When the gale finally ended, we found ourselves approximately four days
normal sailing distance due south out of al-Zira. We replenished our
supplies: patched up the ship, and traded our remaining goods at native
villages along the shores of several islands. Some villages were friendly, but
others were hostile and the natives attacked on sight. I suspect the
hostile villages were filled with cannibals.
We skirted the coastlines of several islands, sailing south by west until we
reached a small peninsula cut off from the main island by a massive stone
wall. We were well received by the natives of Tanoroa, the small village
that guards this wall. The villagers have no name for the large island other
than the 'Isle of Dread'. Their own small peninsula is known simply as
'Home'.
The villagers told us a tale about an ancient city in the central highland
of the isle that was built by the same people who built the wall. The
villagers call the builders 'the gods', but I noticed that the names of the
gods and the personal names of the clan ancestors were often the same, so I
suspect that their ancestors and the builders were one and the same. I
believe that the natives once possessed a much more advanced culture and
that the descendants of the builders have returned to a more primitive
state.
The inland city is rumored to be filled with treasure beyond imagining. In
particular, I heard persistent tales concerning a great black pearl of 'the
gods' that still remains in the inland city. The island waters abound with
excellent pearl beds, so the rumor of the black pearl may well be true.
The village contains a number of huge life-like statues of iron, bronze, and
stone. Since no villager currently has the skill or the craft to make such
statues, the tale of a lost city built by the 'gods' seems reasonable. I
would have liked to explore inland to verify the rumors, but too many
crewmen died in the storm or by cannibal spears. Only five of us are left. I
am a sa'luk, the others are only bahrayin. We can sail the small ship well
enough but on land, in hostile territory, we would be helpless. Once back in
Gana I should be able to recruit a new crew and a party of professional
adventurers, then I will return to claim the great black pearl.
One thing I managed to do before leaving: we sailed around the island and
made the best map we could. We were afraid to land, since village fishermen
had warned us that it was extremely dangerous to land anywhere on the main
island and the coasts were rocky with no beaches. As a result, the map only
shows the coastal areas we could chart from the ship. but it is better than
nothing.
—Rory abd-Arossa
Expedition på ön