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Kofi, the towering Yoruba slave-turned-revolutionary, leads a triumphant revolt against the British colonial stronghold in 1850s Nigeria. Drawing from historical inspirations like the Yoruba uprisings and the Aba Women’s Riot, the novel escalates the erotic and vengeful stakes. Kofi’s muscular dominance and strategic brilliance culminate in the colony’s overthrow, with many white male colonizers killed in the uprising. The surviving men, including Governor Reginald Harrow, are enslaved as cuckolded laborers, forced to toil in the fields they once ruled. The colonizers’ women, including Harrow’s wife Eleanor and their defiant 19-year-old daughter Clara, are confined to the same squalid stables once used for slaves, now repurposed for Kofi’s breeding agenda. Kofi claims exclusive rights, his raw virility central to the erotic narrative as he impregnates the women, forcing the defeated men to watch. His encounters with Eleanor and Clara are particularly intense, blending dominance and retribution. Some slaves defect, seeking normalcy, but most embrace a revenge-driven society, reveling in their newfound power. Amina, Kofi’s fierce lover, leads the women in maintaining order, her sensuality a unifying force. A messenger is dispatched to deter new colonials with tales of a disease-ravaged colony, ensuring the rebels’ control. By the volume’s end, 36 women bear Kofi’s children, symbolizing the slaves’ triumph. The narrative, steeped in historical details of colonial Nigeria’s exploitation, pulses with erotic tension and themes of retribution. The slaves thrive, their health and vibrancy a testament to their liberation, as Kofi’s vision of a new order takes root, setting the stage for further power shifts in this provocative saga.
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