The Rogue Prince of Persia

The Rogue Prince Of Persia -

His name was Cyrus. And he could see the threads.

“You saved my life,” Reza said, not a question.

They stood in silence. A scorpion skittered between their boots. Cyrus didn't kill it. He had seen it, in a dream, saving a child’s life two summers from now. You didn’t kill futures. You defied them, or you rode them. The Rogue Prince of Persia

They would hunt him, of course. They would call him traitor, madman, viper. But in the alleys below, a street child looked up and saw a figure silhouetted against the stars—a figure who had once paid off her mother’s debt with a sapphire the size of an egg.

“The fire revealed the false ceiling.” His name was Cyrus

“I delayed your death,” Cyrus replied. “Not the same.”

The vizier, a man named Khorasani with a voice like oiled steel, hated him most of all. “He destabilizes the fabric of order,” Khorasani hissed to the King one evening, as peacocks screamed in the courtyard. “He unravels every thread we sew.” They stood in silence

In the gilded court of Babylon, whispers clung to the Prince like shadows to a lamp. They called him the Rogue. Not to his face—no one dared—but in the dripping alcoves of the water gardens and behind the silk curtains of the royal bathhouse, his name was a curse and a prayer.