A.V. 510 Winter, the 88th
Eshatoh awoke, as he did many mornings, to the sound of wind-blown sand assaulting his cowhide tent. This was the day for him that most Chaktawe anticipated from their birth. Eshatoh just saw it as the last step he needed to take to get the full autonomy of an adult. After all, who needed the protection of a god or even a guardian spirit if you had been able to take care of yourself without help for the past seven years. No, the only real reason Eshatoh had chosen to proceed with this custom was so that nobody would be sent to track him down when he left.
The desert was a horrible place to live. Sand got into everything. Food was hard to come by. A drop of water was worth more than any amount of gold. With the limited resources, conflict was assured, and thus death was also. In a way, the desert had killed his parents.
Yes, the Eypharians had been an agent of that death, but in the end they were just protecting the little that the desert had granted them. No, it was most definitely the desert that had killed his parents. He wouldn’t let it harm him any more.
Many nights he had listened, entranced as the tribe’s Abaylas told stories of his people’s origin. They had come from a land so rich with water that people could live in one place and merely dine on the fruits of plants—plants crowded together so much that sometimes the ground wasn’t even visible. Most entrancing of all, though, were the stories involving the river. It was a concept Eshatoh’s mind couldn’t understand. He had seen sand flowing in giant drifts, but water was too precious to be wasted in such a manner. If Makutsi had been so generous to the Chaktawe so long ago, why had she withdrawn her hand? What could his people have done that was so terrible that she hadn’t restored the water after the Valterrian?
Those were the questions and thoughts that echoed through his consciousness every moment of every day. Those were the thoughts that spurred him to seek someplace better. And those were the thoughts that made him undertake the Searching in order to be free to seek.
So he rolled over and got up, throwing on his lower body garment. Then, he exited the tent, leaving all of his possessions behind. The Wayhali had been rather vague about what he was allowed to bring with him, so he decided to play it safe and just return to his tent if there was a need.
Surveying the forlorn clump of tents gathered around him in the center of the endless horizon, Eshatoh spotted the small gathering that would be involved in his banishment. Walking with appropriate ceremony and gravity, he approached them.