The First Walkers and the Earliest Age of the Elder Realms

Some stories begin with crowns, borders, and conflict already in motion. Others reach further back, to a time when the world itself had not yet learned how to answer those who lived upon it.

The First Walkers belongs to that earlier age.

This short story emerged during a period of stepping away from the main novel, The Veil of Kings and Gods, in order to explore the ground beneath it. Before returning fully to kings, councils, and divine fracture, there was a need to listen to the first layer of the world. An age shaped by memory, firelight, and watching presences, where meaning travelled through instinct rather than record.

The Elder Realms, in their earliest form, are quiet places. Humanity moves cautiously through landscapes that feel aware yet unreadable. The gods observe from distance and height, bound by their own silences. Magic exists as potential, sensed through alignment and response instead of mastery.

The First Walkers is written as a fragment from this age. It stands as a complete short story, while also serving as a foundation stone for what comes later. Ideas seeded here carry forward into later ages, where they take on clearer shapes through belief, power, and consequence.

Alongside the short story, I have been sharing brief mythic fragments drawn from the same period. These appear as narrated pieces and flash-fiction, shaped to feel like recovered scripture or ancestral memory. They offer atmosphere and tone, allowing the world to be approached slowly, without explanation pressing ahead of experience.

One such fragment can be experienced below. It reflects the mood and substance of The First Walkers, presenting a single moment from the earliest age, shaped for listening.

Watch the narrated mythic fragment here:

These fragments act as quiet entry points. Some readers may encounter the world first through sound and image, others through the written story. Both paths lead toward the same long memory.

The complete short story, The First Walkers, is available as a Kindle ebook for those who wish to read the full piece and remain with the world for longer:

📖 https://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/B0GDWMMQ4P

Further stories and fragments from the Elder Realms will follow over time, each exploring a different age in the long descent toward kingdoms, faith, and fracture.

Why I’m Writing Fantasy Short Stories (And How They Expand My Novel’s World)

Before my epic fantasy novel The Veil of Kings and Gods releases, I wanted to open a small window into the world of Ældorra, a world of stone kingdoms, fading gods, and myths that refuse to die.

Each short story I write is its own world in miniature. They don’t rely on the main novel, yet every one of them echoes it, a fragment of history, a lost prayer, or a legend that shaped the lands my characters now walk. Some are quiet and personal; others burn with the power of the divine. Together, they breathe life into Ældorra in a way that maps and lore pages never could.

Writing these stories is more than worldbuilding, it’s a way of feeling the world I’ve spent years creating. When I step into a new tale, I discover the texture of the world again: the smell of rain on stone, the flicker of temple light, the forgotten names carved into the ruins.

These short stories aren’t just for readers waiting for the novel, they’re for anyone who loves myth, emotion, and the quiet moments that make a fantasy world feel alive.

You’ll soon be able to explore them as ebooks, see the artwork behind them, and even collect the prints.

Welcome to Ældorra. The gods don’t stay silent forever.

🎥 Watch the video