He didn't pack much—just a small bag and the old wooden cane his father had left him. As he drove away from the city, the skyscrapers began to shrink in his rearview mirror. The further he went, the lighter his chest felt.
He stepped out of the car. The air was different here—it didn't just fill his lungs; it filled his soul. An old man, bent by time, was walking a herd of sheep across the road. He looked up, squinting through the dust. Ozan Dundar Koyum Sana Gelecegim
The neon lights of the city never stopped flickering, but for Emin, they had gone dim years ago. He sat in his small apartment, the steam from his tea rising like the mountain mists of his youth. On the radio, the saz began to weep, and Ozan Dündar’s voice filled the room: “Köyüm sana geleceğim...” He didn't pack much—just a small bag and
"Emin?" the old man croaked, a slow smile breaking across a face lined like a map of the earth. "You took the long way home, son." He stepped out of the car
As the sun began to set, painting the Anatolian hills in shades of bruised purple and gold, he reached the crest of the final hill. There it was. The village lay in the valley like a tired traveler at rest. The minaret peeked through the trees, and the smoke from the chimneys signaled that dinner was being prepared.