Sunday, 25 May 2025

Princess Sheeba

Sheeba was thirsty. She had not had a sip of water for over thirty-six hours. She kept looking at the river flowing next to her. Every time she tried getting close to the stream, she saw a host of hungry crocodiles opening their jaws in anticipation of a meal. Sheeba had a rope tied to her neck and the other end was tied to a big wooden peg. She could move five feet towards the water where the crocodiles floated and another five feet on land, beyond which were hungry hyenas on guard. She was stuck near the peg without food or water. She would survive as long as she just remained where her captors had placed her.

Appia- The Peace Haven

Sheeba was the little daughter of Lion King Ogoru and Queen Owaye. The king ruled over a small patch of grasslands called Appia, in the forests of Serengeti. This patch, possibly, was the happiest place in the wild Serengeti for everyone here seemed happy. The gazelles would roam freely, the giraffes walked tall and the buffaloes grazed without any fear. The reason for this reign of happiness lay in the fact that apart from the small pride of lions, none of the other animals were carnivores. Over the years, King Oguru’s great grandfather had issued a diktat which could be found on the trunks of some of the largest trees here which read…

Every day, two of a kind
Will come from the wild
To His Majesty’s side
Be food for the lion pride
None other shall be harmed
None other shall be hunted 

The other animals found this to be a good order which allowed them a life of freedom. On a rotational basis, two animals were allotted. These two would offer themselves to the King and his kind and hope for a rebirth in the same jungle. The king had an able chimp, Shenzu, would keep complete control over births and deaths for which he had created on dried barks of trees a rule book and a register which were shared with all in the jungle. Based on the rule book, every animal knew when they had to go to the King for becoming an offering. The rules were simple and acceptable to all for it excluded all children below two years and the sick animals. This meant that there was an element of peace in this jungle and those living knew that they could lead a good life and for how long. There was no fear from being hunted and with the rains being usually bountiful, food was readily available for all. The king and his pride offered them stability and protected them from intruders from outside. This arrangement had worked for many a generation and this piece of land was ranked highest in the happiness index of jungle.

Oguru and Owaye did not have a child for many years and then finally Sheeba was born. She brought immense happiness to the royal couple as well as to the jungle for she soon became the darling who would run around and play with all kids and elderly all day long. Forest elders advised the royalty to have more children in hope for a male heir but Oguru was adamant that Princess Sheeba would succeed him. This news had spread to all in their forest belt where the animals were initially shocked but later reconciled and rejoiced the decision. The news had, however, gone beyond and reached the Muwazi pride led by King Swabi which was ferociously protective of lion traditions and aggressive in the field. An emissary was sent to King Oguru’s court to dissuade him from making any change to the tradition. King Swabi had also offered to give away one of his son’s to Oguru to adopt and later anoint him the king. The offer was declined gently but made the Muwazi king furious. How dare Oguru refuse my son? He will soon face my wrath. I shall bring him to his knees and take over his land.

The Muwazi territories had fast expanded in the jungle and slowly they had taken over almost the entire jungle except small patches like the Appia who had resisted their encroachments. The strategy of Muwazis was usually direct… Swabi would go head on with the lion kings of other grasslands and defeat them in a one-to-one fight and usurp their kingdoms. King Oguru was among the few who had long ago beaten Swabi and the latter never forgot his defeat. The Muwazi controlled the land with the help of the hyena tribe who were both wily and dangerous and their crocodile friends dominated the waters. The tripartite alliance was an axis of evil. King Swabi called for an urgent meeting of his close confidants. The core confidants of this group were four huge ferocious lions who could tear an elephant apart in a minute, one hyena and a crocodile. King Swabi spoke out aloud at the war council… This time we will not get into a head on fight at Appia. We will use all our guile and strength equally to ensure King Oguru capitulates. Oguru is himself very strong but his weakness is his daughter, Sheeba. If we capture her, we can negotiate a deal which will force Oguru to relinquish his throne in my favour and once that is done, you can have freehand in exterminating the entire pride of his so that we are left with no future claimants to the throne.

All agreed and, one night, when the animals of Appia were fast asleep, a small select band of hyenas quietly slipped into the grassland and gagged the tiny Sheeba who was startled seeing the ugly hyenas while she was sleeping peacefully with Bingo, the baby elephant. Next morning when the sun came out and all the animals were basking in the sun, enjoying the fresh leaves and fruits, a hyena with a white band round his neck came and asked for King Oguru. On meeting the King, he smiled sarcastically and said…

O great Lord Oguru, I have a message from my peace-loving Lord Swabi. Princess Sheeba is now in our custody and her life depends upon your agreeing to stepping down from the throne of Appia and leaving this forest with your pride. You have the next two days to decide and let my lord know. If you agree, the Princess will be safe and return home but if you were to decide against it and try to act foolishly in doing a rescue act, then you will all meet with certain death, painful and ugly death starting with Sheeba.

Oguru was completely shaken and was about to kill the hyena with one strike but Queen Owaye held him back. O Lord, this is not the time to show your anger at this lowly animal. He is just the messenger. We have a much bigger task of taking a decision about the life of our darling Sheeba and the future of Appia. So, just calm down, think and act prudently.

As the ambassador hyena left the court, a few senior Appia animals came together and expressed their sadness at the fate of Sheeba and told the king to agree to the demands of Swabi. King Oguru put his foot down… No..no..no! We have two days to plan a rescue mission and, surely, if all of us work as a team, as a family, we can bring Sheeba back safely and turn these bloodthirsty warmongers away from our land of peace and prosperity. Collectively we have more power than the enemy. We are peace lovers but if the enemy resorts to such heinous acts, we shall payback in the same manner.

Hail the King… Long Live King Oguru… Long live Queen Owaye and Princess Sheeba…. They all shouted in unison. Down with Muwazis… down… down!

In the next couple of hours, the eagles air reconnaissance force had come back with the information about the exact location of Sheeba’s captivity and the formation laid out by the Muwazis and their allies, the hyenas and the crocodiles. The war council of King Oguru now sat together to think through the various options suggested by different leaders of animal pack who all wanted to be in the forefront of the mission. It took the King a lot of persuasion and tact to manage the council members and then the final plan was made with military precision and detail. This would be a do or die act for Appia.

Now it was time to act, said the King. The two allies of the enemy are dangerous but their loyalty is questionable. We shall in the first phase distract and distance them from the main battlefield. That will leave us with only a handful of lions of the Muwazi clan to deal with. They are both hungry at this point in time and this should not be very difficult to defeat. Shenzu, the chimp said, we shall name our plan as DDD- Distract- Divide- Destroy. We will fight to ensure minimal losses and yet hit the enemy hard.

The gazelles took to the field and started dancing around the jungle. They played around at a place, slightly away from the hyenas but enough to be seen and to be able to entice them. The hyenas resisted making any move for a long time as the Muwazi lions kept on threatening them and asking them to hold their ranks. The gazelles, too, were beginning to feel that their plan was not going anywhere when their leader, Maya, took a decision that was not pre-planned. She went very close to the hyenas as if she was an easy kill. The few hyenas closest to her just could not resist the bait and got up to chase Maya. The hyenas did not know the fact that the leader of the gazelles was not chosen based on their age but rather on their speed or strength… the fastest in the herd was unanimously chosen as the leader of the group. Maya moved swiftly in a loop-like movement, giving the chasing hyenas little chance to hunt. Seeing the failure of their kind, the other hyenas joined the chase and started running after the easy kills that were grazing around. The birds on tree tops and giraffes of Appia saw the hyena movement and alerted the other gazelles, who started running as fast as they could. It did not take the fast gazelles much time to outrun the hungry hyenas who were exhausted and dejected. They turned around to go back to their original position of guarding Sheeba near the stream. They were stumped to see that between the stream and the runaway gazelles, stood an army of elephants, daring the scavengers to come forward and get trampled. Bingo was also standing with the huge pachyderms and seemed very annoyed at the sad loss of his dear friend Sheeba. Plan one seemed to have gone off well with the hyenas completely neutralized.

The Pachyderm Blockade

Now between Sheeba and her freedom stood five Muwazi lions on land and a huge force of deadly crocodiles in the stream who were as hungry as the hyenas since they too had not had a good meal for nearly two nights. Suddenly the crocodiles were distracted by sounds of a hundred thousand hooves… a big herd of wildebeests had come on the other side of the stream and were now jumping across the water. The crocodiles initially resisted any movement away from the point where the little lioness was being held captive but their hunger got the better of their duty. They turned around as a group and like a naval flotilla of submarines, dived into the water to reach the crossing point. No sooner had they put their snouts out of the water, the wildebeests had stopped crossing the stream which meant that there were no more preys to hunt and eat. The crocodiles did not realize that these travelling animal herd had agreed to cooperate and help the good lion king Oguru and his allies to repay for the years of kindness they had encountered, when they used to pass this area at the time of their annual migration, and had never been threatened or attacked. They found Appia, a safe haven. The crocodiles turned around to go back to their original guarding station and, suddenly, found the stream to be overcrowded. The big eyes of the crocs could not believe what they were seeing… a bloat of giant hippos had descended the waters and had blocked their passage back to where Sheeba was. Fighting a lonesome hippo is one thing but fighting a bloat of hippos is something no crocodile could even dare to imagine. They had been outfoxed and were now stranded away from the main battlefield.

The Safe Stream

The Muwazi lions and King Swabi could now see what had happened… they were now all alone and isolated. The evil king ordered his pride to go and hold the baby lioness in their jaws as a desperate move but before the lions could close in, from the tree tops fell a troop of gorillas. A lion is a ferocious animal but even they never dare fight the gorillas with their huge claws and sharp teeth that can bring down the biggest animal in no time. The leader of the gorilla troop, Hagi, went towards Sheeba, cut the rope that held her captive and took her in her arms. The Muwazi lions were shaking with fear as they knew what was coming next…. In came King Oguru and his pride….

For destroying the peace and tranquility of my forest, I can order your killing. As a king my subjects would expect me to do so and deliver justice in a manner that no one dares repeat it against us. You went to the extent of using my cub as a captive to take over my kingdom, something which cannot be pardoned but still I give you one last chance… fight me one-on-one now as lions do or accept your defeat and never set foot on Appia.

Shwabi was completely shaken and knew fighting Oguru would result in his defeat for the latter was far too strong. He accepted defeat without a fight. He quietly put his head down and with his tail between his hind legs walked away. Sheeba jumped out of the big arms of Hagi and ran towards Queen Owaye. The forest erupted in happiness and celebrations of victory happened instantly with animals of all shapes and sizes dancing wildly and singing…

She’s back, she’s back
She’s back home
Her Mama is happy
Her Pappa is happy
For she’s back, she’s back home
We will have a party
A big fat party
Animals are all happy
Birds and bees are happy
For she’s back, she’s back home…. 

Shenzu did a headcount of the forest dwellers when they came for the grand dinner and reported… Zero casualties on our side, my Lord. Hip Hip Hurray!

SS

PS. This is our blog number three hundred and fifty…Hip Hip Hurray! 

13 comments:

  1. Loved the story and the lesson dada. And heartiest congratulations on 350!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Very well written, Sibesh. There are many more folklores involving both
    Serengeti and Masai Mara. Made me nostalgic of the years spent in East Africa.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Delighted to read this lovely tale.

    ReplyDelete
  4. 👍👍👍

    ReplyDelete
  5. Pradeep Kr Sharma25 May 2025 at 13:59

    👍👍👍

    ReplyDelete
  6. 👏🏻👏🏻

    ReplyDelete
  7. Very well packed with ensuing breathlessness. Hip Hip Hurray for the 350th. Let’s all gather for a grand dinner.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Congratulations for the milestone.Thorougly enjoyed the story ...

    ReplyDelete
  9. A fantastic piece of imagination, very well woven into a story.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Enjoyed reading this sir👌

    ReplyDelete
  11. Triumph of good over greed. Enjoyed reading. 🙂
    Congratulations!! Looking fwd to read many more!!

    ReplyDelete