It had been many years since he'd been home. Since he'd sat down with his brother in the evenings.
But yet he walked.
So long ago was the past. So much pain it held.
And so he walked, and walked, and walked into the sunset.
He was a farmer at heart. He had loved his crops, more than he loved his brother, more than he loved his god. He loved his wheat, and his barley, and his orchard, they were all he cared for. Not anymore.
His brother was dead, and so were his crops, everything near and dear to him, gone in the blink of the eyes.
Now he roamed the paths of the world searching for a new home, or companions to aid him in his new calling, he was not sure.
He slowly became a living legend, a passing rumor. Of a man who survived a god's wrath. And now he was going to kill that god.
By morning he reached the river—a wide, slow-moving serpent of silver cutting through the land. Mist clung to its surface, drifting like lost spirits. He knelt at the bank and cupped water in his hands. It tasted of silt and memory.
He had crossed this river once before, many years ago. Back then, he had been younger, hopeful, carrying sacks of seed and dreaming of harvests. His brother had walked beside him, laughing at something trivial. He tried to recall the sound of that laugh now, but it slipped away like water through fingers.
A branch snapped behind him.
He rose, hand drifting toward the knife at his belt.
A man stepped from the trees—broad-shouldered, scarred, carrying a spear. His clothes were patched, his eyes sharp. Not a bandit. Not a soldier. Something in between.
“You’re far from any safe road,” the stranger said.
“So are you.”
The man chuckled. “Fair enough. But I’m here for a reason. Word is, a wanderer passed through the ruins last night. A man who survived the god’s fire.”
He said nothing.
The stranger studied him. “You don’t look like much.”
“I’m not.”
“That’s what they say makes you dangerous.”
A long silence stretched between them, filled only by the murmur of the river.
Finally, the stranger planted his spear in the ground. “Name’s Ralven. I’m with the ones gathering in the mountains. We’re building something—an army, a refuge, a chance. Depends who you ask.”
He waited for a response. None came.
Ralven sighed. “Look. If you’re the man they say you are, we could use you. If you’re not… well, we could still use another pair of hands.”
The wanderer looked across the river. The mountains loomed in the distance, jagged and dark, like teeth waiting to bite.
He thought of his brother.He thought of his fields.He thought of the god who had taken everything.
“I’m going to kill him,” he said quietly.
Ralven blinked. “The god?”
“Yes.”
A slow grin spread across Ralven’s face. “Then you’ll fit right in.”
The wanderer stepped into the river. The cold bit at his legs, but he did not stop. Ralven followed, splashing behind him.
Together, they crossed toward the mountains—toward rebellion, toward destiny, toward a reckoning long overdue.
The legend walked on.