Chapter 31 (Zu)
We hovered behind the wall of a
piroth market, listening for any sound from the hangar, but careful to keep out of sight. We could hear our
kuldir friends yell “Attack!” in Doua’s voice. But Doua held us back from coming to their aid. “If they need us, they will say so,” she said simply. "That is what we agreed."
So we watched from a distance as they stole a ship. Watched them fly it away from the hangar, chased by a fleet of pursuers. We tried to follow them as best we could, but even Kelbrid wings are no match for engines. So we watched their ship fade into the distance, and when it was a tiny silver speck at the edge of our vision, we saw it streak upward into the sky.
After a while, we saw the pursuers’ ships drift slowly back toward the hangar, defeated.
The
kuldir were free. They were going back to their home.
I would miss them.
They had reminded me so much of
her. That same stubborn defiance. That same unwillingness to be controlled. What had they called themselves? Humans? They even
looked a little like the Trexions.
It was painful to remember, but it was a pain I welcomed.
She had been my everything. My Zo’axiel.
A
kuldir.
Yet I had loved her. And she had felt the same for me.
I wondered if perhaps, just before they had dispersed the One, the humans had seen her. That monster seemed to love to show her off. Her sweet, beautiful, elfin visage, with that smooth, pale sea-green skin and those dark indigo eyes. Yes, she was beautiful.
She was so beautiful.
The other Kelbrid didn’t understand. Doua, Vuhl, Bahm . . . they empathized with
kuldir, saw them as more than just different, more than just the disease from which the word "
kuldir" itself derived. But they still didn’t understand how a
kuldir could ever be beautiful.
As I gazed, dreaming, at the clouds above, I noticed Vuhl already flying high above the rest of us. Reveling in the wings she had thought she had lost.
Bahm glanced at me and immediately guessed what I had been thinking about. He touched his wingtip to mine, a gesture of comfort. “We will destroy the One someday,” he said. “And when we do, we will take back all the lives he has taken. We will save her.”
I sighed, still looking skyward. I thought of the small winged creature that had been with the humans. There had been something about him, something about the way he talked, something about the way he carried himself when he was in Vuhl's form. Something familiar. Something that seemed almost a reflection of the way I felt.
He had lost someone, too.
"Maybe they were right," I said. "Maybe we aren't as different as we think we are."
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FIN
To continue the story, please read
The Rebirth