Chapter 350: 350: Three Promises at Noon
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Breakfast ended with warm bowls, quick jokes, and a steady calm. Kai pushed back his seat and stood. The room quieted on its own.
"Thank you," he said to everyone. "I will keep it short. First, I go up to the ridge to see Miryam and Skyweaver. Second, Luna and I will talk on the high ledge. Third, we set up new patrols before sunset. Lirien, I will look at the forge walls with you. Shadeclaw, Silvershadow, gather maps. Vexor, Shale, Flint, Needle, eat well and get your gear. Alka, keep the sky."
Alka’s head tipped from the upper hatch. She gave a low chirp that meant "seen."
They moved.
Wind met them first. It came clean and bright over the desert edge and lifted Luna’s silver hair like water. At the top of the mountain, Skyweaver stood with her palms open, reading the gusts. Miryam hovered a few body lengths away, not with wings but with will. A thin ring of air moved around her like a belt of glass. She dipped, floated, and grinned so hard her eyes went to crescent moons.
"Papa, Look," she called, voice high with pride. "I can ride the warm air now. It’s so fun."
Skyweaver smiled without looking away from the wind. "Again," she said. "Start slow. Find the push. Hold the rim. Do not fight the air. Ask it."
Miryam inhaled, then eased forward. The ring tilted. She slid along it, rose on the updraft from the sun-heated cliff, and steadied. Her little claws paddled out of habit, but her body found balance without them.
Kai’s chest went warm. "Good work," he called. "Small moves. Own them first."
She turned toward his voice and wobbled, then grabbed the ring again with a short gasp and righted herself. "Papa," she laughed. "See. I am the wind." Then she added, very seriously, "The wind and I are friends."
Luna’s hand found Kai’s. "She is braver and stronger with each passing hour," she said. "You can thank Skyweaver for the safety lines."
Kai noticed the faint, thin threads of air that rose like ladders from the ledge. They hummed in Skyweaver’s grip, ready to catch Miryam if she dropped too fast.
"Good lines," Kai said.
Skyweaver nodded. "She learns fast. Her wind control is strong, but it is new. I show paths until her body feels them without me."
Miryam floated back to the ledge and landed with a small skip. She ran to Kai and bumped his chest with her head. "Did you see?"
"I saw everything," he said, scooping her up. "You were steady."
"I played with the wind," Miryam whispered, amazed by herself.
"Now, Skyweaver, this afternoon keep her low. No dives. If the wind turns sharp, stop."
"Understood," Skyweaver said.
Miryam hugged Kai. "I want lunch. Then more flying."
"Eat first," Luna said, kissing her head. "You fly better with food."
Miryam wriggled free and trotted to the stairs with Skyweaver in tow.
Only wind and stone stayed with Kai and Luna.
They walked a few steps to a narrow shelf that faced the desert. From here, the world looked simple: sky, sand, a thin line of trees. The quiet was deep and clean.
She leaned her forehead to his. "I am still angry," she said. "But I am proud too. You saved a stranger. But you forgot that last evening we were supposed to train together. I am angry because of that."
He smiled a little. "We will train later," he said. "You asked me to help you grow strong. We start today."
Her eyes lit. "Good. I want you to push me. I want to break and heal and stand at your side."
"Then I will make you curse me," he said.
"I will curse your enemies. I will only kiss you and make love with you," she said, mouth curving.
They stood together for a few breaths more and let the wind smooth the last sharp edge between them.
A few moments later...
Lirien was already at the north wall with tools set out in careful rows. The cracked part marked the stone like a thin, dark smile.
"I did not touch it," she said. "I waited for you."
Kai crouched, pressed his knuckles to the brace, and listened with his bones. "Hairline only," he said. "We sister it and pin it. No need to cut a new block."
Lirien’s relief showed plain. "Good."
They worked side by side. She heated pins to a clean red and handed them over with tongs. He set them with his weight so the brace and wall became one piece again. She cut a new collar, slid it to the joint, and hammered a ring pattern that shed heat and stress.
"You are quick," he said.
"You told me to plan the blows in my head before I lift the hammer," she said, shy pride in her voice.
They cooled the joint slowly with damp cloth, not water. The stone sighed but did not twitch.
"Done," he said. "Test it tomorrow. If it sings, we add a second lair."
She nodded. "Thank you," she said, very soft.
"Build three spare braces," he added. "Not for this crack. For the next place that will need them."
"I will," she said.
A few hours later...
Heat and soft light wrapped Kai at the door. The essence pool moved with a slow pulse. Many cradles glowed like low moons. The thin aura threads that fed them drifted through the runes and slid over shells like mist.
[Ding! System Notification: Chamber stable. Temperature optimal. Moisture optimal. Estimated hatch time: 28 days 12 hours. Daily aura guidance recommended.]
Kai set his palms over the cradles and gave them a steady breath of his Monarch’s aura. Not much. Only enough to remind the room who it belonged to.
"Grow," he said, quietly. "Listen. Learn."
The glow answered with a soft flick that was less a sound and more a feeling at the skin. He smiled, then left the chamber as warm as he found it.
Next on the list was the patrol council.