1st of Spring, 514 AV
A prayer for Kihur, my most noble of brothers. Let Yahal make his journey short and the road safe. So shall I pray.
In the distance, the green light of the Watchtower was faint, but unmistakable. There was no doubting the message that the green light carried - there was no mistaking the warming desert days, shorter nights, the blooming of foliage and the exodus of caravans for the now palatable northern lands for anything but the dawning of spring. By Hirem's count, the year was now 514 AV. In the summer of this year, he would become thirty years old, and forever say goodbye to the eternity of youth. Spring was a time of rebirth... yet he felt as if it was just another winter, withering him down until he was naught but a barren husk.
In these dark days, the only season Hirem felt was winter.
A prayer for Liviya, whom I am not worthy for. Let Yahal make her journey short and the road safe... may he watch over her, as she is a true daughter lost in a confusing land. So shall I pray.
The blisters on his feet were not soothed by their immersion in water, but at the very least the stinging pain had long subsided. Dipping his bare legs into the oasis pool, Hirem slapped his thigh and peered above the water's edge to the distant horizon, his dark brow furrowed. Behind him rested his pack and walking staff. Ahead of him lurked nothing. He was confronted with the entirety of the vast Eyktol desert, of which he had explored only a small fraction... but at the same time he was faced with emptiness.
A prayer for Osahar, one of the faithful and my savior. Blessed be his steps. Let Yahal make his journey short and the road safe. So shall I pray.
Another man would consider himself lucky to have found such an oasis as Hirem now reclined in, so soon after his waterskin had completely dried. But to one of the faithful of Yahal, there was no luck; this was a blessing, one that had saved Hirem's life. Indeed, this was but one of many that had saved him from destruction - had Hirem not received these gifts from his wanderer god, he would have long ago laid down and let the sands wash over his bleached bones, convinced that it was for the best. The fact that Yahal continued to intervene proved to Hirem that he yet had a purpose, and so he continued living due to that faith.
He continued living because of his faith. He had nothing else.
A prayer for Shena'doah and Kuhani, my guardians in a time of danger. Let Yahal make their journey short and the road safe. So shall I pray.
Hirem wondered where he would venture to next. Though he had no map, the Benshiran was fairly certain that he was in the northeastern portion of the desert, close to Ahnatep. He had no desire to enter the city, but perhaps passing it and reaching the eastern coast might be enjoyable, for a spell. He had not seen the sea in quite some time. Or maybe he would venture west, and chance upon a caravan heading to northern Endrykas for the spring? Or maybe he would venture nowhere at all, it made no difference to him.
Another evening, then, would be spent at this oasis, devoted to the Penita scrolls.
A prayer for Dhanya, Ari'Yahal, and little Raziel, my fellow wanderers in the desert sea. May they find their destinations and be filled with joy. Let Yahal make their journey short and the road safe. So shall I pray.
First drying his wet hands, Hirem then reached back for his pack and retrieved a Penita scroll. It mattered not which one; he had memorized them all. Though he had never been blessed enough to read the Penita scrolls in full, his travels had nonetheless brought him into contact with a great many of them. Easing himself out of the pool and reclining against the nearby weathered tree, Hirem spread the scroll onto his lap and began to read the sacred Shiber text. "From the winter of the Thorn:" he whispered aloud, "Three man, all alike in dignity, were blessed with their Father's mark, and given his divine strength. Yet two of them turned away from the path of Yahal and took to avarice, lust, and petty ambition. So one can see that power leads to corruption... we are weak to make us humble, and humble to make us holy."
A prayer for the departed Raim and Jaliya, your most devoted servants. I was blessed to name them sire. Let Yahal make their journey short and the road safe. So shall I pray.
Time passed at that oasis, yet Hirem was indifferent. By the time he was finished with his Penita scrolls, the sun was already slipping back towards the earth, having finished its time in heaven. Light was fading in the Burning Lands, and the sands lost their shimmering quality. Restoring the scroll to his pack, Hirem supped on a haunch of preserved meat. Of all the traditions that he might have taken from his home Tent, the one that he regretted leaving behind most was cooking. His own meals were lean and always left him hungry for more.
A prayer for the departed Netanel, your holiest son. I was blessed to name him teacher. I was cursed to shed his blood. Let Yahal make his journey short and the road safe. So shall I pray.
As the Benshiran set up his camp for the night, he realized that it had been eight full years since he had last lived among a Tent. The false Tent that he had created five years ago, in the hopes of gathering an army to take down the Eypharians... it was no true home. For eight years, soon dawning on nine, he had instead been a child of the desert, living on his own and forever drifting. Sometimes, he wondered if he should not return to his people and become another sheep in his Shepherd's flock.
But it would never be so. Hirem stood apart from his people, and blessed were they for the distance.
A prayer for the departed Savra, your wayward child and my once enemy. May she find the peace denied in life within Dira's embrace. Let Yahal make her journey short and the road safe. So shall I pray.
And now came the worst of his sufferings: the nights. Hirem laid in his bedroll, stared up at the canvas of the tent, and shuddered, despite himself. He was not looking forward to the nightmares. Neither did he have doubt that there would be a nightmare, for always a nightmare arrived to disturb his already troubled sleep. They arrived as constantly as the sun, and cast a darker shadow than any Syna could conjure.
No matter how many steps he took to escape, no matter how many leagues he traveled to flee, he would never truly be free of the Prison. Its scars had burrowed deep into his mind, its lashes tightly woven into the skin of his back. Its influence grew like a malignant cancer within his soul. No waking second of his was spent without a memory of the Prison to accompany it, that dark hell infesting his spirit and overriding his person.
In Hai, in that forsaken tomb, he had gained a Gnosis mark of Yahal. Hirem gazed at it often when he had difficulty sleeping, gazed at its majestic beauty and found comfort there. The faint suggestion of wings, emblazoned upon his hand, gave him the strength he needed to endure the nights... but neither was he truly alive. For while Yahal had blessed him with a single mark, Hai had laid a thrice-stronger curse upon him.
Finally, when Hirem no longer had the strength to stay awake, he laid his head onto the bedroll, closed his eyes, and steeled himself for the battle head. For the terrors began as they always did... with a ghastly creature, sitting upon his chest, smothering him with its scaled hands.
A prayer for Hirem, your lost son. He has been called many names; murderer, zealot, thief, liar, fool, weak. Yet he strives only to walk upon the path ordained for him. Let Yahal make his journey long and the road fraught with peril, for he must yet find some purpose within this life. So shall I pray.
So shall I pray.