A Ghost in Africa
m that she desired nothing else, save his affection." The frail gray bearded man who spoke now coughed and shut his eyes. Obviously, the cough hurt his thr
e for him as alluringly as she could, tenderly coercing
to his frail wrists. His hands groped in the near darkness as tho
his story offered, "You do realize we are in a prison
unkempt than the other. After waiting a while, the 'old one'
as I?" h
ne that had reminded the old one of their c
fist as much as the chains would let him. "But alas,
as Jakob dropped ever so suddenly, but th
two sons already. His heart was his, and her sons, hers - and he had told her just that." He
rivers of Africa could quench his fiery resolve." The old one suddenly stopped talking, and as s
e's hand, hoping to rouse him from the strange slum
d one offered a weak sm
ed bits and pieces. They would rather hear the entire tale without further breaks from the Old o
sk me, I do not know - but whatever it was that happened, this heartbroken lovebird had raced home and in a bid to win his affection, or wa
ers echoed in the stone w
d the happiness she sought. She was scorned by Wiccan and non-wiccan folk
she, Old One
king around, he signaled for Jakob to come closer, and in a rather
June
stillness of the darkness that threatened to blind them. They neither heard the occasional calls of yawning bird-folk nor the unmistakable warnings from prowling animals. E
of the strange woman. That same night had been the night of his awakening. He had somehow discovered his purpose in the words the
strangling him mercifully till he passed on. When his master had broken into the prison and rescued him, killing every other
ly 'clothing' being animal skin skirts wrapped around their waists. On their bodies were diverse markings of varying patterns, each symbol
r shaved heads, on the very day of their initiation. He had doused the wounds w
p and strenuously matching his long strides. An unseen owl, the royal night-guard of the African fauna, hooted it
ity had passed through before. The thorn stave, sleep thorn as Master liked to call it was carved from balsa wood with the tip pointing about a foot downwards like a half 'v', th
stifled
g warnings spelt cowardice, or love, or compassion, and n
g he means to his end. Master stared at the culprit, his eyes unblinking. The latter returned the stare, captured as though
as expressionless as they could be, mustering courage not to look away and incur the master's wrath on them too. For Jakob howe
They hadn't gone any farther when Master stopped. The air about them suddenly grew chilly and the smell of tobacco filled their nostrils. She was here. Master retriev
his was not his first hunt, no, but it was the first time he,