Home / Fantasy / The God of Thunder / CHAPTER 8 The Ribbon
CHAPTER 8 The Ribbon
Author: CreativeMind
last update2026-03-28 13:04:38

Kemi had kept it for five years without knowing why.

She had asked herself the question more than once — usually late at night when the mountain was quiet and honesty came easier in the dark. Why this particular thing? She had left behind everything else. Her small room behind the kitchen. The brass bracelet her mother had given her at sixteen. The leather-bound ledger she had kept for twelve years tracking palace inventory — her handwriting filling every page, the record of a life spent in useful service.

She had left all of it.

But she had picked up a child's ribbon from a courtyard stone in the middle of a massacre and carried it across years and wilderness and twenty thousand steps up a sacred mountain.

She had no answer that fully satisfied her.

Only the sense that some things chose to be kept, and the only wisdom available was to not put them down.

The night Omogun asked about Kike's family, Kemi did not answer immediately.

She made tea first.

This was her habit when something needed to be approached carefully — the ritual of preparation, the deliberate slowness of heating water and measuring leaves, gave both her hands and her thoughts something to do while she organized herself.

Omogun waited. He had learned patience in pieces across five years, and he applied it now — sitting cross-legged on his mat, watching her without hurry, the way the Spirit of Wisdom had taught him to watch things before he reached for them.

When the tea was ready, Kemi poured two cups. She handed him one. She sat.

"Her father's name is Adekunle," she began. "A craftsman. Good with wood — the kind of man whose hands have a particular intelligence that his mouth does not bother competing with. Quiet. Honest. The kind of honest that is not a virtue but simply a nature — he could not have lied convincingly if the kingdom depended on it."

Omogun wrapped both hands around his cup and listened.

"Her mother died when Kike was very small. Fever. Adekunle raised her alone." Kemi paused. "She was in the palace that evening because her father had delivered a carved panel for the throne room — a commission from your father. A gift for your mother, I believe. Adekunle brought Kike because he almost always brought her. She was the kind of child you brought places because leaving her behind felt like leaving behind a piece of your own good judgment."

Something moved quietly across Omogun's expression.

"She was sitting with you on the palace steps," Kemi continued. "I saw you both from the corridor window. You were showing her your wooden horse. She was pretending to be more interested than she was — I could see it from thirty feet away — but she sat with you anyway, which told me everything I needed to know about her character."

Omogun almost smiled. "She was humoring me."

"She was choosing you," Kemi corrected gently. "There is a difference. A child who humors you leaves when something more interesting appears. A child who chooses you stays even when she is pretending." She looked at him. "She stayed until the drums changed."

The fire between them crackled softly.

"When the chaos began," Kemi continued, her voice becoming more careful now, "Adekunle found her immediately. He was one of the first out of the palace grounds — he knew the servant exits, had used them for deliveries for years. He had her by the hand before most people understood what was happening."

Omogun exhaled slowly. Something he had been holding released slightly.

"So she was safe," he said.

"She was safe," Kemi confirmed. "Her and her father both."

A pause.

"They went back to the craftsmen's quarter," Kemi said. "Where they have been ever since. Adekunle kept working — what else does a man do? The new regime needed craftsmen the same as the old one. He took the commissions he was given and asked no questions and kept his head below the level of trouble."

"And Kike?"

Kemi was quiet for a moment.

"Kike grew up," she said simply.

The silence that followed was a particular kind — full rather than empty, the kind that happens when people are sitting inside something together rather than beside it.

Omogun stared into his tea.

"She does not know what happened to me," he said finally.

"No."

"She thinks I—"

"I do not know what she thinks," Kemi said. "I know what I saw that night. She was screaming your name when her father pulled her out. After that—" She shook her head. "I cannot tell you what a child does with that kind of sudden absence. Every child carries it differently."

Omogun set his cup down.

"She was standing in her doorway today," he said. "In the vision. Three guards came for her father and she faced them alone." He paused. "She was not afraid."

"She was afraid," Kemi said. "She has simply learned to be afraid quietly."

"How do you know?"

"Because that is what happens to people who grow up under cruelty without protection," Kemi said. Not harshly — as a fact, the way doctors name symptoms. "They do not stop feeling. They learn to feel in ways that do not show. It is a kind of strength. It is also a kind of loneliness."

Omogun absorbed this.

Then he said: "You kept something of hers, didn't you?"

Kemi went still.

Not with guilt — with something more complex. The stillness of someone who has been seen accurately and is deciding how to respond to accuracy.

"You have mentioned the ribbon twice," Omogun said quietly. "Once when I arrived, once in passing. But you always stop before finishing the sentence. Which means you still have it."

Kemi looked at him for a long moment.

Then she reached into the folds of her wrapper.

The ribbon was more worn than he could have imagined — washed so many times the red had faded to something between rose and rust, the fabric soft with age and handling. It was shorter than a child's ribbon ought to be. One end had frayed and she had trimmed it cleanly rather than let it unravel.

She held it out.

Omogun looked at it for a moment before taking it.

When his fingers closed around it, something happened that neither of them entirely understood — a warmth that was not physical, a recognition that moved through him like a chord resolved. The mountain's blue light pulsed once, stronger than usual. Thunder murmured somewhere above the peak, low and attentive.

He sat with it in his palm and said nothing for a long time.

"You carried this the whole way," he said finally. It was not a question.

"Yes."

"Why?"

Kemi considered this — the question she had asked herself in the dark for five years without a satisfying answer.

"Because you made her a promise," she said at last. "And you were five years old and you were running for your life and you did not get to keep it. I thought—" She paused. "I thought someone should carry it until you could."

The fire burned low between them.

Omogun closed his fingers around the ribbon carefully. The way you close your hand around something you understand the value of — not gripping, not squeezing. Simply holding.

"Tell me one more thing," he said.

"If I can."

"The night we left. When she was screaming my name—" He stopped. Restarted. "Did she know? That I was — did she understand what was happening?"

Kemi was honest because he deserved honesty.

"She understood that you were there," she said, "and then you were gone. Whether she understood why—" She shook her head. "She was five. Children that age understand absence before they understand reason."

Omogun nodded slowly.

"Then she has been carrying an absence," he said. "For five years. Without knowing if it meant anything."

"Yes."

He looked at the ribbon.

"I will tell her," he said quietly. "When I go back. I will tell her everything — that I was there, that I never forgot, that I—" He stopped himself. Reconsidered. "I will tell her what I can tell her. When I can tell it safely."

Kemi watched him with the careful attention she had been giving him for five years — reading the space between what he said and what he meant.

What she saw in his face was not the grief she had been watching manage itself for years.

It was something forward-facing.

Something that had a direction.

She picked up her tea and said nothing more.

Some things did not need commentary.

He slept with the ribbon in his closed hand that night.

Kemi knew because she checked, the way she always checked — one last look before she allowed herself to sleep, the habit of five years that she suspected would never fully leave her even when he no longer needed watching.

His face in sleep was still young. Still the face of a child in many of its arrangements — the particular softness around the eyes that disappears somewhere in the passage to adulthood and cannot be recovered once gone.

But his hand was closed around something.

And his expression had the quality of someone who has remembered, mid-journey, exactly where they are going.

Good, Kemi thought.

She went to sleep.

Above the mountain, the thunder had been quiet all night.

But just before dawn, it spoke once.

A single low roll — not threatening, not warning.

The sound of something that had been waiting a long time

recognizing that the wait was no longer without end.

In the craftsmen's quarter of Egba, Kike woke before dawn for no reason she could name.

She lay still in the dark, listening to the city sleep.

Then she untied the ribbon from her wrist — the habit of nights, so it would not snag — and held it loosely in her fingers.

She did not think of Omogun specifically.

She thought of the palace steps.

The wooden horse.

The boy who had stood up very straight and raised his small hand like a chief and said —

I promise. I will always be there for you.

She had not thought about that in years.

She wondered, briefly and without expectation, where he was.

Then the city began to wake around her, and wonder became a luxury she could not afford, and she rose to begin the day.

But she tied the ribbon back onto her wrist before she did anything else.

She always did.

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