By Sea & Sky
The Sky Pirate Chronicles Book 1
by Antoine Bandele
Genre: Fantasy Adventure, Pirates
With no magic, no brawn, and no pirate crew, Zala seeks to steal back the one treasure that matters to her most: her husband.
To succeed she needs a ship—and not just any ship, but the latest, secret invention by the Vaaji Empire. An airship.
Zala will have to use her wits to overcome scoundrels and nobles alike on her journey through the clouds.
But if she's smart enough, she may just have what it takes to save her husband—and go down in history as the first sky pirate.
Delve into a pirate fantasy inspired by the West Indies, The Swahili Coast, and Arabia, where Zala will encounter ruthless raiders, arrogant aristocrats, and imperial secrets.
By Sea & Sky is Antoine Bandele’s sophomore novel, the first in the Sky Pirate Chronicles trilogy, a pirate fantasy.
Book Trailer:
https://youtu.be/S54AnsEzPPQ
CHAPTER 1
ZALA
COLD WIND WHIPPED
ACROSS THE WHITE-CAPPED WAVES, wailing like a vengeful ghost. The rallying cry
of the pirates who swung from precarious ropes below, drowned its howl.
Neither could
compete with the cannon blasts.
Zala went stiff
with panic, her knees locked and elbows held tight. She always froze before the
jump. It wasn’t the fear of death that had the soles of her feet planted to the
decking of the Titan’s crow’s nest, it was fear that one of those
death calls below might be that of her husband.
A break in the
thick fog below, however, showed him engaged with a merchant, who clearly
didn’t know the first thing about swordplay. Zala forced a calming breath.
There was nothing to fear. Jelani was doing his job; she needed to do hers. It
was her fault they were out here in the first place.
It’s
only a merchant ship, she reminded
herself.
The ominous fog,
stretching wide atop the ocean’s waves, didn’t help her unease as it cloaked
the enemy vessel in its thick, creeping cloud. If she jumped now, there’d be no
telling where she’d land. Dew streamed across her skin, cold bumps rising from
her bare arms and ankles.
Maybe there was a little fear
of the jump after all.
No
use standing here pondering the worst, Zala thought as
she took another deep breath. Her palms clutched at the coarse rope.
“You’re not gonna
stand there all day, are you?” laughed a small, airy voice from within the fog.
A figure appeared through the cloud, a lithe slip of a woman with the
fluttering wings of a butterfly. Zala smiled at the woman—or rather, the aziza.
“I was waiting for
you.” Zala gave her a half smile.
Fon rolled her
eyes. “You always say that.”
“That’s because I’m
always waiting for you.”
The two women could
hardly have appeared more different. Fon barely came up to Zala’s waist, with
pointed ears and brown skin that seemed to glow, a tree-bough tattoo set across
her forehead. Zala was short for a human woman, with skinny legs and small arms
topped with subtle shoulders, all the complexion of an ebony shade. Where Fon’s
hair was long on one side and braided on the other, no
strand out of
place, Zala’s was cut short, left alone to coil and tangle naturally atop her
head.
“Jelani go ahead
already?” Fon asked as she turned her head to the ocean mist.
Zala frowned. “On
Kobi’s orders, yes.”
“Don’t worry.” Fon
tapped Zala’s knee with her four fingers. “Jelani’s a big boy—he can take care
of himself.”
“So he keeps
telling me,” Zala said, unconvinced.
“Come on, pirate,
let’s get over there before those dikala
find all the good loot.” Fon put on a tough
face, squinting one eye and pursing her lips like an angry scoundrel. Zala
couldn’t help but smile at the glint of humor in the aziza’s eye. The facade just
didn’t fit Fon. Even as she withdrew a long, sharp dagger, which looked more
like a sword in her tiny hand, she could never quite shake off that disarming
charm. After giving the Titan’s signature salute, Fon lifted from the deck and
soared toward the enemy ship. Zala’s brows creased her forehead. Fon was right.
The longer she waited, the less loot she’d have for herself. She couldn’t
afford second pickings. In an ideal world, the crew would divide the loot
equally, but she knew the others were taking more than they should. It was just
the way they did things around here.
Zala gathered her
strength, readjusting the sword at her side and the bow on her back.
“Here we go again,”
she mumbled before she gripped the rope and leapt into the air.
Her heart raced as
she swung the distance between the two ships, wind rushing past her ears like a
kongamato’s wail. But she knew as soon as she jumped that she had timed it
wrong. She stuck out her feet to meet the enemy ship’s platform, or a ratline,
or even the side of the ship— she couldn’t tell which. She found nothing but
fog. Her leap hadn’t been strong enough. She’d been too nervous that she might
drop, too nervous about the clashing swords, too nervous that she might fail.
Look
where that got you, Zala thought to
herself angrily.
Berating herself
with a string of swears picked up from moons spent at sea, she reoriented her
body at the apex of her swing and cast her weight back toward her crow’s nest
where she caught her perch clumsily with one arm. She took a moment to settle
her shaken nerves and centered her mind back onto the task. She climbed back up
onto the nest’s ledge, and, with another deep breath, jumped
once more into the
unknown.
This time she
listened for the sound of steel on steel, the grunts and groans of battle. When
they sounded loudest beneath her, she let go of the rope, tensing her calves as
she descended onto the ship. Her bare feet met damp wood with a dull thud as
she landed.
Even on the ship’s
deck, the haze of the mist hid all. Zala could barely make out the glint of
swords cutting their teeth against one another. The cry of the blades and their
wielders raked against her senses.
The first
figure—someone from her crew?—met an even murkier shape of a person she
couldn’t define at all. All around her, pirates and merchants alike traded
insults between their clashes.
When would Kobi
learn? Taking on ship after ship like this was taxing the crew to breaking
point. They were getting sloppy, and it would only get worse.
In that moment, it
didn’t matter. All she needed to know right now was friend from foe.
The pirate crew
wore no uniform clothing, but she could usually make out her fellow crew
members by the way they fought. They had that sway about them—the “wine dance,”
as Jelani called it.
Zala withdrew her
sword, identifying the figure ahead as an enemy, and struck the unsuspecting
foe in the back. The figure let out a guttural yell—a man’s yell—as he keeled
over. The sound sent a shiver down Zala’s spine. He was not her first, not by a
long shot. But she’d never grow used to the sensation of steel cleaving through
bone and sinew. Or rather, she hoped she wouldn’t. It made her insides turn.
The man fell at her
feet, his simple tunic soaked through with blood.
He was just a
merchant… not a soldier at all.
Familiar guilt
filled Zala’s gut, but she shook herself of
its weight. If the man had made the choice to fight pirates, he’d
brought his death upon himself. His captain should have surrendered when her’s
gave him the chance. It was unfortunate, but it wasn’t her fault.
“Good looks, chana,”
the pirate Zala had saved said. The woman threw up a hand signal that Zala had
come to learn meant “thanks” among pirates. “Didn’t think you’d ever save me,” she finished
with a back-handed compliment.
Zala recognized the
woman as Nabila, the gull-shifter Captain Kobi used as a scout. Zala tried her
best to ignore the wound running down the pirate’s arm. It looked deep. Instead
of letting her eyes wander, Zala took her index finger and thumb and shaped
them into a circle at her eye. If she recalled correctly, the gesture meant
“I’ve got your back.”
When the pirate
smiled, Zala knew she’d gotten it right.
She was barely
acquainted to Nabila—though she barely knew or even recognized a lot of the
crew. Kobi had taken on many new members over the past fortnight. Learning
their names and faces rarely mattered when they were all dead by the week’s
end, whether by blade or by sea. Zala turned to the merchant’s corpse and
passed her hands over his body in a quick search for loot. The merchant wore
plain cream-colored robes, a checkered blueand- white kaffiyeh atop his head,
and a beard patched with white hair.
Only the Vaaji
people sported those distinct headwraps with that leather cord around their
heads. Zala should have known. The crew had been raiding the Vaaji for weeks.
Ever since the empire had attacked their home isle of Kidogo, the crew had
redoubled their efforts against Vaaji shipping while dismissing other more
lucrative takes. Zala’s pat-down yielded nothing from the merchant, save for
the dagger he’d fought with and two silver coins.
She pocketed the
silver as nervous sweat beaded down her forehead and a tiny clink rang out from
the too-light purse at her waist. That didn’t matter though. She wasn’t here
for coin.
She needed a
hatchway that led belowdecks. But each time she caught a glimpse of one leading
to the ship’s lower levels, a duel would block her way, fighters on both sides
rushing to join bout after bout.
Her head swiveled
like a hunting owl as she slipped each fight while she let her crew’s wine
dance flow around her. Like a vulture she scavenged the dead and dying. None
had what she was looking for, and she only found bronze coins at best and
soiled pants at worst. A good pirate would have helped her crewmates as she
secured the deck before
looting.
Zala didn’t
consider herself a good pirate.
As she snagged a
final coin purse from the latest corpse in her wake, the crash of a hatch door
opening came at her side. Turning, she had to swallow a snort at the sight
before her: A stout cook barreled his way out from belowdecks, stained apron
and raised pan somewhat undercutting his otherwise admirable war cry. Waving
his pan from left to right, the man charged the first pirate he saw.
He left the hatch
behind him wide open.
It was bizarre, but
Zala was never one to shunt her nose up at the rare turnings of good fortune.
Cooks meant kitchens, and kitchens meant the supplies she needed. She darted
down to the lower deck, then closed the hatch after her. Her eyes adjusted from
the stark white fog to the dingy shadows of a cramp storeroom. Wrinkling her
nose at the stale air, her gaze fell on a set of overturned barrels. Zala
sucked her teeth when she saw their contents: rich honey sloughing onto the
wooden floor. She quickly gathered as much as she could into a set of phials,
but the sticky substance was incredibly difficult to bottle up.
A
phial of honey, a bundle of dawa root, a sliver of aloe, an eye of tokoloshe, and
a stone’s
worth of mazomba scales, she kept
repeating to herself as she gathered up the last of the sweet nectar.
A sudden thump
rumbled above Zala’s head. Was it friend or foe who had fallen? She put the
thought away as she searched through the rest of the stores. As much as the
guilt still lingered at the back of her mind, she had to find the galley if she
had any hope of scrounging up the ingredients Jelani desperately needed. Once
she found what she was looking for, she would help the rest of them—not
before. Besides,
how difficult could defeating a group of merchants really be?
As she corked the
last phial, another loud thud hit the floor behind her. Zala twisted on her
heels with her sword outstretched, ready to stab. A soldier’s body lay at her
side with a dagger in her back. Zala relaxed her arm when she caught sight of
Fon pulling her blade from the soldier’s spine.
“Of course I find
you in the kitchens,” the aziza said with a chuckle.
Zala shook the mild
shock from her face. “Aren’t you aziza supposed to be light on your feet?”
“Half-aziza,”
Fon corrected her. Zala never knew how to address Fon, as she was both human
and aziza—short for a standard human but tall among the diminutive forest
creatures.
“And we’re not
supposed to be on our feet at all— well, most of the time. You’re thinking of pakkami.”
“Right, right.”
Zala turned to the fallen soldier.
The soldier wore a
green turban with red-padded armor and a tunic of white, the colors of the
Vaaji Empire—the colors of their military. So, the merchants had guards after
all.
“Your hands have
been busy.” Fon nodded to the sacks tied to Zala’s belt, her already large eyes
widening further.
“Your mate already
ran out of the stonesbane, then?”
Zala gave her a
solemn nod, then sighed. “It’s becoming more difficult to find what he needs on
these ships.”
“How long has it
been since he’s had some of his potion?”
“This morning,”
Zala said, still scanning the galley for more ingredients. “His stoneskin won’t
grow for a few more days, but I try to stay on top of it.”
Fon pursed her
lips. “What are you missing?”
“Just about
everything. But it’s usually easier to find aloe.”
“I think I might
have seen a barrel of some in the other storerooms.” The aziza hooked a thumb
over her shoulder. Zala grinned, and then the pair of pirates wound their way
through the narrow corridors, avoiding what soldiers they could; the ones they
could not avoid were met with steel. Alone, Zala was no extraordinary
swordswoman, but with Fon’s flight distracting the soldiers, it made cutting
down their enemies almost too easy, even in these tight spaces.
“Are none of these
soldiers decent fighters?” Fon asked as Zala caught another in the back.
Zala looked down to
her latest fallen foe. The Vaaji seemed young, no full beard, just the shadow
of a mustache. With all these guards, the merchants were undoubtedly holding
valuable cargo. It was a surprise the Vaaji were pressing so far into the
Sapphire Seas at all. It shouldn’t have been so shocking, however. Though the
foreign nation had a reputation for being little more than poets and scholars,
in recent moons they had seemed to reclaim their former titles as explorers and
conquerors.
“Doesn’t matter.
I’ll take easy targets any day.” Zala patted the soldier down. “Means easier
pickings.”
Light feet led Zala
and Fon toward the storeroom. As they continued they came across some of their
own, a trio of mousey-looking men looting with eager hands.
Zala gestured their
way. “You see, I’m not the only one plundering before the captain orders it.”
She couldn’t help
pressing her nose into the other crew members’ loot—despite their sour
scowls—making sure none of them had taken any of the ingredients she required.
Discipline was
sorely lacking on the Titan.
Zala glanced
through one of the viewports. The clouds were still thick, cloaking the waves
on either side of the ship.
Well,
at least Kobi is getting smarter. Using the fog for the raid is one of the
better ideas he’s had this week.
“How large is this
ship, anyway?” Zala asked.
“Larger than
Captain Kobi let on—wait just a minute, over there.” Fon pointed forward,
floating just above a set of crates. “The aloe should be just against that
wall.”
Zala started moving
toward the crates, heart lifting, but she halted when two of the largest men
she had seen that day stepped between her and her prize.
ANTOINE BANDELE IS AN AMAZON BESTSELLING AUTHOR IN AFRICAN LITERATURE.
He lives in Los Angeles, CA with his girlfriend, where he produces work on YouTube for his own channel and others, such as JustKiddingFilms, Fanalysis, and more. During the summer he is a camp counselor. Whenever he has the time he’s writing his debut series: Tales from Esowon.
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