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Chapter 3 - Chapter 3: The White Sentinel

The uphill battle was always a sluggish, self-inflicted ordeal.

Leaving the cozy, thick air of the Low-World felt like being

yanked from a hot tub and tossed into outer space. My wings,

once a powerhouse in the smog, started feeling like lead

weights. The indigo glow flickered as my blood struggled to play

oxygen delivery. By the six-thousand-foot mark, altitude sickness

jabbed me right in the chest.

I coughed, and the inside of my respirator got a new paint job

with violet-speckled blood.

Above, the floating spires of Aethelgard taunted me with their

golden glow, looking as serene and saintly as ever. But I knew

behind those ivory fortresses, the Council was stirring, ready

to tally up their

"

pure

" flock.

Suddenly, the sky was filled with the dreaded thwack-thwackthwack of a Sky-Patrol. My heart did a cartwheel.

11

I dove behind a massive, moss-covered gravity-anchor—one of the giant

stone pillars that kept the islands afloat. I pressed my back against the cold

rock, pulling my lead-lined cloak tight to kill the indigo glow.

Through a crack in the stone, I saw them. Three Elite scouts, their white

feathered wings catching the moonlight as they dived in formation. They

were carrying silver lances—weapons designed to pierce the membranes of

"

unpure

" fliers.

"I saw a flare,

"

one of the scouts called out, his voice echoing in the thin air.

"A purple heat-signature near the Iron Veil. It's the Ghost again."

"Focus,

" the lead scout replied. "If it's down there, let it rot. Nothing survives

the smog for long. We stay above the line."

They were right above me. If I moved, the sound of my biological wings—

which hummed like a motor compared to their silent feathers—would give

me away instantly.

12

Then, a shadow fell over the scouts.

A massive, bone-white figure descended from the higher peaks.

It was Lake. He didn't fly like the scouts; he drifted, his wings

spread so wide they seemed to blot out the moon. He looked

less like a man and more like a celestial predator.

"Commander!" the scouts shouted, snapping into a mid-air salute.

Lake didn't return the gesture. He hovered in place, his face a

mask of cold, unyielding iron. He turned his head slowly, his eyes

scanning the very pillar I was hiding behind. I held my breath, my

lungs screaming for air, my heart hammering against my ribs so

hard I was sure he could hear it.

"Return to your sector,

" Lake commanded. His voice was a low

growl that vibrated in my own bones. "There is nothing here but

shadows and shifting gas."

13

But sir, the signature—"

"I said return,

" Lake snapped. The feathers on his wings

sharpened, glowing with a faint, lethal silver light. "Unless you wish

to explain to the High Council why you are wasting energy

chasing ghosts in the Iron Veil instead of guarding the Spire."

The scouts didn't argue. They banked hard and shot upward,

disappearing into the golden mist of the High-City.

Lake stayed.

He drifted closer to my pillar, his wings beating slowly,

rhythmically. He was only ten feet away now. I could see the

individual barbs on his feathers. I clutched my cloak, my eyes

wide with terror. This was it. He was going to reach around the

stone, grab me by the throat, and drag me to the Clipping

Square.

"You are becoming careless, Rofu,

" he said to the empty air. He

didn't look at my hiding spot, but he knew. He always knew.

14

I held my breath, paralyzed and motionless.

"The smog won't conceal your scent forever,

" Lake

continued, his voice void of warmth. It resonated like a judge

delivering a verdict. "Every time you descend, you carry

back the filth of the Walkers. It clings to your skin and

lingers in your eyes. You believe you are saving them, but in

reality, you are hastening your own demise."

He finally shifted his gaze toward the pillar. For a brief

moment, our eyes met through the enveloping darkness. His

piercing blue eyes were cold and analytical, devoid of any

pity.

"Stay in the light, little bird,

" he whispered, his words a threat

veiled as advice. "Otherwise, the next time the scouts find

you, I will be the one wielding the lance."

With a powerful flap of his wings, he ascended swiftly,

blurring the air around him. In his wake, he left a single

pristine white feather that drifted down and landed

delicately on the ledge beside me.

I picked it up, my hands trembling with emotion. I loathed him—

for his relentless pursuit, for his mockery of my

struggles, and for his lofty perch of purity while I bled for

the people below. He wasn't protecting me; he was merely

observing his prey, waiting until I was ripe for the harvest.

15.

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