The coastal winds of Malindi were different. They carried salt, warmth, and the faint scent of spice from far-off lands. For the past few days, Khisa walked those winding streets with no title, no guards, and no ceremony—just a plain tunic, his cloak tied around his waist, and a quiet curiosity etched into his face.
He had visited fish markets where old won barked at boys who splashed water on the catch. He sat with blacksmiths who forged harpoons and sea-hooks, learning how coral and tide affected the tal. He listened to n and won in harbor taverns speak in hushed tones about Portuguese slave ships, betrayal, and the many lives sold under their very noses.
One woman, Amina, told him her story by a cracked wall overlooking the docks. Her brother had been taken in the night. Promised a job. She never saw him again.
"Sotis," she said, "I still hear his voice when the tide rises."
Khisa had no words, only silence. And she appreciated that.
When the celebration ca, it felt like Malindi itself exhaled. The streets were draped with woven fabrics of ocean blue and gold. Fishern wore their cleanest shirts. Children lined the alleys, holding palm fronds or little carved boats painted with shells.
Trumpets of bone and horn sounded across the square as drumrs from the interior joined coastal flute players in a lody that could only belong to Nuri. Unity had a sound now—and it was joyous.
Khisa stood on a raised dais beside Lusweti, watching as scribes began to read aloud from scrolls thick with ink.
"He is the Prince who brought fire to the mountains of the east!" one scribe announced dramatically. "Who broke the slave caravans at the River of Chains. Who outwitted the Warlord of Kambasi with bricks, gas, and children’s laughter!"
Of course all these were great exaggerations.
The children gasped, eyes wide as saucers. A group of them began to chant:
"Khisa! Bricks and blades!
Khisa! Shadows in the glades!
Khisa! Run through fire and sand—
Still co ho to build the land!"
The crowd laughed and clapped, and an old man nearby sniffed. "Back in my day, boys just threw stones. Now they throw nations together."
Among the gathering were mbers of the Shadow Guard, leaning casually against posts and barrels, recounting tales to the curious children.
"Yes, I was there," one of them said. "I saw him run into the flaming tower and co back with the enemy banner. Waved it like it was a matatu flag!"
The children burst into giggles. "What’s a matatu?" one asked.
"Don’t know. Just sounded dramatic," the guard shrugged.
Later that afternoon, a grand ga of Mbumbwa was held by the shore. The sand was packed and damp from the tide, making for a solid field. Teams were divided: young soldiers versus town fishern, the laughter carrying across the waves.
Khisa was drawn into the ga almost imdiately.
"No, no, Your Highness—run, not wave!" soone shouted as Khisa dodged clumsily. "You’re not parading!"
He laughed, slipping, rolling, and tossing the ball with surprising agility. The crowd roared as he made a pass that scored.
"He really is one of us," a teenager whispered to her friend. "Not just a na on a scroll."
As the sun began to fall into the sea, Khisa wandered toward the naval training ground. Rows of soldiers practiced boarding maneuvers and sea-dueling. The clang of cutlasses and the thud of wooden feet echoed.
Lusweti approached from behind, nodding at the drills.
"They’ve co far," Khisa said.
"They’re not the best yet," Lusweti replied. "But they will be. Malindi will be the shield of the coast."
He handed Khisa a rolled parchnt. "The new capital. The council finally agreed."
Khisa unrolled it and grinned. "So we’re finally moving."
"Yes. Most of the districts have been renad too. Our hotown..." Lusweti paused, pride thick in his voice, "...it’s now called Lusimba."
"Lusimba," Khisa repeated. "From musimba, right?"
"A stronghold," Lusweti confird. "A place that cannot fall."
Khisa’s grin widened. "You nad it after yourself?"
Lusweti gave him a sideways look. "It’s not my na. It’s our history."
"Still..." Khisa chuckled, folding the map. "Seems like you’ve done all the work. Maybe I’ll just rest, enjoy the waves, play mbumbwa all day, and live off praise."
Lusweti smacked the back of his head. "Foolish boy. You love the struggle too much. And you still owe sothing."
"What’s that?"
"Your house. You’re building it yourself. In the capital."
Khisa groaned. "Do I get to choose the color at least?"
"You’ll get to choose the mud."
That Night
The stars blinked gently above Malindi’s quiet rooftops. Khisa and Lusweti sat on a terrace overlooking the ocean, a jug of sweet palm wine between them.
"I should start making my way to Lusimba," Khisa said quietly. "Mother will want to see . And the elders too. They need to see we’ve not lost ourselves in the tide."
Lusweti nodded.
"And the Shadows," Khisa added. "They need to visit their families. We’ve asked so much of them. The Drift Squad too, once they return. They’ve earned their rest."
"They’ll be glad," Lusweti said. "You lead well, son."
Khisa glanced at him, surprised. "It’s all because you gave the opportunity father."
"You earned it."
Silence fell again, broken only by the waves.
Far off, children still sang under the moonlight:
"Khisa, who walks with fire and stone—
Never forgets where he calls ho."
Earlier in the day, as part of the celebration, a scribe had stepped forward with an older scroll to recount Malindi’s liberation.
"Years ago," he said, "Malindi bowed under the golden seal of Kilwa. Their soldiers taxed our waters, burned our ships, and took our sons to the foreign markets."
Gasps rippled through the crowd.
"But when the banners of Nuri rose in the east, and the battle drums thundered across the hills, it was King Lusweti who ca—not with promises, but with purpose. He struck first at the slave pens, freeing two thousand in one night. He t the Kilwa governor in open combat—and broke him."
A hush fell. Even children stopped moving.
"And so Malindi, once bound in chains, now sings freely under the blue of Nuri."
The crowd erupted in cheers. n wept. Won clapped. Even the old ones, bent with salt and years, stood to salute.
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