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The night was chaos incarnate. Fire painted the sky in shades of orange and crimson, thick black smoke billowing like banners of war. The roar of collapsing tunnels beneath the city sent tremors through the earth, like the angry growl of a beast awakening from slumber. Dust choked the air, mixing with the acrid scent of gunpowder and blood.

The eastern wall of the fort had been the first to fall, blown apart by stolen explosives. What had once been an impenetrable barrier now lay in ruin, a gaping wound in the fort’s defenses. The ground was littered with shattered stone and mangled bodies, the remnants of rcenaries who had been too close to the blast. The opening gave Lusweti and his warriors a direct path toward Alida.

But the battle was far from over.

The tunnels beneath Kilwa groaned, support beams snapping like twigs under the weight of the city above. rcenaries, caught in the labyrinth of collapsing passages, scread as they were swallowed by darkness, buried beneath tons of rubble. Their desperate cries were muffled by the roaring collapse, their lives snuffed out in an instant.

Lusweti sprinted through the crumbling passageways, his breath ragged, his legs burning from exertion. His hands trembled as he gripped his sword, his muscles tight from relentless movent. Sweat dripped into his eyes, blurring his vision, but he pushed forward.

A warrior at his side stumbled, his exhaustion evident. Lusweti caught him, steadying him for just a second before another blast rocked the tunnels. The shockwave sent them sprawling.

"Get up!" Lusweti roared over the deafening din. "We keep moving!"

Above ground, the reaction of the enslaved people of Kilwa was like a slow-building storm. At first, disbelief—eyes wide, lips trembling as they saw Nuri warriors carving through rcenaries. Then, realization struck.

"Nuri ca for us!" A young boy gasped, his thin fingers tightening around the rusted chain that had bound him.

A woman, ribs visible through her torn rags, let out a strangled cry of hope, of rage, of sothing she thought had died long ago. "Nuri fights for us!"

The fire of rebellion spread like wildfire. So ran, their instincts telling them to flee. But others—the ones who had suffered too much, had lost too much—turned.

A blacksmith, his hands scarred from years of forging chains, grabbed a fallen rcenary’s sword. With a guttural roar, he swung, severing a slaver’s head from his shoulders. A fisherman, once beaten for dropping a single fish, wrapped his calloused hands around a spear and drove it through the gut of a guard. The oppressed beca warriors.

The rcenaries, caught between trained Nuri warriors and enraged slaves, faltered.

"Hold the line!" a Portuguese lieutenant bellowed. His words were drowned by the scream of a cannon firing. The shot blasted through the burning docks, sending bodies flying in a spray of blood and splinters.

The rcenaries, furious at being matched by the very people they had once controlled, fired wildly into the fray. Bullets ripped through flesh, tearing down n and won alike. The screams of the dying were swallowed by the thunder of war.

Lusweti saw it all. Saw his warriors, bloodied and weary, fighting tooth and nail. Saw the people of Kilwa rising. Saw his brothers-in-arms fall.

Maina took a bullet to the chest, his body jerking back before crumpling to the ground. Lusweti reached for him, but another explosion sent him staggering. He had no ti to grieve. None of them did.

Irungu cut through an enemy, his blade a blur of steel and fury. "We need to push forward! The fort won’t hold forever!"

The warriors of Nuri, though exhausted, fought on. Their movents slowed, their swings heavier, but their resolve unshaken. Each strike they landed sent a ssage: Nuri does not yield.

The battle stretched into the early hours, bodies piling in the streets. Smoke burned their lungs, blood soaked the earth, but Lusweti and his warriors pressed on. With every rcenary that fell, another Kilwa citizen rose to take up arms.

Alida, from the heights of his crumbling fortress, looked down at the carnage with gritted teeth. His n, once the lords of this land, were now scrambling like rats, overwheld by the very people they had enslaved.

He slamd his fist against the stone. "Kill them all! Fire the cannons until there is nothing left!"

The cannons roared again, ripping through buildings, tearing the city apart. But it did not stop the tide. The people of Kilwa had tasted the promise of freedom, and they would not let it slip through their fingers.

And through it all, Lusweti ran. Ran with aching legs and burning lungs, sword slick with blood, towards the fort. Towards Alida. Towards the end of this nightmare.

The battle was not over. But victory was within reach.

As the battle raged on the coast, General Simiyu set his plan into motion. Malik would either surrender or die.

Under the cover of darkness, Duarte, Kibet, and three Nuri operatives slipped into Malik’s camp. They found him in his command tent, poring over maps. Before he could react, Kibet pressed a blade to his throat.

Malik’s hand twitched toward his sword. "You dare—"

"We’re not here to kill you," Kibet growled. "Not yet. Listen."

Duarte stepped forward. "Alida has taken Kilwa. The Sultan is likely dead. Right now, your people are being chained and sold."

Malik narrowed his eyes. "Why should I believe an enemy holding a knife to my neck?"

"You don’t have to believe ," Kibet said coldly. "I’d gladly slit your throat for what you’ve done. But this war is now aningless. Our king is fighting on the coast while your so-called allies sell your people into slavery."

Malik hesitated, his expression unreadable. "How do you know this?"

"Your rcenaries were eager to brag—before we killed them," Duarte said flatly.

"So, you’ve chosen Nuri now?" Malik asked him.

Duarte’s voice was firm. "King Lusweti spared my life. I serve him now."

Malik looked between them, his face hardening. "I need to confirm this."

"You don’t have the ti," Kibet said. "By the ti you ’confirm,’ Kilwa will be gone. The decision is yours—stand down and join us, or we kill you and end this war ourselves."

They left without another word, fading into the shadows.

Malik stood alone in his tent, heart pounding, sword still sheathed. The fire of pride burned in him, but so did doubt. One decision. That’s all it would take to either damn or redeem him.

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