“It’s true,” I said. “I am very healthy and can make many babies.”
Kirutu, prince of the Warik tribe, stepped forward, spoke three words, “ Ti an umandek ,” and set two clamshells on the stone.
Lela hopped down, grinning wide. “This lord will take you. You will be saved.”
The idea terrified me. “I don’t want this lord!”
Lela’s smile vanished, replaced by a genuinely frightened look. “No, miss, you must not say this! It is great insult.”
Seeing Kirutu’s glare, I knew he could not have misunderstood my tone. His eyes darkened.
But I saw something else in his face. Pain. He was wounded. This prince wasn’t accustomed to being turned down. He likely couldn’t understand why anyone, particularly one as lowly as me, the white wam, would object to the prospect of marrying him. It should be the pinnacle of my existence, a great honor.
Again reason came to my aide. I cast my gaze into the fire. “Tell Kirutu, the great prince of Tulim, that I am overwhelmed with gratitude at his choosing,” I said.
Lela quickly told him and listened to his response.
“He says you will suffer most painful death if you lie to this lord.”
“Tell him I have not lied.”
She did and gave his response, once again smiling. “You will bear him many strong children.”
The thought of allowing Kirutu to touch me was deeply repulsive, but I managed to hold the feeling back, thinking that I would agree then and make myself revolting to him later.
“Yes.”
The prince Kirutu addressed the others and nodded at the two shells. The clans discussed his offer for a minute, then nodded in agreement, all but Wilam, son of the Impirum chief, who didn’t seem interested in the talk of payment.
“This is very good price, miss,” Lela informed me.
“He’s paying two shells for me?”
“This is this trade. They must pay the chief.”
I caught the eye of the prince called Wilam, who studied me with a curious expression that made me wonder what he was thinking.
He spoke without taking his eyes from me, then turned to Kirutu and exchanged several words with the man. I wondered if he was making a bid for me as well.
As one they turned to me. Wilam nodded at Lela. “ Yoru .”
“This Wilam says you are making them fools,” Lela said. “He says you lie to this lords. That you don’t want to be with this prince. This is insult. The prince will not force any woman.”
Wilam had exposed me, and I felt as though I had no choice but to offer my honesty. “What does he expect from me? To want this? I was taken from the sea by force. I’ve been bound for three days in a canoe, like a pig. They’ve thrown me in a hole and hurt me and they expect me to be thankful!”
“This is very dangerous to say, miss,” Lela whispered.
“It’s the truth.”
“I think this lord Wilam does not want the other to have you. Maybe he not like you making this babies with Kirutu. It gives Kirutu power.”
“Then tell Wilam to take me.”
“No, it cannot be. All must agree.”
For the first time the shaman with the mask asked a question, to which Wilam responded. The exchange between them came to an end. Without further delay, each one of the three tribal leaders spoke the same verdict.
“ Kamburak .”
Nothing about these people met my expectations of the word savage . Their ways were not characterized by boiling pots and chanting. This was a calculated affair driven by complexities and cunning. I was only a pawn to be taken or sacrificed in some chess match far beyond my understanding.
Kirutu picked up the shells he’d offered and stepped back. Only then did I see the horrified expression on Lela’s face.
She looked up at me, stricken. “This prince Wilam say you cannot live.”
I felt my heart stutter.
“They say you must die tomorrow.”
Chapter Eight
THERE in the jungle, I understood fully what it meant to be worthless.
In America good health was a basic human right, and if the family could not bear the cost of extending life, the state would step in to spend millions of dollars on the infirm, all with the hope of adding a day, a week, a month, or a year to a person’s life.
And yet in the Tulim valley I was purchased for two clamshells, then rejected and sentenced to death so that one man wouldn’t gain an advantage over another.
The council dispersed and two warriors pulled me away from the table. My struggling only made things worse. They gagged and bound me and carried me down the mountain without fear that I would cause them any more trouble. Once again I was only a pig on a pole.
An hour later I was back in the hole.
Only then, after the slapping feet of my carriers had faded, did my mind settle enough to form coherent thoughts.
I hadn’t been kidnapped by savages as I’d first assumed. Instead, I had been collected by highly skilled hunters and traders. In their world none of my rights had been violated, because I was wam and therefore had no rights.
Tomorrow I would die.
I lay on the damp earth, breathing into the bag they’d left me in, and slowly drifted into oblivion, wholly defeated.
A soft thump prodded my tired mind. But only a few hours had passed and so I was sure I’d imagined it. They hadn’t come for me yet. Tomorrow was still a long way off.
My eyes snapped wide when I felt hands tearing at my bonds. I was instantly awake. It was morning already?
Someone was over me, breathing hard, freeing the knots that bound my hands and feet. The bag was unceremoniously pulled off my head and I turned in time to see the bare outline of someone vanishing over the hole’s rim. And then they were gone, leaving me in the earth, my heart pounding like a drum.
They would come back?
But they didn’t come back, and after a several minutes I dared to think the impossible: someone had freed me! Who or why I had no basis of understanding, but their actions had been deliberate and they had not returned to collect me.
I saw something else. My blouse, my capris, and my shoes lay beside me in a heap. Everything but my bra. They had known I would need some covering to survive an attempt at escape? My feet needed protection from the jungle floor, and my skin a barrier from sharp branches and leeches.
I ripped off the gag wound about my head. Trembling like a twig I scrambled to my feet, frantically pulled on my pants and blouse, and made an attempt to pull on my shoes. But I staggered off balance and decided they could wait. I had to escape before anyone else came. So I flung the shoes out of the hole and climbed up after them.
The structure’s layout slowly emerged by moonlight seeping through an opening roughly thirty paces to my right. I was in a long thatched house with a dirt floor, a prison for slaves or enemies, I guessed.
I ran two steps, made a hasty retreat to collect my shoes, then turned and sprinted toward that faint light, desperate to be free.
“Ta temeh?”
The hoarse voice swirled around me. They were coming! I had to get out! Never mind that I had not the slightest notion of where to go. Never mind that they would only discover my escape and fetch me as if I were but a pet turtle who’d crawled under the table. I only wanted out.
“Ta temeh?”
I was halfway to the opening before it occurred to me that I recognized the gruff voice. It came from the other prisoner. The one who’d spoken English. In my gagged haze, without the means to call out, I’d forgotten about him.
“Hello?” My speech sounded hollow, suppressed by hard breathing.
His call came back, just ahead and to my right. “Hello?”
I hurried to what I now saw as a cell of sorts, made of timbers set in a framework of poles. Twine was knotted around a piece of wood that kept a rough-hewn door shut.
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