Aridi [portable] [ 2025-2026 ]

That night, the spring grew into a stream. The stream cut a path through Low Sutta, past the Citadel’s sealed gates, and into the dead fields beyond. And where the water touched, the aridi began to forget itself. Grass returned. Then shrubs. Then, impossibly, a single acacia tree bloomed in the center of the market square—its roots tangled around the broken bowl where Kaelen had planted the seed.

Kaelen had been a child when the last river surrendered. Now he was a man with a hollow face and a water-seller’s yoke across his shoulders. Every morning he walked the same route—from the bone-dry well at the edge of town to the iron gates of the Citadel, where the Overseer’s family still bathed in stolen silver water. The rest of them, the dust-grey people of Low Sutta, survived on rationed dew and the bitter milk of thorn-goats. That night, the spring grew into a stream

The Overseer’s men arrived at dusk. They carried torches and chains. “The water belongs to the Citadel,” their captain said, and his voice was dry as old bones. Kaelen stepped in front of the spring. He had no weapon but the memory of thirst. Grass returned

What emerged was not a sprout but a thin, luminous root. It curled through the dust like a question, then dove straight into the earth. Kaelen followed it with his eyes as the ground beneath his lean-to began to soften, to darken, to remember . Kaelen had been a child when the last river surrendered

He hid it in his tunic. All day, as he hauled clay jars and ducked the Overseer’s guards, the seed hummed against his ribs. That night, in his lean-to of salvaged canvas, he placed it in a bowl of dust and poured his own drinking ration over it—three mouthfuls of brackish water, saved for three days.