::::It is my Home::::
He was worried. He could not feel anything else but worried. This was an unbelievable news indeed! The Creator had given him something that was indeed unbelievable!
He had ridden with his comrades and kinsmen here in this land since the first day of his memory, and that was before he could even talk. He rode across the hills and valleys of sands and rock. The world was the bleak red of the rocks as it had always been since it was created; of course, to prepare men for the afterlife, the land was built to be harsh. He had faced many troubles, many battles. He had fought against the oppressors' armies, rode into the worst sandstorms, and even endured a week in the empty land with no food nor water to survive on. But no! There had never been a news more worrisome yet exciting as the one that he had come to receive today.
His son was born.
He rode across the empty lands, returning from faraway adventures to go back to the warmth of his house's hearth. It was evening and the sun was going down. The sands and rocks around him glittered like blood beneath the red sky. He and his mighty horse passed through the barren sands, taking them by the storm of the horse's gallop. He rode as quickly as possible. And it was a long ride. He had ridden from the first light of the day until the sunset before the night. The sky was already dark blue when he reached his destination.
There, in front of him, was a group of roughly built mud houses cluttering around a small Oasis, as blue and dark as the night itself. The vegetations around the blue pond were the only green that could be found for many miles around, and could be noticed even from afar. In this dark night, the skies seemed empty, and everything was covered in the curtain of dark blue. Everything except...
He quickly rode into the Oasis village, feeling extremely anxious as he went around the mud houses in speed. There, in one of the houses, was the house he seek; his house. He went to the front of it, jumped down from his trusty steed, quickly opened the half-broken wooden door quickly, and bursted in.
The lamp still shone with fire lit brightly; the light was bright and yellow-blue. He himself did not even notice that, however. He was completely captivated in the simple scene that he saw in front of him, paralyzing the man of the desert completely with inexplicable emotions.
His son was sleeping in his cradles.
He looked at him for a moment, teary-eyed with pride and relief. His son was born, happy and full. He looked at him so long that wife managed to grab his notice at last:
"Welcome.. back."
"Yes, dear. I came here as fast as I could."
"Oh, I thought-- I thought--" she began crying, for some reason, "I could've lost you to that battle."
"It was just a skirmish, dear. We do not die so easily. I am here, safe and sound, secure to see our son with my full body intact."
"Yes, you're here--"
"He is such a lovely creature."
"He looks so much like his father. Everybody said that, and I agree, Oh, I really thought I would lose you! Don't leave this village again! I wouldn't be able to bear it if I really lose you now, not with our son living."
"Perhaps," he sighed, "but I have to defend my home as much as I want to enjoy it. This son shall grow into a mightier man than his father; bigger, faster, smarter, more beautiful like his mother, greater, and he shall serve his due to the land through valour on the battlefields, like I do. This is his home; this is our home; it is my home."
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