Home / Fantasy / The God of Thunder / CHAPTER 5 Age Eight: The Range
CHAPTER 5 Age Eight: The Range
Author: CreativeMind
last update2026-01-29 22:39:51

The boy Omogun had been was disappearing.

Kemi noticed it the way you notice a candle burning low — not in one dramatic moment, but slowly, in the quality of the light. The five year old who had leaned against her by the fire and fallen asleep mid-sentence was becoming something else. Quieter. Harder around the edges. His eyes, which had once filled with tears easily and without shame, now stayed dry even when she could see the storm behind them.

He was eight years old and he had forgotten how to cry.

She was not sure this was progress.

The Spirit of Thunder pushed him hardest.

Every morning before dawn, Arágbẹ̀ was already waiting — vast and restless, his form crackling with barely contained energy. The trials had grown beyond carrying water. Now Omogun ran the mountain paths until his legs gave out. He climbed stone faces with his bare hands. He held positions of strain for hours while the spirit circled him, pressing questions into the silence.

Why do you train?

For justice, Omogun would answer through clenched teeth.

Who taught you that word?

You did.

Then you do not own it yet. Say it again when you mean it.

He always meant it. He simply could not explain how meaning felt different from knowing, and the spirit never seemed satisfied with the difference.

Kemi watched from the lower chamber, her hands busy with whatever needed doing, her eyes always half on the boy.

She saw the moment things changed.

It was an ordinary morning — or what passed for ordinary on Oke-Àrá. Omogun was running the upper path for the fourth time, his breath ragged, his feet bleeding slightly where the stone had bitten through his worn sandals. The Spirit of Thunder kept pace beside him effortlessly, speaking in that low rolling voice that never once acknowledged the boy's exhaustion.

Faster.

I cannot—

Faster.

I said I cannot—

And I said faster. What you cannot do and what you must do are not the same conversation.

Omogun stopped.

It was not a pause. It was not rest. He simply stopped moving, planted his feet on the mountain path, and turned to face the spirit with something in his expression that Kemi had never seen there before.

Not anger. Something older than anger.

"My father is dead," he said. His voice was very quiet. Very flat. "My mother is dead. I have been on this mountain for three years carrying water and running paths and I still cannot do anything. I could not save them. I cannot save anyone. What is the point of any of this?"

Arágbẹ̀ looked at him.

"Run," the spirit said.

Something broke.

It happened faster than sight.

The air cracked. Not from above — from Omogun himself, from somewhere inside his chest that had been sealed since the night his parents fell. Lightning erupted outward in every direction — wild, uncontrolled, nothing like the obedient flickers the spirits had been carefully cultivating.

It struck the cave walls. It struck the stone floor. It traveled up the mountain's inner passages and blew out through fissures in the rock face with sounds like cannon fire.

A section of the upper chamber collapsed.

Kemi screamed and covered her head as debris rained down. When the dust settled, she looked up to find Omogun standing in the center of a scorched circle, both fists clenched, his eyes blazing silver-white, his chest heaving with something that was not quite breathing.

The mountain groaned around them.

Five of the seven spirits appeared simultaneously — which had never happened before. Their combined presence filled the cave like a physical weight, pressing the air flat.

Kemi could not move. Could not speak.

She had never been more afraid in her life.

The spirits did not speak to Omogun.

They spoke to each other.

In a language that moved through the walls rather than the air, that Kemi felt in her teeth and her sternum rather than her ears. She understood none of the words. But she understood the shape of the conversation.

They were deciding something.

About the boy.

Her heart seized.

She pushed herself to her feet. Her legs shook. Dust and small stones were still falling from the cracked ceiling. She walked forward anyway — through the scorched air, through the pressure of five ancient presences, through every instinct that told her to stay very still and very small.

She walked until she stood between the spirits and Omogun.

"No," she said.

Her voice came out steadier than she felt.

The Spirit of Judgment — Ìdájọ́ — turned its cold attention toward her. When it spoke, every word felt like a verdict.

"Woman. You do not understand what you are interrupting."

"I understand exactly what I am interrupting," Kemi said. "You are deciding whether to abandon him."

Silence.

"He is eight years old," she continued. "He watched his parents be murdered when he was five. He has spent three years on a mountain with no friends, no family, no childhood, carrying water and running stone paths and being told he is not enough. He broke today. That is not failure." Her voice cracked slightly. She straightened anyway. "That is grief. You cannot train grief out of a child. You can only give it somewhere to go."

The five spirits were very still.

The Spirit of Compassion — Ìfẹ́ọkàn — had not spoken yet. Now it moved forward, its presence warmer than the others, like sun on stone after rain.

It looked at Kemi for a long moment.

Then it looked at Omogun, who had sunk to his knees in the scorched circle, the silver fading from his eyes, leaving them dark and exhausted and very young.

"Leave us," Ìfẹ́ọkàn said to the other four.

They went.

The Spirit of Compassion sat — actually sat, folding its vast form down to the cave floor in a way that made it somehow less overwhelming — and looked at the boy.

"You are angry," it said.

Omogun said nothing.

"You have been angry since the night you arrived. You have simply been carrying it in places we were not looking." A pause. "Where do you keep it?"

Still nothing.

"Omogun."

The boy looked up. His jaw was tight. His eyes were red at the edges in the way eyes get when tears have been refused too many times.

"Here," he said finally. He pressed one fist to his chest. "It sits here. Every morning. Every night. It never goes away."

"No," the spirit agreed. "It will not go away. Grief does not go away. It changes shape." It paused. "What you felt just now — that eruption — that was not weakness. That was power without direction. A storm without a path destroys everything equally. The just and the unjust both."

Omogun stared at the scorched floor.

"I could have hurt Kemi," he said quietly.

"Yes."

The word landed heavily between them.

"I could have hurt Kemi," he said again. His voice was different the second time. Smaller. More horrified.

"Yes. And that is why control matters more than strength. Any creature can destroy. Only the disciplined can protect." Ìfẹ́ọkàn leaned forward slightly. "You said you cannot save anyone. But you did not hurt her just now. Some part of you — even in the center of that storm — held back from her. Do you understand what that means?"

Omogun frowned slowly.

"It means the restraint is already inside you," the spirit said. "We are not putting it there. We are teaching you to find it."

The mountain settled around them. The dust had cleared. The blue light in the walls pulsed steadily — patient, constant.

Kemi came and sat beside Omogun without a word. She did not put her arm around him. She simply sat close enough that their shoulders touched.

He did not move away.

After a long time he said, very quietly: "I am sorry about the wall."

"The mountain has survived worse," Ìfẹ́ọkàn said.

"I am sorry about the noise. It probably frightened Kemi."

"Terrified me completely," Kemi said calmly. "I have already forgiven you."

Something shifted in Omogun's face. Not quite a smile. But the beginning of one, perhaps — like the first light before actual dawn.

That night, the Spirit of Judgment returned alone.

It found Kemi by the fire and stood at the edge of the light for a moment before speaking.

"What you did today," it said, "standing between us and the child. You understood the risk?"

"Yes," Kemi said.

"And still you came forward."

"He had no one else."

Ìdájọ́ was quiet for a moment.

"We were not going to abandon him," it said finally. "We were debating acceleration. Whether to move his trials faster given the power he demonstrated."

Kemi looked up sharply.

"But your intervention revealed something we had not accounted for," the spirit continued. "He needs what you give him. Not training. Not power. The other thing."

"What other thing?"

"Someone to come home to," Ìdájọ́ said simply. "Even if home is a cave."

It turned to leave.

"Spirit," Kemi said.

It paused.

"Will he be a good man?" she asked. "Not a powerful man. A good one."

Ìdájọ́ considered this for a long moment.

"That," it said, "depends entirely on whether people like you keep standing in front of him when the storm comes."

It dissolved back into the mountain's light.

Kemi sat with that for a while.

Then she banked the fire carefully so it would last through the night.

And for the first time in a long time, she slept.

Three days later, Omogun repaired the section of wall he had destroyed.

Stone by stone. Without being asked.

The Spirit of Humility watched and said nothing.

But the blue light in the walls burned a little brighter that day.

And somewhere far below the mountain, in a village at the edge of Adewole's new tax routes, a young girl named Kike sat outside her father's workshop and looked up at the distant peak of Oke-Àrá.

She did not know why she looked.

She looked anyway.

Thunder rolled quietly above the clouds.

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