7/03/2019 Rain gently tapped me on the head as I trudged between the trees. The lamb pranced gaily ahead of me, his sodden coat not seeming to weigh him down at all. I scoffed. Of course it didn’t weigh him down, he was young. The young always have that extra energy to carry them in their blissful gambols. Meanwhile, I’m hiking through the woods with every bone and stiff joint creaking like the aspens in Fall. Ah, well. Soon both of our journeys would be over. I had spent the last three years carrying out the previous directive of my goddess. Her last mandate had been a weighty one. Literally. I had carried water for three years to relieve the suffering of a village drought. “Ach, don’t eat that!” I cried to the lamb. We had entered the clearing where the altar lay. A small stone slab on the ground with a ring of wildflowers surrounding it. The lamb was currently eating the wildflowers. I scooped him up in my arms and knelt in front of the stone slab. “I have returned.”I pl...