"Here, I made this for you," Quoy said, as the two young brown men, Quoy nearly twenty and Mussu a newly initiated eighteen, turned from each other with a sigh as they lay behind the levee of the Sierra Leone rice field. They continued touching each other, preparing to go again to a new-found heaven. Quoy had been stroking Mussu's bare buttocks, brushing his fingers across a dilated hole to keep it prepared for the needs of the thickness of his cock. He opened the pouch lying next to his discorded wrap and came up with a carved ivory disk necklace, each disk held to the next by a leather string. He put it around Mussu's neck. "Here, this necklace gives you the power of confidence and assurance that you will always be in control."
"I don't know what I could do to deserve anything like this," Mussu whispered, in awe. No one had given him such a present before.
"I made it myself—for you," Quoy answered. "See, it has our names carved on ivory disks and animals and plants of our world carved on others. And you know what you can do to deserve it."
Mussu did know. Trembling, he turned onto his back, spread and bent his legs, and placed his feet on the soft-earth ground at the base of the levee. As he raised his pelvis by pushing off on his feet, Quoy rolled over between Mussu's spread thighs and entered him for the second time that evening, having opened the young man to him in the first seeding.
The young man grasped the biceps of the older youth—who had not been the one to initiate him in man sex, but who was the one Mussu loved—cried out, and grimaced as Quoy pushed deep into his channel. The younger, small, slim, beautiful, and perfectly formed ebony youth began to pant and moan as Quoy plowed him, his firm buttocks expanding and contracting to the rhythm of the fuck.
Standing off in the foliage, watching the young men fuck from a hidden vantage point, crouched a glowering and angry Ganda, the man who had first mounted and bred the young, beautiful Mussu. The man who also was the father of Quoy.
* * * *
Mussu, shackled at wrists and hobbled at ankles, was pulled, not too gently but also not too roughly, out onto the deck of the small wooden vessel. The pier he found himself on seemed to lead nowhere but to towering oak trees on a heavily foliaged embankment. As nervous and fearful as the beautiful young man who had been in Sierra Leone, in Africa, just a few weeks earlier was, he couldn't help but be taken with the change in his surroundings. Other than the oaks, cypresses, sycamores, magnolias, and, especially, palmettos and flowering oleanders crowded on the land before him in verdant hue, accosting him as a riot of color even in the waning light, after the weeks of him having been held in a dark cabin at sea across the Middle Passage in the English slaver ship. The foliage was new and exotic to him. The land under the trees and foliage at the edge of the sea wasn't unfamiliar to him. It was the same marshy land he knew at home. He had no way of knowing that he had landed on Daufuskie Island, one of the South Carolina Colony barrier islands, at its most showy time or that those towering oaks provided the limbers for the construction of fighting vessels such as the ship that would be the USS
Constitution
.
Farther along the embankment to either side he would have seen what he was familiar with—rice paddy fields—if night wasn't falling. He had been brought to the low country. Rice was the staple crop in his own land, and his people were proficient in growing and harvesting it. This was a main reason why the English slavers preyed upon his people and snatched many of them to transport to South Carolina and Georgia as slaves—to work in the rice paddies and indigo fields there as they did in their own land.
Although closely supervised in his native Sierra Leone on Africa's rice-growing Windward Coast as a perfectly formed young man, coveted by women and indiscriminate men alike, there he was free and unfettered. Here, somewhere in the New World that had been whispered about in his village with fear, he most decidedly was not.
Mussu was lucky to be alive. Many who had been transported in the slaver vessel from Africa to the colonial America coast had not survived the ocean journey, which had first landed in the nearby port of Beaufort off the Port Royal Sound. Mussu had been lodged in a dark, windowless cabin, along with three young women. He was fortunate, though, that the cabin was above deck, while most of the Africans taken as slaves—men and women alike—had been virtually stacked in the holds.