, because he had a platoon of soldiers escorting him. Pointing around, they explored the forest, their hands widening in a gesture that suggested they were planning or measuring something.

I snuck closer to where they stood, using my chromatophore skin to camouflage myself in the leaves, when I heard: “This is perfect. In five days, we will begin deforestation.”

#

Back on Zemon, my progenitors would have me sit around a white flame and we’d discuss life in other galaxies. I missed them, missed the wild thorns we spun for shelter, the taste of grub and the three moons and red sun that gave light to the cities.

The destruction of my planet ripped me apart but there was hope since I had the Tridel. Now, the tree was blossoming and, in a few weeks, the embryos would emerge. Uprooting it would ensure the eradication of my kind. I trembled at the thought of it.

I needed help to save my Tridel, but there were only two humans that knew I existed and I needed to travel to see them.

I wove thick vines, roped them to solid sticks, and thrust those sticks into the ground to create a fence around the Tridel. At least until I came back, it would be safe.

The night train to Lekki was a smooth transit. Every passenger had their minuscule corner that warranted no outside disturbance and I enjoyed watching Channels TV updates. One of the headlines was “Urbanisation in Wazobia Forest – The future of Opulent housing.”

Hidden behind a cloak, I alighted from the train and sauntered through the streets of Ikoyi, sticking to the shadows like a cockroach. My form was similar to a human’s, modified by an earthling scientist to adapt to Earth’s climate. I had two arms, two legs, a nose and a face and since I was female, I had the semblance of a girl’s curves, and the thinness of a girl’s waist. My skin was green, like the colour of leaves, and I had no hair. A child looked my way, eyes narrowing as he tried to make out what I was, but I hurried away, slipping into an alley before he could draw attention. I wasn’t ready to be seen. Not yet.

The gates of the Ojiofor residence were twice my height, wrought iron strips woven in a criss-crossed Lattice. As I stepped forward, a machine ran a horizontal red beam through me. A voice spoke, ‘Identity unknown’.

“Tell Chinaza that Neyllo is here!”

In three minutes, the gates swung open.

“Follow the cobblestones to the backyard,” the voice said.  “There, you will find Chinaza in the rose garden.”

I followed the directions and found Chinaza sniffing some roses. I had met her two years ago, right after my escape pod had landed. She was twenty-six years old, a slim, dark-skinned girl, with thick, curly tresses dangling from her head. Around her neck was a golden chain, attached to a diamond encrusted pendant, a symbol of her family’s wealth.

Chinaza regarded me with a warm smile as we sat under a tree to discuss.

 “The future of my people is at risk.” I began. “I have learnt of a pending project, the urbanisation of the forest I reside in, but the Tridel needs more time to develop, Chinaza. They cannot cut down that tree.”

Chinaza nodded and squeezed my shoulder.

“Oh, Neyllo. I understand your plight but there’s nothing I can do. The project was approved by the Minister of Housing. The government has a hand in it. Contractors have been assigned, funds have been disbursed.”

Just then, her phone rang and she pulled it from her pocket. The face of a man appeared on the screen and my eyes widened in shock. She picked the call and her face broke into a wide smile.

“I got you the purse you’ve always wanted,” a muffled voice spoke from the device. Chinaza told the caller she would talk to him later and hung up.

I met her eyes.

“The Minister; the one who assigned the project, is your father, isn’t he?”

Chinaza’s face tightened.

 “There’s nothing I can do, Neyllo.”

I shook my head.

“Of course there’s something you can do. You can talk to him, explain what is at risk.”

“This is more important than a tree, Neyllo. Lagos is overpopulated, we need more land to build houses, and more room to expand.”

“But what about my legacy?”

Chinaza shrugged. “I don’t know, Neyllo. You’re going to have to figure that out on your own. Just remember, the lands were never yours to begin with, they belonged to the government. So don’t expect them to prioritise your needs at the detriment of my people”.

At this time, Chinaza stood up.

“I helped you once, Neyllo but I cannot help you this time.”

She left me speechless and made her way into the house.

#

I remembered it like it was yesterday. In the first week of my arrival, I struggled to survive. My skin cracked and my chest tightened with every lungful of air. Despite my planet’s similarities to Earth, I had a hard time adapting. It was then I met Chinaza, camping in the woods. She offered to help, found me a scientist and donated a fortune to get me body modifications. I understood her reasons for refusing to help me. Nothing was more important than family.

I made my way to a smart apartment in Ikoyi which housed one of the most brilliant minds in Lagos.

“Neyllo!” Mayen screamed, taking me into her arms. She was about Chinaza’s age, vibrant, bespectacled and passionate about science. Her room was a clutter of textbooks and gizmos, small, compared to Chinaza’s mansion but it was in a way, cozy.

She poured me a cup of water.

“Do you have any issues with your body?”

I shook my head.

“No, you did a decent job on me.”

Mayen raised the cup, a smile forming on her oblong face.

“Why then did you come?”

I helped myself to a chair and narrated my ordeal.

“Chinaza has disappointed me once too,” Mayen said. “Back when we were students of Unilag, she promised to attend my party but backed out at the last minute. Like my father always says, never put your trust in man.”

“I need a plan, Mayen. Time is not on my side. What if I speak to Chinaza’s father? Maybe I can convince him to spare the forest.

Mayen stroked her chin.

“That could work but I do not think he will buy into your belief of a safe haven for your kind. Telling him that you’re nursing a tree that would produce alien species might come off as a threat. Like you’re trying to take over the country.”

“I couldn’t if I wanted to. Zemonians are mild, introverted people. We couldn’t hurt any creature.”

Mayen laughed.

“I know this, Neyllo, but the minister doesn’t.”

“Let me try to talk to him. You can help me, can you?”

Mayen’s smile disappeared. She settled in her swivel chair and slid towards her computer.

“It will be difficult to bypass the Minister’s security. To get to him, you’d have to be creative.”

I turned to meet her eyes.

“Show me.”

#

Minister Ojiofor rested in his car with his back arched slightly backwards. If a bed could fit in the SUV, he would have gotten one. For most of the day, he was trapped in a leather chair, issuing documents to contractors and reviewing costs for building projects. The SUV glided through the streets of Lagos and Minister Ojiofor’s phone vibrated.

“Your daughter is requesting a video call, sir,” the AI said.

“Put her on the big screen.”

Sound-proof curtains circled him as a monitor emerged from the back of the front seats. Ojiofor straightened himself to see his daughter, only that it wasn’t his daughter he saw.

“Good afternoon, Minister,” the strange creature said with a female voice.

Ojiofor’s face turned white with fear.

“Please, do not panic. I am not here to hurt you,” she continued

“Who are you? What have you done with my daughter?”

“I am Neyllo, of the race of Zemon. Your daughter is safe. Be rest assured I am not a hostile creature; I only need your assistance.”

Neyllo spoke about the Tridel as her legacy, the last chance of survival for her race, and how the urbanisation project would put the lives of the embryos at risk, and he listened in shock.

“Is this some kind of joke, a prank put up by some jobless teenager?”

“No, Minister. This is real. I am real. Do not destroy our Tridel, please!” Her voice quivered as she pleaded.

“My daughter, where is she?”

“Minister, I–”

 “I demand to see my daughter, now!”

There was a break in transmission and the video glitched. A tiny screech emitted from the device and soon, Chinaza’s voice surfaced. 

“Hello, dad. I lost you for a minute. How was work? Dad….?”

#

Mayen chewed a slice of vanilla cake as she typed on the keyboard.

“Chinaza called me. She said you nearly gave her father a heart attack.”

I sighed. Seconds of watching the digital clock blink resembled hours. Three days felt like three years and the sound of Mayen’s chewing was making my ear twitch.

“Don’t worry,” Mayen continued. “I didn’t tell her you were with me, or that I had a hand in it.”

I jolted from the cushion.

Art By Jema Byamugisha

“What if I can speak to the president?”

“Really, Neyllo? Didn’t you learn from the incident with the minister? Do you know how many federal security organizations tried to trace you with that one call?”

“What then can I do?”

“I’ve been thinking. The whole urbanization project was set up to cater for the needs of the masses. Lagos is an overcrowded state, it is only logical they wish to expand. The only way we can stop this, is for Nigerians to support your cause, make them sign a petition against the project.”

My eyes widened.

“That could work?”

“Sure, but we need to get as many people on your side as possible – like hundreds of thousands, or millions of people.”

“How will we do that?”

“The same way you market a product or service. You set up a website and a lead magnet, something free and captivating, to get the attention of people. Then you lure them to the website to read about your plight. There will also be a short video of you, speaking to us, telling your story. Before anyone leaves the site, a pop-up icon would request they sign the petition.”

I had no idea what most of her words meant but I understood the logic behind it. We began immediately and it took a few minutes to turn Mayen’s room into a studio.

“Are you ready?” Mayen asked, her eyes glued to the computer screen.

My core pranced and I nodded. Before now, only three humans knew of my existence. It was scary, showing myself to the world, not knowing what would happen afterwards. Our chromatophore skin allowed us to hide, to blend into the environment and disappear. It was ironic that after so much hiding, we were about to be made public.

“We will record in ten seconds.”

I sat in front of a white background, hands quivering as I waited for the signal. A LED bulb emitted a blinding light that made me squint.

“Focus on the camera, Neyllo. Breathe. It’s going to be fine. We will record in three, two…”

For a minute, I froze, until the teleprompter reminded me what to say.

“Good afternoon, Nigerian citizens, my name is Neyllo …

#

“Tsunami, give me the numbers,” Mayen said to her AI.

Number of views – 700,000.

“Number of clicks to the petition?”

About two thousand.

I sank to my knees, devastated. That was barely enough to get the government’s attention. The project would commence in twenty-four hours and there was still no luck. Mayen tried to comfort me but I waved her off and burst out the door.

On my way to the train station, torrents lashed down the city and the gusty wind carried down the earthy smell of rain. Pedestrians without covering hurried through the city, seeking shelter in shops and restaurants. I allowed the cold to engulf me as the wind tugged at my cloak. A minivan swerved by, splashing filthy water my way but I didn’t mind. I felt crippled by my failures, overwhelmed by my inability to save my legacy. Imagining a life where I was the last Zemonian survivor was excruciating. I wanted to have my people around, to experience the wonders of this planet. My willpower dissolved and all that was left of me, drifted in the boisterous wind. Perhaps, I would take out my core, allow myself to die. Since the humans were not willing to offer us a home, then, we might as well all die, and let them be.

The wind intensified, nearly whisking me away, but I planted my feet on the road. Screams broke from every angle as wigs, fabrics and plastic chairs floated in the air. One of the cries alerted me.

“My son! Where’s my son?”

I caught a glimpse of a boy grasping a tree with his body, hoisted like a flag. The wind wrestled him but he clutched the branches, desperate to survive.

I turned to his direction, battling through the storm, dodging floating umbrellas and spiralling clothing. I extended my arm. The boy took it without hesitation, chest swelling as he wrapped his arms and feet around me. His mother’s gaze trailed me from a spot beside a streetlight, gratitude and astonishment in the glaze of her eyes. She breathed a sigh of relief when she hugged her son.

“I don’t know what you are,” she said, “but thank you.”

I nodded.

Turning to leave, I noticed the glint of smart phones, the clicking sounds of the camera shutters, the collective gasps of bedazzled Nigerians.

Sirens blared and tyres screeched as patrol cars halted at the entrance of the restaurant. But by the time the police burst through the crowd, I had already fled.

#

Channels TV Headlines

A tremendous Hurricane passes through Ikoyi.

Mysterious green alien saves a five-year-old boy.

Urbanisation project will commence in twenty-four hours.

#

Minister Ojiofor called for maximum security, so the forest was edged with barricade tapes and armoured trucks. Reinforced with surveillance drones, the Nigerian army swept through the woods, searching for any form of resistance to the day’s operations. News vans lingered around, pointing their cameras and scuttling to get the best view of the incident.

The automated bulldozers revved their engines loud, I quivered at the ostentatious display of strength. Leaves rustled and the military came close, close to the Tridel, close to me. I was shrouded in the leaves and so one had to be observant to find me. They were a hair’s breadth away when one of them spoke to his watch. “There’s no one here.”

“Wait!”

Another soldier edged towards the fence, regarding it with a persistent gaze. He took out a laser pen and was about to cut it open when I ambushed him. I lunged towards him, like a mother, protecting her brood. He grunted, falling on the ground with a thud

“Get your hands off the Tridel!” I screamed, my veins pumping in an unfamiliar feeling of rage.

They hesitated, alarmed by my appearance in the woods but it was not long before they drew their weapons. I was surrounded by heavily-trained soldiers and menacing drones. I couldn’t win, not like this.

“Begin the project.” One of them said, while I was being handcuffed.

The bulldozer began grating the soil and, in my trepidation, I yelled.

While the deforestation was ongoing, I was in the armoured truck, listening.

“You will pay for attacking a soldier and trying to harm the Minister’s daughter,” the soldier beside me spat. His wrinkles deepened as he stared at me in contempt. At this point, with the forest coming down, I was ready to withstand whatever punishment. It was only a matter of time before they destroyed the Tridel.

There was a television in the truck and in it, a reporter narrated the events of the day.

“The alien has been detained and the bulldozers are in motion. Rumours state that she is charged with identity theft and attempted kidnapping of a five-year-old, and may be in military custody for a long time.”

The reporter pressed a device in her ear and paused.

“Hold on…I’m getting reports from Lagos island where there seems to be a protest…” Her voice took on an animated, surprised tone. “I don’t believe it… Nigerians are protesting against the alien’s imprisonment.”

The scene changed to show a crowd chanting and holding placards. Mayen was beside a male reporter who pushed a microphone to her lips.

“She was just trying to protect her legacy,” Mayen said.

“But she attacked the Minister’s daughter.”

“No, she didn’t and I have footage that proves her innocence. Neyllo would never hurt anyone.”

“It’s true.” I recognized the woman whose son I saved. “She saved my baby. Neyllo and her people should be given a chance at life, just like the rest of us. As of now, we have gotten the attention of the vice president. We just pray it’s not too late.”

Hope surged through my veins. Just then, the soldier beside me listened to his watch.

“Are you sure, sir?”

He looked at me.

“I have orders to release you.”

His countenance softened as he unlocked the door. I stumbled out of the truck and hastened towards the mother tree until suddenly, my legs failed me. I was connected to the Tridel, and if anything went wrong with her, I would feel it. My core thumped, slowly, painfully. Purple fluid seeped through my nose as I struggled to heave myself up. I was too late. My head spun and I felt myself slip to the foliage on the ground. The reporters gathered around me, handing me their microphones. I saw their lips move but I heard no sound. Time seemed to slow down as I closed my eyes.

#

Channels TV updates

Alien collapses.

Protesters gain the attention of the president.

Government approves the rejuvenation of Wazobia Forest for the aliens’ habitation.

Aliens given a second chance, ordered to sign a treaty to endorse their peaceful coexistence, but where is Neyllo?

#

I sat by the forest and watched the Tridel grow again. They had cut off her branches and were about to uproot the stump when the call came in. Thankfully, it could grow again. Two years would pass by quickly and I was optimistic. I inhaled the sweet smell of musk as I watched the embryos form.

Naomi Eselojor enjoys writing fast-paced, gripping tales in the science fiction and fantasy genre. She has been published at 365 tomorrows and tree and stone magazine. Her works are forthcoming at Improbable press and Hexagon Magazine. Naomi is a student of the University of Lagos and resides in Lagos, Nigeria with her family. You can find her on Twitter as NEselojor or Instagram as naomieselojor.

Call for submissions: Special South African edition of Omenana Speculative Fiction Magazine

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Art by David Motutu

Omenana speculative fiction magazine (established in 2014) is the Locus and Nommo Award-nominated, tri-monthly magazine that is open to submission from speculative fiction writers from across Africa and the African Diaspora.

Since 1969, Science Fiction & Fantasy South Africa (SFFSA), based in Johannesburg, has been the premier club for fans and connoisseurs of sci-fi and fantasy books, film, and art.

Omenana, in partnership with SFFSA, is putting together a special issue that will focus on the over-50-year history and bright presence of South African Science fiction and fantasy writing. The issue will feature reprints of old stories, non-fiction essays and analyses and a crop of brand-new stories by established and new writers.

Stories do more than entertain us, the best stories hold up a mirror to the world. They show us not just what is, but what could be.

For this special issue, we are looking for well-written speculative fiction that bridges the gap between past, present, and future of South Africa in particular, through vivid imagination.

If you think you’ve got just the tale, send it in; we’d love to show it to the world.

What we are looking for

We are looking for speculative short stories that explore the themes of South African SF, Fantasy Horror, or cross-genre stories. A truly African take on these, whether it be the effect of “Tokoloshe” myth on a speculative plot or futuristic societies in a uniquely South African Diaspora.

We are looking for strong, character-driven stories that focus on future or past visions.

Think space operas that look at the intricate lives of people in ships hurtling towards distant galaxies. Think retellings of ancestral myths on a planet light-years away. Think love! Think war! Think family! Think technology! Think gods and goddesses. Think modern societies or ancient ones. Think out of the box. But avoid dressing South African tradition and philosophy up as science fiction and fantasy. For example, the supposed magic of the sangoma is itself not the stuff of fantasy, but the impact of it on a fantasy plot could be highly relevant.

Let your creativity run wild.

Word length

We are looking for stories of 1000-5000 words.

Additional requirements for stories

Stories should be centered around some element of the South African lived experience and can be set anywhere in a near or far future, other place, other world. If you can imagine it, let’s see it. We are particularly interested in stories from members of historically under-represented and/or marginalized communities in South Africa in order to capture the full range of diversity in the rainbow nation. 

Stories can be of any sub-genre in the speculative: Cyberpunk, Epic fantasy, Africanfuturism, Steampunk, Urban Fantasy, Space opera or any combination but the speculative element must be overt.

Finally, stories should be original and should not have appeared anywhere else online or in print.

How to submit

All submissions should be sent to sevenhills.media@yahoo.com on or before July 30, 2022.

Include the words “SA Special Issue Submission” in your title.

Submission format

All stories must be submitted as a single attachment in .doc file format. Please do not send PDF.

Include a short cover letter in the body of your e-mail providing your contact details (name – not the pseudonym you write under – address, email and phone number), a brief publication history, a bio of no more than 100 words and a profile photo.

Please follow this Standard Manuscript Format.

Payment?

Yes. We will be paying a flat rate of USD 100 for published stories.

We can’t wait to see your work!

Omenana Speculative Fiction Magazine Issue 21

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Editorial

It is April 2022, and we are a bit late to run this issue. Other than this, the world is pretty much the same, except maybe for the war that has been unfolding since Russia unleashed an onslaught on her neighbour, Ukraine. If you are saddened by the hunger, displacement and refugee crisis that can result from such political tensions then you are not so different from me.

In this issue, we encounter some tension, anger and revenge, but we also find love and compassion in the speculative, science fiction, fantasy and horror stories from across Africa – Lesotho, Uganda, Tanzania, South Africa and Nigeria.

Read how a man’s lust and greed hook up with a deity’s cunning and lead to cataclysmic events. The gods have made a request is a story that will make your heart race in rapid beats.

You will also encounter Aisirhiowen, a semi-bionic genius whose invention has to eventually be put on hold to enable her fulfil a calling that is greater than a fight for power, and greater than what’s left of humanity of that time.

Parasites are not friendly, and often they can be deadly, but have you ever thought that a parasite could have benefits? Beyond causing pain, loss of some vital senses, and even loss of speech, this particular parasite can give pleasure in equal measure. We’ve got just the story to acquaint you with the wonder of the tongue-eating louse.

Notes on The Shadow World tries to paint for us the gore experienced by the inhabitants of the shadow world, which is accessible via a portal that has interesting coordinates, with attendant grave consequences.

Ghost stories are fun, and if you believe revenge is best served cold, then, The Activist and Riding Hood are just the tales for you. Our Riding Hood is no innocent girl who is at risk of being eaten by wolves; she could be worse than flesh-eating wolves.

We also spin you a mermaid tale this time around. Sweet love is an unending whirlwind which comes full cycle in the story For You Only.

In addition to the fiction stories on offer in issue 21, we also present you an essay on THE BATMAN movie written by writer and notable comic head, Seun Odukoya.

We bring you these pieces after a thorough selection and editing process, so let me not keep you from them any longer. Go ahead and read to your fill. Don’t forget to share and comment!

Cheers!

Iquo DianaAbasi

In this edition:

English Stories:

THE BATMAN REVIEW – Seun Odukoya

Riding Hood – Tariro Ndoro

Madam Aisirhiowen’s Greatest Invention – Amadin Ogbewe

How to Acquire a Tongue-eating Louse – Stacy Hardy

For Her Only – Matthew K Chikono

The Activist – Christopher Mlalazi

Notes on The Shadow World – Mandisi Nkomo

The Gods Have Made a Request – Ephraim Orji

French Story:

Balla, tu es mon Épine: I – L’éveil d’une Lionne – Mariam Camara 

Balla, tu es mon Épine: I – L’éveil d’une Lionne – Mariam Camara                                                         

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La lune était recouverte d’un brouillard aveuglant, on pouvait s’y perdre autant qu’avec les sentiments.

Au loin, le vent caressait les feuilles du baobab qui semblaient enchaînées. En dix ans elle l’avait vue changer en même temps qu’elle. La seule vue qu’elle pouvait observer, la seule vue qui lui était atteignable.

Cela faisait quelques jours que personne n’était entré dans la pièce. Aujourd’hui c’était le grand jour, pour elle, enfin, pour tout l’empire. Comme si sacrifier sa jeunesse n’était pas suffisant. De toute façon, pour elle, rien n’existait plus, rien n’avait de sens. Sassouma Keita était vide. D’ici quelques heures, tout allait revenir à la normale. Enfin qu’est – ce que la normalité ? se disait-elle. A quoi le monde ressemblait il maintenant ? Cela faisait tant d’années qu’elle n’avait pas mis les pieds sur terre. 

L’aube n’allait pas tarder à faire son apparition, pour la première fois depuis plusieurs années elle pouvait la contempler. Le Mansa avait accepté qu’elle passe la tête par la fenêtre, ce qui semblait être un exploit. Aussi aigri qu’un corbeau, rien ne comptait pour le Mansa à part sa propre personne. Sassouma essayait de se remémorer tous les moments passés dans cette pièce, mais ils étaient tous le même. La seule chose intéressante étaient les poteries.

Posées dans tous les recoins de la pièce, elles étaient recouvertes de fresques représentant le Mandé. Autant les paysages, que la société en elle-même. Celle qu’elle préférait était plus petite, un pot, paré des gravures représentant deux jeunes enfants et une cavalière mystérieuse.

Le ciel entrait maintenant dans sa lueur orangée, les quelques feuilles posées devant la fenêtre imbibées de rosée matinale. Au loin, un homme promenait son troupeau d’ovins, rejoignant petit à petit la clairière. Les mouvements dynamiques des bêtes amusaient Sassouma. Un peulh qui promenait son troupeau vers la brousse, un schéma structurel si simple qu’il attrista Sassouma. Toute sa vie n’avait été qu’une simple pièce, il lui faudrait reconstruire avec les pots cassés.

#

Pas à pas des murmures résonnèrent dans le palais. Les servantes accouraient avec impatience pour s’occuper de la fille de l’empereur. Sassouma les fixait d’un regard neutre. 

« Sassouma ! C’est le grand jour ! » s’écria une servante, « Il faut t’habiller, une noble ne peux pas se permettre de … »       

Le regard de Sassouma devint glacial, elle détestait qu’on lui donne des ordres, surtout quand il s’agissait de son apparence. Même seule dans sa prison, elle y prenait soin tous les jours. Le maintien des apparences maintenait sa raison. Elle se levait, et suivi les femmes qui devaient l’accompagner dans sa nouvelle chambre. 

« C’est bon, je suis là ! Est – ce qu’elle est sortie ? » hurla une voix haut perchée. 

Une silhouette qu’elle ne reconnut pas accourait vers elles, portant maladroitement un bol, et trébucha. Sassouma reçu un jet d’eau froide dans les jambes.  Elle frissonna, ce n’était pas comme cela qu’elle pensait être accueillie au palais. 

« Mince, je suis désolé ! » dit la servante « La bonne nouvelle c’est que vous êtes ici n’est – ce pas ? » 

Sassouma leva un sourcil et les yeux au ciel.

« Imbécile ! » Cracha Sassouma avec dédain.    

L’humeur de Sassouma se détériorait alors qu’elle avançait dans le couloir. Cela ne faisait que quelques minutes qu’elle avait quitté son cauchemar, ce n’était pas pour recevoir un jet d’eau d’une abrutie, ruminait-elle. 

Elles longeaient un tunnel légèrement éclairé, Sassouma avait beau en observer les recoins elle n’en avait aucun souvenir.

Un brouhaha incessant se faisait entendre, une servante couvrit la tête de Sassouma d’un foulard. Le Mansa n’avait pas encore annoncé l’heure de la cérémonie, il souhaitait rester le plus discret possible. C’était un homme réservé et méfiant. Il avait toujours fait des concessions pour se protéger, aux dépens de sa famille. Son honneur passait avant tout, même avant sa fille. 

Sa chambre, elle, était restée la même. Elle était toujours aussi spacieuse, et décorée de tissu en bogolan comme l’aimait Sassouma. Elle entra sous le regard des servantes, et passa le doigt sur les poteries couvertes de poussière. Rien n’avait changé.

Une main attrapa soudainement son poignet. Qui oserait ? pensa t’elle, se figeant à la vue de celui qui lui tenait le bras. Elle n’en croyait pas ses yeux. Comment pouvait-il se permettre de l’attraper ainsi ? Après tout ce qu’il lui avait fait. 

#

Ina était désemparée, ce qu’elle voulait, elle, c’était travailler dans son atelier, pas faire les corvées dans tout le palais. Le fait que Balla allait la devancer la mettait hors d’elle. Déjà qu’elle était dans son ombre, ce n’était pas le moment de disparaitre. L’insulte que Sassouma lui avait craché à la figure, l’avait énormément perturbée. Elle rajusta son pagne, sortie du tunnel et se précipita vers la chambre de la princesse. Effectuer le travail des servantes ne lui plaisait pas, mais être en retard le premier jour n’était pas sérieux, même si la fille du Mansa ne voulait plus la voir.  

« Inutile de revenir, tu vas encore casser quelque chose. » dit l’une des servantes. 

« Mais c’est un ordre du Mansa, » protesta Ina « je ne peux pas lui désobéir, je vous promets de faire attention. » 

Elle la regarda durement puis sourit.

« Ça nous arrive à toutes…Bon c’est d’accord, mais prends soin cette fois, tu t’occuperas de la tenue de Sassouma ni plus ni moins. » 

Ina acquiesçait, elle voulait absolument trouver sa place. En quelques jours elle avait déjà la réputation d’être une petite maladroite inutile. Elle entra dans la pièce, et vit Balla qui tenait fermement le poignet de Sassouma. Son frère avait encore frappé.

« Balla ! Que fais – tu ? » demanda Ina en se plaçant face à son frère. 

Il retira rapidement sa main, l’air nerveux.

« Je suis désolé, je vous ai pris pour un bandit. » marmonna Balla. « Excusez-moi. » dit-il, et quitta la pièce.

#

Son visage couvert, personne ne savait ce que ressentait Sassouma. Seules ses mains tremblantes étaient visibles. Elle ne répondit rien et s’assit sur une chaise. Les servantes se précipitèrent vers elle.

« Tout compte fait, Ina, prends ta matinée. » lui dit la servante. 

Ina se sentait à la fois soulagée et déçue. Elle avait l’impression d’avoir échoué à sa mission en mettant mal à l’aise Sassouma. Mais elle était ravie de pouvoir continuer ses poteries.

Ina se précipita derrière son frère.

« Balla qu’à tu fais ? Je t’ai vu lui attraper la main. »

« Pourquoi en faire toute une histoire ? Ce n’était qu’une bonne n’est – ce pas ? » 

« Oui bien sûr, ce n’était qu’une simple bonne … » Chuchota Ina.

« Apparemment Sassouma va bientôt sortir, cette nouvelle me déplait fortement. » dit Balla. 

« Et pourquoi cela ? C’est la fille du Mansa il était évident qu’il allait la laisser sortir un jour ou l’autre, et puis tu travailles pour lui, donc tu devras la supporter. »

« Oui c’est évident, mais après tout ce qu’elle m’a fait endurer… »

« Ce n’était qu’une enfant à cette période tu ne … »

Balla envoya une gifle sur la joue d’Ina. Il avait toujours été violent, mais depuis quelques temps il était toujours en colère contre elle.

« Mes ennemies sont aussi tes ennemies, grave bien ces paroles dans ta tête. Je refuse que tu t’approches d’elle. » 

« Mais je travaille pendant quelques jours pour le Mansa, je ne peux pas me permettre de … »

« Trouve une excuse, mais je ne veux pas te voir proche d’elle. »

Ina acquiesça, Balla était son frère ainé, c’était la seule chose qu’elle pouvait se permettre de faire.

« Où vas-tu ? » demande Ina.

« Je vais travailler à l’atelier. » dit Balla.

Balla entretenait une relation privilégiée avec le Mansa. Le succès de ses poteries rapportait un énorme capital à l’empire. Les royaumes et empires voisins se jetaient sur les poteries de Niani. Les poteries signées Balla passaient même les frontières de la Méditerranée.

« Moi aussi il faut que je… »

« Non ! » s’écria-t-il, « Je…enfin… Ne va pas là-bas, tu devrais te promener un peu dans la cour. »

Pourquoi Balla se montrait aussi nerveux ? Avait-il quelque chose à cacher ? 

Ina voulait absolument le découvrir, mais elle devait d’abord se soigner, la gifle qu’elle avait reçue lui avait légèrement ouvert la joue. Balla et la douceur, deux antithèses. Ina désinfecta sa plaie avec quelques herbes médicinales que la reine lui avait offertes lors de leurs voyages à Tombouctou, elle ne se doutait pas qu’elle en aurait utilisé à cause de Sassouma. Ina était sous la protection de la reine, depuis qu’elle travaillait avec Balla. Les poteries de celle-ci avaient touché la sensibilité de la reine. C’était la seule qui croyait au potentiel créatif d’Ina. 

La reine était bloquée aux alentours de Gao, elle ne pourrait très certainement pas assister à la sortie de sa propre fille. Ina se demanda comment leurs retrouvailles allaient se passer. Sassouma avait tout de même passée dix ans de sa vie enfermée, comment retrouver des personnes sur qui elle comptait pour la protéger, mais qui lui avaient tourné le dos tant d’années ? 

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Le vent, soufflant dans les feuilles, laissait entrevoir le soleil à son zénith, la fin de la matinée se faisait sentir. Sassouma avait finalement pu se retirer du palais. Les servantes lui accordaient trop d’égard à son goût. Elle ne pouvait plus s’habiller seule, manger seule ni faire sa toilette seule. 

Dans le jardin elle se sentait mieux. Ici aussi rien n’avait changé. L’herbe, fraiche et verte d’un côté, et asséchée aux couleurs d’or de l’autre. Le baobab géant, et le baobab sans branches étaient toujours au fond du jardin.

Sassouma marcha à vive allure, elle voulait savoir si tout était toujours là, au pied du baobab. Les herbes fouettaient ses petites jambes délicates. Elle avait oublié de mettre ses sandales. L’impatience grandissait en elle, toutes ces années enfermées, accrochée au merveilleux souvenir d’enfance qu’elle avait concocté avec le prince et la princesse du royaume de Sosso avant que son père décide de l’enfermer.

Son pagne s’envolait à l’allure du vent, quelques grimaces se faisaient voir sur son visage, depuis quelques secondes elle renaissait. Elle s’élançait le long des arbustes, déplaçant les branches qui la gênaient, piétinant les mangues tombées des arbres, mais plus elle s’avançait et plus les herbes mouillées s’asséchaient, crépitantes sous ses pas.  Plus elle s’avançait et plus les arbres perdait en couleurs, la verdure timide devenant ocre. Sassouma accéléra, et devant le géant baobab, plus rien. Les décorations avaient disparu, les couronnes de feuilles qu’elle avait concoctées avec ses amis avaient fanées. 

Elle s’agenouilla, essayant de déterrer le peu de poteries qui restaient entre les racines noueuses de l’arbre mais en vain. Les poteries qui avaient bercé son enfance n’étaient plus que poussière. Elle éparpilla les feuilles d’un buisson, et y vu un trou béant. Si profond qu’aucune lumière n’y était perceptible. Elle y passa la main et un vent fort l’aspira. Sassouma recula brutalement, surprise et intriguée, mais pas effrayée.  Elle remit doucement sa main dans le trou, et des petites gouttelettes se posèrent sur ses doigts. L’humidité lui faisait un bien fou, l’emportant doucement… 

« Sassouma ! Il est l’heure de rentrer ! La fête à finalement lieu plus tôt ! » s’écria une servante.

« Votre mère est bientôt arrivée, elle est dans les alentours de Niani. »

Sassouma se retourna brutalement face à l’annonce de la servante.

« Ma mère…de retour… » chuchota Sassouma, ébahie.

« Oui c’est formidable, toute la famille sera réunie à nouveau, comme avant. » dit une autre servante venant d’arriver. 

« Je ne veux pas que ma mère me voie jusqu’à la cérémonie, je ne veux pas qu’elle s’approche de moi. »

« Mais c’est… »

« C’est un ordre. » dit – elle gentiment.

Les servantes n’avaient d’autre choix qu’obéir, attiser la colère de Sassouma n’était pas une option. La reine était une femme douce, généreuse et compréhensible elle saurait respecter la décision de sa fille qui ne pouvait être définitive. 

Une fois dans sa chambre, Sassouma avait l’impression d’être retourné à la case départ. De nouveau tout avait disparu, de nouveau rien n’existait plus. Un ou deux reflets dans l’obscurité, et la voilà apparente. La voici, une lumière qui prenait sa place dans cette obscure clarté, une trace incertaine, bâclée, bâclée, pouf une flaque, miroir cassé. Sa trace ne se voyait plus dans l’obscurité, retour à la citadelle, enchaînée. Dans l’obscurité, elle n’était plus lumière, la voilà qui devenait lugubre. La voilà qui devenait faux-semblant. 

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Ina lavait ses mains imbibées de terre.

« Comment est – ce possible ? Elle ne veut pas voir sa mère, sa propre mère ! » Vociféra-t-elle.

Elle avait du mal à ingérer la nouvelle, la reine avait toujours été une femme sans défaut à ses yeux. Elle ne comprenait pas pourquoi sa fille ne le voyait pas. Peut-être, après tout ce temps, l’avait-elle oublié. 

« Moins fort Ina, elle risque de t’entendre. » dit une domestique. 

« La reine s’est toujours souciée d’elle, je ne comprends pas pourquoi elle ne veut pas lui parler… »

« C’est temporaire, elle passera bientôt à autre chose, fait lui confiance. » 

Ina sorti de l’atelier, bien qu’elle ne connaissait pas la princesse, elle savait qu’elle pourrait lui faire changer d’avis sur la reine. Elle traversa le couloir, pour retourner dans la chambre de Sassouma. Il y avait tellement de pièces qu’elle était perdue. Deux couloirs s’offraient à elle, elle décida de prendre celui de droite. Elle regretta très vite son choix. Le chemin était dépourvu de lumière, elle peinait à avancer, mais une lueur s’échappait de l’embrasure d’une porte.

Peut – être que Sassouma est à l’intérieur se dit -elle. 

Elle avança sur la pointe des pieds. Des voix rauques se faisaient entendre, impossible que cela soit Sassouma, Ina avait souvent payée le prix de sa curiosité mais ne pouvait s’empêcher d’écouter.

« Le temps presse, on n’a pas d’autres options, Balla. » dit un homme. 

« Le Mandé sera à moi très prochainement, lieutenant, je sens que ce n’est pas le moment de prendre le pouvoir. » dit Balla. 

« J’ai des mauvaises intuitions depuis que Sassouma est de retour, je pense qu’il faut agir vite, très vite. »

« Justement sa venue va occuper le Mansa, il n’y a absolument rien à craindre. » 

Ina était désemparée. Son frère préparait un coup d’état. Il était vrai qu’il avait des attitudes de plus en plus étranges. Plus évasif, plus violent. Malgré tout ce qu’elle endurait, Ina essayait toujours de voir les bons côtés de son frère aussi infimes soient-ils. Mais il ne s’agissait plus que d’elle, mais de la sécurité de tout l’empire.

Balla et l’étranger ouvrirent la porte, et s’éloignèrent peu à peu. Elle avait peu de temps. Il lui fallait trouver la chambre de Sassouma pour tout lui expliquer. Elle ne faisait confiance à personne dans ce palais, excepté la reine, mais en son absence…

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Ina traversa la place du grand marché. Les longs voiles, et les pagnes colorés étaient de sortie. La place du marché était remplie de tentes, et de fruits écrasés. L’odeur de la viande de rue chatouillait ses narines. Les femmes se ruaient pour avoir une tenue convenable pour la cérémonie, les hommes achetaient leurs plus beaux boubous. Tout le monde était dans l’ambiance pour fêter le retour de Sassouma, sauf Ina. Elle avait le pressentiment que la fête ne se passerait pas comme prévu.

« Ina ! » hurla la servante, dont Ina ne connaissait toujours pas le nom, mais semblait la trouver ou qu’elle soit.

Elle se retourna agacée, ce n’était pas le moment. 

« Je sais que je t’ai donné ta journée mais est – ce que tu pourrais juste me tenir les habits de Sassouma, car je suis débordé. Il faut juste que j’aille chercher ma tenue chez la couturière. »

Ina sourit. Elle ne savait pas comment elle aurait pu entrer dans la chambre de Sassouma sans se faire prendre.  Elle en voulut moins à sa collègue, elle venait de lui offrir une opportunité en or. 

« Oui bien sûr, je t’attends. » répondit elle.

La servante fila, et Ina s’empara du bac, s’élançant vers la chambre Sassouma. Le contenu était lourd, les nombreux bijoux à l’intérieur ne lui facilitaient pas la tâche. Ina remettait sans cesse en question sa décision, car cela pourrait changer le cours de l’Empire.

Elle ne comprenait pas les motivations de son frère. Le Mande était stable, prospère. Balla n’était qu’un potier. Il ne faisait pas partie du monde de la noblesse. Ses poteries étaient reconnues partout, qu’est – ce qu’il voulait de plus ? 

Une fois devant la chambre, elle toquait à la porte attendant une réponse. Mais rien. Sassouma ne répondait pas. Ina enfonça alors brutalement la porte à l’aide du bac.

« Je suis venue avec votre tenue pour ce soir… »

Sassouma était assise face à un miroir brisé. Malgré l’entrée d’Ina, elle ne bougea pas d’un poil. Sa présence ne lui faisait ni chaud ni froid, ce qui ne lui plaisait pas du tout. 

« Je sais qu’on n’est pas partie sur de bonnes bases, mais il serait plus judicieux de répondre car la fête à lieu ce soir. » 

Sassouma se retourna vers Ina, son visage toujours couvert. Quelques courants d’air brisant le silence de la pièce.

« Je pose ça ici. » dit Ina.

Sassouma ne réagit toujours pas.

« Bon, il faut que je vous dise quelque chose. » ajouta Ina. 

« Si c’est au sujet de ma mère, je ne veux pas la voir pour l’instant, ça ne sert à rien de vouloir me convaincre. »

« C’est ce que je voulais vous dire, enfin… Non, j’avais autre chose à dire mais… »

« Si tu ne sais pas quoi dire tais toi, tu éviteras une autre catastrophe. »

« Justement si je ne dis rien une catastrophe se produira. »

Sassouma se tourna vers Ina et baissa le voile qui recouvrait son visage. Elle avait un teint ébène, qui contrastait avec le tissu bleu qu’elle portait. Ses cheveux étaient en longues tresses perlées, ressemblant à une couronne. C’était le portrait craché de sa mère. 

« Balla veut prendre le contrôle du Mandé… Il faut faire quelque chose. »

Sassouma ne s’y attendais pas, Balla prendre le pouvoir de l’Empire ? Cela semblait impossible. 

« Comment l’as-tu découvert ? » demanda t’elle, sceptique. 

« J’ai entendu une conversation entre Balla et un homme de l’armée, il faut agir vite ! »

Sassouma regardait Ina gesticuler en vain. Elle se calma, et fixa Sassouma du creux de l’œil. 

« Pourquoi tu me fixes comme ça ? Que veux-tu que je fasse ? » Demanda Sassouma.

« Il faut absolument qu’on aille voir le Mansa ! »

« Il ne se passera rien… Je ne pense pas que Balla va assiéger le Mandé il n’est que potier après tout. Fait moi confiance je sais ce qu’il me reste à faire… Combien de temps avant le début de la cérémonie ? » demanda Sassouma.

« Le Mansa a décidé d’avancer la célébration, j’espère que tu es prête. » dit Ina. 

« Ma mère n’est pas arrivée, mon père ne commence jamais les cérémonies tant qu’elle n’est pas là. »

« Je sais, mais il a ordonné que l’on commence malgré l’absence de votre mère. C’est étrange, votre père s’est également absenté, qu’elle est l’utilité de la maintenir… »

Sassouma laissa Ina la vêtir, reprit le voile, le mis sur sa tête pour cacher son visage, et suivit Ina qui l’emmenait malgré elle à la cérémonie. 

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La chaleur qui s’était emparée du Mandé commençait à s’atténuer. Contrairement à ses gardes, la Reine Anta la supportait facilement. Elle revenait du désert, la chaleur lui manquait presque mais il lui tardait d’arriver à Niani. Revoir sa fille après tant d’années était son souhait le plus cher mais comment la regarder en face après ce qui lui était arrivé ?

Anta et ses gardes s’arrêtèrent à un point d’eau. Elle se mit debout sur un rocher, regardant son reflet dans l’eau. La vieillesse ne semblait pas l’atteindre, sa peau ébène contrastait également avec son voile bleu, et ses tresses ornées de perles rappelaient celles de Sassouma. Elles étaient comme un reflet dans un miroir. La seule distinction qu’elle avait avec sa fille était les innombrables grain de beauté présent sur son visage. 

Me ressemble-t-elle encore aujourd’hui ? pensa-t-elle.

La reine rentrait le cœur lourd à Niani. Elle avait passé un merveilleux moment à Tombouctou, mais elle portait dix ans de culpabilité sur les épaules, en plus des nombreuses poteries achetées pour décorer le palais.

Elle leva la tête et vit un attroupement de bergers et paysans qui accourait vers elle. 

« Pourquoi tout ce raffut ? » hurla un garde.

« Une attaque a été lancé il y a quelques minutes dans les alentours de Kangaba. » dit un berger. « Je ne sais pas s’il s’agit de bandits ou d’une armée. »
La reine sursauta. Une attaque ? Cela n’avait aucun sens. Le Mande était fort. Mais le moment n’était pas à la spéculation. La reine descendit du rocher et remonta à cheval.

« Gardes ! Encerclez les habitants et protégez les ! Préparez-vous pour une attaque ! »

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Des claquements réguliers de sabots résonnaient au loin, et un attroupement de civils fit son apparition sur la place du marché de Niani. Bonne nouvelle, se dirent les quelques commerçants n’ayant pas écoulés leurs stocks avant la fête.

Mais l’attroupement ne ressemblait guère à celui de clients de dernière heure. Les civils se bousculaient les uns les autres, hurlant des phrases incompréhensibles.

« Ils arrivent ! » s’écria une vieille dame, se cachant derrière un stand d’igname.

Petit à petit l’incompréhension laissait place à la peur. Des cavaliers étranges se tenaient à l’entrée du palais. Ils arboraient des tenues différentes des soldats de Niani. Leur chef portant un turban vert émeraude qui semblait atteindre le ciel. Un petit châle cachait sa bouche et son nez. Il avait un boubou qui lui arrivait à la hauteur du genou et un sarouel étanche orné de motifs, son cheval aussi élégamment paré que lui. 

La foule était fébrile. Les enfants se réfugiant derrière les genoux de leurs mères alors que quelques hommes s’étaient armés de machettes.

L’homme enroulé de tissus leva son sabre vers le soleil en faisant dresser sa monture, et hurla une phrase qui n’était ni du malinké, ni du soninké et encore moins du peulh, et l’armée s’avança au trop vers la place du marché, écrasant les personnes âgées devant eux.

Des servantes entrèrent en furie dans le palais, un mouvement de foule ce fit sentir à l’extérieur. L’armée étrangère passa aux galops, sabres levés.  

Ina était pétrifiée. Sassouma attrapa la main de celle-ci, l’entrainant dans une course folle. Sassouma n’avait jamais couru aussi vite de sa vie. L’écho des sabots se faisait plus proches. Elles arrivèrent au jardin, courant le long des herbes sèches, dépassèrent le baobab et se mirent face aux buissons. Sassouma dégagea les feuilles encombrantes, et se retrouva face au trou.

« On va très certainement se faire trancher la tête et vous m’emmenez devant un trou ! » S’écria Ina. 

« Il ne faut pas tirer de conclusion hâtive. » dit Sassouma.

Elle passa délicatement sa main au travers, des gouttelettes se déposant sous son bras. Soudain Sassouma virevolta, aspirée dans le vide, des ronces s’accrochant sur son pagne. Ina se jeta dans le trou, tentant tant bien que mal de rattraper Sassouma mais en vain. Elles s’enfonçaient toutes deux, la lumière du jour disparaissant derrière elles. La seule chose qu’elles ressentaient était de l’humidité. 

Elles s’écrasèrent sur de la mousse, manquant de peu un rocher à quelques pas d’elles.

Sassouma se releva brusquement, elle mourrait d’envie de savoir où elles se trouvaient. Son acolyte quant à elle, était défraichie, son visage couvert de boue et d’herbe.

« Il faut qu’on commence à avancer. Voir où cela va nous mener. » dit Sassouma. 

« Et si on retournait au palais ? Imaginez un instant que ce n’est qu’un rêve ou pire un piège ! »

Sassouma secoua la tête, désespérée à l’idée d’effectuer ce voyage avec une poule mouillée.

Il fallait absolument qu’elle découvre ce qu’il y avait derrière la grotte. Elle ne comprenait pas pourquoi Ina voulait faire demi-tour. Le fait même d’être aspirée par un trou ne semblait pas l’intéresser. 

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Les cavaliers avaient encerclé le palais, mais étrangement cette armée fulgurante n’avait pas l’air de vouloir attaquer.

Balla se sentait prêt, depuis plusieurs mois il s’entrainait secrètement corps et âmes. Le Mansa s’était absenté, c’était le moment de prouver sa force.

« Soldats, le temps presse il faut agir ! » s’écria t’il.

« Où est le général Konaté ?! » demanda un soldat. 

« Il est parti à la recherche de la reine. » dit un fantassin « Il y a des rumeurs selon lesquelles la caravane de la reine est introuvable ! »

Aucun autre chef d’armées n’était présent, et le Mansa était absent.

« Soldats ! Je vous donne l’ordre de monter sur le toit du palais, des arcs y sont gardés. Nous allons tenter de vaincre l’ennemi par le ciel ! Il faut également un groupe au sol ! A vos sabres ! »

Les hurlements de la foule devinrent plus insistants. Les soldats hésitaient à suivre un potier, aussi influent soit-il, mais c’étaient leurs parents et leurs amis qui mourraient dehors.

Les soldats exécutèrent les ordres. Balla rejoignit les archers. C’était pour lui le moment de faire ses preuves. Les étoiles se perdaient dans le ciel bleu nuit. Balla les contemplait, ferma les yeux et s’imagina les conséquences de ses actes. Il se coucha sur le toit, s’emparant d’un arc et de flèches. Les archers autours de lui faisaient de même, les flèches fusant vers l’ennemi. Au sol, les fantassins prenaient facilement le dessus sur les étrangers, bien trop facilement. 

« Balla… On s’est trompés. » dit l’un des archers. « Ce n’est pas une armée étrangère mais des simples bandits ! »

La plupart des cavaliers avaient disparus, il ne restait plus que quelques hommes à terre.

« Fausse alerte, descendons, les soldats attraperont les bandits. » 

Balla et ses hommes descendirent du toit, les mystérieux attaquants ayant pris la fuite. Balla et les soldats aidant les blessés et déplaçant les corps, quand un groupe de cavaliers approcha, entourant le Mansa.

« Que ce passe – t – il ici ?! » Hurla l’empereur.

« Des bandits ont attaqué le palais. » dit Balla.

« Pourquoi y a t’il autant de flèches au sol ? » demanda le Mansa.

« C’était un ordre de Balla. » dit un soldat.

Le Mansa se retourna, le visage serré, vers Balla. C’était la première fois qu’il le regardait ainsi. 

« Balla rejoint moi dans la salle du trône, et vite ! »

Le Mansa descendit de sa monture, et se dirigea furieusement vers son trône.

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Balla ne comprenait pas l’attitude du Mansa, il avait pourtant tenté de sécuriser le palais comme il le pouvait. Pensif, il ramena le cheval de l’empereur à l’écurie, allait-il se faire renvoyer de la cour ? Ou pire bannir ? Il avait besoin d’en parler se rendant compte à ce moment de l’absence d’Ina. Où est-elle passé ? s’interrogea t’il. 

Il rentra, nerveux, dans la salle du trône, sous le regard menaçant du Mansa. 

« Préparer une action d’une telle ampleur pour des simples bandits, Balla, c’est irresponsable ! Sans me consulter en plus ! Imagine juste si des soldats avaient perdu la vie pour cela ?! » 

« Mansa je pensais bien faire, des cavaliers étranges avait fait leur apparition et aucun général n’était présent. Il fallait absolument que quelqu’un protège les habitants ! »

« Il y a tellement de soldats plus expérimentés que toi qui auraient pu prendre le relais enfin… Balla, tu es potier ! Qu’est – ce qui t’a pris ? »

« Je serais prêt à tout pour protéger ma patrie et la chérir. » dit – il, « Je ne suis que de caste d’artisan, cela est vrai, mais je manie avec précision les armes, Mansa… »

Le Mansa écouta attentivement Balla, surpris par la manière dont il avait su gérer les troupes. 

« Bon, ça va pour cette fois, en tout cas je te félicite pour la manière dont tu as géré cette petite crise avant la cérémonie. » 

« Je vous remercie, Mansa. Je… »

« Balla, aujourd’hui je me suis absenté avant la cérémonie pour rencontrer des émissaires et tenter d’apaiser les tensions entre Zazzau et Niani. »

« Zazzau… mais qu’avons-nous à voir avec ce peuple ? » demanda Balla.

« Leurs soldats s’approchent beaucoup de la frontière ces derniers temps. J’ai d’ailleurs pu parler à des gardes qui m’ont affirmé te contraire de loin. »

La tension de Balla virevolta. 

« J’avais de la famille qui commerçait à Zazzau, il y a de cela quelques années, c’est très certainement à cause de cela. » dit – il, cachant son tremblement.

« Je comprends. » dit le Mansa se satisfaisant de son explication hâtive. « J’avais comme l’impression que tu avais quelque chose à me demander. »

« Oui, Mansa. » dit – Balla, « Comme je vous disais. J’aime ma patrie, je suis prêt à tout pour la défendre, et si en plus Zazzau a des vues sur nous, alors…. Permettez-moi de rejoindre le corps de l’armée. » 

Le Mansa était surpris de la demande de Balla, il arrivait que certaines castes rejoignent l’armée mais il n’avait jamais eu une telle demande de la part d’un forgeron.

« Je vais réunir le conseil, on décidera de ton sort. » 

Balla sourit, comment le Mansa pourrait-il refuser ? Il pouvait enfin mettre en marche son plan.  

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Cela ne faisait que quelques minutes que les deux jeunes filles arpentaient un chemin sinueux, qui leur semblait pourtant éternel. La respiration d’Ina s’accélérait, ses pieds lui faisaient mal. Elle s’agrippait comme elle le pouvait au mur. Sassouma était subjuguée par la beauté de la grotte, et les dessins gravés sur les murs. Des soldats soninkés, armés de leurs sabres se précipitant vers une contrée lointaine. Un festival sous la peine lune dont le sens est depuis longtemps perdu. De simples paysages, et le passage de la vie. Aucun accomplissement de son père n’était présent, il devait donc s’agir d’un autre royaume. Mais lequel ? L’ambiance de la grotte lui rappelait indescriptiblement des souvenirs de son enfance.

« J’en peux plus. Je t’attends ici. » dit Ina se jetant à terre. 

« Mais c’est extrêmement dangereux, je ne peux pas te laisser là. Si on se perd comment on va faire pour rentrer à Niani ? »

« C’est vous qui nous avez ramené ici, je n’ai rien demandé moi. »

« Il y a surement une bataille qui se prépare. C’est pour notre sécurité. »

« Non je ne pense pas qu’une bataille a lieu, je suis sûre que c’est un plan de Balla. La situation s’est obligatoirement stabilisée… Moi je fais demi-tour. » 

« Comme tu veux alors, moi je continue. »

« Comment allez-vous retrouver votre chemin ? » demanda Ina.

« Je trouverais une solution comme toujours. »

#

Sassouma continua sa route.

Devant elle, un léger faisceau lumineux attirait son attention. Elle prit ses jambes à son cou, il ne fallait absolument pas qu’elle perde de vu la lumière. Celle-ci disparaissait petit à petit, plus elle s’avançait et plus elle s’éloignait. Le chemin s’arrêta soudainement. Une fente se faisait voir dans le mur de la grotte, mais où la mènerait – elle ? 

Sassouma essayait tant bien que mal de passer à travers la fente, sa silhouette svelte était à son avantage. Une fois de l’autre côté c’est avec stupeur qu’elle se trouvait dans la place du marché, couverte de tentes et de fruits écrasés, d’une ville inconnue. La grotte derrière elle ayant disparue. Cela ne ressemblait pas à Niani. Elle marcha petit à petit, vers une vieille dame assise dans l’ombre d’une tente. 

« Tu as l’air perdu, je peux t’aider ? » Dit la vieille dame.

Elle parlait un malinké emmêlé, avec un accent qui n’était pas propre à Niani. Vêtue d’un pagne violet qui recouvrait tout son corps, des cernes et d’énormes rides creusaient son visage.

« Euh, oui… Je ne sais pas du tout où je suis, est – ce que vous pouvez m’éclairez ? »

« Comment ça tu ne sais pas où tu es ? On est dans le royaume de Sosso. Tu te moques de moi ? Toi, une servante du palais ? Les jeunes franchement… » dit -elle en s’en allant. 

Une servante du palais ? Sassouma regarda ses vêtements déchirés. Elle était sous le choc. Cela faisait tant d’années qu’elle n’avait pas mis les pieds ici. Depuis que son père était ennemi avec le royaume de Sosso, elle n’en n’avait plus jamais entendu parler. C’était une occasion qu’elle ne devait pas louper. Il fallait qu’elle aille parler au roi et à la reine de Sosso. 


#

« Halte ! Qui va la ?! »

Sassouma se retourna brusquement, un soldat était derrière elle, prêt à l’attaquer.

« Je… Je suis une servante. » Dit Sassouma par réflexe « J’ai sorti le linge de la reine maintenant il faut que je retourne au palais. » 

Le garde sembla hésiter mais à sa surprise, la laissa passer.  

« Bon, passe mais dépêche-toi, ne traine pas. » dit-il. 

« Oui bien sûr, merci beaucoup… à demain ! » dit – elle en s’en allant. 

A demain ??? pensa-t-elle. Qu’est ce qui m’a pris…

Il lui manquait de peu pour ce faire attraper, comment pouvait-il la croire ?

Elle entra dans le palais. Elle se souvenait de l’endroit exact où se trouvait la salle du trône, marchant le long de couloirs familiers mais étrangement vides. Ou étaient donc tous les gardes ? Etant enfant elle était toujours impatiente d’arriver dans ce royaume. C’était un lieu de réunion pour l’empire et les royaumes voisins. Son père l’y emmenait souvent, pour elle c’était comme un grand jardin. Elle s’amusait avec les nombreux enfants de Sosso. Tout était sublimé par leurs imaginations. Les écuries se transformaient en salle de tournoi, la grande prairie non loin de la place du marché en hippodrome. 

La salle du trône était immense. L’architecture en terre cuite formait des grands ovales autant à l’intérieur qu’à l’extérieur. Des masques immenses et des crânes étaient posés délicatement sur le mur. Un long tapis en or massif ce tenait face aux trônes.  Le trône des Kanté était orné de koris et d’or. Un grand miroir, debout derrière les trônes, reflétait la pièce, doublant sa taille et sa profondeur.

La reine la fixait d’un regard glacial. Ses cheveux étaient tressés et orné de perles, recouvert d’un fichu bleu nuit posé délicatement sur sa tête. Elle portait un long pagne sombre, aussi sombre que son regard. Soumaoro Kanté était assis aux côtés de son épouse, sa peau brune ce contrastait avec la peau sombre de sa femme. Ses doigts étaient parés de bagues en argent, sous un boubou en bogolan orangé. 

Sassouma se vit dans le miroir, et compris pourquoi la vieille dame était offensée. Pourquoi le garde l’avait cru sur parole. Dans le miroir, Sassouma apparaissait vêtue d’une robe blanche de servante du Sosso.

« Qui est tu ? » demanda calmement la reine, « comment as-tu pu rentrer dans le palais ? »

« Je suis… je suis Sassouma Keïta. La fille de Mansa Ibrahim, empereur de Niani. ».

A ces mots, son reflet changea, et elle apparut dans sa robe royale, déchirée et maculée de boue.

Le roi et sa reine se figèrent. Sassouma avait été un grand réconfort pour leurs enfants. La revoir dix ans plus tard, dans un tel état, était un choc. 

« Sassouma, je ne m’attendais pas à ta visite, encore moins en pleine nuit, seule et aussi débraillée. Et par quelle magie as-tu… »

« Ma chère reine. » L’interrompit Sassouma, bien incapable d’expliquer quoi que ce soit. « Le temps presse. J’ai besoin de vous et de votre générosité. » Elle soupira et dit, « Il faut absolument que votre armée envahisse Niani, mon père souhaite plus que le contrôle du Mandé, mais Zazzau, et Sosso aussi. Il n’y a rien de bon en lui. Rien ni personne, sauf vous et moi, pouvons faire quelque chose pour l’arrêter. »

Le grand Soumaoro s’était mis à rire. 

« Sassouma, Sassouma. » susurra-t-il, « Tu n’es qu’une gamine inexpérimentée qui a passé sa vie enfermée, que peux-tu faire pour le Mandé ? » 

« Oh, grand Soumaoro, je ne veux point avoir une gouvernance sur le Mandé, la seule chose que je veux, c’est détruire mon père et contrôler Niani. Un potier, y a aujourd’hui, tenté un coup d’état. » 

Soumaoro Kanté se leva brusquement. 

« Ton père a toujours été un incapable, comment un potier peut – il tenter ouvertement de prendre le pouvoir ? Le Mansa est vraiment irrécupérable, et il croit pouvoir dominer le Sosso ? Nous allons t’aider. » 

Sassouma allait enfin pouvoir se débarrasser de son père, mais à quel prix ?

#

Ina sorti de la grotte, ses vêtements légèrement mouillés. Elle était certaine que l’attaque aux alentours du palais n’était pas bien grave, ne comprenant pas pourquoi Sassouma était entêtée à savoir ce qu’il y avait derrière cette grotte.

Avant de quitter définitivement le jardin, Ina cueillit une fleur. Elle ressemblait comme deux gouttes d’eau à une espèce réputée pour donner des hallucinations. Ina voulait se persuader que ce qui c’était produit n’était en réalité que cela. Mais alors, où était Sassouma ?

Une fois au palais, on pouvait entendre les mouches voler. Personne n’était à l’intérieur, mais une masse de personnes s’était rassemblée autour du djéli personnel du Mansa, formant un énorme cercle autour d’une estrade. Ina avait du mal à entendre ce que disait le djéli. Elle s’approcha, et c’est avec stupeur que Balla fit son apparition. Ina lâcha la fleur sans s’en rendre compte et s’avança vers son frère. Il ressemblait au soleil qui se refugiait derrière la lune.

Il avait bien caché son jeu.

#

Mariam Camara est une lycéenne française, d’origine malienne. Elle écrit depuis ses années collège, et publie pour la première fois une nouvelle dans le magazine Omenana. Elle a toujours aimé le fait que les mots deviennent des phrases pour prendre un sens plus profond. Dans ses écrits de genre contemporain, fantastique, historique, et autres, elle aborde des thématiques sociétales anciennes mais toujours d’actualité, et souhaite offrir une réflexion sur le monde qui l’entoure. Dans sa première publication, Balla tu es mon épine, elle nous plonge en 1533, dans l’empire du Mali, en Afrique de l’ouest.

Bonne lecture.

The Gods Have Made a Request – Ephraim Orji

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Ephraim Ndubisi Orji writes short stories from Nigeria. His work has been published in Eboquills. He was shortlisted for the Awele Creative Trust Award 2020. He is a lover of stories and stans the works of the amazing horror fiction god Clive Barker and the carefully crafted works of one of Nigeria's literary icons, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. He is presently a student of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka and when he is not screaming the notes to a song, he is hunched over on his system or smartphone typing away the chaotic world thrashing within him.

Dike stared at his sleeping wife, watching as her chest rose and fell evenly, the stillness of her face altered occasionally by twitching brows, her pale skin shimmering within the dark interior of their bedroom. Tonight, the sky was a gaping void of blackness, without a trace of twinkling stars or silver moonlight leaking into their bedroom through its lonesome square window. He stared at her neck, slender and long, with traces of bulging veins, and imagined the dagger he had in his hand making a clean cut. He imagined the red blood that would look black against her pale skin, and the confused horror that would register on her face as pain fired up her nerves. He also imagined the haunted look in her eyes, the disbelief and betrayal etched in those pair of bright blues as she gaped at him, her stunned mind connecting the dots.

He fought the moan of agony that threatened to leave his swollen, tightly pressed lips. He had silently cried himself raw earlier, pleading with the forces that be to change her fate. But the goddess Ani, mother of all things fertile, had been clear; “The life of your soulmate in exchange for your manhood.”

And when he had gaped at the goddess, bewildered and uncertain, she had asked; “Do you not wish to father children of your own any longer?” Her ageless eyes shimmering with mockery, her vile intent unconcealed.

All he had to do was refuse her offer, choose his wife over his need to father an offspring. But the people of Ukorie had started to whisper, and rumours hung on neighbours’ puckered lips. Even his friends had begun to give him ‘the look’. A look he knew questioned his masculinity, a look they reserved for a man who could as well be a woman. How could a man of his status not sire a child after a year of being married? The women of Ukorie were not known to be barren, such a thing was unheard of, so surely, this childlessness had something to do with his loins. Perhaps a curse from a past lover who would not let go, or one from his lineage. Whatever it was, Dike’s reputation, and that of his family was at stake, he had to prove himself man enough, he had to prove he functioned as properly as every other fertile man in Ukorie. His entire legacy hung dangerously between generational shame and restored dignity. Surely Yeni would understand, she might die with a broken heart – as one betrayed by the man she had loved and trusted, but she would later come to see the bigger picture, she would forgive him; he hoped.

A drop of sweat, or perhaps tears, trickled from his face onto Yeni’s, and she stirred. Dike bristled, almost losing his grip on the dagger. His heart thundered within his ribcage as he watched her moved slightly, a soft moan escaping thin pink lips typical of people born with pale skin. He shuddered with relief when she did not wake. Once again, he drew himself over her, a looming figure of sweat and thick muscles, sucked in a deep breath, tightened his grip on the hilt of the glistening dagger, swallowed the lump of terror, guilt and shame lodged in his throat, and slowly lowered the dagger to Yeni’s neck.

“Forgive me my love,” he whispered.

Yeni stirred again.

‘Now!’ he heard the goddess Ani’s voice echo in his head.

His hand moved with the practiced precision of one who had killed too many times, the sharp silver blade of the dagger slashing across smooth pale skin, drawing blood. It happened as he had imagined it; Yeni’s eyes flew open, blue as the sea and alert as a cat. She opened her mouth to speak, or perhaps scream, but gurgled on her own blood. In the dark, it sputtered in waves of black against her pale skin, squirting all over Dike’s dark thick abdomen, warm and sticky, the stench of it, metallic and heady. Her eyes found his, and for a second, the confusion flickered within them, then instant realization. He watched as those eyes widened in disbelief. Then, as though an afterthought, her body began to thrash beneath him, her slender hands, once delicate and smooth against his hardened body as she caressed him into slumber on those many nights when he returned to her in exhaustion from the day’s labour, now clutched desperately at her gaping neck. Everything within him begged to look away, but he did not, he allowed the image of Yeni, thrashing and gurgling for life, to plant itself in his memory, an eternal burden he’d bear as retribution for her.

When Yeni finally stilled in death, her blue eyes, now devoid of light, remained wide open, staring accusingly at him. Dike released a ragged breath. His body trembled and sweat slicked across his skin. He ran his free hand over his sticky abdomen, feeling Yeni’s blood mixed with his sweat. The sob lodged in his throat like a rock, refusing to be released.

“Well done.”

Dike’s head snapped up. In a shadowed corner of the room, just above the bed, Ani’s slender form blended like a darker shadow itself. She stared at him through a face partially concealed by a veil of beads flowing from a silver crown made of colorful seashells, only her nose and full lips were visible. Her long braided hair cascaded around her like tendrils, twisting of its own accord. Dike’s hands trembled as he stared at her, his breath came in laboured gasps. Then after long seconds of unnerving silence, she spoke again,

“Lay your wife to rest Dike, and when you do so, make sure you solicit the help of Okeke the witchdoctor, you may perhaps be in need of his… abilities,” her voice was like trickles of water poured into a bucket, ancient and beautiful.

Drawing all the strength he could muster, Dike said,

“W-will I be able t-to f-father a child now?”

Silence greeted him, for Ani was already gone, as easily as she had been there.

Through the night, while surrounding neighbours and the rest of Ukorie slept, Dike knelt before his wife’s corpse and wept till his eyes puffed, his throat burned, and the first crack of dawn peeked across the sky.

*

Yeni was buried two days later. Dike snuck her body out of their home in the dead of the night, and, according to instructions from Okeke the witchdoctor, took her to the deepest parts of Agunji forest where Okeke already stood waiting for him with a group of shirtless sweating young boys, armed with shovels. They stood in a clearing; a gaping hole dug by the boys at its center.

Dike stood back and watched as the boys lowered Yeni’s stiff body into the grave while Okeke paced the perimeter, muttering words under his breath. Yeni had died with a broken heart, her trust betrayed, Ani had asked Dike to solicit Okeke’s help because he needed to bind her soul, in case she became vengeful and latched on to the mortal world using her rage as an anchor, refusing to move on to the afterlife. This was also why Okeke advised against burying her behind their home as Dike had intended, for the closer her body was to Dike, the more likely she was to return.

Once the grave was sealed, Okeke, a tall bald man dressed in pure white wrappa tied around one shoulder, flowing all the way to his feet, stood over the grave, his voice sharp and clip against the rustling breeze as he uttered guttural incantations. Dike watched this through eyes that still stung from hours spent weeping. Okeke circled the grave, a calabash containing a white substance in his large, wrinkled hand. He traced the white powder around the grave, forming a circle in the black soil. Somewhere close by, an owl hooted, the undergrowth rustled as nocturnal beasts lurked, some peering curiously at the group of humans in their territory, others scampering away just by merely catching a scent of them.

Okeke instructed one of the boys to hand him another calabash, then sprayed its content — dried leaves — over the grave, all the while his mouth did not stop muttering those guttural incantations. He stood back, inspected his work, and nodded his approval.

“Now cover the traces of salt,” he said to the boys.

They swung into action, carefully placing damp earth over the circle of salt.

“Are you sure this will work?” Dike asked the man as they trudged through the forest, heading for Ukorie village.

“Yes Dike, it is done, the salt will keep her bound within the circle if she tries to return, and the achicha leaves will inconvenience her. When she gets restless, or tired of being confined, she will have no choice but to move on to the afterlife.”

Dike nodded.

“B-but will i-it h-hurt her? The salt and the ach…”

Achicha leaves,”

“Yes.”

Okeke chuckled.

“Dike, Yeni is dead, nothing can harm the dead, she feels no pain, at least physical, however, emotional pain is not like physical pain, it never just goes away, especially when it is strong, it lingers; which is why some souls need to be bound in order to prevent them from leaving the planes of the dead where they belong. Yeni died knowing you betrayed her, which is no fault of yours by the way, the gods made a request, you had to do what was required of you. However, if she is not bound, she might return for vengeance,”

At this, Okeke patted Dike in the back, his calloused palm hard against Dike’s bare skin.

Dike nodded and spoke no further.

Later that night, while he laid in bed alone, the lingering stench of Yeni’s blood in the still air, he stared into the ceiling and for the first time since Yeni’s death, gave in to the wave of exhaustion that caused his eyes to close.

*

He dreamt of feet. Filthy strong feet, thrashing at black damp earth like a chicken searching for insects in the undergrowth, only, these feet were human. The earth peeled off where the feet thrashed, and white shimmering powder came into view. The feet kicked at the white powder, scattering it across the floor, then paused. One heartbeat, two heartbeats, then charged for his face. One foot rose above him, revealing a filthy sole, and came down with a grunt, smashing into his eyes…

Dike jolted awake clawing at his face.

*

When the people of Ukorie asked about his wife, Dike told them she had gone to be with her mother in the west. They had nodded in response, a knowing look in their eyes, which was why when Dike took a new wife for himself three months later, rather than ask if Yeni was aware of this, they cheered and congratulated him. His friends gave him strong handshakes, the elders patted him on the back, and the women sang his praises.

His new wife was a young woman whose parents were low earning farmers from the northern parts of Ukorie, which meant she was not as pale as Yeni, but was several shades darker than himself. Dike had carefully chosen her for her round waist, plump breasts, and long legs, all of which were qualities of a body that would know how to make and nurse a child.

Her dark skin and full body were not the only qualities that contradicted Yeni’s. Where Yeni was feisty, sharp-mouthed and laughed carelessly the way most women of Ukorie did not dare around their husbands, Njideka was a typical Ukorie woman, silent and subservient, judiciously performing her wifely duties in a bid to please her husband. Even lovemaking was not as loud or as wild as it was with Yeni. She did not mount him and twist her waist the way Yeni did; the way he liked. She did not press his head against her nipples as he nibbled and suckled on them. She did not scream his name and writhe beneath his bulk with pleasure, she barely made a sound, only short, suppressed gasps as though afraid releasing the moan of ecstasy he knew rippled through her would offend him. And when he tried to teach her the art of pleasuring him with her mouth around his manhood the way Yeni knew how to, she had been awkward and stiff. Hence, lovemaking with Njideka was quick, unexciting, and quiet, save for infrequent, suppressed grunts. But Dike was hopeful, he had no interest in enjoying it anyway, all he needed was for her to conceive.

He had his plans laid out; after three children, if they were all boys, or two boys and a girl, he would resume bedding other women for the sole purpose of pleasure, and if they took in and gave him more children, though he would not marry them, for his dwelling was too small to accommodate more than one woman and he wanted no such responsibility of being forever tied to his concubines, he would take the children and place them under Njideka’s care, as was customary in such cases.

*

The first two months came and went with Njideka still seeing her monthly flow. No one thought too much of it, for sometimes it took a woman up to five months after marriage before conception. But four more months came and went, yet Njideka’s monthly flow did not cease. The looks and whispers began anew, this time less conspicuous than with Yeni. The anxiety crept up on Dike like a slithering serpent, haunting him on those nights he spent thrusting into Njideka. Each time he released, he willed his semen to penetrate whatever wall stood between him and her womb.

By the eighth month, Dike had had enough. He knelt before his altar and beckoned on Ani. She did not respond. His fury blazed like suppressed burning lava. The lingering fear lurked in the recesses of his mind that perhaps, Ani had deceived him. It was not uncommon for the gods to toy with humanity, which was why most never communed with them directly.

Dike pleaded and called to Ani Day and night, but she never came. Then on the seventh day, fueled by rage, he mounted Njideka, determined to shatter her womb if that was what it took.

For hours he pumped himself into her, and even when she began to sob in agony, he did not stop. Whenever he got exhausted, he laid beside her for a short while to regain his strength, and when he did, began the process all over again. This he did until darkness fell across the sky, and he finally collapsed on top of Njideka, exhaustion causing his muscles to tremble.

*

By the end of the ninth month, Njideka’s flow did not come. She held her breath, refusing to get excited too soon. Then the morning sickness began, and along with it, the headaches and constant exhaustion. By the third week of the tenth month, women around their home confirmed Njideka was with child. The tension that had heaped over Dike’s shoulder like a humongous boulder, came crumbling down. Ani had fulfilled her part of the bargain after all.

Njideka’s body adjusted as her stomach grew, her mother visited from the north to assist with house duties and look after her daughter. Across Ukorie, Dike was congratulated for finally proving himself a man worthy of honour. In the eighteenth month after his marriage to Njideka, she brought forth twin sons.

Friends and neighbours went wild with jubilation. Not only had Dike been blessed by the gods with twins, but twin sons? That was more than any man could ask for. Dike held a feast at his home, slaughtering three bulls: one as thanksgiving to Ani, the other two for his sons. People drank and dined, women sang and ululated, men jeered and got drunk, and when at last night came, silence returned to Dike’s dwelling as the men and women retired to their homes.

That night, Ani visited.

Her misty shadow-body materialized out of the dark. Dike bristled when he saw her, shoving his penis back into the wrappa tied around his waist. He had been in the middle of urinating in the backyard of his home when the goddess appeared before him.

Dike went on one knee, head bowed. Silence and stillness peppered the chilly night as crickets and frogs in the surrounding bushes scampered away at the presence of the goddess.

“G-great A-Ani, mother of the sea and all things fertile, I greet you,”

She scoffed and heaved a sigh.

“Rise mortal,” she said with distaste.

Dike rose. A smirk lingered on her full lips. Through the veil of beads, Dike caught glimpses of her face. When she did not speak, Dike spoke first.

“I-I thank you for blessing my home with such undeserved blessing, I asked for just a child, not even a son, and you gave me two sons all at on—”

“You fool!” she hissed, her voice like the sound of waves slamming against rocks by the sea.

Dike startled, confused.

“You mortals are so stupid and unwise, so full of greed and driven by your desires, you plunge into your own doom without thinking!”

What was she talking about?

Seeing the questioning look on his face, she scoffed again and said,

“I blessed you with no children, those two sons are no sons of yours, you fool! How could you not see it!” she hissed, “your wife has played you for the fool that you are, the curse that kept your loins locked up was never lifted!”

Dike blinked at her; his mouth suddenly dry.

“I don’t understand,” he breathed, “I-I made t-the sacrifice.”

Ani’s voice carried into the night as she laughed, bitter and resentful. She shook her head, her beaded veil clinking against each other.

Tsk, my instructions were clear and simple; the life of your soulmate in exchange for your manhood. Yeni was never your soulmate, she was merely your wife!”

Dike froze, his eyes bulging in disbelief.

“Your soulmate is never always your lover, mortal, your soulmate can be a friend, a brother, a sister, and in some cases, if you are lucky, a lover. Yeni was not—”

“But you s-said… that night, y-you came to me, y-you said it was done,”

Ani chuckled.

“I said, ‘well done’ and then asked you to lay Yeni to rest, I never said she was the one. And don’t you dare question me mortal!”

Dike’s knees felt like they would cave from beneath him. Yeni had died for nothing, he had murdered his wife for absolutely nothing, all of it had been a waste, the curse still clung to his loins, unyielding.

“B-but w-what about my sons, the twins?”

Ani made a sound that might have been a chuckle, but it came out like gurgling water.

“Have you not been listening to me, mortal? Your new bride deceived you. She saw how desperate you were for a child and did what most women in this accursed village do in such cases, she bedded an old lover of hers in your absence, those sons for whom you slaughtered two bulls are not yours!” Ani laughed and shook her head, “you mortals never cease to fascinate me.”

Her words sank in, each one unveiling like layers of onions, causing his eyes to sting and burn. Not only had he been deceived by the gods, Njideka had deceived him as well. He trembled, his rage churning, contorting, and morphing into a foul thing that twisted his hands into tight fists. He glowered at Ani, his hands longed to grab her slender neck and snap it in half. Ani smirked at him, relishing his powerlessness and fury. She knew he could do her no harm; he was but an ant in the face of her powers, and this fueled his anger even more. His breath came in huffs, his chest rising and falling, thick muscles heaving, veins bulging across his biceps.

“So much anger, so much hate,” she chuckled, “mortals and their fickle emotions,” she said to herself, shook her head, and faded into the shadows.

Dike did not know how long he stood there, rage, regret and shame, coursing through his nerves. While Ani was a goddess and beyond his reach, Njideka was not. She had deceived him just as much as the ruthless goddess, played him for a fool, and would have kept up the act had the goddess not told him the truth. He would have raised two bastard sons in his home, completely oblivious to who had truly sired them.

Unable to contain himself, Dike charged for the house.

*

Njideka snored softly, her still protruding stomach rising and falling as she breathed. His contempt grew with each rise and fall of that stomach, all the useless nights spent thrusting wildly into this useless lump of flesh of a woman, wasted. All the nights enduring her dullness in bed when he could have had Yeni by his side. Oh, poor beautiful Yeni. Dike growled, his voice startling Njideka awake.

“Di’m, my husband, is that you?” she said, blinking sleepy eyes at him.

That stupid meek voice of hers too, how he hated it. Dike went on his knees, reached under the bed where he had hidden the dagger, he’d used on Yeni, and pulled it out. It was still wrapped in the thickly bound rag he had used to encase it.

“Di’m, what is it, is everything o—”

The words died in her mouth when Dike rose, the glistening dagger in his fist. Her eyes bulged with terror.

“D-di’m—”

Dike roared as he plummeted her with the dagger, blindly stabbing and slashing at her flesh. Njideka screamed, her hands going up to shield her face. But Dike was a big man, his muscles were thick and well built. With both hands clasping the dagger, he brought it down on Njideka. He heard her hand snap from the force of his blows, and she shrieked. He caught flashes of terror in her huge eyes as her blood splattered all over the room, and when she could fight no more, she went limp. Dike sank the dagger into her stomach repeatedly, sputters of blood raining on him. Once he was sure she no longer lived, he charged for the next room where the twin bastards slept with Njideka’s mother.

He almost bumped into the frightened old woman as she too made to step out through the door. She froze when she saw him, a petit figure in the face of his brutish build. His eyes darted to the babies tightly clasped in her arms and the small bag at her feet. His nose flared. She had been about to escape, the old hag, she had probably planned the entire thing with her stupid daughter.

Dike killed her easily, first yanking the boys off her arms and tossing them on the bed. They wailed. Then, he grabbed her by the neck and bashed her head against the wall, twice. The woman’s skull popped on the second impact, and her body convulsed, then went limp. He tossed the body aside and turned to the twins. He snatched the first child off the bed by the leg, letting him dangle, his voice shrill as he screeched in agony. Dike held the dagger over the child’s elongated neck. He sobbed, tears trickling down his face, rage, and compassion rioting within him. The boys had done nothing to deserve this, but neither had Yeni. Ani had played him, so had Njideka. The image of her tall curvy body on a mat, moaning and writhing as another man, perhaps younger and better looking than him, thrusting into her, flashed before his eyes. Dike snarled. These little bastards belonged to that stranger, whoever he was, wherever he was.

The rage returned, shooting through his nerves in blinding bolts of white twinkling stars. The cut was deep, swift, and clean. He did not wait to watch the baby gurgle on his own blood, he tossed the child aside and went for his twin. He held him up by the leg, then all at once, as though a veil had been lifted from his face, the rage slipped away, taking with it the strength and determination that had fueled him. His muscles caved and he dropped the wailing child on the bed. He trembled. He sobbed. He gaped in shame and disbelief at the carnage he had unleashed on his household; the dead twin, twisted in an awkward position on the floor, neck gaping, his mother-in-law, sprawled in one corner, brain-matter leaking from the gap in her skull. And when he dragged his feet to his bedroom, he wept at the sight of Njideka, mangled and bleeding.

That night, while the people of Ukorie slept and the only surviving twin wailed, Dike, a man who had once prided himself as one who had fought in the king’s army and returned with the head of their enemy’s general, a man who had once loved a pale-skinned woman, but for his selfish desires, had sacrificed her to a goddess who had tricked him, walked out of his home, bloodied and sweating, never to be seen or heard from again.

The End

Ephraim Ndubisi Orji writes short stories from Nigeria. His work has been published in Eboquills. He was shortlisted for the Awele Creative Trust Award 2020. He is a lover of stories and stans the works of the amazing horror fiction god Clive Barker and the carefully crafted works of one of Nigeria’s literary icons, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. He is presently a student of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka and when he is not screaming the notes to a song, he is hunched over on his system or smartphone typing away the chaotic world thrashing within him.