Spirit Ch 04
- 4 years ago
- 23
- 0
Another load of goods for Izem sailed at the end of January, along with fifty troops to accompany his caravan to Tissinte and back. Tissinte, the name of my new town at the salt mine, was derived from the Berber word for salt. Ten of the troops who made the first trip were among those to continue helping the rest learn the Berber and Soninke languages. The new troops had been practicing the languages for three months, and even learned to ride camels. We’d brought fifty camels to Valencia to help train selected troops how to ride and care for them.
The ship returned with a glowing report from Izem. The wall was finished, in large part because nearly two hundred families insisted that they be allowed to go. Since they were all related in some way, he had used some of his own money to purchase additional supplies.
The first two wells and cisterns were complete and operating. Everyone was amazed at the quantity and quality of water the wells provided--and especially how cool the water was. The underground clay pipes ran into town from the first outlying cistern and the first crop of millet had been planted, as well as numerous date palms. The palms were small trees they dug up and transported in clay pots. They had used some of the drinking water they took with them to keep the trees alive. Selecting a salt-free site, they now had a hundred date palms growing in an orchard outside the western town wall, as well as other trees scattered strategically through town to eventually shade homes, warehouses, and the well. They completed the work of building the infrastructure so quickly that Izem estimated they would have a hundred thousand pounds of salt ready to go when he took the spring caravan.
They had even started small vegetable gardens by building an overhang covered with palm fronds between the roofs of each house. This would shade the garden plots from the worst of the desert sun.
When the men from the prototype sawmill felt ready, we proceeded to the next step. Each man took four sets of parts and a dozen extra blades, each headed to different locations. Cyprus, Lebanon, and Turkey each got one man to supervise the building and operation of two sawmills specializing in cedar. Two men went to locations along the Rhine River in Saxony to build sawmills for processing the abundant hardwood found in the forests there. One man went to each of our larger Iberian cities with a nearby river, one man to Paris to build and run two mills for Clovis, and another to Soissons. The man going to Soissons took two sets of molds with him, so they could cast parts for more sawmills. Five more men left with me when we sailed for Ghana. All of them understood the importance of having extra trees planted to replace every tree that was cut down.
One of our newest ships, the Paris, sailed directly for Bioko Island to found Port Tizemt. My wives conferred and felt that since the port was to facilitate trade with her homeland, it should be named after her. As long as they didn’t name it after me, I didn’t care and stayed out of the decision. The ship carried the agreed-upon purchase price (and extra in case the Bubi tried to renegotiate), as well as everything they needed to build a town, a port, and two sawmills. They would plant fields with sugar cane, cacao trees, banana trees, both types of oranges, lemons, and limes. They had plenty of troops with bows and mortars to defend themselves, if necessary.
They towed three of Odoacer’s repaired ships, one for the Bumi and two for their own use for fishing and trading with villages along the coast. They took a year’s supply of food, even though we would have ships there every three months. Ten slaves who spoke Bantu went as translators and were promised their freedom in four years instead of eight since their contribution would be so valuable. The group took several of the pavilion-style tents to live in until they built homes.
The Valencia carried the Tenerife settlers, and everything needed to build Port Audoflede and one of the new sawmills. Three of Odoacer’s repaired ships were towed, one for the Guanches and two for the colonists. Again, my wives decided the port’s name among themselves. Banana pups potted in clay pots went, along with potted citrus and sugar cane that they picked up from ports along the way. Twenty of the soldiers who made the overland trip to Koumbi and had learned to speak Berber went to act as translators. I warned them that the language was similar, but not exactly the same. Half of the fifty soldiers I sent would stay aboard the Valencia, just in case. My initial confrontation with the Guanches left me a little apprehensive. The soldiers would exchange positions every three days.
I sailed aboard the Montana, stopping at each of our ports along the Iberian coast to pick up grain, citrus, sugar, rum, bananas, and everything else that sold well. Surplus Roman weapons were aboard since the soldiers of the former Eastern Roman Empire now used our bows and Soissons steel swords. In addition, they sent us the weapons they had captured in battles with groups still struggling against us. The men to build the roads, the docks, and the five sawmills were aboard. Each man took two slaves purchased in Koumbi. Those slaves had learned enough Frankish to translate for them if necessary, although the men took a crash course in Soninke. Each of the men building a sawmill, roads, or docks had two of the locking metal boxes of explosives for blasting.
We stopped at Achinet for two days. I met with their King again, and had him choose what he expected for payment. He chose Roman swords and spears, bolts of cotton cloth, salt, grain, and iron cook ware. A bag of sugar, a bunch of bananas, and a hundred pounds of oranges were my gift to the King. I wanted him to taste what we would be growing there, hoping to convince him that our presence was a good thing. The town was laid out, the supplies and livestock were unloaded, and several loads of rocks had been collected by the time we left. Their King was a happy camper. I hoped he stayed that way.
Five days later, we arrived at Port Tizemt. Everything seemed to be progressing nicely. The Bumi were excited about the ship and Roman bows we left them last time. The bows made hunting a lot easier for them and the ship let them catch a lot more fish than their small boats. I left a bunch of bananas and a hundred pounds of citrus with them so they knew what we’d be growing there.
The next day, we began our trip upriver. This time, each of the six repaired ships we were towing had two of the harpoon guns aboard and a much shorter version of the harpoon designed specifically for the crocodiles. I wasn’t worried about hunting them to extinction since they had a broad range of habitat. I just wanted to make the Bambara River safer for the people who lived and worked along it.
We stopped at every city and medium or large village on our way upriver. We sold sugar, bananas, dried fruit, citrus, crocodile meat, and some of the other goods, but only if we got almost as good a price as we did at the end of the trip. Some people thought we charged too much, others were ecstatic with their purchases--especially the man who bought one of our plows. Along the way, Tizemt bought rice and millet if the price was low enough, along with anything else she knew we could sell at a profit later. For now, we eschewed buying slaves, promising to buy them on our way back downriver. Somehow, Tizemt kept track of each town and city offering to sell slaves.
When we stopped in Segou, one of King Reba’s men rushed towards Koumbi to let him know we would be arriving in Bamako in a couple of days. Another hurried to Bamako to warn them. Despite everything we sold along the way upriver, our holds were full when we reached Segou. Most of it was millet and rice, but Tizemt bought thousands of clay pottery pieces, and we were buying as much cotton as we could.
Seeing cotton available on our last trip, I built a screw press like a cider press--except it was bigger--kind of like a modern cardboard baler. We tossed loose cotton and hand-tied bundles of cotton into a compartment enclosed on all four sides. When the hopper was full, the screw press compressed the cotton.
With the cotton fully compressed, we pushed or hammered sharpened steel rods through a series of holes in the front and back of the compartment, right below the press. That held the cotton down, allowing us to add more cotton and to repeat the cycle. We pulled the steel rods out before compressing the cotton and moved them up a notch or two each time the cotton was compressed. When the compartment was full, we tied the cotton bale with lengths of sturdy rope and lowered it into the hold with the winch we used to load and unload the ship. Our bales were about eight times the size of modern rectangular hay bales.
Bamako was chaotic upon our arrival, but the soldiers were ready for us. Someone quickly set up shade coverings along the waterfront. I told the men tasked with designing and building the docks here to take into consideration the informal marketplace that appeared when we docked, and to let the local commander approve their plans before starting.
Again, we unloaded horses and wagons first. We left a lot of both last time but needed even more for the extra cargo we brought this time. Aside from carrying the extra cargo, I wanted to leave extra wagons behind for the builders, the lumberjacks, and the sawmill. I did bring two men to build even more wagons since we’d had to reject several offers to buy a wagon while we were here the last time.
By the time we had several wagons filled with goods, we had to open for business! The people were that insistent. People were surprised at how much rice and millet we had this time, nearly four times as much as last time. We had purchased a third of it on our way upriver.
King Reba arrived the day before we were finished unloading. He spent an entire day aboard ship exploring. We tapered off unloading goods for sale and moved the informal marketplace so we could unload lumber, cement, equipment, and tools. Tizemt suggested the delay to give people from outlying areas time to get here to buy rice and millet from us rather than having to buy it at an inflated price from local merchants. I made a mental note to have some of our wagons take loads of rice, millet, and ironware to outlying villages, saving them having to walk here, buy things, and then having to return carrying everything on their backs.
On our last day of selling things, King Reba joined me as I rode out to check on the millrace. It was discouraging to see the millpond full of crocodiles. We’d need to find a way to keep them out of the millrace and millpond. Looking around, I guessed that we’d need to fence in the whole area, driving long ironwood stakes into the ground every foot or so to keep the crocs from digging under the fence. Then we’d have to install some kind of gate across the mouth of the millrace, like locks on a canal, for when we let trees float in. Even then, I was sure some crocodiles would get in.
We only saved a small amount of grain for the trip home, knowing we could buy more rice and millet downriver if we ended up with lots of slaves. Tizemt told everyone in Bamako who was interested, that we’d be back in about four weeks to buy slaves. Fifteen archers stayed aboard to watch the ship and the gold already aboard. Others would watch for crocodiles while the men worked at the site of our sawmill. I suggested that they pay some of the women in town to skin the crocs for them, and to sell any of the meat they didn’t want. I did want the hides, though. We still had thousands of troops who needed riding boots, and the crocodile hides were much more durable than regular leather.
We left four wagons behind but filled the others with goods for Koumbi. King Reba laughed and told me his wives warned him not to buy so much rum this time. I think he ate half of a bunch of bananas during the five-day trip to Koumbi as we talked and laughed while our lengthy wagon caravan snaked along the dirt road.
While we were in Bamako, I had twenty of the empty wagons repacked, filling them with necessities. Partway to Koumbi, those wagons started peeling off from the main column with two of King Reba’s soldiers to guide them to some of the rural villages where they would sell their goods.
The people in Koumbi definitely expected us; the crowd in the marketplace the afternoon that we arrived was the biggest one I’d seen. Agreeing with my suggestion, King Reba announced that he wanted individuals to be allowed to go first to help reduce the number of people in the marketplace. Those buyers who had slaves with them should send most of them home or back to their campsite, keeping one to call the rest back to the marketplace if they were able to buy goods today. There was some grumbling from the wealthy buyers, but the individuals and families surged forward excitedly.
We allowed everyone to browse and check the quality of the grain and fruit while it was still light outside and continued to sell our goods by the light of torches late into the night. Even some of the wealthy buyers managed to buy goods before we finally called it a night.
The marketplace was again crowded in the morning, albeit a bit more controlled. King Reba had nearly a hundred of his slaves help us out since we were still exhausted. He had chosen what he wanted to buy while we made the trip to Koumbi, and those wagons went directly to the palace grounds yesterday. This morning, the fruit was flying as were the rum and sugar. By the next evening, nearly everything was gone. While we were busy selling, Tizemt bought all the pavilion tents she could find, and had them set up near the palace. Then she started filling them with slaves. She also contracted to have many more pavilions made for this and future trips.
Once King Reba and I settled our account, we headed southwest, overland. I warned him that we would be going near the original goldfields, but he waved off my warning. The road didn’t have as much traffic as the one from Bamako to Koumbi, and heavy rains the first two days turned it into a quagmire that we slogged through. I spent fourteen of the seventeen days trying to decide whether the mud or the desert was worse.
For two weeks after arriving in the small village of Kayes on the bank of the modern Senegal River, we rode through the jungle, visiting sites. I showed them where nine gold mines were, a second stretch of the Senegal River to pan for gold, two garnet mines, and eight kimberlite pipes, three of which had diamonds in them. Having no idea how much rough garnets and diamonds were worth, I promised to have Tizemt go with me when I had them evaluated. He told me that he trusted me to pay him a fair price. We spent a day at one of the kimberlite pipes digging so I could show him what they needed to look for. Finding nothing after four hours, I took the chance to demonstrate the gelignite to King Reba, leaving a five-foot crater. I kept digging while the men poked through the debris looking for anything resembling gravel. Then we spent half a day at one of the garnet mines, which was more productive. We pulled thirty small to medium garnets out, compared to only four small diamonds we found at the kimberlite pipe.
Thank God, the trip back to Koumbi was dry (nearly) and we made the return trip in ten days. I gave the stones to Tizemt to hang onto and crashed. She and Audoflede woke me the next morning before dawn, insisting on a good drilling. After breakfast, I discovered that everyone was packed and ready to leave. Audoflede and Tizemt had even bought leather goods to sell downriver and had the local leatherworkers make them boots from the crocodile hides while they waited for me. Audoflede teased me about the danger of leaving bored women alone with so much gold.
When I finally saw the number of slaves they managed to buy, I was dumbstruck. There were one hundred forty pavilions, each holding twenty-five people. I also found out that the market wagons had been a huge financial success for us and a political success for King Reba. The villagers were grateful for a king who would arrange something like that for them, and nobody tried to explain anything different. I thought it turned out just fine. Some of the slaves here now were ones my men managed to buy in the small, outlying villages.
I was stunned when we made it back to Bamako. I went to see how the sawmill was coming, and found the outside walls done. They’d built it so the main floor was ten feet off the ground, both to compensate for flooding, and to stay above the crocodiles. A sturdy raised catwalk went along each side of the millpond from the mill to the opening of the millrace. From the catwalk, one of the men could catch any log in the pond with a peavey (a sharply pointed grappling hook type of logging tool, attached to a long pole). He would guide the log along an extension of the pond that almost looked like another short millrace. Two chains were lowered until they reached the bottom of the extension. They floated the log over the chains, winched it up to the second level, and released it onto the steel-roller conveyor belt.
From there it would roll inside where they pushed it sideways onto an angled rack. When the log on the carriage was done being cut, the angled rack tilted and rolled the next log onto the carriage and the men secured it. I was impressed and told the men so. I also noticed a distinct dearth of crocodiles in the area. They laughed and explained that they helped the soldiers by loading them into the wagons using a block and tackle. I almost choked when they told me they’d killed two hundred twenty-three crocodiles. It seems that, once they got the hides, tails, and legs, they left the rest of the carcasses along the riverbank. That attracted more and more crocodiles. Only when they were down to two or three a day did they push the remaining rotting carcasses into the river to get rid of them.
They traded most of the meat from the tails to the women for skinning the crocodiles instead of paying them with gold. The women were excited to get the meat for their families and sold any extra in the market. As a bonus for the job they did, I told the men I would pay for each of them to have a pair of crocodile skin boots made and left the money with the supervisor. The drawback was that they had to kill more crocodiles, but I was certain there would be plenty more.
Audoflede seemed to have picked up quite a bit of the Soninke language and joined Tizemt in her daily forays into the marketplace. By now, both women were well recognized, drawing a daily crowd of people hoping to sell slaves. I didn’t even want to know how many they bought, but the Montana was nearly full when we finally left. The women also bought more pavilions as well as inexpensive, locally grown meat and produce. All the way down the river, our crocodile hunting continued. With so many people aboard, nobody had a chance to get tired of crocodile meat. We actually killed fewer going back, than on the trip upriver, mainly due to not having the smaller boats trailing behind us that we had used to hunt the crocodiles. Those boats remained in Bamako for the lumberjacks to use for guiding logs downriver to our sawmill. We left the harpoon guns in each boat for them to use.
Tizemt reminded us of each village and town where we had promised to stop to buy more slaves. We also bought more millet, rice, meat, fish, and vegetables to help feed everyone aboard. She sold off some of the leather goods and other goods she bought in Bamako and Koumbi, but was saving most of them to sell in Mediterranean ports.
After finally reaching the ocean, the crocodile hunters became fishermen, dropping nets from the stern. The nets had floats made by laminating layers of cork together with the same glue we used on the Mongol bows. Small lead weights were attached along the bottom of the net. After fifteen minutes, they raised the net using the cargo boom on the rear mast. That one fifteen-foot-by-thirty-foot net caught up to two or three hundred pounds of fish--or none if there weren’t any in the area. We trained some of the slaves to use the nets to fish; they kept fishing and training other slaves the entire trip home. The women pitched in by preparing and cooking the fish. On the entire trip home, I don’t think I ate the same type of fish more than once. If I did, it was prepared differently each time.
We stopped by Port Tizemt to make sure everything was going well. It was. Racks of drying fish littered the beach where the Bubi ship was tied up. The Bubi women were excitedly showing me how many fish their men caught with the new boat and the nets we gave them. They’d found a use for the “worthless” salt: drying and preserving fish. I also noticed several of the Bubi men working in our village helping to build the wall that would surround it. We left them to their new lives, needing to get back to ours.
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Edward stood before a table in a large meeting room. Covering the table was a large-scale model of their target. The captains crowded around as Edward outlined the plan. "Ok, Phase One: Wan, Armand, and myself will lead our squadrons in a direct assault from above. The rest of you, except for Robert, will use your troops to set up a perimeter, at ground level, 100 yards away from the fence. Phase Two: Once our squads start drawing their fighters, those of you on the perimeter attack the...
Edward quickly sped towards the large white structure in the early pre-dawn hours. This time he could not indulge himself in the joys of flight; he had a mission to accomplish. At his sides were two of his captains, Wan and Armand, and right behind the trio flew six hundred of their warriors. Edward and his troops maintained their swift pace as they approached the White House. Part of their plan was to make it appear that they were going to pass the building by on their way to another place....
Хелен с опаской приложила большой палец внизу пергаментного свитка. Раздалось едва уловимое шипение и струйка белёсого дыма устремилась к низкому закопчённому потолку. "Это ваш первый отпуск, мисс Андерсон?", старый, сморщенный клерк взглянул на полупрозрачный силуэт висящий в воздухе по ту сторону стола. "Да, сегодня ровно сто лет с того.. с того случая, как..", нежный, чуть взволнованный голос, явно принадлежащий молодой женщине, казалось звучал из пустоты. "Да-да, мисс Андерсон", перебил её...
Mind Control"Are you going to jump?" Ted almost did. The unexpected voice from behind startled him, his body taking a half step towards the edge of the rock. He caught himself, hands not quite flailing for a safety railing which was not there. The roar of the waterfall filled his ears, the rocks far below suddenly very close. Balance once again regained, he turned. She stood on the dirt path, hands clasped before her. She was not pretty. To him, at least, not that he was influence much by physical...
Sue struggled over which costume to wear to the ADULTS ONLY party for which we were already late. Though she favored a body-paint only getups, there was no way to do it right and dry in seconds. I jokingly suggested she could be ready in two minutes if she went in her long blonde wig and boots, otherwise totally nude, as Lady Godiva. She slapped my arm. "What? This is a great excuse to show off your cute little boobs and great nipples to neighbors and strangers alike. And you KNOW we all love...
I fell back into the chair in the dressing room. This was the 40th -or was it the 45th concert that we had played in as many days. I had four hours before I had to be at the airport. After being in an enormously successful Rock band for a few years, branching out on my own had been good for my career. The downside was being in a different city every night or two, sometimes you can't even remember who you really are. I could hear the activity as the stage was pulled down and packed onto the...
I was still confused and even angry, but I couldn't stand for her to be in tears. I rose up enough to wrap my arms around her and held her to me while she calmed down. The girls came in after a few minutes and Kelly wondered why her mother was upset. Donna told her not to worry about it now and we all would sit down and talk later. We had a nice, if subdued dinner and the women headed toward home with the promise that I would visit there tomorrow. I tried to sleep that night, but the events...
I woke up fairly late in the morning, still dressed in the tracksuit. I had nothing else to wear so I gave my hair and fur a quick brush, it seemingly behaving better since there was lots more of it, then headed down the stairs. Mum sitting doing some work at the kitchen table, "Morning sleepy head," she said, "Want some breakfast?" "I can get it," I said. Grabbing some cereal and munching away. With my new sense of taste my usual cereal was way too sweet. I persevered for a bit with...
I woke up the next day. At least I assumed it was the next day. It was hard to tell in this windowless cellar. I was cold and stiff; I couldn't stretch out properly, so my limbs hurt. I pushed the hurt to the back of my mind and examined my cage more carefully in the hopes of finding some way out of this nightmare. It was made of thick steel sections welded together. The door was secured by a heavy padlock l couldn't quite get at, I had no idea how to pick locks anyway. I was cold and...
I woke the next day barely able to move. The area around one of my eyes was so swollen that I couldn't open it. Every move was torture. My fur hid the damage mostly. I was probably bruised all over but it was only places where they had broken the skin with the fur matted with blood that you could see the damage they had wrought. Sandra came to rub salt in my wounds, with another round of her "training". By the end of the day I had gone from barely able to move to completely unable to...
The bomb shell that my imaginary friend wasn't imaginary at all was something of a shock. "but ... but ... how can I hear you? And for that matter how can you hear me," I thought. I don't know, said Jessica, Oh, It must be telepathy! You're reading my thoughts!? I sent. I guess so, I don't really know. I can't think of any other explanation. I guess, unable to think of a more plausible explanation, me being crazy seemed high up on the list though. I was a little shocked by the...
I woke up feeling a bit stronger than the last few days. I sorted out some breakfast for myself and Jessica and then I told her about my explorations the previous night. I tried to find somewhere I could get help, but I can only just reach the edge of Little Greenvale and I doubt anyone there would help us, I said. Well I did hear the local Doctor was somewhat sympathetic, but his practice is on the other side of the village from here, said Jessica. Maybe you could contact him...
It was a very bright day some number weeks later when things got back to a more normal footing. I had been out of hospital for a while and soon returned to school. I did my best to visit Jessica every day as she spent more time getting well and strong again. She gradually got to a more healthy weight and previously her painfully thin body filled out, becoming more and more beautiful. Thanks to the healing powers of a bio-elemental we both regained our voices and it was a surprise to both of...
Before I returned to Audoflede and the others, Clovis and I established a code of sorts. Using Audoflede’s name at the beginning of a message I sent would indicate that the message was true. Mentioning Gotberga’s name would indicate that an immediate attack against the Romans was necessary. Mentioning neither name would signify danger, probably an imminent attack on Tournai. The women were relieved when I returned from the castle. Audoflede was going stir crazy by the afternoon since she...
A few hours after we finally fell asleep, I managed to extricate myself from the tangle of warm, naked bodies and interwoven appendages without waking them. I grabbed fruit and cheese to eat from the kitchen and headed for the stables, fully armed and ready for whatever I encountered. After saddling my horse and loading two packhorses each with two amphorae of unadulterated wine, I hurried to town. When I was close, I tethered the horses, did my forms to center myself, and jogged the final...
Surprisingly, I wasn’t in as much trouble as I thought I’d be when I got back to the castle. In fact, the women easily forgave me for sneaking off this morning to work. With all the construction we planned, Audoflede suggested sending messengers throughout Clovis’ territory with an offer of work for laborers, hoping to attract craftsmen, too. That way we would have more help available to do all the new things I wanted. Once the new help learned our new ideas and techniques, they could spread...
In addition, by the time our harvest was complete, I had already made a quick trip (for this time period, anyway), sailing from Rouen to Valencia and back. In Valencia, I found an estate I liked and hired a man named Andagus to run it. Andagus was excited about the scope and the enormity of my plan. When I left, fields were already being prepared for crops, and orchards were being planted. The two hundred potted trees we had of each of the two types of orange trees (Valencia and Navel) were...
With so much new help, things started happening quickly. The Valencia quickly took shape, Ragno had several batches of powder finished, and we made rice paper. The extra help let us work on other projects, too. The millrace was nearing completion, with two sawmills and two gristmills well underway. The millrace would redirect about ninety percent of the water unless the river reached flood stage. At that point, the extra water would continue down the old course of the river. I turned my...
Our arrival at Cologne provided us a surprise. Our flags had been flying at towns all along the river. Two miles before reaching the heavily walled city of Cologne, a gathering of people was frantically waving one of our flags at us. Our lookouts reported that our flag wasn’t flying at Cologne, so we stopped to talk with the people. They had the tribute for all of the villages along the river, but the riders said Cologne felt they were safe since their walls were higher and thicker and they...
After tearfully hugging each of my wives and concubines, I hurriedly introduced them to the newest group, and then ran back aboard the Audoflede to go help the Marise. I noticed King Tassimut staring at the sunken fleet after hearing that the citizens of the city did most of the fighting. My troops had remained aboard, figuring that we would head out again once they heard what happened. Once we reloaded food, ammunition for the mortars, and another five hundred archers, we left the Saxon...
The Koumbi marketplace was a cacophony of excited voices as buyers tried to talk and shout over each other. Then there were the constant bleats, bellows, growls, grunts, and roars from upset camels. I was dealing with one of the wealthy men when it got so quiet that I thought for a second that I’d gone deaf. Only noise from rambunctious camels let me know I hadn’t. Turning to find Izem and ask about the sudden quiet, I found him genuflecting towards my rear, just like the wealthy merchant. I...
I sent a missive to Clovis requesting permission to purchase large tracts of the just conquered Eastern Roman Empire. Along the coast in what would be modern Lebanon I wanted to grow bananas. Along the coast in what would be modern Israel I wanted to grow sugar cane. Along the Nile valley, it would be cotton, sugar cane, and bananas. Land around Constantinople would be for growing a delightful spice as of yet unknown in Europe, Asia, and Africa. My query received a positive...
Our first group of homing pigeons was finally ready to test. We’d raised hundreds in each capital and cities along the routes to other capitals and then transferred groups to different cities. They’d make their way home to where they were born and raised when released, taking our messages with them. The initial messages asked what time of day the pigeons arrived at each relay station (early morning, mid-morning, noon, etc.), and then each capital. Clovis’s first message, talking about the...
When the train left Valencia to take Clovis and the governors home, Emperor Reba and his wives stayed behind to catch the next ship home. Izem and I planned the attack on the Vandals at Carthage. He was sure he could get 50,000 troops within three months so we set the attack date for September 1. I would provide three thousand ground troops armed with rifles, and two hundred mortar crews. The rifle infantry and mortars would cover the west wall since there was no other way for the people to...
Hi Friends, This is my first story to ISS. As a big fan of ISS, I have read many stories on this site and so I really want to share my experiences about sex with you all. Mai vaise bhi bahot sex ka shokin hu…mai aapke samne mera ek experience share karna chahta hu. Mai Gujarat mai Ahmedabad ka rahene vala hu or single hu. Mujhe 30+ or aged ladies jyada pasand hai or jab bhi unko dekhta hu lund ko kuchh kuchh hone lagta hai. Ye baat un dino ki hai jab mai ek aisi company mai job karta tha jaha...
For Laura Lyn ‘Oops, that was it,’ Lola muttered as she past the dirt road she should have turned left on. She backed up, made the turn, and headed south 2.7 miles according to her directions. The sun was blistering and it hadn’t rained in weeks. Dust fogged the inside of the old ’87 Grand Am she’d driven since she was in high school, making it hard to breathe. She pressed on down the gravel country roads. Naturally the air-conditioning picked this day to be temperamental. ‘It can’t be too...
When Abbie and her husband Mel bought an old Victorian mansion on the outskirts of the city, they did so with two goals. The first was to convert the big, run-down house into a bed-and-breakfast. Their plan was to rent out rooms to businessmen tired of cookie-cutter motels, providing a more home-like atmosphere. They were reasonably close to the city’s financial center and since Mel was an executive with a major insurance company, he had the kind of contacts to make this feasible. Their...
Hi all, my name is Raghu and I am from Hyderabad. I am 28 years old working for an NGO in Hyderabad. I work as the project head for south India. I love contributing something to the society rather than working for Corporates and earning lakhs of rupees where I will not have time to spend that money. So this is my basic intro. I am new to ISS and also to sex life. I come from an orthodox family where my parents were very strict in upbringing me. Please read on ISS. Now coming to the story, this...
Spiritual Wandering by Kevin "Now, everyone, let us clear our minds to reach full enlightenment." Kevin looked around the room at all of his students in his meditation class. They all had their eyes closed, and they were all sitting cross-legged on the floor of the room. About an hour later, all of his student had left the room and he was still sitting. He closed his eyes for his own time of meditation. He cleared his mind of all of his thoughts and sat surrounded in...
I'd like to dream that what happened next was an instant orgy with all three girls cuddling into bed with me. I'd like to, but it sadly wasn't what happened. The fear that Courtney had exhibited managed to put us all completely out of the mood. When sleep came to me finally, it was only in fits and starts, and I found myself feeling the edge of a dream only to have it snatched away by a nervous breath. "I didn't want to hurt her..." The voice was stronger now than it had ever been...