"Thus Began Our Longest Journey Together"
There have been times in my life when I imagine hearing a narrator say ominously: "Thus began our longest journey together." It is typically when I begin a walk or trip into unfamiliar territory with an unknown outcome of the far side. It sometimes comes as a premonition (if such things are permissible for people of faith). I'll be starting out on some vaguely unfamiar task or trip, no reason for anything to go wrong, and yet I can imagine, as if in future hindsight, that what begins innocently enough takes an unexpected turn and nothing is the same from that point forward. Like most fears and worry, the ominous possibility never becomes a reality, and it's soon forgotten, but even a broken clock is right two times a day, and when a strange occurance actually happens and we remember having a feeling that "something was going happen," we give far too much credence to our clairvoyance.
The line comes from the movie and screenplay of To Kill A Mockingbird."
Screenplays are written in present tense:
Here is what happens in the moments after that line is read: