Home / Fantasy / The God of Thunder / CHAPTER 6 What Wisdom Taught
CHAPTER 6 What Wisdom Taught
Author: CreativeMind
last update2026-01-29 22:54:12

The Spirit of Wisdom never raised its voice.

This was the first thing Omogun noticed about Ìmólẹ̀ — and the thing that frustrated him most. Every other spirit had presence you could feel before they arrived. Thunder announced itself. Judgment pressed against the air like weather. Strength filled a room the way a boulder fills a riverbed.

But Wisdom simply appeared.

One moment the chamber was empty. The next, Ìmólẹ̀ was already seated — always seated, always still, its form like deep water given shape, calm on the surface and unknowably deep beneath.

It never began a lesson with instruction.

It always began with a question.

Omogun was nine years old the first time Wisdom summoned him alone.

He arrived expecting drills. Physical trials. The familiar language of effort and exhaustion that he had come to understand, if not always welcome.

Instead he found Ìmólẹ̀ seated beside a small clay lamp, two bowls of water on the ground before it, and nothing else.

"Sit," the spirit said.

Omogun sat.

"Look at the bowls."

He looked. Two bowls. Both filled with water from the mountain stream. Both identical to the eye.

"What do you see?" Wisdom asked.

"Two bowls of water."

"Look again."

He looked again. Longer this time. The lamp flame reflected in both surfaces. The water was still. The clay was the same color, the same thickness, the same shape.

"They are the same," he said.

"Put your hand in the one on the left."

He did. The water was cold — sharp, clean, the particular cold of mountain water that had never seen sunlight.

"Now the one on the right."

He moved his hand.

And pulled it back immediately.

The water on the right was warm. Not unpleasantly so — almost body temperature, like water that had been sitting in a covered pot. But completely, startlingly different from what his eyes had told him to expect.

He stared at the bowls.

"They looked the same," he said slowly.

"Yes," Ìmólẹ̀ said.

"But they were not."

"No."

Omogun was quiet for a moment, turning this over.

"Is this about my uncle?" he asked.

Wisdom looked at him with something that might have been approval — or might simply have been attention. With Ìmólẹ̀ it was difficult to tell the difference.

"What made you think of your uncle?"

"He looked like a loyal brother," Omogun said. "He was not."

"Yes. And what else does that teach you?"

The boy thought carefully. He had learned by now that rushing an answer with Wisdom was worse than saying nothing. Ìmólẹ̀ did not punish wrong answers. It simply waited, with infinite patience, while you lived inside the wrongness of them until you found your way to something truer.

"That I cannot trust what things look like," Omogun said finally.

"Closer. Try again."

He thought longer.

"That the most dangerous things look safe," he said. "And the most trustworthy things sometimes look — ordinary."

The lamp flame flickered.

"Now," Ìmólẹ̀ said quietly, "you are thinking."

The lessons with Wisdom were nothing like the other trials.

There was no running. No lifting. No lightning summoned or suppressed. There was only sitting, and questions, and the particular discomfort of having your assumptions turned over like soil to see what lived beneath them.

Ìmólẹ̀ taught him to read people before they spoke — the way a man's shoulders carry what his face conceals, the way loyalty sounds different from performance if you learn to listen beneath the words. It taught him that silence was not emptiness but information — that what a person did not say was often the truest thing about them.

It taught him history.

Not the history of battles and victories that the palace tutors had recited. The history beneath that — the patterns. How power corrupted along predictable lines. How good kings became tyrants not through sudden change but through small surrenders, each one reasonable in isolation. How the people around a throne shaped the man who sat on it, for better or ruin.

"Your father was a great king," Ìmólẹ̀ said one afternoon.

"I know," Omogun said.

"You know the story of his greatness. Do you know the story of his blindness?"

Omogun went still.

The spirit continued, its voice carrying no judgment — only the flat, careful tone of someone delivering something that must be received clearly.

"Oba Oluwole trusted completely. This was his greatest strength and his only fatal weakness. He believed that loyalty, once given, did not require watching. That a man who had served faithfully for ten years would serve faithfully for eleven." A pause. "He knew your uncle was ambitious. He chose to love him instead of watching him. He believed love was enough to hold a man's worst nature still."

Omogun's jaw was tight. "He was wrong."

"He was human," Ìmólẹ̀ corrected gently. "There is a difference. Wrong implies he should have known better. Human implies he knew his own heart and assumed others matched it." The spirit looked at him steadily. "Your father was not naive. He was generous. Generosity and naivety wear the same face from a distance. Only the person living inside the choice knows which it truly is."

"He died for it," Omogun said. His voice was controlled. Careful. The way voices get when emotion is being held at arm's length by force of will.

"Yes."

"Then generosity killed him."

"No," Ìmólẹ̀ said. "Adewole killed him. Place the weight correctly. Your father's nature did not murder him. Your uncle's choice did. A man who trips on a stone is not responsible for the stone being placed in his path."

The chamber was very quiet.

Omogun looked at his hands for a long time.

"I have been angry at him," he said finally. Very quietly. As though confessing something shameful.

"At your father?"

"For not seeing it coming. For not protecting himself. For—" He stopped. "For leaving."

Wisdom did not fill the silence immediately. It let the confession breathe.

"That anger is honest," it said finally. "Anger at the dead is one of grief's most secret rooms. Most people never admit they have entered it." A pause. "How long have you been carrying that?"

"Since the beginning."

"Then put it down. Not because it is wrong to feel it. Because it is heavy and it belongs to no one now. Your father made his choices. They were his. Your choices are yours. Do not build your future on the foundation of his mistakes — build it on the foundation of his values."

Omogun pressed his lips together.

"What were his values?" he asked. His voice was rough at the edges.

And so Ìmólẹ̀ told him.

Not the ceremonial values — the ones carved into palace pillars and recited at festivals. The real ones. The ones the spirit had observed across a long reign: a king who argued with his own chiefs when they were wrong and did not mistake agreement for loyalty. A king who walked the market district in plain cloth twice a year so he would not forget what ordinary life felt like. A king who had once, in his third year of rule, reversed a judgment in public because new information proved him wrong — and who wore the embarrassment of it openly, saying that a king who cannot be wrong cannot be trusted to be right.

Omogun listened without moving.

By the time Ìmólẹ̀ finished, the lamp had burned low.

"He sounds like someone I would have wanted to know," Omogun said quietly.

"You did know him. For five years."

"I knew him as a father. Not as a man."

"Yes," Wisdom said. "That is the particular sadness of losing a parent young. You spend the rest of your life meeting them through other people's memories." It paused. "But consider this — the man those memories describe chose your mother. Chose his servants carefully. Built a court that mourned his loss genuinely enough that a servant woman carried his son into the dark and did not put him down." The spirit looked at him steadily. "You have been surrounded by your father's judgment your entire life. You simply did not recognize it."

Omogun looked toward the passage where Kemi's quiet movements could be heard in the next chamber.

Something shifted in his face.

Something that had been clenched for four years opened, very slightly, like a fist remembering how to be a hand.

The lesson he remembered longest came near the end of that year.

Ìmólẹ̀ asked him: "When you take the throne — and you will take the throne — what kind of king will you be?"

"A just one," Omogun said immediately.

"That is an intention. I asked what kind."

Omogun thought carefully.

"One who walks the market district in plain cloth," he said finally. "One who can be wrong in public. One who watches as well as trusts." He paused. "One who does not make my father's mistake — but does not lose my father's heart either."

Ìmólẹ̀ was still for a long moment.

"In nine years of teaching kings and princes," it said quietly, "that is among the wisest answers I have received."

Omogun blinked. "You have taught others?"

"Many."

"What happened to them?"

Wisdom considered.

"Some became great. Some became cautionary tales. The difference, in every case, was not intelligence or power or strength." A pause. "It was whether they remembered, after the crown was on their head, what they had learned before it."

The lamp went out.

In the darkness, Ìmólẹ̀'s voice came one final time.

"Remember, Omogun. Power will come to you. It always comes to those shaped for it. The question is never whether you will be powerful."

A beat of silence.

"The question is whether power will find you ready — or whether it will find you only strong."

That night, Kemi heard Omogun laughing softly to himself as he settled to sleep.

She had not heard him laugh in four years.

She did not ask why.

She simply lay back on her mat and looked at the glowing mountain walls and felt, for the first time since the night everything ended—

something that felt almost like hope.

In the city below, a nine year old girl named Kike was helping her father close the workshop shutters when she looked up and saw lightning flicker silently inside the clouds above the mountain.

No thunder followed.

Just light.

"What is that?" she asked.

Her father glanced up briefly. "Storm in the mountain. Nothing to worry about."

He went inside.

Kike stayed a moment longer, watching the light pulse — slow and steady, like breathing.

She pressed her hand to her chest without knowing why.

Then went inside.

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