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The Bitter Fruit of Home
The Bitter Fruit of Home
The Bitter Fruit of Home
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The Bitter Fruit of Home

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Keya Oko joins Zhura and her companions as their chronicler on an arduous journey through the wetlands and savannas of Ikanje to the border and freedom.
The more Keya helps Zhura to uncover about her mysterious legacy, the closer the two young women grow. But Zhura's dearest friends do not trust Keya - or Keya's demon, Blossom – and for good reason.

The remote woods on the edge of the savanna hold their own dark secrets. When disaster strikes the travelers, Keya is forced to choose where her faith lies, and a budding love will be put to the test. Because no weapon wounds quite as deeply as betrayal.

While the Gods Slumber is an erotic fantasy adventure series about love and legacy in a world rich with beauty, danger and ancient lore. If you like stories set in well-imagined worlds populated by multi-dimensional characters - human and otherwise, this might be the story for you. But it is not for the faint of heart! It contains mythical creatures that lust for human flesh, and graphic sexual situations.

This book includes a sample of the final book of the series, Convergence.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherYancy Ball
Release dateSep 27, 2021
ISBN9781005713379
The Bitter Fruit of Home
Author

Yancy Ball

As an amateur writer with a vastly overactive imagination, Yancy Ball has been writing sexy heroines into African-inspired fantasy realms for many years. During the day, Yancy enjoys cycling, martial arts, and conspiring to build a brighter future. Read Yancy’s Smashwords interview at https://www.smashwords.com/interview/yibala.

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    Book preview

    The Bitter Fruit of Home - Yancy Ball

    The Bitter Fruit of Home

    by Yancy Ball

    Published by Yancy Ball

    Copyright 2021

    Cover Art by The Illustrated Page Book Design and Sleepy Fox Studios

    Smashwords Edition License Notes

    This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your enjoyment only, then please return to Smashwords.com or your favorite retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    Marsh

    Kitu

    Talek’s Village

    Taken

    Reckoning

    Joining

    Ranthaman

    Sample of Convergence

    About the Author

    Other Books

    Connect

    Marsh

    Home is that place you run from, because it tells who you are. – Acerbic Sung proverb

    Dugong Marsh, outside the city of Namu. 6th of the Month of Abundance, 3125.

    Bayati of Kichinka stood taller than me by a head. But that wasn’t the reason I found her so intimidating.

    She possessed a tragic beauty, with skin the color of sweet dates and graceful lines that dragged her lips into a perpetual pout of disapproval. Finger-thick braids were tied back from her high forehead. She had dressed plainly under the steady rain, with a dun-colored side wrap that bared one wiry shoulder and overlaid a strip of cloth across her chest. The wrap skirt she wore fell to her calves, but slits bared smooth flesh up to the thigh. Her willowy frame belied a toughness, like fine leather. After a morning of slogging through the sand and mud of the Dugong wetlands, she looked as steady as ever.

    Like Zhura, Bayati wielded a steel-shod staff taller than I was. On her back, she’d slung a sheath full of more lethal weapons – the mambele throwing axes that I’d only seen veteran askari wield. She was one of three warrior women I’d ever known, and her aura of grim resolve made me want to drop to my knees, to start kissing her feet and work my way up. But just now she eyed me as if I were a snake she wanted to crush under her heel.

    I was Keya – scholar, priestess, and first daughter of House Oko. Bayati was a village girl from a tiny, backwater kingdom. Yet she awed me.

    I am not sleeping while she has that summoning stone, Bayati said, speaking to Zhura and Ngo as if I wasn’t there. As soon as we close our eyes, she’ll have the thing stuffed between her legs, conjuring up her pet demon.

    Blossom is no danger to you, I said. I could control the beast. I’d prevented the demon from charming my servants. Back when I had servants.

    Bayati arched an eyebrow. Is that the lie you told Amankar San, before you bewitched him?

    Zhura scanned the light, sandy scrub of palms, thistle and sedge that surrounded us. Her frame was heavier and her garb lighter than Bayati’s – just a brief halter that bared her belly, and a skirt that couldn’t hope to reach her knees. She and Ngo carried large baskets strapped to their backs.

    We all worried that someone trailed us from the beach, especially if they were searching for me. We needed to be vigilant until we were far from the city.

    Zhura turned to Bayati and I with a pained expression. When we make camp, she’ll take a turn at watch like the rest of us. Whether she calls her demon is for her to decide.

    What is the point of having her take watch? Bayati scoffed. She couldn’t drive off a hungry anteater, let alone something dangerous.

    I couldn’t understand the reason for Bayati’s distaste for me. Yes, I had used Blossom’s magic to charm Amankar. But the lecherous old man richly deserved it, and her contempt for me had been evident before she knew about Blossom, the first time Bayati and I met.

    She was common-born; a trader’s daughter. Ngo was a village chief’s son, and Zhura the cast-off of an up-jumped king. But they each lived common, earnest lives despite their connections to the highborn.

    Perhaps it was my nobility that embittered the woman.

    Keya is one of us, Zhura insisted. We’re not going to pamper her, nor will we treat her like a prisoner. She’s suffered enough of both.

    She came between us to face the taller woman, rain dripping from her thick braids and down her arms. I caught the faint smell of coconut oil on her skin, and it reminded me of the single, torrid encounter we’d had.

    I trust her, Zhura said, finally.

    Ngo observed the confrontation, munching on a bit of honeyed rice cake. His eyes danced with amusement. He wore a green cloak, its hood pulled up to ward off the rain. His skin was the color of night, nearly as dark as Blossom’s.

    When he wasn’t smirking as if I were the punch line to a joke, the spearman seemed utterly indifferent to my presence. I found most men inscrutable. The only ones I had truly known were my brother and one that had been sworn to serve my House.

    That’s good enough for me, he grinned, replying to Zhura. I’m not afraid of anteaters.

    Bayati’s eyes became slits. This is a mistake.

    Zhura stepped past us, her sandaled feet lightly crunching on sodden sand. If it is, it won’t be my last, she muttered.

    The taller woman’s gaze lingered on me, before she turned to follow.

    I understood that message. The debate was not over.

    These three had risked their lives for each other. How unusual it was that Bayati and Ngo followed Zhura by choice, not because of her birthright or the coin she owned. That bond was foreign to me. I couldn’t understand how it could last.

    But Zhura was a remarkable woman. After knowing her for only a week, I could see how others were attracted to her. Were the three of them lovers? Did jealousy explain Bayati’s contempt for me?

    The last bit of dried meat stuck in my throat like a piece of rawhide. I sighed and trudged along to rejoin the march. The dull pain in my feet and legs gnawed at me as the four of us continued our journey.

    We walked in a spread-out single file, several paces separating each of us. Bayati took the lead now. The three companions all seemed to know these marshes well, and they carefully maintained their distance from the deeper waterways that made up the river delta.

    There was a Dugong Marsh district of the city of Namu nearby. The settlement lay outside the city’s walled enclosure; a cluster of farming villages that cultivated rice and palm orchards. By midday, we’d left that populated area behind. We tramped through floodplains of high grass, with only dragonflies, mosquitoes and birds to keep us company.

    In the distance, I spotted clumps of mangroves. The foul smells of marsh gas and decaying vegetation in saltwater were muted, at least, by the fresh rain.

    If anything, the dismal weather of the Month of Abundance lifted my spirits. I had drawn the hood of my long cloak back from my hair, allowing the kinky golden mass to soak up moisture, letting it trickle under my clothing and caress my skin. I loved rainy seasons. They were the only times of year I didn’t fear sunburn.

    It was all I could do not to tear off every stitch and cavort naked in the storm, baring my pallid skin to the world. No one here would think less of me? I was a princess no more.

    Of course, on clumsy sore feet, a few moments of dancing in the rain and I’d probably end up lying in the mud. So I remained clothed, and plodded on.

    On occasion I glanced behind us, past Ngo, who swished through the grass like an emerald beetle under his shield and basket of supplies. He’d told us that, in his hunter’s opinion, without a line of sight no one could track us far through this rain.

    I could put to rest my fears that Barasa San’s agents would find me. Namu, home for all of my twenty years, was in the past. The sacred Ancestors had granted me the most precious of all gifts – a second life. Once I crossed the border and left Ikanje State behind, I might truly know freedom.

    As the sun passed us by and fell towards the horizon, the terrain gradually climbed. The land grew firmer, the air grew fresher, and poplar and spiky thorn trees sprouted up on the plain.

    Though this was not Zhura’s native land, the herb-witch seemed familiar with the local plants. She stopped as we passed a grove to gather bright colored berries. She took a nibble from one and sucked the juice.

    "These are like maramu grapes, she said to Ngo, but less bitter than the ones in the Valley."

    The spearman, whose home was a village close to hers, took a taste and nodded in agreement. We picked more of the berries, dumping handfuls into empty gourds.

    The animals of the marsh had the same idea. We passed troops of red, white and black monkeys who scampered through the grass, feasting on the fruit. I’d seen the same species caged in the markets of Tanga District. Here, they screamed and yammered at us like we were interlopers.

    I had never walked so far. By afternoon, the blisters had stopped stinging. Overwhelmed with pain, my ankles and soles grew numb.

    At first, I had welcomed each stop we took to rest. But then I found that it hurt more to get my stiff legs and feet to start moving again. Zhura threw me a few sympathetic looks, but the other two simply ignored me. They spoke little, even to each other. Sometimes when I ventured near Bayati, I heard her sing softly in a foreign tongue. I assumed it was Nubic, from her homeland. But I knew little of that language, and I couldn’t discern the words.

    Before the sun set, Ngo picked out a space

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