Distance was a thing that could be felt. A point came when map or star was meaningless, when the heart knew how far it had strayed. A single man standing in unending sand, Abashai could feel the enormity of the space as never before. He was passing beyond all the familiar crags and wells into territories that had no names.
High dunes softened Abashai's horizon line, shading him like waves. This vast land shifted and changed unseen by mortals. Superfluous beauty rose and died on the sand without witness: hues and shapes conjured by the mechanical turning of the earth. Did glory glow and fade here for the gods alone?
The gods, an uncomfortable thought. A Rapa had baptized Abashai in just enough knowledge of Yahal to sustain him, but he was not full. Was there ever fullness in this faith, or would he be led about by the nose until he could not enjoy the bounty? Yahebah's glories were built long after Biyram died, and the old man never saw his people grow great. The doubt was planted in his thoughts as Abashai climbed the final dune.
Rolling sand finally gave way to ocean like flatness, disturbed only by a lonely gathering of stones. The gathering of stones grew into a red monument and the monument became a prelude. Solidifying in the shimmering heat were the Redstone formations.
They grew more magnificent and unkind as the day labored on. When Abashai finally reached their ruddy feet, weariness had winnowed into his joints.
Here, the terrain was more generous to life. Scrub was tufted between stones and the canyons echoed with the clop of goats' hooves. Smoke even curled from a plateau twenty feet above his head.
"Who's there?"
A silhouette accompanied the question, bending over the ledge. It was a feeble man with clothes that looked like they had been raked over claws. His beard was shamefully short for his age and his head was shorn, but there was a quickness in his expression that argued against madness.
"Come, sit with me," he waved his hand, "Thief or traveler, you can plague me no more than I have already been."