Harlan stood. He didn’t speak of magic or skulls or the deep. He simply opened his arms, and his son stepped into them.
Harlan nodded, throat tight.
But on the tenth day, as Harlan mended a net on his porch, a truck rattled down the dirt road. Marcus stepped out. He looked older, softer. In his hands was a wooden box. Old Man And The Cassie
And at the center of the temple, resting on a pedestal of bone-white sand, lay a single object: a polished cassowary skull, its casque carved with symbols no anthropologist had ever seen. The Skull of the Cassie. Legend said it held a single wish—but only for one who had lost everything and still returned to give, not take. Harlan stood
Nothing changed the next morning. Or the next week. Harlan nodded, throat tight