As he walked down the dusty road, the sun warmed his back, and a gentle breeze carried the faint scent of jasmine from his village. He glanced back once, seeing the secret garden’s stone well glinting in the distance, a silent promise that no matter how far he roamed, the roots of his story would always be tied to the earth that raised him.
But with brilliance came a different sort of weight. The other children, especially , the son of the village chief, began to see Badwap not as a friend but as a rival. Whispers trailed him through the corridors: “He’ll leave us for the city,” or “He’ll become a scholar and forget us.” Badwap sensed the undercurrent, yet he kept his focus on the pages, on the stories that opened doors beyond the hills. 4. The Secret Garden Beyond the western fence, where the cultivated fields gave way to untamed scrub, there lay a forgotten patch of earth—a secret garden , overgrown with wild thyme, rosemary, and the occasional stubborn rose bush. It was a place Badwap discovered one rainy afternoon while chasing a stray goat that had escaped the pen. Badwap 14 Age
The words spoke of a young sailor who had been rescued by a passing merchant ship after a tempest tore his vessel apart. He described the endless horizon, the ache of longing for home, and his resolve to return someday, bearing gifts and stories from faraway lands. As he walked down the dusty road, the
But Badwap never stopped dreaming. He saved a portion of the silver coins he earned, buying a sturdy pair of boots and a satchel. One crisp autumn morning, after bidding farewell to his mother and sister, he set out toward the city of —a place where scholars gathered, markets bustled, and the horizons stretched far beyond the familiar copper hills. The other children, especially , the son of