The night sky above Nuri shimred with a blanket of stars, but the quiet harbor below told a story steeped in hidden sorrow. Under the shroud of darkness, figures moved like whispers—silent, careful, and burdened by more than physical chains. The rescued slaves—n, won, and even a few children—were ushered off the rchant vessel and quietly guided through the back routes of the city, cloaked to shield them from curious eyes.
Their bare feet touched Nuri’s soil for the first ti, and though the earth was solid beneath them, their hearts remained adrift in uncertainty. A few glanced nervously at the guards surrounding them, unsure if these were saviors or new jailers. The air slled faintly of salt and ashwood smoke from distant hearths. In the quiet night, the sound of their shallow, guarded breathing echoed louder than footsteps.
They were led to a large, well-lit hall near the royal offices—warm, with woven mats on the stone floor and bowls of steaming porridge and at stew placed along the walls. Water—clear, cold, and in plenty—was offered with clay cups, along with folded cloths and simple robes. The guards retreated respectfully, leaving them alone.
So bathed, hesitantly. Others sat, staring blankly at the food, uncertain if it was a trap.
A silence settled before the cracked voice of a young woman broke it.
"...What will happen to us?" she asked, more to the room than to anyone in particular. Her na was Amani, no older than twenty, her wrists still raw from iron cuffs.
A pause. Then another voice, deeper and bitter.
"I have no idea," a middle-aged man muttered. "Maybe this ti they’ll kill us early...instead of the slow torture." He scoffed, his voice hollow. "At least it would be quick."
Amani’s eyes shimred with pain. "I have no ho," she said, her voice trembling. "My own parents sold because I refused to marry a man three tis my age. I thought I could survive it. But they... they took every night. Over and over. And if I cried, they beat . If I fought, they starved ."
Her voice cracked. "I kept telling myself I’d fight, that I’d find a way out—but now I wonder why I even tried. Maybe I’m just too much of a coward to end it myself."
A tear slipped down her cheek. No one reached to comfort her—they were all too broken in their own way.
Then, a younger man whispered, "The air here... it feels freer. Different sohow. None of them yelled at us. No whips. No barking orders. They even let us bathe. I haven’t touched clean water in... I don’t even know how long."
"It doesn’t an anything," another snapped. "Chains or not, they still hold the sword. This kindness? It’s a trap. Just a lull before the whip cracks again. Freedom is a lie told by powerful n."
"And what if it isn’t?" asked an older woman, her eyes sunken but alert. "What if this ti... it is real? Would you even recognize it if it stared you in the face?"
The debate silenced as the doors creaked open.
Four n entered, their presence quiet but commanding. At the front walked a tall man with thoughtful eyes and a calm, regal air. His robes were simple but elegant, with the royal sigil of Nuri stitched in gold across the chest. Beside him was General Malik, stern and alert, and Mzee Kombo, the new representative from Malindi. An Amharic translator, a soft-spoken woman, accompanied them.
The slaves stiffened. Instinctively, so recoiled. A few dropped their heads.
The tall man stepped forward and placed his hand gently on his chest.
"My na," he said with a warm smile, "is Khayo Lusweti. I am King of Nuri. I want to speak to you—not as a ruler, but as a man."
His voice carried the weight of authority but none of the cruelty they’d co to associate with power.
"I know fear has followed you like a shadow. I know that uncertainty claws at your every thought, and that words like ’freedom’ and ’peace’ feel more like cruel jokes than truths. I won’t insult you by telling you to stop being afraid. I cannot imagine what each of you has suffered... but I can promise you this: your suffering will not continue here."
The translator relayed his words with gentle precision. The room was still.
"You are no longer slaves," Lusweti continued. "From this mont on, you are citizens of Nuri. You will live, work, and be paid like everyone else. You are not charity. You are human beings—and your dignity will be restored here."
Gasps rippled through the room. Eyes widened. A few blinked as though they’d misheard.
"We will relocate you to a town further inland—a peaceful place, where the soil is fertile and the rivers are clean. It’s still growing, but it’s ho to good people and honest work. You’ll elect your own representative, and we will listen to your needs."
He paused, letting his words sink in.
"You ca here under secrecy because this liberation is part of a larger operation," he said. "We are quietly freeing as many as we can. If the rchants knew, they’d cut us off or worse. That is why your relocation must be discreet."
Lusweti t their eyes one by one. "There is a war between Abyssinia and Adal, and that war is tied to your pain. But I swear to you—when that war ends, you will be given the choice to return ho, if you so wish. And we will help you get there."
A soft murmur rose—confusion, hope, and disbelief colliding.
"I won’t ask you to trust today," he finished. "But I will ask you to watch us, to see our actions. Trust can be earned. And I promise—we will earn it."
He bowed his head slightly, then turned and left the room, his footsteps soft against the stone floor.
The door shut behind him.
The silence was thicker than before, but it wasn’t heavy with fear—it was dense with fragile, unspoken hope.
"Do you believe him?" Amani asked quietly.
"I don’t know," the bitter man replied. "Words are easy."
"We don’t have a choice," another muttered.
"I think... I want to believe him," said the older woman. "Not because I trust him. But because I’m tired of living in a world where trust is impossible."
A younger girl clutched her robe tightly. "I want to rest. Just for a while. If they lie... then at least I had one peaceful day before I go."
They huddled closer together. The food was eaten slowly, the water shared, and the mats laid out side by side. That night, for the first ti in years, many of them slept without shackles.
What dreams they had were their own.
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