They walked until the trees thinned and the land opened into a rugged clearing. A small fire crackled beneath a rocky overhang, its smoke rising into the cold air. Ciprian-1 had clearly been living here — tools lay scattered around: flint shards, bone-handled knives, traps fashioned from twisted sinew.
Ciprian-1 dropped his spear onto a log and turned to Ciprian-8.
“Your training begins now.”
Ciprian-8 straightened instinctively, though exhaustion dragged at him. His ribs ached from the fight. His cheek throbbed where the arrow had grazed him. His hands still shook — a humiliation he tried to hide.
The ancestor noticed.
He always noticed.
Lesson One: Steady the Blood
Ciprian-1 stepped close and grabbed Ciprian-8’s wrist, raising it so the trembling was unmistakable.
“Your blood is loud.”
“My blood?”
Ciprian-1 tapped his descendant’s chest with two fingers — firm, almost accusatory.
“Fear makes the blood shout.
A warrior’s blood must whisper.”
He released Ciprian-8’s wrist and pointed to the ground.
“Sit.”
Ciprian-8 obeyed.
Ciprian-1 knelt opposite him, closing his eyes.
“Match my breath.”
They inhaled slowly, deeply.
The cold air burned Ciprian-8’s lungs.
But after a few cycles, the trembling eased.
Ciprian-1 opened one eye.
“Better.
The mind bends when the blood quiets.”
It wasn’t meditation — not the soft, gentle kind Ciprian-8 had learned in his era.
This was more like enforced discipline, a command over the body.
Lesson Two: Know the Land
Ciprian-1 stood and pointed to a tree root half-buried in the soil.
“Eat.”
Ciprian-8 frowned. “That?”
“If I wanted you dead, I would not waste my time teaching you.”
Ciprian-8 reluctantly bit into the root.
It tasted bitter, earthy, foul.
Ciprian-1 nodded.
“Galeţ. Good for the stomach. Prevents weakness.”
He pointed to a patch of small red berries.
“Eat those and your blood stops forever.”
Ciprian-8 swallowed hard.
Ciprian-1’s tone sharpened:
“Your world gives you food in packets.
Our world taught us to see food or death in every step.”
He made Ciprian-8 point out five edible plants.
He got three wrong.
Ciprian-1 made him memorize the shapes, the smells, the veins of each leaf.
Lesson Three: The Knife
The ancestor tossed him the iron blade.
“Hold it.”
Ciprian-8 gripped the handle.
Ciprian-1 slapped his hand.
“Incorrect.”
He adjusted Ciprian-8’s fingers, forcing them into a grip that felt more like holding a tool than a weapon.
“The knife is not for slashing.
It is for ending.”
He pointed at a sapling.
“Strike.”
Ciprian-8 hesitated.
Ciprian-1’s voice snapped like a whip:
“Strike like you mean to kill.”
Ciprian-8 slashed awkwardly.
The blade glanced off the bark.
Ciprian-1 shook his head.
“Again.”
Ciprian-8 tried again.
Better — but still clumsy.
By the tenth strike, his arm burned.
By the twentieth, sweat dripped down his face despite the cold.
On the thirtieth strike, the sapling split.
Ciprian-1 grunted approval.
“Not good.
But not shameful.”
From him, that was praise.
Lesson Four: Philosophy of the Frontier
When the moon rose high above the pines, they sat by the fire.
Ciprian-1 sharpened his spearhead, the rhythmic scrape filling the silence.
Without looking up, he said:
“You think your world is safe because you have machines to fight for you.”
Ciprian-8 didn’t respond.
“Safety is an illusion.
Comfort is a trap.
A man softens.
Then he forgets what he comes from.”
Ciprian-1 tossed a pinecone into the fire.
It cracked loudly.
“Your blood survived centuries of storms.
Wars.
Famines.
Empires.”
He fixed Ciprian-8 with a hard stare.
“What will you add to it?”
Ciprian-8 didn’t know how to answer.
He had come seeking history.
He had found judgment.
A Final Lesson Before Dawn
As the fire died, Ciprian-1 stood.
“Sleep lightly.
We train until you can walk without the forest hearing you.”
Ciprian-8 wrapped himself in a rough wool cloak and lay down.
His body ached.
His mind raced.
But beneath it all… something stirred.
A feeling he hadn’t expected.
Pride.
For the first time, he felt connected to something older than the world he came from — older than the Union, older than America.
He was learning what his ancestors had known:
There is no meaning without struggle.
No identity without trial.
No lineage without sacrifice.
As he drifted toward sleep, he heard Ciprian-1’s voice, low and distant:
“Tomorrow you learn to hunt.”
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