Read The Voyage of Promise Online
Authors: Kay Marshall Strom
2
I
n the simmering glow of early dawn, Grace sighed restlessly in her sleep. Little Kwate squirmed on the mat next to her and nestled his fluffy head further into the crook of her arm. Mama Muco, freshly awake, stretched out her morning aches. She paused for an extra moment to take in Cabeto’s rhythmic breathing, then she silently hefted herself from her sleeping mat of banana leaves and padded her way outside the thatched-roof mud hut that the family shared. She would start the morning fire, just like she did every other morning.
Only this morning wasn’t like every other. This morning slavers lay in wait. They pounced quickly, but not quickly enough to keep Mama from bellowing out a call of alarm.
Cabeto lunged for his musket, but before he could ready it, two Africans rushed into the hut and threw a net over him. He kicked and fought, but his struggles only entangled him more.
“Run, Grace!” Cabeto yelled. “Take the boy and run!” But it was too late for Grace. It was too late for all of them.
Clutching her screaming son, Grace grabbed for Cabeto as the slave catchers dragged him from the hut. But rough arms snatched her away and shoved her outside.
I must do something!
Grace thought in desperation.
But what?
Outside, pure horror greeted Grace. In the stifling shards of first light she could see the village’s strong young men— those whose responsibility it was to stand guard at the gate—and they were all bound together with strong rope. Hola and Tetteh struggled against their bonds, but Tawnia, who was tied with them, did not. She stood perfectly still, her young face etched with horror.
In a great feat of strength, Cabeto’s brother Sunba ripped free of his bonds. He snatched up a fallen tree branch and cracked it against the skull of an attacker, then he hit a second one. But before he could raise his makeshift club a third time, a blow from the butt end of a musket knocked him cold.
“Do no damage to him,” ordered one of the African attackers to the one who hit Sunba. “He will bring us a good price.”
But the second attacker wrinkled his face and scowled at Sunba’s scarred back. “Not this one. He bears the marks of a troublemaker. His price will not be like theirs.” Here he motioned toward Hola and Tetteh, and Ama’s two brothers.
The young men still blinked in confusion. What had happened? They had stretched out on their sleeping mats just as they did every night, except that this time their bellies were filled with roasted goat and their heads swam with memories of Tawnia giggling and doing her best to dance like a woman. They lay down brimming over with celebration, and the next thing they knew, strangers yanked them out of their dreams, pulled them outside, and tied them up so tightly that the ropes cut into their flesh.
Suddenly the African attackers on either side of Sunba fell to the ground, first one and then the other. Ikem’s arrows protruded from their chests. Another attacker fell, then another. But as skilled and courageous a fighter as Ikem was, his weapons could not stand up against the slave catchers’ firepower. Before he could pull out another arrow, a muzzle-loaded lead ball exploded into the old man’s shoulder.
So many attackers! And hidden everywhere! They poured out from the papaya grove and they ran from inside the storage huts. They came from the goat pens and appeared from behind the ghariti trees. First they grabbed the men, forced them to the ground and bound their wrists. Then they secured them with rope tied around their necks. “Struggle and it will cut your breath away,” they warned.
“I will not be a slave again!” Tuke yelled. He wrested himself free and leapt away. The first musket shot missed him and so did the second, but the third hit him in the back and he fell.
“Cabeto!” Grace screamed. She clutched her crying son and frantically fought her way through the confusion. But immediately an attacker grabbed her, then a second one jabbed her with a musket.
“Are you the one they call Grace?” the attacker with the musket demanded.
“Please, my son!” Grace pleaded.
“She is the one,” the other answered. Then, before Grace had time to think, he snatched the child from her arms. He grabbed Kwate by his tiny ankles, then, with all his strength, the attacker slammed the little boy against the rocks. Little Kwate never uttered a cry.
Grace’s screams sliced into the morning and joined Cabeto’s agonized howls. Grace fell to the ground and knew no more.
By the time the sun added its stifling heat to the horror of the day, the villagers stood lashed together in a single line, numb with terror.
“Walk to the gate!” came the command. “Then on to the fortress!”
At first when she awoke Grace couldn’t understand, couldn’t remember. But then she saw Cabeto in the line, his hands bound and a rope around his neck, and everything came rushing back.
Mama sat alone among the rocks cradling the limp, broken body of little Kwate. Grace could not bear to look at her son. If she didn’t see him, perhaps the horror would not be so.
The line started to move.
“Wait!” Grace yelled. She jumped to her feet and rushed forward. “Take me too! You already took my child. If you take my husband, take me too!”
The attacker who had dashed her son on the rocks pushed Grace away. “Not you,” he said. “You are not to go with the others. Not now.”
“Why not?” Grace demanded. “Who gave such an order?”
But the line of people—Grace’s friends and family—was already on its way toward the gate. Despair blazed with the rising sun.
As the line disappeared through the gate, as two Africans with muskets at the ready barred her from Cabeto, as her happy village of peace and love lay shattered around her, Grace fell to her knees beside Mama Muco and lifted little Kwate from Mama’s arms. A cry tore from deep within her, wild and uncontrollable.
Mama Muco pulled Grace to her and enveloped her in her arms, rocking her just as she had when Grace was a little girl. “Ikem has gone to the ancestors,” Mama whispered in a voice husky with grief.
“Kwate…” Grace sobbed. “My baby…”
“He is in the arms of Jesus, child. Let him go.”
Grace shook her head and sobbed. “This is the end,” she wept. “The end of everything.”
As Mama Muco caressed Grace and whispered soothing words into her ear, she wished with all her heart that it was the end. But she knew it was not. She knew this day of awful destruction was only the beginning.
3
D
espite Jasper Hathaway’s hatred of bone-jarring wagon travel, his fleshy jowls stretched into a self-satisfied grin as he did his best to brace himself on the bouncing seat.
I really am quite the genius
, he thought as he lurched along the rough trail.
And soon everyone who matters will realize as much.
“Slow down!” Mister Hathaway ordered the African driver beside him. Hathaway gestured to the boundary rocks up ahead that marked the beginning of the land of the local Gold Coast chiefdom. “Have you no respect for the ancestors?”
Jasper Hathaway pulled his handkerchief from the pocket of his waistcoat and mopped at the perspiration that rolled over the folds of his face and down into his collar.
Respect the ancestors! Hah!
Well, playing the part was a small enough price to pay for all that now lay within his grasp. Respect for the ancestors on one side of the world and indulgence of the aristocracy on the other. Which was the more insufferable—or the more ineffective—he truly could not say.
When Mister Hathaway’s wagon entered the village, it was at a respectful pace. At his further command, the driver slowed even more, then just outside the royal enclave, pulled the
horses to a stop. It was not at all what Jasper Hathaway would call a palace, but this was Africa, after all, so he must make allowances. Carefully, laboriously, Mister Hathaway climbed down. He pushed back a wild shock of thinning brown hair, freed by the jostling journey from the cord that tied it in back, and made an attempt to reassemble his disheveled clothes.
Men walking along the road, women with baskets of fruit or fish balanced on their heads, girls on their way to collect drinking water, boys herding small black and white goats— people going about their everyday business—stopped to stare at the fat white man bundled up in such an excess of clothing. Wheezing and panting, Jasper Hathaway stood beside the wagon and waited. The unrelenting sun broiled his face and withered his patience. His linen shirt soaked through with sweat and his coat sagged, yet he continued to wait. Although he spoke not a word, a fierce anger flared up in his eyes.
Finally the king’s
okyeame
approached Jasper Hathaway. “King Obei awaits you,” he said. “I will speak to him on your behalf.”
Mister Hathaway bowed his head and followed the man into the sacred territory. He would much prefer to talk directly to the king, but he was well aware of the wisdom of following custom. And in this kingdom, custom meant speaking through an
okyeame
, a speaker skilled at cleansing words of unintended nuances, at shaping them into just the right positions and decorating them with rhymes and rhythms, of weaving them together so that they would cause no undue offense.
Inside the royal hut, King Obei sat on a carved wooden chair encased in pounded gold. More importantly, his feet rested on the
sika’gua
—the wooden stool that contained the soul of the ancestors and bestowed on him his authority and power. Even as Jasper Hathaway bent low in honor, his eyes
greedily swept the room. So much gold! Thick and rich and hand-tooled! A king’s fortune in this so-called king’s palace.
“Tell the king that I bring him my gratitude for sending the
slattees
to gather up fresh slaves from the village squatting next to Zulina fortress,” Mister Hathaway said once he managed to regain himself. “No life of any importance was lost, I am pleased to report. And I did capture the one I particularly desired. As we agreed, I have brought you a wagonload of gifts—cloth and muskets and gunpowder. I also included rum for the king’s pleasure. My slave awaits your command to unload the wagon.”
The
okyeame
started to speak Hathaway’s words, but the king waved him away. “If we can do business together, we can most certainly talk together,” King Obei said. Again Jasper Hathaway bowed. The king did not respond to the gesture, nor did he ask the flushed white man if he would care to sit down.
“I do business with you for the sake of my father who has gone to the ancestors,” said King Obei. “You signed an agreement with him, and he would not be pleased to see it broken. I also do business with you for the benefit of my sister, Lingongo. It is not my personal will to be a friend of any white man.”
“Is it your will that your chiefdom continue to be the most powerful and respected kingdom on the coast?” Jasper Hathaway asked. “Is it your will to have a continuing supply of firearms and gunpowder so that you may remain the exalted king of such a kingdom?”
“Crisis makes opportunity,” the king replied coolly. “Since we talk, let us talk with honesty. It was crisis that made you lord of Zulina fortress, and it was crisis that made me king. And so here we are, united by crisis.”
Jasper Hathaway should have let the king have the last word. He should have bowed low, then gone outside the royal
hut to where the air was fresh and he could breathe more freely. He should have lowered his bulk under the canopy of shade trees and dozed until his slave unloaded the cloth and muskets and gunpowder and rum, then he should have gone back to his house to wait out the heat of the day with fans and cool drinks. But he did not. The heat made him irritable, and he was tired of affording aristocratic courtesy to this self-righteous African who had dared to side with rebel slaves and fight against the white slave traders, a black man who now acted as though it was the responsibility of white businessmen to keep him in power.
So Jasper Hathaway bared his teeth just the least little bit and said in a tone faintly glazed with rancor, “Why is your sister not here to speak in your stead, o king? Was it not Lingongo who created an opportunity for you out of the crisis?”
If a royal upbringing had taught Obei anything, it was never to flinch at an attack, not from a weapon and not from a word, no matter how offensive, painful, or insulting it might be. For several moments he sat perfectly still. Then, with the same even tone to his voice, he countered, “Why is your rich Englishman not in
my
presence to speak in
your
stead? Is there any decision you alone can make without first seeking his approval?”
Before today, Mister Hathaway would have been tempted to slink away at such a blow. But not now. Because now there most certainly was such a decision, and he had just made it.
Ever since Grace Winslow had chosen to cast her lot with the rebellious slaves at Zulina fortress rather than fulfill her parents’ promise that she would be his wife, Jasper Hathaway had been forced to endure the humiliation of snickering whispers and outright laughter, all at his expense. For five years he had borne the pain of knowing Grace preferred to live in a mud hut thatched with banana leaves than in his
well-appointed house with him. That she found it preferable to subsist on roots and wild-growing fruits than to dine with him in his impeccably furnished dining room, though a finer table than his was not to be found in all of Africa. Grace, with her satin-smooth bronze skin, had thrown him aside and chosen to become the wife of a runaway African slave! The very idea infuriated Hathaway beyond words.
It was not that he was unable to get another wife—although precious few young women measured up to the standards necessarily set by a gentleman of his standing. But he could not… he
would
not… allow such a humiliating set of personal insults to go unchallenged.
Yes, Jasper Hathaway definitely
had
made a decision without the approval, or even the knowledge, of his financial backer. Indeed, he had made a most momentous decision. And, he mused with glee, Lord Reginald Witherham would learn of it soon enough with his own eyes.
“Crisis does indeed make opportunity,” Jasper Hathaway replied. And though he willed himself to keep his eyes fixed on the king, the call of gold was powerfully strong. “Zulina slave fortress is now in business once more.” His glance strayed in spite of himself. Quickly looking back to the king, he said, “I shall look forward to further negotiations on our business agreement. I shall also look forward to greeting Lingongo once again. Shall we say tomorrow then?”
“I do not embrace the ideas of my father,” said King Obei. “But I do possess his magical powers. I also enjoy favor from the spirits, as did my father. And I warn you, Mister Hathaway, it would be most unwise of you to rouse their anger.”
“Until tomorrow then,” said Jasper Hathaway.