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Something I have bean working on.

jalaughlin

New Member
Something I have been working on.

This is the second story in a series I started earlier this year. The first book ended up being 134,000 words. I have to warn you, these stories have some graphic violence.

Sparse Hunting

Kibwe and Imani stood on the edge of the desert, looking over the green valley of the Nile. Dawn was breaking before them and they watched the sun paint the valley in its splendorous colors. Below them and a good run east lay the village that the pair called home. Sanaa was watching Chausiku while the pair hunted in the night. The couple held hands and looked into each others eyes as they stepped off the sixty foot cliff. They kept their eyes locked and hands together as they dropped to the ground and landed easily in the patch of long grass among the strewn rubble that littered the foot of the bluff. Sunlight washed the face of the bluff above them in delicate oranges and yellows as the two started the run for the village. The grassy landscape was dotted with copses of trees as the two blurred along at a tremendous speed. The fastest cheetah on the plains would not have been able to keep pace with them even for a short distance. They slowed as they approached the village and scanned with eyes, ears and noses. Even though Khalemrho was dead, they had let many of his men live and there was always a possibility that someone would decide that the west bank of the Nile needed a leader that could unite all of the villages and control the people.
“Good morning Kibwe, Imani! How was the hunting last night?” Turuk called as they entered the edge of the village. He was washing his clothing and is eating stones at the stream that ran along the south side of the village.
“Sparse.” Kibwe called back with a smile. They had found only eight goats in the desert and so had each only fed off of one.
“Wrong time of year for goats.” Turuk called back, shaking his head and smiling. “Might try some crocs or hippos down by the river though, it is a good time for them.” Kibwe nodded and called back before the tents blocked his view of Turuk, “Maybe tomorrow night.” Imani smiled up at her man and squeezed his hand.
They made it to Sanaa and Sefu’s tent without anyone else intercepting them and stepped inside. Chausiku and Kamaria were playing on the floor with bones, sticks and rocks while Sanaa and Sefu were sewing leather pieces together to make clothes for the children.
“How was the hunt?” Sefu asked without looking up from his sewing.
“Not very good. I think the goats have gotten wise to our hunting area.” Kibwe answered as he squatted and extended his arms to his daughter. She grabbed his hands and he lifted her to his shoulder where she could see from his perspective. She wrapped her little fingers into his thick hair and looked at her mother who was smiling at her.
“Sanaa and I will try further north tonight while you two baby sit.” Sefu grinned at Kibwe. Kibwe nodded in agreement and looked at his sister. It was hard to believe that raucous woman was a mother. He wondered weather it would mellow her out or not. Sanaa looked up at his contemplative face.
“What?” She asked. It seemed to her that he was seeing into her deepest soul.
“Nothing, sister. Just wondering if being a mother will calm you down or not.” Kibwe smiled at her. She shook her head with a mirthful grin and went back to finishing the clothes she sewed on.
“Bandits!” A woman’s voice called from the north east edge of the village. The tent was suddenly empty with just the sound of rushing air and the tent flap slowly falling back into place.
Fifteen hungry, adult vampires ran for the north east edge of the village of tents. Already they could smell the spilled blood of their friends and neighbors. In the grassy field were eight hairy men that wielded heavy clubs with deadly efficiency! There were four dead grain gatherers further out in the fields and the women were running for the safety of the tents! Kibwe stopped in front of a very surprised woman and handed Chausiku to her and nearby Sanaa did the same with Kamaria. The brother and sister quickly rejoined the others in the dash for the raiding invaders. They were not Neanderthal, but were nearly as large. Their stringy black hair and pale skins were filthy and the heavy brows hid their dark eyes deep in their faces. The raiders never knew what hit them. Kibwe slammed into the lead man with a force that would shatter stone and latched onto the side of his greasy neck with deadly sharp teeth. He felt his venom inject into the man’s flesh and felt the broken bones of that greasy body collapse in his grip. He drank quickly, knowing that in just moments the man’s heart would stop pumping and the blood would be harder to get to. Each of the other raiders were shared by two Vim-Pyr. In seconds the raiding party was exterminated, though the toll on the village was far too high. Kibwe lost himself in the satisfaction of human blood filing his belly. He indulged the sensation of it flowing through him and warming his entire body. Then it was done. There was none left to drink. He dropped the lifeless body into the sea of waving grass. It hit the earth with an unceremonious thump and sprawled in an unnatural way, the broken bones lending it a flexibility it never had in life. He looked around to find the others and noted all of their locations.
Kibwe and Imani walked back to the village hand in hand. They were met at the edge of the tents by Ashmael, who held a spear that he had not had to use.
“Once again, we owe you for our safety, Kibwe. If you had not been here the raiders would have taken many more lives before we could have stopped them.” Ashmael spoke evenly.
“If we had been watching there would have been no deaths to sadden our village. It will not happen again.” Kibwe answered. One dead villager was too many for his conscience. Four men lay dead in the fields. Ashmael let Kibwe and Imani walk past him, looking for their child. Chausiku was safe in the arms of the woman Kibwe had handed her to. He had no fears of leaving his child with any of the villagers, he trusted them implicitly.
“Thank you.” He said as he took his daughter from the woman’s arms. The family walked back to their tent.
At dusk Sefu and Sanaa dropped Kamaria off to Kibwe and Imani so they could go hunting.
“Since you’re going north, keep an eye out for more of those raiders.” Kibwe instructed the couple.
“Absolutely.” Sefu replied with a grin. The hunters left as the two children began to play together. Kibwe and Imani watched the children play until the return of Sefu and Sanaa at dawn.


Preparations

Akam-Ra sat on his throne as the sun broke the eastern horizon. His eyes were heavy from lack of sleep. Surrounded by guards, the king of the East Bank pondered how to make his men ready for the challenges they would face. As he thought a strange woman approached. She walked between the guards who stood frozen and approached Akam-Ra’s throne.
“Who are you, woman, that you approach my throne unbidden?” Akam-Ra asked forcefully.
“Bow your head, mortal. You are in the presence of Nebet-Het!” The woman’s voice echoed through the tent village. Against his will, Akam-Ra’s head tilted foreword. “I come with consultation for you, Akam-Ra. The course you are on will carry you into the jaws of death. You cannot fight the creatures on the west bank with armed men and sharp weapons. You must fight them with intelligence and cunning. You must have their power within you before you will be near strong enough to face them!” Her voice became louder as she continued, “They are more powerful than you could imagine! Inupu has given your priest instructions, but what does he know of the frailty of mortals like you? What does he care? If you wish to be the first great ruler of the entire Nile valley, you must learn a way to defeat these abominations! If you loose, Inupu will reject your spirit from the underworld and reject your corpse from the ground. You will wander as a ghost until the end of man!” She calmed her powerful voice as she stood within inches of the kings bowed head, glaring down at him. “If you win, Inupu will herald you as the first chosen ruler of the Nile valley, Egypt will be yours and your sons’ after you.” Akam-Ra’s head snapped up, released from the power of the woman. She was nowhere to be seen. His guards fell to the ground, dead, around him. The priest came running through the village, bowing as he entered the circle of dead guards.
“My lord! I felt something the likes of which I have never felt before!” He stammered out to Akam-Ra.
“I know. Get the toolmaker.” Akam-Ra commanded. The priest bowed again and left the king to retrieve the toolmaker. Akam-Ra sat thinking of the words that Nebet-Het had spoken while he waited for the arrival of the toolmaker. He decided that he didn’t need fighting men to go with him.
The priest returned with the toolmaker in tow and approached Akam-Ra. The two of them waited for several minutes with head bowed for Akam-Ra to address them. Finally he spoke.
“Leave us, priest.” The old priest rose and left, confusion swirling around him. Akam-Ra regarded the toolmaker kneeling before him with bowed head. The powerfully built man could probably kill him with a single blow, if he could connect with it.
“Rise, toolmaker, and look at me.” The toolmaker did as instructed, but did not make eye contact with the king. “Look at my face, my eyes.” Akam-Ra waited for the toolmaker to comply. As he did, Akam-Ra continued. “What do you see when you look at me?”
“I see my king, lord Akam-Ra.” The toolmaker flatly replied.
“You hate me, do you not? You despise me, I think.” Akam-Ra read the man’s face. He was seething inside with anger and hatred.
“I do. I both hate and despise you.” The man stated boldly. No change in expression moved his face. His conviction was true.
“That is what you feel for me, but what do you see?”
“I see a king. A powerful man that keeps all of the people of the East Bank together and understands the minds of men.” He sighed as he admitted the ruler’s quality.
I know, and always have known that you hate me. Do you know why I keep you around?” Akam-Ra continued.
“No. I do not know why you have not killed me as you did my son.”
“Because if I ask you a question, you answer honestly, and I can tell that you are as intelligent and observant as you are strong. You are exactly the type of man that I respect.” Akam-Ra let his words sink into the toolmakers mind. “I am going to require you to accompany me on a very important and long hunt. Before we go, you are going to help me find an interim king. Someone that is between us in attitude. What do you have to say, toolmaker?” The burly man thought for a moment before speaking to the king.
“Why not have your priest rule while you are gone?” But he already knew the answer.
“I would not let that man rule an anthill. He would preach to them about his dog-god while the ants ran amok. We need to find someone sensible and pragmatic. I was going to ask you to rule in my stead until I decided to take you with me.” Akam-Ra looked hard at the toolmaker. It was clear that the man was beginning to understand what was going on. “We are going to search through the kingdom and find the right person.” The toolmaker looked at Akam-Ra. This was going to be a long search.


Northern Nomads

Sefu and Sanaa stood atop a small outcropping of rock in the desert. They watched the lines of people to the north, moving in the early dawn light. They were late to pick up Kamaria from Kibwe and Imani, but this was important, and she was safe. The travelers wore hides like the ones the raiders had worn and carried rough spears along with skins packed with their belongings. The couple could smell their body odor from their observation point almost a mile south of the large band. Sanaa counted in her head the ones she could see that were not obscured by the rolling terrain. The line seemed endless.
“I’ve already counted four thousand, Sefu. What do you want to do?” The first of the travelers would reach the valley in just a few hours.
“We have to go let Kibwe know. This may change things for the people of the valley.” The two spun off of their observation point and ran as fast as they could to the south. It would still be two hours before they reached the village.
Kibwe watched the bluff line to the west while the children played in the short grass at the edge of the village. The girls were hunting grasshoppers and pouncing on them. Sefu and Sanaa were still out and it was already two hours past dawn. The girls found a harmless egg snake and pounced of it. Kibwe turned to the village and watched as Imani, Tieno and Homrhod walked towards him. Imani was laughing and rubbing Tieno’s flat belly. As the trio got closer, Kibwe could see why. Tieno was pregnant. She was less than a month so, but the tiny life changed the heat and blood flow patterns in her body. Tieno would give birth as the first five children of the Vim-Pyr had their first birthday. She would give birth in the winter lands, far to the south.
“Congratulations, Tieno!” Kibwe offered as the group reached him. Tieno smiled and took Homrhod’s hand.
“Thank you, Kibwe!”
“This makes all of us now.” Imani said in low tones, looking at Kibwe.
“Yes, it does. Our clan is growing.” Kibwe said as he turned to address the rushing breeze approaching from the west. All four adults watched as Sefu and Sanaa raced across the fields, heading for the group. Their expressions were serious. The girls had now killed the snake and were drinking its blood.
“There are travelers by the thousands, Kibwe.” Sanaa said. “I counted four thousand before we left. They are two hours run north and are headed for the valley. The first of them will reach the edge of the valley within the hour. They are dressed and smell like the raiders.” Kibwe watched her face intently as she spoke. Sefu stood silently by her side.
“Your turn to baby sit. Imani, will you come with me to meet the new people?” Kibwe asked his mate.
“I think we should all go. The children can stay with the villagers. It’s safe enough.” She walked to the children and scooped them both up easily. The group walked to the center of the village, collecting the other Vim-Pyr and the children as they went. Leaving the fifteen children among the grain grinders and weavers, the group left the village running north.


First Impressions

The nomads stopped at the edge of the green valley. They surveyed its expanse before them. There were two tent villages visible from the rocky slope they stood upon. Ugat pushed past the hunters at the front of the group. He was a huge man, standing a head and a half above the others of his tribe. He looked over the green valley that the others had been surveying. He could tell that there was fresh water down there and his people were thirsty.
“Take the villages.” He ordered in his guttural language. The building mass of men and women began to pour down the slope, heading in two lines for the two tent villages. Ugat stood stationary and watched as his people swarmed to the villages. It would be over soon. There would be water, food and new tents for the nomads today. He turned and looked over the lines of people still coming from the desert. They stretched as far as he could see and he knew that they stretched twice that far. There were two other tribes behind his, but he was here first, they would have to find their own places in the valley.
Kibwe led the Vim-Pyr north through the grasslands. He wanted to get to the two northernmost tent villages before the travelers did. The fifteen of them blurred past other villages as they raced through the copses of trees. The villagers in the fields digging roots and gathering grains noticed only a breeze after the passing of the Vim-Pyr. They ran as fast as Homrhod could go, as he was now the slowest of them. They stopped two hours and ten minutes after leaving the village. They were still a distance from the two northern tent villages, but they could see that they were too late. The invaders were piling bodies outside the village. Men and women were dumped unceremoniously in piles, but Kibwe saw no children’s bodies. The invaders had pale skin and wore hides for clothing. The smell of blood and body odor wafted to the Vim-Pyr on the gentle breeze. The group set in motion once again, heading for the over run village.
They stopped in front of the wall of bodies. Kibwe looked them over, inspecting the rough wounds. It was apparent to him that while the travelers were fierce, they were by no means precise in their killing. Most of the bodies of the peaceful villagers had multiple wounds from spears and clubs. He also noted that mixed in with the bodies of the villagers were bodies of invaders. Not many invaders had died, but that was likely to change shortly. The Vim-Pyr skirted the mounds of dead and stood looking into the village from the east while invaders continued to swarm in from the west. There was hardly room for the invaders to walk among the tents, they were so packed into the village. The Vim-Pyr just stood looking and listening. The ground had become mud from all the blood mixed into the dirt. The language being spoken was a gruff and harsh as the people who spoke it. Finally one of the invaders noticed the group of black skinned men and women standing at the edge of the village. Without a word he rushed at them, swinging a club. Kibwe easily caught the club in mid-swing with his left hand and using his right grabbed the attacker by the face, hurling him back into the crowd of invaders, knocking down and scattering many before the man stopped. Silence spread through the crowd like fire in a dry field. They stopped their pillaging and fighting over new finds to face the people that stood at the edge of the village. The man that had attacked Kibwe slowly regained his feet. He glared at the intruding Vim-Pyr and shouted something in his tongue. The invaders reacted immediately and with a group shout charged at the fifteen calm watchers. The Vim-Pyr stood, waiting for Kibwe’s signal as the invaders massed toward them like a sea of smelly bodies. Kibwe nodded and the Vim-Pyr blurred into motion, meeting the invaders head on. Kibwe and Imani danced into the invaders, punching, kicking and biting. Imani ripped thoughts out with her claw-like nails, releasing yet more blood into the soaked ground. Kibwe’s arms lashed out so fast that they were a blur, yet despite their efficient deadliness, they found themselves backing up in front of the invaders. These people had no fear and showed no regard for the dead among them. They simply pushed the dead or dying in front of them and continued to attack the Vim-Pyr. In just minutes the deadly group was forced back to the edge of the village. They were forced to change from attacking to defending simply because of sheer numbers! They had killed hundreds, and yet more seemed to pour into the fight by the second. Imani caught a stone axe to the back of her head, opening a small wound.
“Retreat.” Kibwe grumbled. The fifteen blurred out of the fight and regrouped a hundred yards from the village. The invaders poured out of the village and swarmed toward the Vim-Pyr.
“Anyone have any suggestions?” Kibwe asked quickly. No one answered quickly enough and the attackers swarmed over them once more, ready to die without a thought about it. The Vim-Pyr fought for several minutes, killing hundreds more before Kibwe called a retreat once again. They regrouped two hundred yards east this time.
“Fire maybe?” Zuberi offered up as a potential suggestion. The mass of attackers rolled across the lush green grass in pursuit of the Vim-Pyr.
“I do not know if we can win this fight, Kibwe.” Homrhod stated. He sported many injuries that were trying to heal and his heavy cloak was shredded. Even though he was acclimated to the sun now, he still wore the protective cloak. Kibwe snarled at the suggestion that they might be incapable of winning this fight. The group braced to fight as once again the invaders surrounded them in a sea of bodies. The Vim-Pyr fought ferociously, killing with every movement of their blurring bodies, but still they were forced back. Bodies piled around them, but the sea of invaders seemed unending. They were now entering the village from the west and running straight through the village to join the battle in the east.
“Retreat!” Kibwe called as he took a blow to the left shoulder from a club. This time the Vim-Pyr regrouped three hundred yards away, doubling their distance from the village. The invaders did not follow. They stood their ground three hundred yards from the village and let out a victorious roar as one, shaking spears and clubs in the air. Kibwe stood looking at the invading people, pondering what to do. They were too aggressive and dangerous to the peaceful villages of the valley to leave them here, and there were too many to fight off. The invaders turned as a group and walked back to the village, stepping over the dead without even looking at them. Kibwe tallied the dead as they appeared behind the withdrawing crowd. There were over a thousand dead from the short, ferocious battle.
Ugat stood watching from the ridge. He tried to see the battle in the southern village, though it was too far for him to make out details. He could tell something big was happening by the way his people sped up as they approached the western edge of the village and poured out the eastern edge. He made his way down the slope and joined the lines going to the south village. It would be dark before he got there, but there would be plenty awake to tell him what happened.
Kibwe looked over his Vim-Pyr. Homrhod had taken the worst damage of the fifteen, but he was healing quickly.
“We are going to rush in, each grab a person and meet back here. These are to feed off of. When we are finished we will rush in and grab another until we are all satisfied. Then we will discuss once again what to do.” Kibwe hoped he or someone would have some ideas by then.
In less than half an hour, the Vim-Pyr were satisfied and forty five bodies were added to the dead. They had struck so fast that the invaders had not known what was happening. Kibwe surmised that they could keep snatching and killing until they had destroyed the invaders, but that would take days, and he wasn’t sure how many more were coming. There was still a steady stream of hundreds of people per minute pouring into the village.
“Any ideas?” Kibwe put out the question to the group. Silence reigned over the small group. Finally Zuberi broke it.
“There would have to be more of us. Ten times more of us to be effective.” Kibwe shook his head. He didn’t like that idea.
“We can wait until dark, when they go to sleep and then kill them.” Tieno offered. The idea sounded reasonable, but Kibwe didn’t want to wait that long, the children were at the village with no Vim-Pyr there to watch over them. Kibwe looked back to the village. They still had not posted any guards or lookouts, even after the battle.
“We could wait until dark.” Kibwe acknowledged Tieno’s suggestion. “Someone will need to go back to the village and care for the children. This is just the south village, there are more of them in the north village. It could take weeks to remove them.”
“Their numbers are overwhelming.” Sefu stated calmly. “They fight like nothing we have ever encountered before.”
“They seem to have no fear of death.” Nuru added. She shook her head slowly.
“They’re from the west world.” Frule began. “If they are here, then there is a reason. They may have been forced from their homelands and are looking for a place to settle. This is much like our people fought when we were defending our hunting lands from invading clans. All that matters is the survival of the clan, not the survival of one person. They’re desperate and so they fight with a ferocity that is hard to match.” Kibwe looked at Frule and then Malor. Malor simply nodded his agreement, looking at the village.
“They’re not speaking your language.” Kibwe said pointedly.
“No, they are probably from further north, judging from their clothing and weapons. The snows most likely drove them south and they haven’t been able to find a place to settle.” Malor deduced.
“Still, they attack without provocation and kill without mercy.” Kibwe looked again at the growing piles of dead on the south side of the village.
“I’m not defending them, just understanding their ways.” Malor replied.
“I know, Malor. I’m just trying to fight off the compassion for them. I’m at a loss as to how to deal with these people.” Kibwe reassured Malor. The Vim-Pyr stood quietly, watching the village for some time.
 
Search for a King

Akam-Ra walked openly at the head of the small force. It would take the better part of the day to reach the next village north from his seat of power. The toolmaker walked to his right and a step behind, followed by the ten guards that accompanied them.
“Toolmaker, your true name is Tekka, is it not?” Akam-Ra asked as they walked.
“It is, my lord.” The massive man answered simply.
“Then that is what I shall call you. You are no longer the toolmaker to me.” The group walked on in silence for a time more. The guards maintained a two column formation with perfect spacing, as Akam-Ra demanded, but they were beginning to fall behind the two leading men. Akam-Ra and Tekka set a fast pace.
“Tell me what life was like for you before I came with my people to the valley.” Akam-Ra requested of Tekka.
“Peaceful. We gathered grains and hunted game animals. We raised our families in our villages and enjoyed each others company.” Tekka replied tersely. The past was a sore subject for him.
“Boring. Life in the valley was boring.” Akam-Ra concluded. “You did not build anything, you did not make life better, and you did not explore what wonders were around you. How could you miss that?”
“Life was no where near boring. We had games and music. We sat and told stories around the fire while we cooked our bread and meat. We learned of all the creatures and plants that were here in the valley. How could you call that boring? How could we not miss it?” Tekka retorted. Akam-Ra shrugged.
“Not that it matters much. Things can never go back to what they were. Even if I left, another would take my place. Change is what the world thrives on. And change has come to your valley.”
“Change is coming again, soon.” Tekka mumbled more to himself than to Akam-Ra.
The group walked in silence again for a time. As they approached the northern village in the river delta, Tekka noticed that there were sentinels watching them. The people moved silently among the trees, shadowing the king and his entourage. It was a reminder to Tekka how much his people despised the rule of the king and his people. He knew that in the village, people would be hiding their food and items the kings men would want. Many would be getting their daughters out of the village as well.
“Do you think they are doing the right thing, by resisting my rule?” Akam-Ra directed to Tekka.
“No. I think it is futile.” The large man replied.
“Do you believe that my rule in the valley is a bad thing?”
“I think your rule in the valley is a temporary thing.” Tekka snarled.
“I think that is just a false hope.” Akam-Ra paid no attention to the hostile tone Tekka used with him. “My people are here to stay and so is our way of life. Soon your people will become accustomed to it and will accept it as normal.”
“My people will never fully accept that. We will always be independent in spirit.” The group was now within sight of the tent village. The guards pulled closer to the pair that was leading them into the village.


Stopping a River

The Vim-Pyr considered their options as they watched the invaders moving about in the village they had taken over.
“Who is going to go home and take care of the children?” Kibwe asked the group. Tieno, Homrhod, Asha and Sauda stepped foreword. Kibwe turned toward them.
“Go then. The rest of us will try to find a solution here.” The volunteers left the group and ran south as fast as they could. “Does anyone have an idea how we can stop these people?” Kibwe asked as the four volunteers disappeared on the south horizon.
“How do you stop a river?” Tendaji asked quietly. “This may be something we can not stop. We could kill everyone in the south village, but it would take days. Then we would still have to deal with the north village.”
“I agree with Tendaji.” Sauda stated. “It may be time for change in the peaceful valley. Who are we to make that decision?” Kibwe shook his head. He didn’t want to accept that. Imani looked at his face and smiled.
“We have to do what we can, my love. First we need to know how many more are coming and why they are here.” Imani’s calm voice soothed Kibwe’s mind. He understood the logic of her observation.
“Time to learn their language.” He said with a wry grin. The Vim-Pyr moved as one to approach the village. They reached the edge in seconds, stopping on the road and lining up as if to block the exit to the east. They waited until the first of the invaders noticed them. The man’s face wrinkled into a grimace of annoyance. He raised his club and squared his shoulders to the Vim-Pyr. As he was about to roar, Kibwe held his hands up, palms outward as if to say “wait.” The man didn’t roar, but instead lowered his club to his side and walked straight at him without fear or hesitation. The Vim-Pyr listened to the almost unintelligible noises coming from the people of the village. Slowly the sounds revealed patterns and rhythm. The sounds stated to become words. The man with the club stopped six feet from Kibwe.
“What do you want here?” He snapped at the group.
“We want to know why you have come here and why you killed these people.” Kibwe responded. The man swept his shaggy blond hair out of his blue eyes and regarded the tall black man with silver eyes in front of him.
“We didn’t think you savages cared about what happened to each other. We also didn’t think you could speak.” He allowed grudgingly. “We came here because the winter drove us out of our homes. We traveled across the desert thinking it would end soon, but it didn’t until we got here. Now we are staying. This is home now.” His face never softened, nor did his voice. Kibwe absorbed his words for a moment.
“Do you kill peaceful people wherever you go?” He asked as calmly as he could in their language.
“If we need, we take. We are survivors. We needed a new home, we took it. Now we have it and we will keep it.” Kibwe held his temper in check. He took a deep breath and asked his next question.
“How many of you are there?”
“How many grains of sand are there in the desert? Why such a stupid question? This is one tribe that you see. There are more tribes coming through the desert now. There are even more that are still in the north that will be coming.” The man looked as if the conversation was at an end.
“Who is your leader?” Kibwe asked quickly. The man began to turn away from Kibwe, but answered over his shoulder.
“Ugat.” He stated simply, as if everyone should have known that. He walked back into the crowd of his tribe and there were no roars of attack. Many of the invaders watched the Vim-Pyr, but none attacked.
“Now we have more information to make a decision.” Imani said quietly. The situation did not look good. Kibwe shook his head.
“I think Tendaji may be right, Kibwe.” Zuberi stated. “We may not be able to change the outcome here. I have been thinking about changing the course of the river instead of trying to stop it, but I’m not even sure we could accomplish that. We may be able to hold an island though.”
“I disagree. We can kill them all. Then when the others arrive, they won’t want to stay here.” Sefu snarled.
“Calm, Sefu.” Kibwe intervened. “Let me here your idea, Zuberi.”
“That was most of it. We go back to the village, warning others on the way and try to get them to move together where we and they can defend one place rather than trying to defend all of the spread out villages. Make an island and defend it.” Zuberi explained. “The drawback is that if we can not hold them back, all the villagers are in one place.”
“Making it easy for the invaders to eliminate them.” Sanaa finished for him.
“Does anyone think we can, or should, try to eliminate these invading people?” Kibwe asked the group. No heads nodded, no voices spoke.
“Back to the village then. We will go with Zuberi’s idea. We hit all the villages on the way and warn them.” Kibwe finished. The group turned to the south and burst into motion.







Once Burned

Sien walked alone on the road to the great desert. She followed the path of a group that she knew little about. All she really knew of them was that they tried to kill her. She wasn’t out for vengeance; she was just out to learn what she had become. She had been paralyzed in bed with her master by the one they called Kibwe. He had then pierced her hand with a knife that was covered with his blood. He had stated something to her, something that burned as much as his fiery blood had. More than the flames that had engulfed her in her master’s home. He had said, “That is for willingly entertaining a man who treats people like dirt.” He had no idea how wrong he was.
Sien had been a captive in the prison before Alandri had taken her as a slave. She wanted to tell Kibwe that. She wanted to make sure that he understood what she had been in the city that he had destroyed. It had taken her a long time to heal from those fires.
After the poison had left her, she was charred from head to toe. There was not a single patch of skin on her body that wasn't burnt. They had thrown her out with the burnt timbers and charred stoneware. The sea had cooled her skin and she floated in it for days before she washed back up on shore. Vultures and seagulls had fed her during that time, slowly allowing her the energy to heal.
When it no longer hurt to move Sien hunted a jackal down and fed off of it. Once she began hunting, she didn’t stop. She fed off of apes and dear and finally found a group of nomadic hunter/gatherers. After she fed off of them, she felt complete again. That was when her thoughts turned to tracking the ones that had done this to her. Had changed her. She didn’t know what she was, but she knew she was different. She was faster and stronger than she had ever been or ever dreamed of. Her senses were heightened to a frightening degree. As soon as she found the trail, she knew. The smell of Kibwe was very different from the smell of humans. She could tell how many were with him and what sex they were. She didn’t let the scents of the Baska interfere with her trail.
In the last town before the great desert, Sien found the trader that Kibwe had dealt with. The spear was right there, in the front of the booth. She walked to him and stood staring at it.
“That spear is too big for you, little woman.” The trader said. She looked at him. He was a frail man to her eyes. His heart beat feebly in his chest, but she sensed no malice from him.
“I want it.” She stated plainly.
“What do you have to trade?”
“Your life. I give you your life in exchange for that spear.” Sien glared at the man’s eyes. His skin paled and he nodded.
“Take it. It is yours.” He stammered. Sien snatched the spear and headed for the desert.
Sien raced through the desert during the rainy season. For twelve days she ran due north. When she reached the cliffs over the sea she stopped. The stones and sand had not held the scent through the rains. She looked west at the city that sat on the beach. It was in flames and the scent of burning flesh wafted to her nostrils. She headed for the pathway down. Maybe the ones she tracked were destroying another city.











Efforts Redirected

Akam-Ra and his group entered the village. They were met by Nebet-Het at the entrance. The guards froze in place as she walked up to them. The villagers watched curiously.
“What are you doing here, Akam-Ra?” She bellowed as she reached them. Both Akam-Ra and Tekka dropped to their knees and bowed. Tekka out of respect and Akam-Ra by force. “Answer my question, Akam-Ra!” She commanded.
“Searching for an interim ruler.” He choked out despite himself.
“You have no time for such foolery! The time is very near. You need to get across the river and find the ones you need to find. The world stirs and change waits for no man. A new menace is already entering the valley from the west and if you do not act swiftly your chance will be gone forever.” She turned her fierce gaze on Tekka. She looked at the toolmaker for a long time.
“Do not fight the change so hard, Tekka. Your time will be soon. You have a special destiny to follow. Go where you are lead and act appropriately. Fate smiles on your devout heart.” She turned her back on the two of them and walked away. Once her power released him, Akam-Ra stood. Tekka stood as well, looking at the area where Nebet-Het had disappeared. The two looked at each other for a moment and then turned to the guards who lay prone on the ground. They were quite dead.
“We need to go back and gather our things, Tekka.” Akam-Ra said as he bent down to retrieve one of the spears from the dead guards. As he stood, Tekka began walking for the village to the south. He would not defy the words of such a powerful witch. There were things to prepare and little time to prepare in.



Ferocity of the Heart

Sefu ran with the rest of the Vim-Pyr, but his heart was screaming for him to rid the land of the invaders that had killed so many of the people he called friends. His loyalty and honor demanded not just their vengeance, but safety for the friends and families of the dead. As the group approached the first village on their way south, he spin in stride and raced back to the north. The others were so preoccupied with finding leaders and friends that they didn’t even notice.
Sefu approached the overtaken village from the south west side. He was hidden by the wall of bodies form the occupants of the village. He knew that if he charged in, he would loose his effectiveness and speed. He decided to start with the still growing line of people entering from the west. He would use their linear formation to do the most damage he could.
He wheeled around the edge of the wall of bodies and raced along the line of invaders, cutting them down with the knife Zuberi had made for him. He held the blade out to the side and raised and lowered it according to the height of the next target. His speed was great enough to carry the knife cleanly through their necks. In his first pass, he turned away from the line at the foot of the lope leading to the desert. He continued to run full speed south along the growing bluff for a minute before turning back to the east to intercept his original approach path. Following the same path, he used the same tactic. In his first pass he had killed three hundred, but this pass was different. The confusion caused by an unseen enemy took the lines of travelers focus off of the village and onto defense. The warrior tribe had taken defensive postures with bodies lowered and weapons raised. The killing was more difficult and Sefu finished his second pass claiming only fifty lives. Changing course and tactic, he cut north across the line of invaders and east down the far side of the lines. His attack was much more effective as the now defenders were facing south where all the bodies were. He finished his run along the north edge of the line with three hundred seventy bodies behind him. The smell of the blood drove his anger at these people higher and he decided to make another pass, but this time up the middle of the lines of people. With his left hand he drew his old stone knife. Tearing through the lines of people, Sefu slashed as he ran. His two knives dancing independently of each other, each taking lives and leaving the air raining blood on the ground.
At the end of the slope, the travelers were piling up. The incoming stopped at the edge of the killing path and looking at the lines of dead stretching from there to the village.
Sefu saw the mass of men and women before he plowed into them, but he did not change his course. He saw sets of eyes locking on him as he approached, dropping bodies in his wake, but he did not turn. He saw the massive man step out of the crowd with two axes raised, but he was set on what he wanted to do. He saw as the man stepped sideways and leaned back, axes swinging at two different heights, but he did not see the club coming from the other side that caught him in the right side of his head. There was no pain. Sefu went from full speed to a back flip ending in a sudden stop so quickly that the pain could not warn him in time. The axes came down one after another.
Ugat looked down at the dismembered man at his feet. His separated parts were still moving, twitching. He reached down and picked up the head of his enemy. One of the men reached for the deadly sharp knife, still clutched in the right hand of the dead man. Ugat snarled at him.
“Mine.” The man backed off. Ugat stepped to the knife and put his foot on the still twitching arm. He reached down with his left hand and grabbed the knife. It cut the palm of his hand as soon as he touched it. He pulled his hand back quickly, slicing it even deeper. The injured left hand went immediately to the right hand that still held the bloody head and his palm smacked into the blood covered neck stump. Shards of bone and strips of torn flesh invaded the open wound and forced the blood of Sefu into the unsuspecting Ugat. Immediately the burn began to spread through his arm and up his shoulder. Frustrated and angry, the huge man thrust his fists into the air and let out a roar of fury! When he finished venting his rage, he looked around at his shocked people.
“Burn it! Burn the remains of the black man! I want his bones to be ash!” He threw the head onto the pile of body parts. It was then that he saw the fangs, as Sefu’s mouth opened and he locked eyes with Ugat. Ugat was sure that his future was about to change.


Goodbye to a Lover

Kibwe led his group further south towards the next village after leaving the one they had just warned. He was painfully aware that Sefu was missing, as were the rest of the Vim-Pyr, but they all knew Sefu could more than take care of himself. They ran like the wind, wanting to get to the village by the slow creek so they could continue on their way home. As they topped a small rise where they could see the next village, they all stopped as one. They were too late. Another group of the barbaric invaders had already made their entrance. There were stacks of bodies reminiscent of the two north-most villages. Smoke rose slowly from the fire in the middle of the tent village. This invasion group was not anywhere near as large as the one to the north, but they had run over the peaceful villagers none the less. Kibwe’s stomach turned. The smell of the blood on the air stirred his thirst, but the sight of so many more people that he called friends stacked as if they were bundles of grass stalks sickened him.
“Do you think the others made it past before the attack or not?” Imani queried as she squeezed Kibwe’s hand.
“Look for Homrhod, Imani.” Kibwe responded after a moment of silent contemplation. She nodded and gazed to the south.
“They are past the invaders and running for home. I can’t tell if they know or not.” She blinked a few times to clear the vision and turned to look back up at her mate. “There’s something else, Kibwe. I saw a dark shadow hanging over Homrhod as he was running. It was strange, like the sunlight just didn’t hit him. It gave me a bad feeling.” Kibwe listened, but his true focus was on the murderous invaders that now occupied the once serene village by the slow stream. His anger was replacing the sick feeling in his stomach. His fists clenched as he thought of the loss of all those good people.
“Kibwe,” Zuberi snapped, bringing Kibwe out of his angry trance. “What do you want to do? Fight or go on?” Kibwe let his anger subside and his logic take over.
“First we go home. We continue the plan we made, warning the other villages. Then we will come back.” He led the group down the gentle slope at a furious pace. They skirted the village by about two hundred yards and continued to the last village before they would reach home. As they approached the village they could see that all was well. The Vim-Pyr raced through the village, warning the residents as they went, urging them to pick up and move to the south. As they reached the south edge of the village, they regrouped and sped south for home. On the last rise, Sanaa stopped in her tracks. Her eyes widened and her skin paled even further than normal. Throwing her head back and reaching for the sky she let out a scream that carried pain and heartache across the valley.
“Sefu!” She dragged the name of her lover out until her considerable breath ran short. Sucking another breath into her lungs, she let the sobs rack her body. “Goodbye, my lover, my love.” The others froze in their tracks as they heard her scream begin and then had gathered around her as she bid Sefu farewell.

The Other Side

On reaching their village, Tekka made his way without distraction to his tiny home. He had things to get ready. Akam-Ra scowled at the back of Tekka’s retreating bald head, but also made his way home to prepare for the crossing. Tekka threw his skin door open and stopped moving. The old priest was sitting inside, waiting.
“Sit, Tekka.” He said calmly. Tekka stepped in and let the flap swing closed. The priest sat cross-legged on a fur spread out on the floor. He had a small pile of bones in front of him that glinted in the light of the oil lamp. Tekka sat facing him across the tiny collection of bird and lizard bones. The priest looked him in the eyes and smiled.
“No need to worry. I have words for only you to hear.” The priest soothed Tekka’s concerns.
“What is it, priest?” Tekka asked grudgingly.
“This trip is not about Akam-Ra. Pay close attention to the details I am about to disclose to you. These people that you are going to hunt, they have a name. The villagers call them vampires; they call themselves Vim-Pyr. They are well loved by their villagers and by the entire west bank people. They consider them to be heroes. When you reach the village they live in, Akam-Ra will incur their disdain. He will be searching for a way to get one alone and take his blood. You will be presented with an opportunity. The way you take their power into you is by getting some of their blood into your body through a wound. You will have to cut yourself and force some blood from the one that you are presented with into it. Then you need to leave quickly. If you hurt a villager, all the Vim-Pyr will release their wrath upon your head. Be cautious, but be yourself. For some reason the Vim-Pyr will like you.” He fell silent.
“Why me? What is my part in this thing?”
“I do not know why. The gods speak to me, but do not tell me all. I just know that you have to do this and that Akam-Ra will not know until it is too late.” The priest stood as he finished scooping his bones together. Without any further exchange of words, the priest left and Tekka gathered his things. He tried not to think of what was to come, but he couldn’t help it. If the people of the west bank thought of these Vim-Pyr as heroes, then maybe they were different than the priest made them out to be when he spoke to Akam-Ra. Thoughts rolled through Tekka’s mind as he packed food and clothes into a skin bag. Maybe he would stay on the west bank for a time.
Akam-Ra had his slaves packing his clothing and weapons. He himself carried his spear and wore his knife in his belt, watching as they packed. He dreamed of the new powers he was going to claim and wondered what they would be like. Would he be able to fly? See the future? Would he be able to conjure fire or storms? Would the beasts of the world bow to him? He relished in his daydreams as his slaves finished packing the last of five skin bags.
“We are done, master.” One of the slaves sheepishly approached. Akam-Ra thought is was a shame that all of these people did not have the strength of Tekka. Then he decided it was a good thing. If all of the people of the east bank had been like Tekka, his people never would have defeated them. Akam-Ra regarded the slave.
“You and two others will come with us. Pick the other two and each of you take a bag to carry. Meet us at the fire.” Akam-Ra picked up two of the bags and left the room. He went to his throne in front of the fire to wait for Tekka and the three slaves.
Tekka strode to the fire, bowing his head as he approached Akam-Ra.
“You do not have much, Tekka. Where are the weapons? You are lightly armed.”
“We will need few weapons. We are not going to wage a war. I have all that I need.” Tekka responded shortly. The three slaves approached the throne, bowed and humble. They carried the remaining bags that Akam-Ra was taking on the journey. Tekka looked at the heavy bags Akam-Ra was taking on the journey. Words started to make their way up his throat. He wondered at the conceit of the man and how easily he could put the innocent slaves in the path of danger for his own vanity.
“All is ready. Tekka, you will carry this bag for me.” Akam-Ra said as he tossed a heavy bag at Tekka, who easily plucked it from the air with his left hand. He did not respond. He let the words he wanted to speak die on his tongue. Akam-Ra looked to one of his few remaining guards. “We will need a boat. Get to the fishing village and prepare one.” He then turned to a second guard as the first left. “Replenish the guard force while I am gone. Make sure there are at least forty trained and ready upon my return.” The guard bowed in understanding. Akam-Ra stepped lightly off of his throne, carrying his one bag and led the group through the village toward the fishing village. They were escorted by four guards on the short journey.
When the traveling party arrived in the fishing village, the guard that had preceded them had their boat ready. The three slaves looked nervous. They would be leaving in the night hours, when the crocodiles were active in the river.
“What are you waiting for? Put the bags in the boat and get in. You three will be paddling.” Tekka had already embarked on the tiny, wood vessel and had taken the point with his hammer in his hand. He had dealt with crocs before, but being on the water at night made him nervous as well.
Once everyone else was on the boat, Akam-Ra stepped into the back with his spear at the ready. He also had dealt with crocs many times in his life.
“Push us off.” He ordered the guards that waited next to them. The guards obeyed and the small group was off to cross the Nile in the middle of the night. All around, crocodiles silently submerged in anticipation. The three slaves paddled as quickly as they could, wanting to give the crocs as little time as possible to get them.
 
Little Time for Grief

The others led Sanaa off of the rise and to the village where her child waited. As she gathered Kamaria into her arms, her sobs increased, wracking her body. Kibwe knelt beside her and wrapped his sister in his arms.
“Go warn the villagers.” He instructed the others. They dispersed quickly to do as instructed. Neither spoke after that. Sanaa cried for a few minutes and Kibwe held her silently as she did. Kamaria was unaffected by the crying or the hugging. It was Imani that broke the silence as she returned from warning the villagers.
“Kibwe, Sanaa, there are invaders on the western bluff line. The villagers don’t know yet.” At Imani’s words, Sanaa dried her eyes. She let Kamaria go and stood up.
“What are they doing?” Kibwe asked in a rumbling voice.
“They have stopped at the bluff. They seem to be camping. Torches are lit and campfires are being started.” Imani answered. Kibwe nodded and looked at Sanaa.
“I just lost my mate, my love. I don’t want to loose a brother tonight.” Sanaa stated firmly.
“What would you have us do, Sanaa? Wait until morning and be buried by them as they rush into the village in the daylight?” Kibwe asked.
“No. We should leave. Take the village and go south to the winter lands.”
“We couldn’t have the whole village packed by dawn. There are too many people here.” Imani voiced in response to Sanaa’s suggestion.
“I’m not talking about the whole village.” Sanaa let the words set for a moment before finishing. “I’m talking about the Vim-Pyr. Us and our children. This is a fight we can’t win. If they can kill Sefu, they can kill any of us.” Kibwe and Imani stared at her in shock and disbelief. To suggest that they abandon the friends that they had made, that had accepted them into their village and trusted them with their lives, their children’s lives and the safety of their village, was beyond comprehension to the pair.
“Sanaa, we can’t just leave these people to be slaughtered! That would be wrong!” Imani whispered.
“If we were never here. If we had never come here and had instead gone to the west world, what would the outcome have been? Would these invaders still have come here? Would they still have slaughtered these people? Yes. This is not our fight. It is the way it is supposed to be. We can’t stop the spread of these people. Why should we die for something that was going to be no matter what? I see no point in sacrificing my life and Kamaria’s life in a fight that can’t be won. We can fight again another day.”
“Take Kamaria and any of the others that would go with you. I am staying. If any of the other Vim-Pyr stay, then we will try to meet up with you in the southlands after this is over. If we can’t win, then I will stay until the last villager that showed us hospitality is dead.” Kibwe answered Sanaa’s suggestion. Imani shook her head. She looked as though she were about to cry.
“I can’t leave these people either. Take Chausiku with you, Sanaa. Keep her safe for me. If I don’t make it, I want you to be her mother for me.” Imani fought the tears, but one managed to escape and roll down her perfect, black cheek, tracing a line from her almond shaped eye to her delicate chin before dropping to the ground.
“I’ll gather the others. Each must make their own choice in this. Sanaa is right, we can’t win this fight, but we can do our best to help these people before we loose.” Kibwe turned to face the center of the village.
“I’ll go get Chausiku ready.” Imani affirmed. The two departed from Sanaa in different directions, leaving her to her own thoughts.
 
jalaughlin: Which writer(s) have/has influence your writing?

Actually, quite a few. Just to name the ones I used to read the most: Tolkein, R.A. Salvatore, Anne McAfferey, Stephen King, Peter Straub, the list goes on. I'm not sure where I got my style though. I can't really place it among the writers I used to frequent.
 
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