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Rated: E · Prose · Emotional · #2330819
A man struggles with the illusion of control amidst a current that knows no master.

Title: The Man and The River

The man stands at the river's edge, his shadow etched long and gaunt against the amber hues of the fading sun. In his hands, a rusted spade trembles under the weight of purpose. Before him, the river churns, dark and untamed, carving paths through the earth that no map could capture. Its waters pulse with a life of their own, a force neither cruel nor kind but utterly indifferent. To him, it is a monster--vast, untouchable, and consuming.

He cannot remember when he first decided it must be tamed. Perhaps it was when the floodwaters swept away the small garden he had once coaxed into bloom. Or perhaps it was simply the way the river seemed to mock him, its unchecked power a reminder of how small he had become. There is no blueprint, no guide for this battle. Only the spade in his hands and the fervent belief that he must redirect its current or be swept away entirely.

Day after day, he digs. His body is a clockwork of aching joints and splintered will, each shovelful of dirt a prayer to an indifferent god. The river watches, unyielding. When the rains come, it swells with defiance, undoing his furrows with cruel precision. He builds dams from broken trees and jagged stones, their sharp edges slicing his hands raw. But the river tears through them like paper, leaving splinters and shards in its wake.

Still, he labors--not because he believes he can conquer the river, but because to stop would mean surrendering to chaos. And chaos, he fears, is the true beast waiting to devour him.

As the days blur together, he begins to see himself in the river's reflection. His face is a stranger's--a hollow-eyed phantom with dirt streaked across his cheeks and hair matted with sweat. The weight of his struggle has made him unrecognizable, but he cannot stop. The river must be tamed, he tells himself. It must be.

Yet, there are moments, rare as the stillness of dawn, when the river quiets. Its surface mirrors the sky, a trembling sheet of stars fractured only by the gentle ripple of its current. In those moments, the man feels something he cannot name--a longing, perhaps, or the faint whisper of understanding. The river is alive, yes, but it is also beautiful in its wildness. Its song is one of freedom, a melody he does not understand but aches to.

One night, beneath a sky heavy with stars, he sits at the bank, the spade discarded at his side. His hands are raw, his shoulders bowed, his breath a shallow rasp. The river surges on, uncaring and eternal. He wonders if his struggle was ever truly about controlling the water, or if it was simply about proving to himself that he could fight--even as the current swept him under.

The stars ripple in the river's depths, a trembling constellation that fractures and reforms with each passing second. He reaches out, his fingers grazing the surface. The water is icy and swift, its pulse beating against his skin. For a fleeting moment, he closes his eyes and lets the current pull him, no longer digging, no longer resisting--just being.

And still, the river flows. It does not stop, and neither does he.



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