Chapter 354: 354: The Mountain While They Mate
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Night folded over Monarch Mountain like a soft cloak. Torches ringed the upper terraces. Their light ran along the stone in quiet streams. The halls breathed in a slow rhythm. Far below, the desert kept its own long breath. Inside the mountain every room had a purpose and every purpose kept time.
On the highest ledges Silvershadow finished the watch roster with a bit of charcoal on a slate. He stood straight, a tall figure with a habit of listening to things other people never heard.
"The second ring takes the west ridge until moon peak," he said. "The third ring shifts to the eastern teeth. No chases. No hero work. If you see something you cannot fold into your pocket, you call."
Shadeclaw leaned against the parapet and looked down the black slope. His voice was low enough to make the stone listen.
"Orders heard," he said. "I am taking the south cut with two runners. If a dune cat sneezes I will know which nostril."
Vexor, Shale, Flint, and Needle arrived together, steps uneven because they were laughing at something Needle had muttered on the stairs.
"Commander wants quiet," Shale said to the others, then to the officers, "and we will defend it with our lives."
"Defend it with your whisper," Silvershadow said. "I do not want your lives yet."
Flint saluted with two fingers and tried to look serious. He failed after three heartbeats. Needle elbowed him and the laugh slipped out anyway.
"Positions," Shadeclaw said. "Go."
They went. Their shapes thinned into the night like ink pulled along by a brush. On the new roost Alka stood with her wings folded. Her eyes shone in the torchlight. She studied the open sky and then the breathing mountain and then the thin thread of stars.
"Quiet suits them," she murmured.
A small breeze came up the cliff and ruffled her chest feathers. She spread one wing and caught it, held it, and then let it go. The roost Kai had promised was real now. It curved like a bowl lined with fur and moss. She had helped pack it with her own beak. She had tested the grip of the ledge with each talon. It pleased her. It felt like a promise kept.
Below, the egg chamber hummed with a warmth that did not sleep. The runes glowed as if a soft hearth had been drawn along the wall. Naaro sat outside the threshold with a blanket around her shoulders. She listened to the low sound and watched the faint rise and fall of light within the cradles. The glow was not bright. It was steady. It was the kind of light that speaks to the inside of the chest.
Lirien came quietly with a bowl and a cup on a wooden tray.
"Mineral broth," she said. "And mint if the air feels strange."
Naaro took the bowl with both hands. "It smells like warm river rock," she said. "Thank you."
Lirien sat beside her on the step. The forge heat still clung to her, gentle and clean.
"I tuned the feed lines," Lirien said. "The essence flows evenly to each cradle now. The silk holds it without soaking. The floor grooves do not pool at the corners. It will treat every shell like a guest."
Naaro listened. Her antennae twitched. "You speak about stone like it is a friend."
"It is a friend," Lirien said. "If you speak to it correctly."
Naaro took a sip and let the heat settle in her stomach. She kept watching the cradles through the doorway. "I do not feel alone when I sit here," she said. "It is a strange thing. I know they are only eggs. I know they do not see me. Still the room does not feel empty."
Lirien folded her hands in her lap. "A good room answers its work," she said. "This room was built for life. It remembers that with you."
They sat without speaking for a time. Azhara arrived with a bundle of soft cloth against her hip.
"I brought wraps," Azhara said. "And fruit. And also a bad joke if you want one."
"No bad jokes at the nursery," Lirien said, but her mouth turned at the corner.
Azhara gave them the wraps and the fruit. She set a small lamp on the floor and adjusted the wick so it did not talk too loudly. She leaned in and peered at the runes like a thief looking into a jewel box.
"They are pretty," she whispered. "Like little moons."
"They are not moons," Naaro said, but her smile softened the words.
"Fine," Azhara said. "They are round promises. I will take that."
Vel and Sha came next, moving with the cautious steps of people who had sworn to walk softly and were proud to be doing it well. Vel carried a basket of dried meat and bread. Sha carried a small jug of warm, sweet tea.
"Food drop," Vel said. "The kitchen is quiet. I tied a ribbon to Azhara’s tongue."
Sha snorted. "She bit through it in two breaths."
Azhara widened her eyes in feigned innocence. "I have improved. Watch me improve again."
Vel set the basket down and knelt at the threshold with her hands on her knees. She looked in at the cradles and sucked in a breath.
"They look safe," she said.
"They are safe," Lirien said. "And you will help keep them that way."
Vel nodded hard. "I like orders like that."
Sha stood with her arms folded and her tail curled close. She did not look at the cradles. She looked at Naaro. She opened her mouth as if to say something rough. She closed it. She tried again and managed a simple sentence.
"I am glad you are warm," she said.
Naaro bowed her head. "I am warm," she said. "Thank you."
On the training terrace Skyweaver watched Miryam sleep. She had taken the princess to the top of the mountain and built a nest of cloaks and soft moss near the windbreak rock. The stars were kind tonight. They were not cold needles. They were small lamps. It was the training for feeling the winds while sleeping.
Miryam’s breathing rasped a little when she had fallen asleep. It smoothed out after a while. The air around her nose glowed when she exhaled. It made Skyweaver think of a coal under ash that needs the right breath to flame.
When Miryam stirred she blinked up into Skyweaver’s face and smiled without waking all the way.
"I flew," she mumbled.
"You did, princess," Skyweaver said. "We will make the lines cleaner when the sun climbs. You must be with the winds while you sleep. That will make your control more refined."
Miryam rolled, pulled the edge of the cloak over her ear, and slept again.
Skyweaver rose and looked out over the dark desert. She listened to the wind scrape the cliff and then slide off into the belly of the night. She knew sounds by habit. She could tell a bird from a bat. She could tell a mouse from a stone that pretended to be a mouse. Tonight she heard only ordinary courage.
Back on the ledges Shadeclaw paused at the south cut. He felt the stone with his palm. He counted to ten without thinking about numbers. There was a small tremor on the edge of his hearing. He held still and let it climb his arm.
"Not a beast," he said to the darkness. "Not the weather. A drum. Very far. Very faint."
He did not signal the alarm. He took a piece of chalk and drew a small ring on the parapet and a mark in the ring.
Silvershadow joined him without stepping loud. He stood beside the mark and looked toward the east.
"I felt it too," he said. "Tomorrow we will look at lines and maps. Tonight we let the quiet stand."
"Agreed," Shadeclaw said.
They said no more words. They let the night talk for a while.
In the forge, the last ribbons of heat drifted from the vents. Lirien had already banked the fire. She made one last walk around the room, hand on wall, eye on the supports. The meteor iron had been sorted into three racks by grain and dream. She labeled the racks with neat chalk. In the corner she had begun a small frame for a cradle. It was more art than tool yet. It looked like a half moon and a promise.
"Two," she said to the wood without thinking. The thought surprised her. It felt right as soon as it landed. She took off her gloves and set them on the bench. She washed her hands in the basin and watched the soot spiral away until the water ran clear again.
In the kitchen Azhara laid out bread and meat and a pot of stew for the late watch. She clicked her tongue when the stew lid rattled.
"Behave," she told the stew. "People are trying to be quiet."
Vel leaned against the door and shook her head. "You are talking to a pot."
"It started," Azhara said. "Also, I am making carrot coffee."