ARROWHEAD MARK SPOTS OF WITS: MAKING OF A KING. It is the end of one
reign and the beginning of another. Not that easy. The Yorubas do not
automatically transfer the crown from father to sons. In any case there
may be more than one son. There is almost always a competition to wear
the grown. The gods speak. So do the people and the king makers. We
shall see here a keenly competed throne. This play is a battle of wits!
I hope that I have equally responded with wits, entertainment and
accented it with a nice plot. If you've read "Blood and Arrows of Wits",
"Shafts of Arrows Pierce Wits", then follow me to: "Arrowheads Mark
Spots of Wits: Making of a King." Before we find out where it all ends,
the concluding part of the trilogy (book four): "Arrowheads Mark Spots
of Wits: Taking on the Dragon.".