15 March 2017

Kalahari Herald Chronicles 15 March 2017 3#38

DAILY NEWS FROM MAMLAKAT KALAHARI
(http://mykalahariblogaddress.blogspot.com)
((see dara's video of Queen Vi's party  https://youtu.be/EtOflO7KktA))

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KALAHARI STORY TELLING AWARDS!

Many Awards Granted by Story Guru Nada


The brilliant creator of the Kalahari Storytelling Series, the noted Literary Lioness Nada Syuhada, announced the First Kalahari Storytelling Awards, informally known among the literary elite as the Hassanys.

Nada was so impressed with the quality of the selections entered by the cream of Kalahari's literary greats that she changed the original rules, by rewarding the first FOUR winners, not just the Grand Winner.

Here are the winners!!!

FIRST WINNER OF A HASSANY: VIEW LUMINOS


First Place           View Luminos         L$500
Second Place       Jack Docherty         L$300
Third Place         Elyssa Kalaratri        L$200
Fourth Place       Marrissa Greene      L$100

Remaining participants win L$50 each for their excellent stories.

Abla, Afraa al Abid, Bill LeBrave, Hew Hoall Saw, Josie North, 
Mad the Barbarian, Malika Kingbe, Rosecendre Moonwall, Roxelana Chronander.

And to please the large audience of story lovers in Kalahari and around the whole world, here are the four stories that won awards.


VIEW LUMINOS

KALAHARI

Why does one like some place or something?  This question can either make your mind go blank or rattle of a list of things, at the end of which you may still be wondering if you have got it all?!  So what is it about Kalahari – is it a place that has to be experienced but can never be adequately described in words or are there a multitude of flattering terms that do it justice?  The best place to start would be, I suppose, at the beginning.

The search for life beyond our space and time has intrigued man for time immemorial and any reference to it enlists firm support by those who believe in there being “someone out there” and plain ridicule from those who think otherwise.  Hazarding some of this ridicule, I can truly confess that time and space travel has been pretty much what I have been enlisted to do for the past few years.  My reason for it – well that would be too far in the beginning so maybe we should start from just this point on!

Prior to landing at Kalahari, I was at the Amazon.  It was a rather arduous stint there what with one having to watch out for the beasts and the humans who were still living in smaller settlements and spending much of their time vigorously guarding the same.  Their way of life, simple and primitive was difficult to adjust too, though the ladies there added much beauty by moving around topless – very suitable for magazines reporting on faraway places that will find themselves in the market a few centuries after their time!

On landing at Kalahari, the calming salty sea breeze at the point of entry, the warm sunshine, charming turrets, arches and the aroma of delicious food from the adjacent inn all together gave the impression of Kalahari being a peaceful and welcoming abode, far removed from the dangers of the Amazon.  Definitely a place to explore, to linger, to relax……….

It was with these attractive thoughts that I began to explore the Kingdom, striking up conversations with the citizens that I came across, an easy task given the friendliness exhibited by most.  One thing that soon became apparent was that this almost picture book like “fantasy” land was not one for shirkers but one that was carefully created and maintained with the efforts of all its citizens who contributed to the wealth of the Kingdom through dedication in their own professions.

So there was peace, there was a bountiful of plenty and contentment amongst the citizens or was this all too good to be true?  The Kingdom does have its structure of command that can be very firm at any visible sign of disagreement and while there is a general atmosphere of subservience, it is not that alternate opinions are not accommodated, but there is firm action against what is perceived to be “indiscipline in the ranks”.   But then again maybe it is this fear of the ‘rod’ that keeps would be trouble makers at bay and allows the Kingdom to provide for itself and its citizens.

There is a lot of material that explains the organisation of the Kingdom and the reason for its opulence and stability but a narration of administrative details is hardly the manner to express the feeling that is Kalahari.  While it may be regarded as presumptuous for me, one who is not yet a full-fledged citizen to claim to know this feeling, I do end this submission with a few lines that to me summarise all that is Kalahari.

Kalahari, a Kingdom from far and away,
An atmosphere it has that beckons one and all to stay.

It’s not the food, not the trees, not the breeze that sets it apart
It’s the affection of the people, it’s the warmth in their heart.

There is firm action against those who choose to cross the line,
Be not afraid, for good efforts beget days of roses and wine.

One may say this is all false how can such a land be true?
To them I say, why tell me -
Have you ever seen a man here feeling blue?!

A great wonderland, pearl hidden from most,
To the Land to the people, cheers, I do raise a toast!




CAPTAIN JACK DOCHERTY

JACK'S TALL TALE


This is a tale from about three or four years ago, the days when things were a little different, well, some may say quite different. A tale involving four countries, Kalahari, Abydos, Meyonia and to some extent, Kuwar.
It all started one evening with a formal reception at the presidential palace of Meyonia, for dignitaries visting from other countries. I attended it, as part of the Meyonian entourage, you know, the usual mingling, cocktails, me keeping ears open on any dropped information, partially to entertain myself.
Then I was privately approached by one of the Abydos Goddesses, Allegra. It seems one girl close to her, a young gypsy girl named Eman Shehata, who was a bit involved with a cousin of mine at the time, had mentioned me to the Goddesses.

We talked about various states of affairs and she invited me to Abydos.
A few days later, I took her up on the offer, and headed for the gates of the Queendom. At first being challenged, since I was a man, I stated my name and who had invited me, and I was not just admitted, but given a guided tour of the land by Allegra herself. At that time, Abydos and Kalahari were neighbours, and the gates of each were entered from a common place where you arrived.
There was also an older arena, located right between the lands, Kalahari gates to the east and Abydos gates to the south.

I returned on and off, between my voyages, sometimes Allegra or some of the Goddesses were busy handling state affairs, and I took the opportunity to wander down to the arena, for a bit of practice, both with sword and rifle.
While heading there, I chanced upon a warrior, practicing her skills, and we started talking. Well, rather, we started training, as she said something about needing to warm up and the wooden dummies were not able to provide for that. She was good, a really good fighter, and when we ended the session, we both grinned.

She presented herself as Livia, sister of the Kalahari King. Well, princess or not, she was damn good with a blade, and we sparred with each other on and off.
When I arrived one day to the arena, Livia was not there, so I started some target shooting with my rifle instead. Someone approached me, and I recognised, Eman, the young gypsy girl that I had met a few times, both in Meyonia and in Kuwar.

She was on her way from Abydos to Kalahari and asked me if I would like to join her, which I thought would be a nice idea. After all, I had never really been there. She led me to a small place with a dance scene, with two men, one seemed pretty obviously some kind of noble, and the other... well, pretty noble too, those maybe one notch down, or something.
Eman introduced me to them, while she was preparing for a dance she would perform for us, they were King Hassan Ibn Trrrol, His Highness of Kalahari, and his Minister, Magdy.

At first, the King was very wary of me, inquiring, almost interrogating me about who I was and what I was doing there. I later found out that his intelligence had briefed him of my presence and dueling with his sister, the Princess, that I was a sharpshooter, in addition to being deeply involved with businesses in Kuwar. During that period, the relations between Kuwar versus Kalahari and Meyonia were.. well, shall we call it a little tense.. to use real understatements. I think General Romanova of Kuwar.. or was she colonel back then? She rose in ranks so fast, it was hard for us to keep up. Anyway, it seems she was perhaps behind a couple of recent assassin attempts on His Highness, so no wonder he was on his guard.

I became rather fond of both Kalahari and Abydos, spending what time I could be away from Kuwar there. At this time, my friend Afraa was working as the new hotel manager in Kuwar, and I am afraid I sometimes referred to her coughingly to the Emirate’s Guards, when I needed to leave Kuwar for a bit. Sorry about that, Afraa, heh.

Livia was pretty much as wild in the Kingdom as she was in the arena it turned out, we enjoyed the sparring, me learning from her fighting skills and she picking up a couple of.. well, let’s call it “my bag of pretty unorthodox tricks”.
One lazy afternoon in the Kingdom, which was very quiet, Livia and I were relaxing over at her private quarters. We were drinking wine and munching away on some delicious cakes she had made herself. Unfortunately, she had forgotten they were spiked with hashish. We never really noticed, but enjoyed a friendly conversation with various, perfectly normal topics, like” what colour of the rainbow would possible a blue penguin have” or ”if you clap with one hand and miss, does a tree fall in the forest”, when she jumped to her feet, crying out that she knew what mission we had to accomplish. As soon as I had gathered myself up from the floor, which I hit, falling off her couch as she cried out, I asked her what kind of mission that may be, but she was already well out of the door.

By the time I finally caught up with her—that lass could run, I tell you—I crashed into her, as she came dashing out the door to the King’s private quarters, shouting” RUN!”. As she passed me, I took a step in through the door, seeing parts of the royal bed on fire, the result of a prank gone terribly wrong, but that seemed like a good idea after seven pieces of hashish cake and two bottles of wine. Outside, I heard the Princess exclaim a less than regal” Oh shit! The Guards!”

So there I was, trying to put out the fire of a royal bed in front of me, Royal Guards approaching behind me, no idea where the Princess were.. The King, however, I discovered, was with his Guards, and he sure looked less than happy.
You know, I am no paladin, or something like that, honour and blood for their own sakes, but I don’t rat out on crew mates. The King assumed I was guilty of this, and I didn’t claim otherwise, so I ended up in the gaol, gruel, chains and all.

But Princess Livia she was really straight about it all, when she saw where I had ended up and went to her brother, explaining everything.
You know, that was definitely not the first time I was in a gaol, but sure the first time I shared it in royal company. That would happen again, with another princess, but that’s another story.

The King told me I was free to leave, I really hesitated, not wanting to leave his sister in the ironer, but both King and princess assured me it was not the first time she had ended up there.. and probably not the last, so I walked out, thanking the King for his mercy and headed straight for a beer. All that hashish and prison dust had made really parched my throat, you know.

His Highness and I become friends over time, I still count him as one, and if he ever needs support, I’ll be there with my blade. We both actually later were appointed the first Knight Protectors of Abydos by the Goddesses, the two men to first ever hold titles of that dignity in the Queendom.



ELYSSA KALARATRI


ELYSSA'S BIOGRAPHY

My name is Elyssa Kalaratri. Elyssa means 'god is my oath' and that was the name my mother chose for me. My father was in rebellion against the King of that land, and his rebellion failed. The situation was such that my mother was in no danger, but I was. My father had sired many children, with the intent of breeding an army for his revenge. Mother had me raised in India, in the village where she grew up. She thought I would be safe there.

Safe, but not loved. Those villagers scorned me for being born of a mixed union, and for being born out of wedlock. It was they who gave me my second name Kalaratri. It is a reference to the goddess of war, destruction, and devastation Kali. As soon as I was able, I returned to the Kingdom of Sand where I was born.

There I had difficulty finding my mother, as she had been adopted into a Bedouin clan and had a new name. I wanted to cause her to suffer as I had suffered. My father was easier to find, and he happily took me in. Under the tutelage of him and his harem, I learned the ways of war. Yet another soldier in his army, with his other spawn.

But the war was only planned. Disaster struck and leveled the kingdom. I know not who else escaped, but surely little could escape that!

I travelled the world, always fleeing from men and their evil intent. For a time I was a waitress at the Matsubaya brothel in Japan, but made my way out before they could think of making me yet another whore. At the end of my travels across the world, I came here to Kalahari.

Lady Louise Kingbe invited me to be her houseguest, but I slept in the courtyard and prepared my own food. She encouraged me to sleep inside, in a spare bed. I did so but one night, and she then charged me with a bill for room and board. It was all just a trick!

My money was exhausted from my travels, so she decided I would work it off as her handmaiden. She set a collar around my neck and had me help her dress and assist her in the bathhouse.

Her husband, Mr Kingbe, didn't like my attitude and stripped me naked and left me in a cage in the slave's room. My imprisonment lasted a week, with regular beatings. All because I did not acknowledge him as my Master. A brute he is, truly.

Louise was interested in my time in Japan, and bade me to make a garden for her in that style. I dug the channels for the pond and planted the lilies myself. For that effort, I was freed after only a month or so of shameful enslavement. King Hassan proclaimed me a citizen and granted me an apartment to use, in which I reside to this day.

Minister Magdy found my work at the farm very useful, and made me his assistant, to manage the slaves when he was unable to. In time, romance bloomed and I now count myself as close to a wife as he has. All went well, until the civil war.

Only a few days before the final battle, I encountered Mr Kingbe, now calling himself Halim. We fought at the arena, after I commanded that he return to his territory. We fought, and somehow he got a second wind in the middle of the fight. (He switched from combat mode to arena mode, which gave him back many of his hit points. It was cheating.) I was knocked unconscious and he dragged me back to that same cage he had locked me in before. He ripped my clothes off my and left me shivering and wounded.

Days later, and I heard the slaves talking. The war was over and he had lost. He, on the other hand, was determined to keep on fighting. He had missed the final battle, and did not count the result as valid. We all know what came of that determination of his. Nothing.

Still I was kept, unlawfully imprisoned. Starved and denied water. Only by tricking some of his slaves did I get any food or water. I would have died in that three week period otherwise. At the the end of the three weeks, probably expecting me dead or too weak to resist, Halim declared I was to join his harem as a slave. He handed some tawdry red silks to wear, and I put them on, glad to have something to wear at last. He foolishly left the front door unlocked and went to sleep. I walked out and ran to my apartment, burning those silks and replacing them with one of my own modest dresses. He was not going to get me back so easily!

I continued my work at the farm, just waiting to see if it would be worth making a criminal case about. When I saw the entire House of Kingbe leave the kingdom, I thought it would not be worth doing, but now that rumors say they may return, I wonder...



MARRISSA GREENE

MARRISSA GREENE'S STORY

I first visited the kingdom to broaden my mind and learn about other cultures.

My family was rather wealthy and well positioned. One of the first persons I met on arriving was the Minister for Entertainment. She showed me some of the local dances and advised it was something all the ladies here did.

With some encouragement from her I donned what seemed rather flimsy clothes but she reassured me that was what all ladies wore in the Kingdom when dancing. Not wishing to create a diplomatic incident I went and put on the clothes then danced with the others.

I found it fun and the Minister declared I had talent. After the dance she told me about the dancing school the Kingdom ran and how foreigners like me were welcome to join it. The idea tickled my fancy so naturally I agreed. I also assumed it would please my family what with me creating diplomatic connections and such and learning about another culture.

I found some of the customs the students had rather odd, such as the cramped accommodation, sleeping on furs and the rather dreadful food. I had heard student food was bad but what we ate at the school was absolutely horrid. It was made from fish heads and other stuff we normally throw out in my own land. But as they say you shouldn’t knock other cultures so I just tried to grin and bear it. What I found odd was how well the Minister seemed to eat in comparison.

One of the strangest customs for students how we had to kneel all the time and call the teachers Master or Mistress depending on gender of course, but in our schools sometimes such titles were also expected. Equally odd was how all the students wore special necklaces that showed they were part of the school. For some odd reason my necklace got stuck for some reason. The Minister was disconcerted but alas always too busy to find some solution.

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Afraa al Abid
Kalahari Herald

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