Author's note: This is the last part of this novella-length story. All comments and feedback are welcome!
Zhura awoke to ravenous hunger. She hadn't eaten since the previous afternoon. Clouds scudded along the sky, masking the sun. Bayati lay curled against her in a fetal position. The Kichinka woman's back rose and fell with deep, even breaths. She was still asleep.
Bayati was tall and well-formed under her dress, with a slender waist and long legs. Beneath the smells of sweat and dust, Zhura detected a hint of hibiscus. She felt the stirrings of a different sort of hunger. As quietly as she could, she slipped a hand under her loincloth, running fingers along her moistening slit.
She remembered the last time she had been with Amina and Miliki'tiki, when Zhura bent her friend nearly double and watched the sanju demon pound her gaping cunt. In her imagination, Zhura embraced the demon, planting kisses all over its ashen body as she sat on Amina's face. Amina's tongue curled deep inside her, spreading her inner walls, while her fingers lashed Zhura's bud of pleasure.
Zhura came quickly on her hand. She licked it, tasting her salty, pungent flavor.
But it wasn't enough. It only whetted her appetite for more. She gazed longingly at Bayati's sleeping form.
The Kichinka woman seemed so... innocent. She had had the courage to flee from everything she knew, just to avoid being corrupted by Great Wallop.
You smell of demon.
Zhura, scowling with frustration, sat up and woke Bayati. Once they had cleaned themselves as best they could, they began to search for the other survivors.
Bayati recognized that they had slept on a south-facing hill, and quickly oriented them eastward. They made their way down the scrubland slope until they reached a plateau dominated by acacia trees.
"How did you become so brave?" the Kichinka woman asked. "I watched you lead your companions last night. Weren't you afraid?"
"I only wanted to protect my friends," Zhura replied. "They are here because of me."
"My father says we live to honor our ancestors," Bayati said. "That's why we should do great deeds."
"What if our ancestors don't deserve to be honored?" Zhura shot back.
Bayati fell silent then, and asked no more questions. Zhura, contrite, tried to make more conversation.
"When we reach the border," she said, "others will learn of Kichinka. Men will come to destroy the demon and save your village."
"I don't care about them," Bayati said, bitterly. "If I stayed, they would have let me become a slave. Great Wallop will soon be gone. It will move on to terrorize others."
The Kichinka woman turned to Zhura. "Teach me to not be weak and afraid. Teach me to not be a victim again."
Zhura swallowed, unsure what to say. "You are already brave, Bayati. Come... we need to keep moving."
By midmorning, she had located the stones that marked the trade route. They followed eastward alongside the trail for a time, vigilant for any sign of people.
Ahead she spotted someone waving on a distant ridge. "There," she said to Bayati. "I think that is them."
As they hurried closer, she recognized Amina and Kaj waving. Zhura climbed the bluff, with Bayati in tow, and rushed into her friends' arms.
"We thought you were gone!" Amina cried, as the three of them hugged. "I wanted to go back for you."
"I am relieved that you didn't," Zhura said. "I needed for you to be safe."
"You saved us, Zhura," Kaj said. "All of us."
Eleven others stood with Amina and Kaj, all looking as starved and dirty as Zhura felt. She immediately recognized Ngo, the vanmaster Ranthaman San, and his young assistant factor, Ofari. Six porters and drovers and two of the wives had escaped with them.
The day before, the van had numbered fifty-three.
"That's all?" Zhura asked, cheerlessly. "No one else made it out?"
"There may be others who won free," San said. "But we were scattered last night, and we have no way of finding them safely."
Zhura introduced her new companion, and then they all sat to decide what to do next. They had water, but little food, beyond a few gourds they had dug up, and some dried meat from the camp. Not enough to feed the group for even a day. No one had bows or other weapons for hunting larger game.
"We can make the Ikanje border post in three days," San said.
"I can help find food," Bayati volunteered. "I know what is edible and grows wild nearby."
"We should send out foraging parties of two or three in different directions," San decided. "Leave a few behind here to watch the route for stragglers or pursuit. Tonight, we collect the food, save what we can, eat the rest. Tomorrow at first light, we start for the border post."
They all agreed. Zhura joined Amina and Kaj.
Bayati watched her anxiously, but Zhura was eager to be alone with Miliki'tiki and the couple. Ngo and one of the wives volunteered to forage with the Kichinka woman.
The three friends descended the bluff and crossed over the trade route, exploring the plateau to the north. As soon as they were out of sight of the others, Zhura called to the sanju demon.
Amina gave Kaj a sidelong glance.
"Sanju mate?"
"Soon," Zhura said to the demon. "But we need you to hunt for us. Fowl, or an antelope? Can you bring those back to me?"
"Not many," Kaj said. "That would be suspicious."
"Yes," Zhura agreed. "Sanju hunt."
The demon stared at her, then vanished.
Zhura glanced at her friends. "It saved me last night."
"Against the bowmen," Kaj said.
"And once again. Great Wallop... nearly killed me."
Amina came and hugged Zhura. "I am sorry, my friend."
"Do you know why?" Kaj asked. "Why does this demon serve you?"
"We bound it," Zhura said, letting Amina go.