Page 43 of Cast in Flight


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Moran lifted a hand. “Those Aerians are already collateral damage.”

“I think they had some choice in the matter.”

“Do you?”

Kaylin started to speak. Stopped.

“Did you have a choice when you were thirteen?” Moran continued.

Silence. Kaylin hated the reminder of the life she’d left behind. She hated the reminder of the harm she’d done in both desperation and fear. The only thing she’d seen was the need to survive, and survival had been brutal and ugly. Only when she’d given up entirely on survival—when life itself had become so crushingly ugly she believed she was better off dead—had she changed.

It hadn’t been an act of courage.

It had been the ultimate act of despair. And even then she hadn’t had the determination to end her own life. She had come here, to the Halls of Law, with every expectation that her life would be ended for her.

“...No,” Kaylin finally said. “Not if I wanted to survive.” She wanted to turn and leave—it’s what she would have done a handful of years ago. She was awash in that particular form of self-loathing that was guilt. But she shouldered the weight; she’d started this, even asked for it in some fashion. “I expected better of the Aeries than the fiefs.”

At that, Moran sucked in air, and Kaylin winced; she’d spoken the truth, but not with any particular care. “Frightened people,” the older Aerian eventually said, “are the same everywhere. It looks different, but it’s not.” She turned away. Turned back. “But your point is taken. If my leave of absence is granted, I’ll remain with Helen.” She then looked past Kaylin to Severn. “Are my services going to be required?”

“The assailants don’t appear to be injured. According to Private Neya, there were three; only two are currently in captivity.”

“The third?”

“He must have escaped. I don’t know what happened—small and squawky flew up, and two of them fell down. The third, he might have missed.”

“What did hedo?”

“...I don’t know.”

“The Hawklord’s going to demand an answer. How does ‘I don’t know’ generally work out for you?”

Not particularly well. “It’s the truth. It’s going to have to do. I don’t know. I didn’t see what happened. If I had to guess, I’d say that two of the Aerians are naturally close to flightless. Magical alterations were made—somehow—that allowed them to fly. The familiar did something to dispel that magic.”

Squawk. The familiar was bouncing on her shoulder, having abandoned the lazy sprawl.

“If that’s the case, it implies that Aerian number three didn’t require alteration in order to fly. He or she merely required it to be invisible.”

Squawk squawk squawk.

“Your familiar agrees,” Bellusdeo said quietly. “You’re making your thinking face.”

“It’s just...”

“Yes?”

“If I’m looking at them through his wing, the wings look whole. They look healthy. Theydon’tlook like little extensions of Shadow or whatever it is. The net they were holding? That screamed Shadow. But the wings don’t. I think that the physical container for the power of flight was created, but it doesn’t depend on Shadow to work.”

“Meaning?”

“I think they could fly again. But I don’t understand how. The lack of relevant parts in their natural, normal wings is real, it’s physical. This is like—it’s like someone found the phantom arm that people who’ve lost an arm feel, and they figured out how to make it temporarily solid.”

Moran said a lot of nothing.

Kaylin wasn’t certain what she would have said if given enough time, because the mirror went off. The infirmary had a rather large one. It wasnotquiet.

“Sergeant!” An Aerian appeared in the mirror, in a poorly lit room. Light was incoming, and behind him, Kaylin could see the dark red of blood.

Moran’s eyes shifted to blue. Not purple. She wasn’t surprised at all. But she was bitterly, bitterly unhappy. Kaylin, who had just felt the uncomfortable, ugly rush of guilt, recognized it when she saw it on another face.