Title:
Dark Genesis
Author:
A. D. Koboah
Genre:
Paranormal Romance
Format:
eBook
Life
for a female slave is one of hardship and unspeakable sorrow,
something Luna knows only too well. But not even she could have
foreseen the terror that would befall her one sultry Mississippi
evening in the summer of 1807.
On
her way back from a visit to see the African woman, a witch who has
the herbs Luna needs to rid her of her abusive master’s child, she
attracts the attention of a deadly being that lusts for blood.
Forcibly removed from everything she knows by this tormented
otherworldly creature, she is sure she will be dead by sunrise.
Dark
Genesis is a love story set against the savage world of slavery in
which a young woman who has been dehumanised by its horrors finds the
courage to love, and in doing so, reclaims her humanity.
Author
Bio
A.D.
Koboah was born in London and completed an English Literature degree
in 2000. Her first novel, Dark Genesis, was inspired by the concept
of dehumanisation and the impact it can have on the psyche. She is
currently working on a screenplay and will begin the sequel to Dark
Genesis shortly.
Links
Website:
http://www.adkoboah.co.uk/
Amazon.co.uk:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Dark-Genesis-Darkling-Trilogy-ebook/dp/B007NI8GUS/ref=sr_1_7?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1332433043&sr=1-7
Smashwords:
http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/141566
Goodreads:
http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5807160.A_D_Koboah
Chapter
One
My
name is Luna and my tale begins on a dry summer evening in 1807.
I
was walking quickly along a dusty country road, my shoes stirring up
a small cloud of dust that turned the hem of my faded violet dress a
muddy brown. The trail of dust I left in my wake soon settled. But
the pressing need that had me make this two-hour journey in beaten
shoes and a broken spirit, in the midst of a particularly merciless
Mississippi summer, would not be settled as easily. Wiping the sweat
from my brow and waving away the flying insects that droned lazily
near my face, I wished for some respite from the relentless heat but
found none. Although the sun hung low in the topaz blue sky, it felt
as if I were walking through warm soup and it was likely to stay like
this long after the sun went down.
I
would have found some relief from the pitiless sun if I had chosen to
walk through the woods that rose up on either side of the road like a
green and brown wall. But green woody spaces such as those have been
a deep source of fear for me since I was a child and I imagined that
they would continue to be so long past what I guessed was my
twenty-second or twenty-third year on this earth. So I clutched my
lantern and small cloth bundle and walked on in the heat, listening
to the birdcalls punctuate the otherwise still air.
I
was lucky to be able to make this journey during the summer months as
the previous two trips had been made in the dead of winter when night
gathered up the day long before I could finish serving the family’s
supper and slip away, leaving the other house slaves to do my share
of work and conceal my absence. That small mercy meant that I didn’t
have to walk alone in the dark, afraid to light my lamp in case the
solitary glow brought unwanted attention my way, or have to dive into
the trees every time the sound of a horse’s hooves disturbed the
sweet melody of the crickets. It also meant that when I turned the
corner and saw the woodland give way to cotton fields, marking the
beginning of the Marshall plantation, there was still roughly two
hours of daylight left, which meant I would be able to finish my
business and be back before dark, hopefully before I was missed by my
hawk-eyed mistress.
I
stopped for a second to gaze at the rows of cotton up ahead. I have
always thought that there was something heavenly about cotton fields,
which looked like row upon row of fleecy white clouds caught up in
brown nets. But I’m sure that the brown-skinned figures bent double
between those rows would have disagreed. For them, there was nothing
even remotely celestial about the cotton fields in which they had
been toiling since sunrise. And they were likely to still be working
in them when the sun set. Even from this distance I could see that
most of them were wretchedly thin, their few flimsy items of clothing
in tatters. And although I wasn’t close enough to see their faces,
I was sure that they all wore uniform expressions of misery and
fatigue.
I
left that unhappy sight and ducked into the trees on my left, a
necessary shortcut to the slave quarters. Although many slaves have
used this shortcut on their way to see the African woman, I’m sure
I’m the only one who ran all the way through the trees looking back
over my shoulder even though I knew I wasn’t being followed. Only
when I saw a flash of white through the trees did I slow down so my
breathing could return to normal by the time I exited the screen of
trees.
The
slave quarters were little white cabins made of wood, which lay in
two long rows some distance from the Master’s mansion. Only a few
children were around at this hour, some of whom recognised me and
stopped what they were doing to stare with a quiet reverence that
made me uncomfortable. It was the same reverence I had received from
the grownups the last two times I had come here under the cover of
darkness and they had not only stopped what they were doing to watch
me pass by, but nodded or offered some sort of greeting, which I
returned before hurrying on by. I didn’t have to endure that kind
of scrutiny today, but I still hurried down to the lone cabin at the
back of the clearing, which was nestled under the shadow of the trees
some distance away from the rest of the slave quarters.
Many
slaves came to visit Mama Akosua for her medicines, and her skills
were known far and wide. It was also rumoured that she dealt in more
than just herbs and was actually a witch. Whether that was true or
not, she was feared by many, even some of the whites, and few dared
incur her wrath.
As
I got nearer to the cabin, I saw that the door had been left open and
a light was burning inside even though the sun had yet to go down. I
approached gingerly. Already feeling the unease that always possessed
me in the presence of the African woman, I walked up to the door, and
stopped.
“Mama
Akosua.”
There
was a short spell of silence and then her voice floated out to me.
“I
have been expecting you.” The voice was low and dry like the sound
of rustling leaves.
She
probably said that every time someone came to her door, no doubt to
help foster the belief that she was a powerful all-seeing,
all-knowing witch. But the words still sent icy fingers trailing down
my spine and I swallowed before taking her words as permission to
enter.
The
cabin, which consisted of only one room, was rich with the slightly
bitter, but not unpleasant, smell of dried herbs. Most of the room
was taken up by a long wooden table, which held bottles, bowls and an
assortment of other instruments that were used to prepare her
concoctions. Every wall in the room was lined with shelves holding
bottles, jars and baskets of fresh and dried herbs. The only evidence
that someone lived in the cabin was the pallet in the corner. This
was the most furniture I had seen in any slave cabin, but as her
Master profited from the sale of her herbs, it was in his interest to
make sure she had everything she needed. There was another smaller
table in the centre of the room and that is where she sat, peering at
me by the light of an oil lamp.
She
was a small lithe woman with delicate features like mine. Her head
was cleanly shaven and she would have been considered beautiful were
it not for the scars, rows of lines about an inch long, marking her
forehead and cheeks. It was rumoured that those scars had been
self-inflicted when she was first brought to America as a slave. Some
people whispered that she had done it to honour the customs of her
people, others, that the journey, the horrors of the middle passage,
had driven her to scar her face in madness and despair. Although I
would never dare to ask her, I didn’t believe she had been driven
insane. The shrewd dark eyes that met mine belonged to a strong,
sharp mind and I doubted that anything could, or ever would, be able
to break it.
“Evening,
Mama Akosua,” I said as I walked into the circle of light.
There
was still daylight outside but it didn’t seem to reach the small
window in Mama Akosua’s cabin and so it was always dark in here no
matter what the time of day.
She
gestured to the chair opposite hers, her eyes never leaving my face.
I moved to the chair and when I sat down, she pushed a small cup
toward me.
“Drink,”
she said.
I
picked up the cup and sipped the cool concoction, which tasted
vaguely of mint leaves. Whatever it was, it seemed to have an
immediate effect because I no longer felt as hot and the fatigue,
which had been pulling on me like lead weights, seemed to evaporate.
Feeling
slightly better, I was able to meet the force of her gaze fully. She
seemed to have aged a great deal since I last saw her, nearly four
years ago. The lines around her eyes and the ones running from her
nose to the corners of her mouth had deepened and although she was
not yet forty years old, she looked much older.
She
studied me for a few moments and a soft sigh escaped her when she
finally shifted her gaze away from my face.
“It
is as I feared,” she said and stood up, wincing from the small
movement.
“You
hurt?”
“It
is a small price to pay,” she mumbled, more to herself it seemed.
She
reached into a basket on one of the shelves and pulled out a small
black cloth bundle. Moving back to the table she placed the bundle
before her and when she sat down again she closed her eyes for a few
seconds. She was clearly in a lot of pain.
“I
have prepared what you need,” she said pulling open the cloth
bundle to reveal six paper sachets of herbs.
There
was no need for her to ask me why I was here. I would only risk
making this dangerous journey for one reason.
“Take
this tonight.” She pointed to the larger of the bundles. “The
rest is to be taken for five nights after, to stop the bleeding.”
She
tied up the bundle and pushed it across the table toward me.
“Thank
you, Mama Akosua.”
“Is
it the son this time?”
I
looked up and met her intimidating gaze, but on this occasion, I
couldn’t hold it. She knew how much these things shamed me yet it
didn’t stop her from asking about them. When I answered, my voice
was barely a whisper.
“Yes.”
“How
long?”
“He...
he be at my cabin near about three times a week now since Easter.”
“He
is worse than his father, no?” It wasn’t a question; it was a
statement.
“Yes.”
I
fought back tears as an image came to me from a few weeks before. I
was standing in my tiny cabin and Master John was behind me gazing at
our reflections in a small handheld mirror. I don’t know if making
me look at myself was one of the many ways he had of tormenting me or
if he really was oblivious to the fact that I despised my face.
Either way, he would make me stare at my piercing dark brown eyes
framed by long sooty eyelashes, deep mahogany skin, small delicate
features and large sensuous lips. My springy, unruly hair was pulled
away from my face, something he insisted on, as my hair was the one
thing a man like him could find no beauty in. It was always the same
ordeal with the mirror whenever he came to my cabin. And I honestly
don’t know which face I hated more, that of the blond-haired,
blue-eyed man I had come to despise even more than his old, decrepit
father, or my own. The face he was enamoured with. He eventually
pulled the mirror out of my hand, and placing it on the bed, held his
arms out.
“Dance
with me,” he had said in a soft, silky voice.
I
remained where I was, my face a blank mask but rage no doubt burning
behind my eyes. I may not have had a say over his nocturnal visits,
but I would not play these little games or pretend that I wanted him
in my wretched little cabin.

Hi Shandy Jo
ReplyDeleteI just wanted to drop you a quick note saying thank you for featuring an excerpt of Dark Genesis on your website. I think your site is fantastic by the way.
Enjoy your day.
ADK x