An elite warrior must investigate the death of an emissary in this historical novel set in 17th-century Nigeria.
A royal emissary from the prosperous kingdom of Kano returns home gravely wounded—he has clearly been tortured. Before he succumbs to his injuries, he conveys a troubling message that Kano is threatened by a plot to destabilize it. He arrived on a horse different from his own, maybe a sign that he was kidnapped but subsequently escaped. In addition, he was transporting a classified communication from Kano’s ruler, Emir Ado Sanusi, to the Sultan of Sokoto. The sultan is the ruler of a neighboring kingdom with which Kano historically suffered tempestuous relations. Master Mansa, a Durbar peacekeeper—he keeps “peace only when there is none”—is faithfully dedicated to Kano, and is charged with investigating both the emissary’s death and his cryptic message. Accompanied by a young boy, Isa, a former enslaved person he purchased, Master Mansa travels to Sokoto as well as Katsina, a neighboring kingdom, to uncover the truth. Set upon in both places by well-trained assassins—he immediately recognizes these were not “local vagabonds operating in desperate times”—he correctly deduces that formidable forces intend to thwart his probe. Blackstaff deftly depicts the complex political circumstances that provide the context for Master Mansa’s mission. While Kano is enjoying a “rare time of peace and prosperity,” its neighbors suffer. The ruler of Sokoto is all but incapacitated by illness and his kingdom is plagued by famine while Katsina is overrun by corruption and decadence, a cesspool “nourished by violent crime, poverty and general desperation.” Moreover, Master Mansa is a gripping protagonist—almost impossibly courageous and wise, he’s unfailingly loyal, a moving personification of what Kano’s rivals lack morally.
A subtle but powerful tale of political intrigue and honor.