Elias Kane clawed free from the river's wrath—a specter the ridge couldn't claim. Day two unfurled, gray and hushed, a stillness veiling secrets beneath the pines. Wounded—knee gnarled, ribs shadowed by pain—he lingered in a lean-to's frail embrace, too far from water's whisper, a refuge crumbling under silence's weight. Something stirred close—a flicker of fortune, a lifeline snatched from the wild's jaws—yet hunger gnawed deeper than he'd admit. He ventured west—toward the river's unseen pulse, through mist and cedar ghosts, chasing a shadow of permanence, a refuge unnamed. No canteen, just a pot too heavy for his broken stride and a hide curing in the dark, its promise distant. Thirst drew him to water—raw, untested, a bargain with the unknown he couldn't refuse. What haunts him stays buried, a secret the ridge cradles close.
In this shrouded tangle of man and wild, Elias seeks more than survival—a truth the silence might devour.