THE TSAVO MAN-EATERS GHOSTS
Kenya, 1898 The railway stretched like a steel serpent through the scorched savanna, its iron bones humming under the relentless African sun. The workers—Indian laborers, Swahili porters, and a handful of British engineers—moved like ants, driving spikes into the earth, laying tracks toward Uganda. But something else moved in the tall grass. Something that watched. And waited. Lieutenant Colonel John Henry Patterson adjusted his pith helmet, wiping sweat from his brow. The reports had been coming for weeks—men vanishing in the night, their screams swallowed by the dark. At first, the workers whispered of shaitani—demons . Then the bodies were found. Or what was left of them. "Two more last night," muttered a foreman, his voice tight. "The lions… they don’t just kill. They take." Patterson had heard the stories. Lions that walked like men, their manes sparse, their eyes glowing like embers in the firelight. The Tsavo man-eaters. No fear of man, no instinct to f...