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Chapter 37 - …Through the Valleys and the Sand…

I-I don't know how much time has passed.

I wandered through lands, across continents—yet the pain never faded. The pain of losing everything I cared for clung to me like a shadow.

The sandstorm was relentless.

My legs ached. But I would not stop.

Through the veil of dust and exhaustion, a settlement emerged in the deep desert.

Shelter. Water. A brief reprieve.

The streets were empty, the villagers hidden away, shielding themselves from the storm's wrath. I sat against a building, using its walls to block the worst of the wind.

At some point, I must have dozed off.

A small hand nudged my arm.

A child.

Before I could react, his mother pulled him away, her wary eyes fixed on me. A stranger in their home.

I pushed myself to my feet and approached the well at the center of the village. The water burned as it rushed down my parched throat, clearing the dryness like a cleansing fire.

Then, a voice.

Soft. Steady. Ancient.

"Young man… your face. You have walked through much in that short existence of yours."

I turned to see an old man. His robes were worn, his figure frail, but his presence felt unshaken.

He smiled.

"Yeah… I guess so,"

I muttered.

He studied me for a moment, then spoke again.

"Why don't you share your story with an old man?"

I hesitated. But what did I have to lose?

So I followed him. Through the quiet village. To a nearby cliffside, where the setting sun bled into the horizon.

And there, beneath the dying light, I told my story.

He listened. Silent. Unmoving.

Even as I spoke in riddles, my voice burdened by memories too heavy to explain, he seemed to understand.

By the time I finished, the sun had vanished.

The night had claimed the sky.

He finally broke the silence.

"Disappearing… what a frightening thing,"

He murmured. His expression was unreadable.

"I have seen much in my life… things lost to time. Some seemed meaningless, but I now know none ever were."

His voice was gentle, yet it carried the weight of something vast—something beyond this moment.

"There is a choice before you,"

He said.

"A hard one."

He paused, then smiled.

"You will figure it out."

And just like that, he was gone.

I was alone on that cliff, left with only his words.

He had given me no answers. But somehow…

A weight had lifted from my soul.

And I knew what I had to do.

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