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  The Call of Zulina - Grace in Africa Series #1 
 By Kay Marshall Strom 
 Abingdon Press 
 Copyright © 2009   The United Methodist Publishing House 
All right reserved.
 ISBN: 978-1-4267-0069-9  
    Chapter One 
                   West Africa, 1787    
     Hot, dry harmattan winds swept across the African  savanna and awakened the yellow-brown sand, whipping  it up with wild gusts that swirled and soared high into the  air. The sandy clouds that blew in with the first shards of daybreak  to shroud the dawn in grit refused to release their grip,  and by late afternoon a thick layer of dust coated the entire  landscape. Irritated goats paused in their search for edible  blades of grass to stomp and shake themselves, and the children  who herded them scratched at the itchy grit in their own  eyes and hair. On the road, donkeys turned their heads away  from the sandy wind and refused to pull their loads. Impatient  masters swiped at their own faces as they whipped at the donkeys'  flanks, but all that accomplished was to send still more  billows of dust into the air.  
     Sand whistled through banana leaves thatched atop clusters  of mud huts in villages, and it settled over the decks of ships  as they rocked idly at anchor in the harbor. Even at what was  mockingly called "the London house," with its ostentatious  glass windows locked tight and European bolts securing its  imported doors, gritty wind found a way under and between  and beneath and into.  
     Twenty-year-old Grace Winslow, who had claimed the  plumpest of the upholstered parlor chairs for herself, shifted  from one uncomfortable position to another and sighed deeply.  She reached out slender fingers and brushed a newly settled  layer of sand from the intricate lace trim on her new silk taffeta  dress and resigned herself to the day.  
     "The ancestors are angry," proclaimed Lingongo, Grace's  mother, from her imposing position beside the rattling window  shutters. Silky soft kente cloth flowed over her in a kaleidoscope  of handwoven color, framing her fierce beauty. Lingongo made  a proud point of her refusal to sit on her husband's English  furniture—except when it was to her advantage to do so.  
     "Ancestors! Sech foolishness!" Joseph Winslow snorted . . .  but only under his breath. "Wind jist be wind and nothin' but  wind."  
     "Maybe the ancestors don't want me to marry a snake,"  Grace ventured.  
     No one could argue that the first harmattan of the season  had roared through on the very day Jasper Hathaway first came  to court her. He had swept through the front door and into the  parlor in a blustering whirlwind of sand, his fleshy face streaked  with sweat and his starched collar askew. He stayed on and on  for the entire afternoon. Only when it became obvious that no  one intended to invite him to eat supper with the family did  he finally heft himself out of Joseph's favorite chair and bid a  reluctant farewell. When the door finally shut behind him and  Grace's father had thrown the bolt into place, Lingongo had  turned to her daughter and warned, "Snake at your feet, a stick  at your hand. So the wise men say. Keep a stick in your hand,  Grace. You will need it with that snake at your feet."  
     Surely, Grace had thought, that will be that. Never again will  I have to endure such an agonizing afternoon. And yet, at her parents'  insistence, here she sat.  
     "Perhaps it angers the ancestors that white men insist on  settling in a country where they do not belong," Lingongo said,  her black eyes fixed hard on her husband.  
     But Joseph was in no mood for arguments. Not this day.  So, turning to his daughter, he said, "Ye looks good, darlin'."  And he meant it too. He fairly beamed at Grace, bedecked as  she was in the new dress he had personally obtained for just  this occasion. The latest fashion from the shops of London,  Captain Bass assured him when the captain unwrapped the  package and then carefully unfolded and laid out the frock he  had secured in London on Winslow's behalf. Captain Bass  said it again when he presented the shop's bill of goods, with  the price marked out and double the amount scribbled in ("To  account fer all me trouble," Bass explained).  
     In the end, Joseph had been forced to turn over two of his  prize breeding slaves to pay for the dress. But, Joseph consoled  himself, it would be well worth his investment to get a son-in-law  with extensive landholdings, not to mention endless access  to slaves. A son-in-law with enough wealth to flash about, to  impress the entire Gold Coast of Africa and no doubt dazzle the  company officers in London, too ... well, such a bloke merited  the calculated investment he had made in his daughter.  
     "Ye looks almost like a true English lass, me darlin'," Joseph  exuded. "Yes, ye very nearly does."  
     Grace sighed. In her entire life, she had met only one true  English lass. Charlotte Stevens was her name. And if Grace  Winslow knew anything, she knew she looked nothing like  Charlotte Stevens. Small and dainty, with skin so pale one  could almost see through it—that was Charlotte. The she-ghost,  the slaves called her. Charlotte's hair was almost white, like an  old woman's—very thin and straight. In every way, she was the  opposite of Grace. Tall and willowy, with black eyes and thick  dark hair that glinted auburn in the sunlight, Grace was a silky  mocha blend of her African mother and her English father.  
     Charlotte's father ran a slave-trading business down the coast.  Grace had never been there, although she had seen Mr. Stevens  on a number of occasions when he came to see her father on  business matters. Charlotte never accompanied him, though.  She and her mother mostly lived in England and visited Africa  only two months every other year. The few times Grace and  Charlotte had occasion to be in each other's company, Charlotte  had treated Grace as though she were one of her father's slaves.  Never once had she even called Grace by her given name.  
     "Mr. 'Athaway—now there's as fine an Englishman as ye  could 'ope to find, Daughter," Joseph Winslow continued.  "English 'ouse 'e 'as too. Even finer'n ours, if ye kin believe it.  An' 'e 'as 'oldin's all up and down the coast, 'e 'as—"  "I don't like Mr. Hathaway," Grace interrupted.  
     "You do not have to like him. You only have to marry him,"  Lingongo replied. "You are a woman, Grace. Tonight, you  will tell the Englishman what he wants to hear. After you are  married, take what he has to give and then make your life what  you want it to be."  
     Grace stole a look at her father. A deep flush scorched his  mottled cheeks and burned all the way up to his thinning shock  of red hair. Embarrassed for him, she quickly looked away.  
     Outside, the wind grabbed up the aroma of Mama Muco's  cooking and swept it into the parlor. It was not the usual  vegetable porridge, or even frying fish and plantains. No, this  was the rich, deep fragrance of roasting meat. Forgetting his  humiliation, Joseph blissfully closed his eyes and sucked in the  tantalizing fragrance. A smile touched the edges of his thin,  pale lips, and he murmured, "Mmmmm ... good English food.  That's wot it be!"  
     Lingongo's flawless cocoa face glistened with impatience  and her dark eyes flashed. "Where is Mr. Hathaway?" she  demanded. "He keeps us waiting on purpose!"  
     Grace and her parents had endured one another's company  for almost an hour by the time Jasper Hathaway finally blustered  in, full of complaints and self-importance and, of course, a  tremendous appetite. He talked all through dinner, not even  bothering to pause as he stuffed his mouth with roasted meat,  steamed sweet potatoes, and thick slices of mango.  
     "... so I sent detailed instructions by the next ship to London  inquiring about my various and sundry holdings," Hathaway  said. Little pieces of sweet potato fell from his mouth and settled  onto his blue satin waistcoat. "I should have gone myself. It is  the only way to get things done right. But I do so hate the long  sea journey. I am not of your kind, Joseph."  
     Here he stopped his fork long enough to cast his host a look  of pity.  
     "Aye," Joseph said. "Sea air. 'Tis wot keeps me lungs clean  and me 'ide tough!"  
     "No, no!" Hathaway said with a dismissive wave of his fork.  "That isn't it at all. I mean, you can be away for a year at a time and  no one misses you. That is, your work in Africa does not suffer  in the least in your absence. Not so with a true businessman  such as myself. Why, if I were to be away so long—"  
     Grace stopped listening. The truth was, she had absolutely  no interest in anything Mr. Hathaway had to say. And as for his  demeanor, she found that absolutely disgusting. So she allowed  her mind to move her away from the table and nestle her down  in the mango grove, to settle her in her favorite spot where the  wind rippled through the branches above her and she could  lose herself in books. There, Grace could leave Africa and travel  to wonderful places around the world. One day, she promised  herself, she would see all those places for real—London and  Paris and Lisbon and Alicante ... the mysterious cities of the  Orient ... yes, even the New World. Oh, just to be outside her  parents' walled-in compound!  
     "... a business agreement, of course," Mr. Hathaway was  saying. "And as a husband ... well, as I am quite sure you  know, I have a good deal to offer your daughter. A very good  deal, indeed!"  
     Mr. Hathaway glanced at Grace and flashed a leering smirk.  With a start and a shudder, Grace jerked her attention back to  the table.  
     "Now once again I have come to your house—and under  miserable conditions, I might add—for the sole purpose of  seeing and of permitting myself to be seen," Mr. Hathaway  continued, his voice tinged with pompous irritation. "If there  is to be a marriage, as I have been led to believe, I insist that we  talk terms immediately. Of course, the business of Zulina will  be a necessary part of those terms."  
     Outside, the trees groaned in the howling wind. Suddenly,  a great jackfruit, scorched hard by the sun, smashed through  the shuttered window and crashed onto the table. It shattered  the hand-painted English platter and sent roasted meat juices  spewing across the linen tablecloth. Grace screamed and  jumped to her feet and then stared in horror as a dark stain  spread down the front of her new dress.  
     "This is not the time to discuss such things," Lingongo  pronounced. "The ancestors are much too displeased. We will  talk another time."  
     "Now see here—" Mr. Hathaway blustered.  
     "Another time!" Lingongo repeated. Her tone made it clear  the discussion was over.  
     Jasper Hathaway judiciously turned his attention to his  waistcoat. The close-fitting satin garment might be the latest  fashion in Europe, but Hathaway's fleshy body proved too  much for it, dangerously straining the seams. Sighing deeply,  he tossed fashion to the wind. He undid the buttons and freed  his ample stomach.  
     "The ancestors are invisible, Lingongo," Jasper Hathaway  stated as if to a not-too-bright child. "They have already  collected what was due them in their own lifetime. Now they  have nothing more to say. You need not fear the ancestors."  Shifting his gaze to Joseph, he added, "Fear the living, present  threats to your well-being, my dear lady, not powerless shadows  from the past."  
     Joseph Winslow flinched and paled.  
     At long last, Mr. Hathaway, jovial and flushed in his  flapping waistcoat, and far too familiar toward Grace, sent  for his carriage and bid his farewells. Yet even as his carriage  clattered down the cobblestone lane toward the front gate, he  leaned out the window and called back, "I will not be patient  for long, Winslow. Time is running out. And as for Zulina—"  The rest of his words swirled away in the harmattan winds.  
     As soon as the door was closed and bolted, Grace announced,  "I refuse to marry Mr. Hathaway!"  
     Joseph Winslow stopped still. Never in his twenty-one years  with Lingongo had he dared speak to her in such a way. Oh,  he had wanted to. How many times he had wanted to! But the  most he had risked was a mumbled opinion under his breath.  Nor had Grace openly contradicted her mother before. But  the harmattan winds blew harder than ever. They rattled the  shutters and sent jackfruit clattering down onto the roof. And  when such a wind blows, anything can happen.  
     "And just who are you to tell me what you will and will not  do?" Lingongo challenged.  
     "It's my life, Mother, and I ... I—"  
     I will what? Grace thought with a sudden jolt of despair.  Undoubtedly, the same question occurred to her mother  because a mocking sneer curved Lingongo's mouth into a  twisted grin, and all Grace's bravery failed her.  
     "Do you really think I will allow you to stay here forever,  playing the part of a useless idler?" Lingongo demanded. "Why  should you live like a princess when you bring absolutely  nothing to my house? Even a princess must do her part, Grace.  Especially a princess."  
     Grace opened her mouth to answer, but Lingongo wasn't  finished. Her voice dripped with bitterness as she said, "You,  with your washed-out skin and the color of rust in your hair!  You, with your English clothes and English ways and English  talk. Oh, yes, Grace, you will marry Mr. Hathaway. You will  marry the snake. You will because I command it of you!"  
  (Continues...)  
     
 
 Excerpted from The Call of Zulina - Grace in Africa Series #1 by Kay Marshall Strom  Copyright © 2009   by The United Methodist Publishing House.   Excerpted by permission of Abingdon Press. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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