The mountain had seasons that did not match the world below.
Kemi had noticed this early — the way Oke-Àrá held its own rhythms, indifferent to whatever the sky was doing beyond its slopes. It rained here when the valley was dry. It was still here when storms hammered the plains below. The blue light in the cave walls brightened and dimmed on a schedule that answered to nothing she could identify. The spirits called it alignment. She called it disorienting. But she had stopped arguing with the mountain's nature three years ago, around the same time she stopped arguing with Omogun's. He was twelve now. The boy who had arrived on the mountain small enough to carry had become something harder to measure. He was tall for his age — the training had lengthened him, drawn him upward the way trees grow when they are competing for light. His face had lost its last traces of pure childhood softness. His hands were calloused. His eyes had settled into a steadiness that unsettled adults who were not expecting it from someone his age. He was still, in many ways, a child. He laughed at things that struck him as funny without checking first whether laughter was appropriate. He still came to find Kemi when he had nightmares, sitting near her without waking her, simply needing the proximity of someone who had never betrayed him. He still asked questions with the relentless appetite of someone who had decided that ignorance was the most dangerous thing he could carry into adulthood. But the rage that had collapsed the cave wall four years ago had been replaced by something quieter and more controlled. Not extinguished — contained. The way a forge contains fire: deliberately, usefully, with the understanding that the heat was the point. The Spirit of Thunder had noticed. And so the trials changed. "Today you run," Arágbẹ̀ said. Omogun had been running the mountain paths for seven years. He had long since stopped treating this as an announcement worth responding to. "Run where?" he asked. "Up." He looked at the upper path — the one that switchbacked across the mountain's face toward the peak, the one the spirits used freely but had never directed him toward. He had assumed there was a reason for that. "The upper path," he said. "You have never—" "Today," the spirit repeated. Omogun looked at the path. Then he ran. The first hundred steps were familiar — the burn in his thighs, the deepening of his breath, the settling into a pace his body had learned to maintain across long distances. He had run every path on the mountain's lower face so many times he could have done it without sight, navigating by the particular sounds of each section, the feel of different stone under his feet. The upper path was different. It was steeper than anything below — not gradually, but immediately, the incline demanding a different kind of effort within the first twenty steps. The air thinned noticeably. The temperature dropped. The stone underfoot changed from the weathered familiarity of the lower paths to something rawer, less worn, as though very few things had ever passed this way. By the two hundredth step his lungs were arguing with him. By the three hundredth, his legs were joining the argument. The Spirit of Thunder kept pace beside him without apparent effort, which Omogun had learned to stop finding infuriating and simply accept as the spirits' particular form of honesty about the distance between where he was and where he needed to be. Do not slow, Arágbẹ̀ said. "I am not slowing." You are managing. Managing and running are not the same. "What is the difference?" Managing is running while calculating how much you have left. Running is running. A pause. Stop calculating. Move. Omogun stopped calculating. Something shifted. It happened around the four hundredth step and he felt it before he understood it — a change in the quality of his movement, as though something that had been resisting quietly had simply stepped aside. His legs stopped reporting pain and started reporting information. His breath stopped fighting him and started working with him. The path stopped being something he was climbing and started being something he was reading — each stone, each shift in grade, each turn arriving in his awareness just ahead of his feet so that his body responded before his mind finished processing. He was no longer running the path. He was running. The wind picked up as he climbed — not the passive wind of altitude but something directed, purposeful, pressing against him from the front as though testing. He leaned into it. It pressed harder. Something ignited in his chest — not anger, not desperation. Something cleaner. Something that felt, for the first time in his life, purely like joy. He pushed back against the wind with everything he had. And the wind — — lost. It happened in an instant that lasted much longer than an instant — the resistance vanishing, the wind reversing around him rather than against him, and Omogun suddenly moving at a speed that had no comparison in his previous experience. The mountain face blurred. The upper path unrolled beneath him in seconds rather than minutes. The peak — distant and cloud-wrapped and forbidden — lurched closer at a rate that made his eyes struggle to process what his body was doing. He ran through the clouds. He came out the other side. He stopped at the mountain's peak, breathing hard but not broken, and looked out at the world. He had never seen it from this height. Egba Kingdom lay below him — small from here, its palace a dark shape among lighter ones, its market squares reduced to geometric patterns in the morning haze. Beyond it, other kingdoms stretched toward the horizon, their boundaries invisible from this distance. Rivers caught the early light. The great forest that had seemed impenetrable from inside it was, from here, simply a dark patch among many. The world was so much larger than the mountain. He had known this. He had not felt it until now. The Spirit of Thunder arrived beside him without having climbed — simply present, the way spirits were present. For a moment it said nothing. Omogun looked out at Egba. At the palace. His jaw tightened. "I could reach it," he said. "At that speed. I could reach the palace in—" "No," Arágbẹ̀ said. The word was not angry. It was simply final — the way a door being locked is final. Not hostile. Not apologetic. Simply closed. Omogun's hands tightened at his sides. "I am fast enough now. I am strong enough. I could—" "You could run there, yes," the spirit said. "You could enter. You could fight." It paused. "And you would die. Not because you lack speed. Because you lack everything else." "I have been training for seven years—" "You have been training your body for seven years," Arágbẹ̀ said. "Your body is exceptional. It will continue to grow. But power is not only body." The spirit turned to look at him directly. "Tell me — when you arrived at the palace, what would you do?" Omogun opened his mouth. Closed it. The honest answer was: he did not know. He had imagined arriving. He had imagined confronting his uncle. He had not, in any specific detail, imagined what came after. "You see," the spirit said, without satisfaction — simply noting. "Speed without destination is not power. It is momentum. And momentum without direction destroys what it was trying to protect." A pause. "If you arrived today and fought and somehow won — and you would not, but imagine you did — what then? You are twelve. You have no army. No allies. No proof of your identity that anyone living would confirm. The chiefs who are afraid of your uncle would simply find someone else to fear. The people who are suffering would suffer differently." Omogun stared at Egba below. "I know," he said. Quietly. The quiet of someone who knows something and hates knowing it. "Speed is a gift," Arágbẹ̀ said. "But gifts given to the unprepared become weapons pointed the wrong direction. Today you have received something real. Honour it by not wasting it." The wind moved around them, calmer now — the collaborative wind of the upper peak rather than the testing wind of the climb. Omogun looked at Egba for a long time. At the palace that should have been his home. At the city that did not know he was watching. "I am going to need more than speed," he said finally. "Yes." "And more than strength." "Yes." "What else?" The Spirit of Thunder looked at the kingdom below. "Time," it said simply. "And everything that only time can teach." They descended in silence. Halfway down, Omogun stopped at a place where the upper path turned and the lower path became visible below — and on the lower path, a small figure was moving with the unhurried purposefulness of someone who had somewhere to be. Kemi. She was carrying water from the mountain stream to the cave — the daily task she had taken on without being asked five years ago because she had decided that if the mountain was going to keep her, it was going to find her useful. She did not know he was watching from above. He watched her for a moment — this woman who had given up her entire life for his, who carried water and kept fires and remembered things he needed to know and never once suggested, by word or expression, that any of it was a burden. He thought about what Wisdom had said. You have been surrounded by your father's judgment your entire life. He descended the rest of the path quickly. When he reached her, he took the water vessel from her hands without comment and carried it the rest of the way himself. Kemi looked at him. "I am capable of—" "I know," he said. "I want to." She was quiet for a moment. Then she walked beside him without arguing. It was, he thought, the best use of speed he had found so far. That night, the Spirit of Wind visited the cave for the first time. It did not speak. It simply moved through the chamber once, circling Omogun where he slept — a slow, considering circuit, the way a master craftsman circles a piece of work they are deciding whether to touch. Then it stilled. And in the morning, when Omogun rose to run the upper path again, his feet were lighter than they had been the day before. The mountain was not finished with him. It was, in fact, just beginning. In Egba, Adewole received a report that made him set down his morning wine very carefully. "A figure," the scout said, "at the peak of Oke-Àrá. Before dawn. Standing at the summit." Adewole said nothing for a long time. "How large?" he asked finally. The scout hesitated. "Small, my king. Like… a child." Adewole picked up his wine again. His hand was not entirely steady. "Send word to the diviner," he said quietly. "Tonight."Latest Chapter
IMPORTANT MESSAGE TO MY READERS
Dear loyal readers, Thank you for being among the first to read The God of Thunder. Your support means everything. I have exciting news. The God of Thunder has been significantly expanded and upgraded. I have added 16 new chapters to the mountain arc — the full story of Omogun's 20 years of training that was previously summarized. These new chapters go deep into his pain, his growth, his failures, and the moments that truly forged him into the God of Thunder. The story you loved is still here — only fuller, richer, and more emotional than before. Please restart from Chapter 1 for the complete experience. I promise it will be worth every chapter. The God of Thunder is just getting started. I also look forward to receive your comments. Your author
CHAPTER 61 The Name Beneath the Mask
Rain fell steadily over Egba Kingdom.Not violent enough to flood the streets.Not gentle enough to ignore.The kind of rain that made people hurry home early and whisper prayers beneath their breath.But beneath the city—far below the noise of traders, guards, and frightened citizens—another world breathed in silence.Torchlight flickered against stone walls.Boots moved in disciplined rhythm.Steel clashed.The hidden stronghold of the Thunder Warriors had grown.What began as a secret gathering in the forest had become something far more dangerous: an organized force.Hundreds trained within the underground chambers now. Men moved through drills with sharpened precision while others studied maps spread across wooden tables stained by oil and ink.No drunken shouting.No careless pride.Only discipline.Only purpose.And at the center of it all stood Omogun.Watching.Thunder Ife slammed another warrior onto the dirt floor hard enough to shake dust from the beams overhead.“Again,”
CHAPTER 60 The First Seal
The rain did not stop.By dawn, Egba Kingdom had become a land of wet earth, restless winds, and uneasy silence. Traders moved carefully through muddy roads while palace guards doubled their patrols near the royal district.Rumors were spreading.Whispers moved faster than soldiers.Some spoke of the God of Thunder gathering an invisible army beneath the kingdom.Others claimed ancient spirits had returned to reclaim the throne.And within the palace walls, fear was beginning to grow.King Adewole Ogunwole stood before the ancestral shrine with irritation burning behind his eyes.The underground excavation had lasted nearly three weeks, yet nothing meaningful had been found.Broken stone.Rotten wood.Dust.But no drum.No divine weapon.No proof.The elderly chief priest knelt beside one of the opened chambers, sweat running down his wrinkled face despite the cold air underground.“We are close, Your Majesty,” he said carefully.Adewole’s expression hardened.“You said that four days
CHAPTER 59 The Drum Beneath the Shrine
Rain fell over Egba Kingdom like a warning.Not violent.Not yet.But steady enough to drown small sounds and hide dangerous movements.The city slept lightly beneath dark clouds while thunder rolled far beyond the mountains, slow and patient, like footsteps approaching from another world.Deep beneath the old western quarter of the kingdom, hidden under abandoned tunnels and forgotten stone pathways, torches burned within a vast underground chamber.The Thunder Base.What had once been a collapsed network of ancient war shelters had become something else entirely.Alive.Warriors moved through the corridors with discipline and silence. Weapons lined the walls. Maps covered long wooden tables. Messengers hurried between chambers carrying coded reports from villages, markets, forests, and palace routes.The Thunder Army was no longer an idea.It was becoming an organized force.And at the center of it stood Omogun.He studied the map spread before him carefully, one hand resting agains
CHAPTER 58 The Night the Village Burned
Rain threatened the sky, but none fell.The clouds gathered heavily above the western border villages of Egba Kingdom, dark and swollen, rolling slowly like beasts searching for a place to feed. The air smelled of wet earth and smoke long before the first scream echoed across the hills.By the time Omogun arrived, half the village was already burning.Flames climbed through dry rooftops with violent hunger. Women ran through the muddy streets carrying children. Goats screamed from broken pens. Men armed with farming tools tried desperately to fight trained soldiers with sharpened steel.It was not a battle.It was slaughter.Omogun stood at the edge of the village, hidden beneath his cloak, watching the chaos unfold with growing fury in his chest.“They came faster than expected,” Thunder Ife said beside him.The military commander’s face remained calm, but his eyes were sharp. Around them, hidden within the trees and rocky hills, more than two hundred Thunder warriors waited silently
CHAPTER 56 A Mission Without Mercy
The night chosen for the operation carried no moon. Darkness settled over Egba like a deliberate cover — thick, unbroken, swallowing sound and softening movement. The kind of night where truth could move unseen and judgment could fall without warning. Omogun stood at the edge of a low ridge overlooking a convoy route. Below, lanterns flickered in a slow-moving line — three wagons, heavily guarded, wheels grinding against dry earth. The men surrounding them were not careless soldiers. Their spacing was disciplined. Their weapons were clean. Their movements were alert. This was not a random transport. This was protected. Behind him, five figures waited in silence. The first operational unit — not the full force he was building, but the beginning of structure. The beginning of precision. Olufemi stood closest, reading the formation below with the calm assessment of a man who had been reading formations for twenty years. Ife to his left. And Adeolu — reinstated two days ago after Ta
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