Deep in the heart of the Cloud Forest, a baby girl is born: Mila Tzofia Ferro. In the same place, an exceptional gift was entrusted to an ancient group of people called: Sachapuyo, the Cloud Warriors. While Mila’s life leads her away from Amazonas, she will inevitably be drawn back to the Cloud Forest and its secret. But first, Mila must confront her own.
The Norfolks—a family of powerful pharmaceutical tycoons—attempt to procure an archaeological artifact found in French Polynesia. As this remnant from the Cloud Warriors resurfaces, a chain reaction is set off and Mila understands she must come to terms with her roots, the reason for her unusual upbringing, and her unique abilities in order to fight alongside the people she loves.
Deep in the heart of the Cloud Forest, a baby girl is born: Mila Tzofia Ferro. In the same place, an exceptional gift was entrusted to an ancient group of people called: Sachapuyo, the Cloud Warriors. While Mila’s life leads her away from Amazonas, she will inevitably be drawn back to the Cloud Forest and its secret. But first, Mila must confront her own.
The Norfolks—a family of powerful pharmaceutical tycoons—attempt to procure an archaeological artifact found in French Polynesia. As this remnant from the Cloud Warriors resurfaces, a chain reaction is set off and Mila understands she must come to terms with her roots, the reason for her unusual upbringing, and her unique abilities in order to fight alongside the people she loves.
Clouds cloaked the dense green walls of the forest like a veil of soft cotton stretched over the jungle. Day was breaking after a night downpour. The misty aroma of wet earth and blooming plants was overpowered by weak flame and smoke from wet firewood the Quechua army was trying to ignite. The scent lifted from the soil to the leafy canopies and to the sky. Solitary condors glided above the encircled fortress following the scent of death, peering at the carcasses and future prey below.
“Another body for the hungry beast!” Amidor, a Sachapuyo warrior grumbled, throwing another lifeless Quechua into a deep grave prepared for assaults on their peace. “Another unnecessary bloodbath to our name.”
“No, my brother, it’s a curse from the Highest or perhaps Time is fooling us. We have been around too long, reliving the aches of the world, time and time again.” Leo, another warrior narrowed his eyes at the sight of the bodies piling inside the mournful pit next to the fortress’s main entrance. He, with the rest of his people, had rebelled against their own vicious nature and pursued peace with an incessant thirst. “This must be a test. What else could it be, if not to tempt our war-craving souls?”
“Perhaps is it the human heart that is fooling itself,” said Amidor. He close another Quechua’s eyes, recited a prayer, then let the body drop into the pit. “It has been centuries that we have spent in the mists of voracious rebellions and devastating battles, brothers. I close my eyes and see the records of Time: the blood spilled in every age and place to this time. I know it will forever be in our memory. But, perhaps, we have grown too proud of our peaceful lives and ways in this land and forest.”
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At the foot of the great stone snake named Kuelap, the Quechua soldiers continued losing arrows, with no response from the other side of the citadel’s massive walls. Hundreds of Quechuas, accustomed to great exploits, marched around, their hearts pounding as loud as their steps and shouts. It would be a glorious victory for Inca Huayna Capac, Son of the Sun, if they could entice the Sachapuyo into war. If they could only reach the interior, they would drag the Sachapuyo men and women to Qosqo, the sacred city of the Quechuan Empire, for a life of servitude. Moved by this thought, the Quechuas hurled their bronze spears, aiming high with confidence. Much was at stake. Inca Huayna Capac had or- dered the victory. It was a God-given order for every soldier, and a much- needed win for his ruling.
“Proud or blood thirsty, we have made an oath to the Highest. Life over death!” stated Leo, his deep blue eyes followed the length of his spear as he cleaned it. Like every time, he hope it was the last time he removed the crimson stain of a life that had departed.
The Quechua army resembled active ants, unable to even climb up the massive stone fortress. The high walls and clouds around them pro- tected the sublime Sachapuyo from sight. And hid within them the secrets that would guarantee them the victory. In the blink of an eye, the Quechua army would be but dust on the very ground they stood. But these warriors understood death as the sole outcome for those who desire power for the sake of it. Despite their unusual talents and innate bellicose inclination, the warriors embraced peace in the land that hosted them. Until, of course, they were attacked, and even then, they didn’t engage with their full force of their power.
Huayna Capac, the Quechua Inca and his army were losing momen- tum. Hundreds of his loyal men, lifted their bows and arrows and ran up the steep and narrow path, causing a meteor rain over the clouds protect- ing the bastion. They pushed their way up the hill to the entrance gate prepared for just one man at a time, where the unfortunate soul found nothing his death. One stubborn fighter after another raised his battle-axe before a splendid being as never seen in the realm of the living. A glorious giant, like an angel of death, pierced their hearts with his spear.
The natives from the Amazonian villages, not knowing if these be- ings were humans or angels, named them Sachapuyo, a word that, in the local’s indigenous tongue, meant Cloud People. Why had they received
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such a name? Perhaps because of their seclusion inside Kuelap. From its place on the highest mountaintop, covered by impenetrable clouds, the fortress seemed to touch the heavens.
Or perhaps it was the height of the Sachapuyo. They were like their ancestors, hybrid-beings of marvelous seed known as giants at their cre- ation. The Cloud People were from a different place and time, but they adapted and shrank to blend in among the mortals, though they still stood heads above them. Those paying close attention could assert that the Sachapuyo’s exuberance came from a dimension hidden to the hu- man intellect, for each warrior was an exquisite sample of human and divine attributes, and the very reason they kept to themselves, attending only those brave or desperate enough to seek their help.
“When will they understand Kuelap cannot be breached?” said Hadi, intense and dark as a black panther, complained to Leo. Both men were peering out from their high tower. “I designed this place to discourage invasion. They run to their death through the only entrance their limited perception allows them to see. They will never find the other two.”
“Well, if anything, they win the prize for stubbornness. I ache to see them laboring this hard, and for what?” said Leo, hand on the pommel of his sword. His natural desire of war was calling him and he was ready to jump the walls to engage in the fight.
“For a miraculous portal to open.” Amidor commented, climbing to his post now in the second tower. “Around and around, they go as in the Battle of Jericho without the singing and blasting of ram horns.”
“You cannot blame them for trying. They are soldiers trained by our very own brother Ayar. We should not expect anything less,” said Gadiel, the youngest of the selected group of Healers. He stood next to his men- tor, Mikael, the highest Merappe, the oldest of the Healers. Both men peered through the clouds from the front of the lookout.
“We must put an end to this!” Leo roared from his tower. Turning to the oldest Healer, he pressed, “Give us the order, Mikael. Let us finish this vain pursuit now!”
“Stop, my brothers. Although we have the power to do so, we must not,” Mikael said in an ancient form of Hebrew, the language of the Healers. Mikael glanced at the army outside and discerned the intentions of Huayna Capac’s heart, for such was his special ability. The Healer,
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solid like the watchtower in which he stood, stable and robust despite his several hundred years of age, didn’t give in to pressure. Patience was the strength of the wise. Despite his high position in the community, Mikael wore a humble Healer tunic made of fine alpaca wool, and a silver breast- plate with the tree of life and an inscription: CHOOSE LIFE SO YOU MAY LIVE. His square face sheltered a pair of shrewd brown eyes capa- ble of piercing the clouds surrounding the fortress in search of the thoughts inside the Quechua minds. It wasn’t his age or his ability to read the minds or discern the future that earned him respect in the com- munity. It was wisdom, a gift the Highest Power had given him to lead this special breed of beings from every corner of the world. They were to live peacefully and cultivate their botanical knowledge and medicinal powers for healing.
“What do they want?” Hadi sank his dark, green eyes on a fallen arrow and, picking it up, he broke it into particles. “What are they look- ing for by suddenly attacking us?”
“Trouble,” answered Amidor, amused. He examined the arrows on the ground, their fires dying. “Our brother Ayar taught these Quechua well.”
“They want exactly what every ruler wants: land and skills to make their empire grow.” The young Healer Gadiel shook his head.
“Healer Mikael, we have to do something! How many of these fools my spear must pierce?” The warrior at the entrance gate grieved as an- other Quechua soldier died.
“Mikael, we do not have to touch them. If we release the poisonous gas, their deaths would be a bloodless and painless transition to their Uku Pacha, the world below, as the Quechua believe. Give us the order,” insisted Leo, dressed as most warriors, in a woolen tunic, a bronze breastplate, and a pair of leather boots. He drew his sword and awaited the order.
“My brothers, we could finish them now and continue with the rest of our duties unaltered, but must I remind you of our purpose?” Mikael faced the warriors, and their families gathered in the square, awaiting orders. “Those Quechuas are children of our brother Ayar, as Gadiel cau- tioned us. It was Ayar who, after turning his back on us, brought together those nomads and gave them purpose. He knew the ancient world firsthand, as we also do. Ayar established Tawantinsuyo, their kingdom, and although he is not among them anymore, they carry a fragment of his soul. We should honor that.”
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The Healer climbed down the tower to address the people in the square. They had ignored the army outside for days. But it was time to act. “From the beginning those Quechuas have suffered from their desire for expansion and power. We know this thirst very well. You, Xian, and your brothers were in the battle of Rouran Turkic. Aegeus, you still re- member what happened in Ionia. Do you see the similarities between Cyrus and Ayar? Knud, you and your clan participated in many coastal raids until you parted ways and came here with your Healers. Should I go further back in time?
The scars of war on our skin remind us of what we left behind. Now, the natives of this precious land have told us about Huayna Capac’s methods, as many other Incas have done before him. Natives of other cultures have lost their land and their children for a broader Incan Em- pire. Many of those enslaved are out there ready to fight for their ruler. We have seen it before, my brothers; we know where that bloodshed leads. Their violence is taking them down the path to the destruction of their empire. The humiliation and affliction they will endure from wicked men from across the oceans breaks my heart.” Mikael closed his eyes and pause in silence for the fate of the Incan Empire. “But it will not happen today. I assure you, it will not happen by our hands.” Mikael looked down as he finished talking. The children were tugging at his tunic. The Healer gazed at them with a smile. He sat on a bench and let the children approach him playfully, as children often did.
“But could we give them a slight taste of their future?” Leo asked, amused. “I am not talking about killing them. With a little taste of the Soul’s Brew: psychotria viridis shrub and Banisteriopsis caapi vine, we could give them frightening dreams of days to come. Something like that would take them back to Qosqo or Cajamarca in a sprint. What do you say, Mikael?”
The community roared in laughter.
“Good idea! Let us drip the tincture into their water!” said another healer, retrieving from her leather pouch a bottle of medicine. “Our chil- dren will pass on the story of brave warriors defeated without the sword but by sharp bowel movements and aches from Rhamnus purshiana.”
“The Quechuas marched back to Qosqo in triple the time. Why?” asked Leo, his eyes blazing with mischief.
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“Because they had to stop five hundred times along the way!” Ami- dor howled in laughter with the rest of warriors.
The elder Healer cleared his throat, ordering the community’s atten- tion. “What I hear in the leader’s mind alarms me,” said Mikael, unmoved by the community’s humor or the appeals for war from the Quechuas at the other side of the fortress. “Huayna Capac is desperate to secure his rule in the empire, and he suspects we have something extraordinary for his kingdom. Although he does not know the extent of our knowledge, he has heard rumors.” Mikael’s stern voice echoed throughout the community. “It is the warning we knew would arrive one day. We must hide the Gar- den of Life before he or anyone worse finds it.”
While the warriors deliberated, a few stones reached the inside of the fortress, and one hit Hadi on his shoulder. Without a second thought, he picked up the stone and tossed it back out, grinning until Mikael’s heavy gaze fell on him like a boulder. Hadi shrugged and pointed to the pebbles and fiery arrows the opponents were shooting in hopes of reaching the heart of a Sachapuyo, but it never happened. The few arrows that made it past the clouds fell without aim inside the fortress like a weak fire rain, their flames dissipating in the air before reaching anything flammable.
“I know what would stop this now and forever,” Leo declared, his blue eyes burning.
“We have achieved a life of peace for so long. Would we throw eve- rything away for these little stones and arrows? Would poisoning them or breaking their bones guarantee us another century of peace? Our ex- istence and preservation belongs to the Highest.” Mikael pointed outside the walls. “Those Quechuas are faithful to their nature, their times, and their surroundings. Remember the empires we have seen and even fought for? Each time, one worse than the other emerges. Time, my brothers, echoes the past. If you doubt my words, look at these Quechuas. What do you see in Inca Huayna Capac’s eyes? Isn’t it the same desire we saw in the eyes of the others? Watch his thirst for power, isn’t it the same yearning that overthrew the kingdoms of old, time and time again? Yes, their end is near, but as I already said, it is not for us to hurry their fate.” Mikael’s words spread like wildfire through the minds of those listening.
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“So, what should we do?” The warrior at the gate asked, casting an- other unfortunate Quechua into the pit. “We must do something, or they will keep hurting themselves trying to get in the fortress!”
Mikael let his gaze roam through the community. “We will lead them to our water supply and let them figure out how to cut our water flow to force us to come out of the fortress. Then we will honor them with a satisfying fight while we close the Garden of Life, the laboratory.” Mikael turned to address the astonished community. “Wisdom tells me that our knowledge has exceeded our time. We must hide the laboratory now. Gadiel! Leo! Hadi! Amidor!” the Healer called, standing up.
“Here we are, Healer.” The warriors ran to stand before the Healer. In the square they were surrounded by every member of the bastion.
“The four of you will accomplish a great task! Go to the Sacred Gar- den of Life and close its walls as planned for this time. After you complete your task, go to Angel Mountain. The hideouts are ready.”
“What will happen to you? To the community?” Hadi asked, deep green eyes moistened by sadness. He gazed at the friends he would leave behind.
“We will keep the Quechuas occupied, fighting as simple mortals with no help from special powers or plants to weaken them,” Mikael answered before addressing the rest of the community. “My brothers and sisters, you are free. Choose your path, navigate the oceans, find new lands! Here there is only servitude.”
“Would this Inca with such a mockery of a battle force us to move? Just like that? We have our abilities and weapons to give them a good scare. Let’s end this now! I do not see the need to break our community,” Hadi bellowed like a gigantic tiger. He met the gaze of the little ones born in time of peace, those who knew nothing of blood or war beyond what they had been told. Kuelap and the Sacred Garden of Life were their home.
“Brave warriors, it is not about them or us, but about the Sacred Garden and the secret the Highest gave us. Once people understand the magnitude of our work in the laboratory, as it often happens with power, it will persuade hearts to take it. It will poison their human consciences and turn what is good into evil. Remember what our ancestors taught us: power is nothing more than a mirage, a fortress of sand that easily crum- bles, destroying everything within and around,” Mikael said, burdened
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by centuries of history. “Life on this planet showed us that there is a place and a time for everything. It would be a great arrogance to think we are the only ones of our kind left and that our seed will die today. I assure you as it is the promise of the Highest that when the time is right, other warriors of light will come together. They will know what to do with the Sacred Garden and our work.”
“But our people! Our families!” cried some men and women holding on to their children and glancing at the stone homes and gardens and the forest wrapping them in green and beauty.
“My brothers and sisters, choose the freedom presented now. Leave and start anew, for if you stay, you must surrender to these common men,” pleaded Mikael, embracing his people with his gaze. He received their anxious thoughts and bore in his heart the weight of their aching souls. “Know that no matter where you live, you will prosper with the land that hosts you. The Highest is with you as He has always been. Use your knowledge for a good pursuit and flourish!”
Everyone fell silent, weighing in their minds the past, the present, and the future. The battles they fought in the ancient world were the reason they had set out on a great odyssey overseas in search of a place to pursue peace. They had passed on their experiences from one generation to the next so young warriors could seal in their minds their divine origin and the devastation that violence caused. The hybrid warriors, half angels and half human, had navigated the oceans in vessels made by the High- est’s instructions. They had sailed the world until the sea joined a water serpent called the Amazon River. The land and water there was so pure and so abundant with vegetation and high mountains, that the ancient warriors settled. But the day to part had arrived. Some Cloud People took their children and left. Those who remained stood by Mikael’s side—they were old warriors, too tired to move around the world again.
Outside, Inca Huayna Capac and his army kept up with their in- citement, oblivious to the decisions being made inside Kuelap’s walls. Time seemed to stop. The stubborn attack of the Quechua fighters at- tacked stubbornly and tirelessly despite the futility of their attempts. The wind danced through the forest and carried their shouts as a warning throughout the region. The sun was high in the sky, but the fortress re- mained covered by a thin fog like a delicate cotton curtain protecting the watchtowers and treetops inside the walls.
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Gadiel, Amidor, Hadi, and Leo stood in front of Mikael, ready for their mission. The High Healer handed them a small bottle of elixir pre- pared in the Sacred Garden, the botanical laboratory where Healers worked to understand the power in plants and produce cures for ailments afflicting the world. It was this House of Life that the four were set out to protect.
“Drink it when you are inside your hiding place. This blend of Atropa belladonna and valerian roots will help you endure the passing of time and remain unaffected by it in every way. Its effect will vanish the minute intruders open the sarcophagi. You must believe it to be a sign that the Sacred Garden is in danger, and your time to fulfill your purpose has come.”
The Warriors received the bottles of tincture and kept them safe in their leather satchels. Then they bowed their heads, opening their minds for the Healer to search inside. Mikael put his hands on their heads and bowed with closed eyes, almost forehead to forehead. He listened to their fears and concerns but also to their hopeful courage. After discerning their thoughts, Mikael dried his eyes, knowing they were the right war- riors for the time-bending task. The Healer bid them farewell, placing his right hand on the right shoulder of each warrior one at a time.
“Gadiel, youngest Healer.” Mikael looked straight into Gadiel’s al- mond-shaped amethyst eyes. “May the peace of the Highest be upon you, my brother Healer!”
“Peace, Healer,” answered Gadiel, bowing down to accept the blessing.
Leo, Hadi, and Amidor received the same blessing and farewell from the elder Healer. Heads lowered, they turned and left without looking back.
The four men rappelled down the bastion’s massive back wall and hurried through the beaten trail, cutting through the thick of the jungle, each with a breaking heart, but a mind fixed on the mission. They rushed swiftly and nimbly, sidestepping mosses and ferns aside, and thick tree trunks until they reached the edge of the raging Marañón River. They jumped into the wooden rowboats Healers used for their travel from Kuelap to the Sacred Garden. Aided by experience and strength, they braved the savage current, water twirling and foaming around the boats, and cut through to the other side.
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“From here we have a day’s journey, brothers!” said Gadiel, shaking the water that splashed onto his long alpaca-wool shirt, which was sealed with a thin layer of beeswax. Their leather trousers and boots were wet, but they didn’t care. The natural materials were water resistant, easy to dry, and light to carry despite the rainforest’s moist environment.
The four Sachapuyo darted through ancient trees dressed in thou- sands of sprouting orchids and paradise plants on their branches. Curious monkeys, capybaras, and jaguars observed the runners from a safe dis- tance, cautious but unperturbed. The air was humid with a trace of wet forest, blooming plants and rotting fruits: raw life to breathe.
The warriors entered the complex through the massive stone walls draped in all colors of mosses and epiphytes. Thousands of orchids cheer- fully spread long and wide, coating every space and crack on the rocks. It was the House of Life, their Sacred Garden, the hidden laboratory where the ancient healers worked without rest.
They were immersed in their curiosity and the desire to further their understanding and learning. The Healers experimented, analyzed, and blended local plants and the foreign ones they brought from their homes around the world where they had been. The Healers worked with careful minds, knowing well the tempting power of life and death entrusted to them by the Highest. Every discovery, study, and research was carefully cataloged and kept with great zeal in paper made out of the inner bark of woody and leafy plants like banana, fig, walnut, hibiscus, mulberry, as well as grass like the papyrus, which some Healers brought from Africa. But moved by losses of information through fire, the ancient Cloud Peo- ple had also stored their knowledge on thin, portable stone tablets. In this way, they ensured their knowledge and wisdom would pass on to all generations of Healers.
“Peace, Healers.” Gadiel announced their arrival to the group work- ing in the herbarium, where there was a delicious scent of geranium, sage, and stevia.
“Peace, Gadiel,” a Healer answered, grinning at the sight of the youngest Healer in the community. “I have something to show you, Gadiel. But what brings you here today?” the Healer asked as the rest of the delegation entered. Every Healer in the garden stopped their activities.
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“The Quechua army is trying its luck again,” Gadiel replied, under- standing the Healers’ worried gazes. “But the time has come.” He made his way through the natural laboratory, followed by the Healers. He crossed the large herbarium, then the arboretum where trees and shrubs were sharply organized by their respective taxonomic groups.
“What do you need? We have something potent you could use in the battlefield,” one of the Healers said, prepared to go in search for the formula he had developed.
The delegation and the Healers walked from the laboratory to a house at the other edge, far from the Sacred Garden. There were people from different tribes, those brave and desperate souls that dared to seek help from the Cloud People. They waited their turn to be assisted while some Healers examined the sick and prescribed their remedies. They lifted their surprised gazes and stopped their labor at once to listen.
“Healers, please, finish attending the people, send them home, and come join us for a meeting,” commanded Gadiel, making his way through to the natural chambers in the complex to stand where everyone could hear him.
“Mikael has seen the times. The Garden of Life is no longer safe.” Gadiel faced his audience, who had been working at the treatment cen- ter. Every Healer stood by a clearing where they held their meetings next to a pond. “Mikael has directed us to hide this House of Life before oth- ers try to use the knowledge stored here for their advantage. Each of us knows firsthand what the rapacious nature of the human heart was, is, and will be. We came from a world of struggle and bloodshed. We un- derstand the danger of having life and death in our hands.” Gadiel gazed at the vastness of their garden. “Today we close the laboratory until the Highest brings us back. You are free men and women. Sail the seas again, create a new life, or, if you so wish, stand by Mikael in Kuelap.”
“It is for the Highest to give and to take away. It’s heartbreaking, but we knew this day would come!” the Healers answered. They divided into groups and moved swiftly through the green corridors, preparing the chambers for closure.
“The knowledge entrusted to us will remain in you and inside this jungle. Go in peace, Healers!” Gadiel addressed his fellow scientists, feel- ing their pain.
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“Once we set these walls in motion, the vegetation will finish the job,” declared Hadi, pulling down handles attached to the rocky walls that served as levers and immediately the earth trembled in protest while the walls slid with a rumbling sound until they interlocked in position and disappeared beneath a living green veneer.
The Healers departed—some to sail the seas and some to fight as mere humans by Mikael’s side. And the four chosen marched down the unmarked roads. They delved into the virgin forest until Angel Moun- tain was in view. At the foot of the mountain, they closed their eyes for a short rest before facing the rocky giant and the climb to their hideout: the sarcophagi embedded in the rock.
Back in Kuelap, the Sachapuyo warriors offered Inca Huayna Capac and his army a convincing fight worthy of the Quechuas’ prideful hearts. Yet, the price the Sachapuyo, Cloud Warriors, paid to protect the House of Life was high.
“Courage, my brothers and sisters, courage! This grievance will not last long,” said Mikael to the warriors remaining by his side.
Some of the Sachapuyo—half-angel, half-human—relinquished their special abilities and powers to become mere humans. They allowed the Quechuas to take them as trophies to Qosqo, the Center of their World, the holy city of the Tawantinsuyo Empire. But as Mikael had foreseen, a band of criminals arrived to vanquish the wrongfully called new world in the name of a queen and a god. Through gunpowder, sav- age forced labor, and smallpox, they spread death through the land.
This army, heart-sickened by insatiable greed, made a corpse of anyone who stood in their way. They looted the land and exported precious metals and treasures to Spain. Thus the Crown grew stronger among their neigh- boring kingdoms, becoming a golden bridge in the trafficking of gold and silver. Nevertheless, what the Spanish monarchy gained with blood and de- ceit, with blood and deceit their treasures were taken from them.
As the elder Healer Mikael had predicted, the end of the Incan Em- pire came to pass. Sapa Inca Huayna Capac, Son of the Sun, ended his days drinking from a bloody cup of violence. And the Spanish conquis- tadors, Sons of the Catholic Crown, after falling from their bridge, were never able to regain power or wealth.
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But the real golden treasure, the House of Life, the Sacred Garden of Healing and science, hidden in the jungle, was never found.
CHAPTER 1 AMAZONAS, PERU, 1985
Armies of ancient trees supported crowns of copious vegetation. Vines tangled with diverse, luscious greenery which descended, ascended and hung from everywhere. This botanical kingdom also hosted other living creatures which were capable of leaping, gliding, and flying. Life in the cloud and rainforest was raw and pure, and as symbiotic, as flora and fauna inside Mamapacha, Mother Earth’s womb.
The fauna provided food for the soil, and in return the flora supplied fruits, seeds, and flowers. The uneven canopies, with their billions of leaves, produced power for the forest and the planet. Each leaf was a miniature solar converter that transformed atmospheric carbon dioxide and water into precious oxygen for all.
It was a sweet and wild disorder surrounding the Bosco house, in the heart of Amazonas, the Cloud Forest. Built with wood, mud, and rock from the site itself, the house blended into its green environment. The high walls and stairs that split the house made the second floor the largest and highest treehouse in the area. The elevation provided the fam- ily with a breathtaking view far and wide of the jungle, and to Tzofia Bosco, an old Healer, the ability to collect out-of-reach fruits and flowers for medicinal potions.
Fern and lemongrass traced a path to the house’s entrance. They min- gled with blue hydrangea and delphinium. Dandelions and grape hyacinths intertwined with yellow dahlias, yarrows and marigolds merged with the front garden carpet of vibrant azaleas, narcissus, and irises. Bell- flowers hung, and on the ground, anthuriums and asters illuminated the road to the door in reds, yellows, and purples. Butterflies, bees, and hum- mingbirds coasted from one flower to the next during the day, and round armadillos and bears found their sweet treats at night. In the gardens around the house, short fruit trees delimited the ample spaces for the big- gest—yet unknown—medicinal herbarium available in the world.
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Despite the Bosco family’s wealth, accumulated through centuries as scientists in old continents and merchants navigating the seas, the house was simple. It had ample windows and doors all leading to the gardens encircling it and to the canopies above. The extra rooms in the house were for people who made the journey to find the cure for their ailments as their ancestors did, and sought help from the Sachapuyo Healers.
Tzofia cared for whomever found their way to her, as the Cloud Warriors before her did. Tzofia learned how to treat many diseases, stor- ing tablets and scrolls left by other Healers before her in an area apart and known to her as the Sacred Garden, the Healer’s laboratory. And when the sick offered payment for her help, she never accepted it. The medicine she used, Tzofia would answer, was part of their land, part of the world. It was a Sacred Garden, where one living creature taught an- other the sanctity of life.
But, one day, inside the green walls of the Bosco home, two lives struggled for existence.
“Push, Flora, push! Breathe, and push harder! We are about to lose him!” a middle-aged midwife shouted, wiping the sweat from her wrin- kled forehead with the back of her hand. In all her years delivering babies, she had never seen one fight so hard to remain inside the womb. The woman checked the clock on the wall. The baby had to come out now. She placed her hand on Flora’s belly with great care. “Let’s do this again! Please, give that baby a push before he runs out of oxygen!”
Flora’s body was soaking wet. Large beads of sweat rolled down her tired face. But she followed the midwife’s commands with great effort. She had been in painful labor for several hours already, and her strength was running out, but she wasn’t ready to give up. As from the beginning of her pregnancy, her prayer continued to be: the baby’s life over her own.
Flora did as she had from the beginning of the deadly race. She per- sisted, refusing to back down despite the somber prognoses of the many doctors who saw her. Each expert had expressed their concerns as people of science, foretelling her failure to give birth unharmed. They told Flora that she was recklessly playing with her life, that the fetus she was carry- ing inside of her was calling her death.
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After months went by and Flora’s intractability became clear, the last doctor to see her gave her an ultimatum: it was her life or the fetus’s. It was necessary to remove her unborn child like a cancerous cell, the sooner the better. But Flora rejected this advice, as she had rejected all previous advice. So the doctor let her go. He didn’t want their blood on his hands.
“My love, push or the doctors’ predictions will become true!” David Bosco begged, caressing his wife’s face gently and holding her hand, seek- ing courage for both of them.
With every muted cry from Flora, David wished to trade places. He concealed his fears as best as he could, begging God in his heart, to keep him strong for his wife and baby.
“Hold on, my love. Hold on to my hand, my Flora. We’ll go through this together!” David said, frustrated with the fact that he couldn’t do anything, although he normally was a man of action. But in such a dark hour, even words that in other times gushed free, like the great river surrounding them, today were few.
Flora struggled to utter a sound. “The baby is so stubborn. He just doesn’t want to come out!”
“Grandmother, is there something else you can do for her? For us?” David asked Tzofia as she walked into the room. She infused the room with the fresh scent of chamomile and sweet herbs as she had been walk- ing in her garden. She had been talking to the Highest, the Great Healer and thanking Him for the instant with her great-grandchild in some sphere of Time that the Highest had granted her.
Tzofia took her place at the other side of Flora and regarded her grandson kindly with her caramel eyes. Tzofia fixed her tender eyes on the mother, drying Flora’s forehead with a lavender-scented towel.
“Keep calm, David. Remember, Flora and the baby have my Healer’s blood running in their veins. It doesn’t prevent them from suf- fering, but it sustains them as they go through this battle. Flora will overcome this test, and the child she carries will be born when the time to embrace the light comes!” Tzofia Bosco answered, holding Flora’s hands in her own.
“Please, Tzofia, if I don’t make it today,” whispered Flora, clinging to the elder’s hand, “see that my baby...” Her contractions began again and the midwife commanded her to push.
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E. I. LANDA
Tzofia held on to Flora’s hand. “There is nothing to fear, child. Nothing to fear.”
Flora Ferro was a strong woman, but her spacious and loving heart was a sickly organ from birth. If it were not for Tzofia Bosco, nine months of arduous tenacity to maintain the tiny life in her womb would have killed her. The elder cared for the mother during the last months of her pregnancy after the couple left noisy Lima and settled in Tzofia’s jungle home, in the region the Peruvians called Amazonas. Tzofia shared her Healer blood when Flora’s ran weak, and cared for her heart with the medicine she prepared from the plants in her garden.
Flora fell back on the bed. Her wet back felt cold and sticky. She gazed at her husband’s tears and at Tzofia nodding in understanding. She pushed resolutely, hearing the midwife’s shouts and pursing her lips with courage.
The little being inside the womb listened to the excited voices coming from outside. Frantic commands resounded in the tiny space the baby had used for nine long months. The echoes from the world unknown demanded a fast descent through the tunnel, but the chamber was too comfortable to abandon for an uncertain promise.
The baby resisted the coercion for several hours, but the drum of its mother’s heart grew weaker. It slowed down and became irregular. The womb oscillated and pulsed violently. It expanded and narrowed as if preparing for a forceful eviction.
Suddenly, engulfing lights disturbed this pleasant darkness. The baby became overwhelmed. It dropped into the arms of a delicate woman with a frail countenance who studied her little one with the feebleness of a soul leaving her shell. The baby, moved by sadness and exhaustion, lowered its guard. The tiny soul stopped resisting, and in that fraction of time, she traveled through a narrow canal, leaving the womb. So, with the early-morning sun sneaking in through the curtains, a life came into the light.
“It’s a girl,” announced the midwife, devoid of emotion. In the local culture, couples considered that having a firstborn son was considered the first of God’s blessings.
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WARRIORS OF THE SACRED GARDEN
“Welcome to the light, precious one!” said Tzofia, holding the new- born girl in her arms. She kissed her wet, little forehead, and keeping her tight against her chest, the elder offered a prayer of gratitude for the great miracle of life.
“Here, Flora. Look at the great soul you fought to bring into the world!” The elder gave the baby to her mother.
“My little wonder!” whispered Flora tenderly, feeling the baby’s soft skin against her own, both bodies wet from labor.
David sat on the bed. He kissed Flora and embraced her tightly while caressing his daughter’s cheek.
“Let’s give you some rest while I clean this beauty,” Tzofia said gen- tly, receiving her great-granddaughter and taking her to a basin readied with warm water.
“I knew you, my dear,” Tzofia said to the newborn in her ancient language, sponging away the blood and remains of birth. “Our paths crossed when we were about the same age. Don’t ask me how. The deal- ings of the Highest and Time are unknown.” Tzofia recalled, marveling at the event she was allowed to see in her garden. It had been several years into the future for the baby, and hundreds of years back in Tzofia’s past. She wrapped the baby in a delicate cotton cloth and handed the little one to the warmth of her mother and father.
“Tzofia, would you please name our daughter?” asked Flora.
“I thank you, my children, for such an honor. But it is the father who names the child.” The matriarch placed her hand on David’s shoul- der, squeezing it gently. “My grandson, take your place.”
David embraced mother and daughter. “You are my life,” he said earnestly, “I knew and now it’s confirmed, nothing in this world would matter much to me as the two of you.” He paused to think as if frozen in time, his emerald eyes locked on his baby. “Here it is, your first, most important moment in this world.” He caressed his newborn’s cheeks. “I was raised with the belief that a man is his name.” He glanced to the elder and his wife. “And the best or worst thing that can happen to him is his name. Here is the importance of a good name, my daughter. There- fore, I name you Mila Tzofia Ferro. Your name means servant warrior, wisdom, and iron. You will be brave, no doubt. Iron wrapped in the silk of wisdom, just like your mother. Fighting for your birth, she taught us
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E. I. LANDA
about courage and the power that comes from loving even in the direst of times. Please, remember what your name means. Life will make sure you live up to it, and perhaps even more.”
And with those words, David sealed the rest of Mila’s existence.
Mila, a girl with a sharp and curious mind, spends her childhood exploring parts of the world alongside her mother. She learns new skills, conquers challenges and faces terrible loss, all of which ultimately create the strong, intelligent young woman she grows to be. But in her heart, one question remains; what are her roots and where do they lie? Her story is trapped by secrets she must uncover in order to learn who she really is and what she is capable of.
In the first couple of chapters we get to see Mila at various points during her childhood, in which elements of her future characteristics are sprinkled in, as well as some subtle foreshadowing. Mila is a curious child with a thirst for knowledge. She asks many questions of the world around her, even theorising on the answers herself, always learning. Occasionally, I found her language doesn't reflect that of a six-year-old, even for an extraordinary child such as Mila.
Landa presents the reader with a colourful, atmospheric, sensory delight. Her rich and powerful imagery creates a beautiful environment to escape to, in addition to further enhancing the detailed world building that has been clearly and carefully considered. The author integrates real moments in history, including personal experiences, into this fictionalised world. This heightens the culture and tradition the reader is exposed to within the prologue and continued in the story as it progresses. It also serves to enrich the characters backstories.
Tangled throughout the text lies this question of roots. Identity and family trees are mirrored by the fascination and importance of plants and their own roots. The themes of nature are juxtaposed with the rise of technology and its advancements, yet both share an element of growth and discovery. This weaves all the characters together; and oh, we are truly spoiled with the diverse mix of characters we have been given! A select few of these characters are gifted with a unique ability which lends itself to further the plot with secret societies and dangerous missions.
The path to finding yourself is something everybody will experience at some point in life, allowing readers to see and discover a part of themselves in Mila's story. I feel like the book would benefit from a further edit to fix the small, yet infrequent mistakes, and to tighten up the story. Nevertheless, this is an exciting tale with a little bit of something for everyone to enjoy: action, love, mystery; and carries an important message, as any good book should. The world always needs more superheroes, in any and all shapes and forms.