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Bloomingday

  Chapter 1 Bloomingday

  I Rachel

  “Good morning Rachel. It’s 06:00 ship time. Your mother requests your

  presence at breakfast in her gardens at 07:00.” Auriga’s voice is quiet

  and implacable. I bury my head under my bedding, but her voice is

  mental, so it doesn’t help at all. With a sigh, I sit up and rub my

  eyes. “Good morning Auriga,” I mumble. “Did you not sleep well?” Auriga

  inquires. “Not really. Too much to be excited about, and nervous.”

  “Well, in that spirit, I would like to wish you a pleasant name day and

  congratulate you on your blooming. How do you feel?” I snort. “Anxious,

  nervous, excited.” Amusement touches her voice as she responds, “That is

  understandable. Your matriarch was the same when we were first bonded.”

  “Really?” I ask, surprised. My mom is the most together Felis I know.

  “Yes, she was. She was a little less… settled though,” Auriga responds.

  I laugh and stand. “You say I have a bit until my mother wants me?”

  “Yes, 07:00.” I drop into some Veil poses to stretch, and snatch a clean

  knee length kaftan from my spatial chest. Shrugging into it, I say, “I’m

  going for a run and a swim to wake up before I have breakfast.” Auriga

  sends her affirmative. “I will notify your matriarch. Do you anticipate

  being late?” “No. I’m just running ten kilometers each way today. I’ll

  be back in time to grab a quick wash.” “Very well. Enjoy your wake up.”

  Grinning, I exit my quarters and start jogging for the lift channel.

  II

  A ten kilometer run is a little light for me, but I want to be back in

  time to meet with mom. She hates it when I’m late. To be fair, she is

  the First Spiral, so appearances matter more for her. Today is also

  important for me, and the appearances matter more here for me too.

  Normally, physical exertion helps me loosen up, and today was turning

  out to be that kind of morning right up until I hit the halfway mark and

  began looping back toward my starting point.

  That’s when I hear it. The sharp, wet thud of fists on flesh. The scrape

  of feet, breathless crying, the mean edge of laughter. When you grow up

  around combat, you know the difference between a spar and an

  ass-beating.

  I slow just enough to listen, my ears shifting into a Cup?Scan to track

  the scene and flicking in acknowledgement, picking out layers: two older

  voices mocking, breath easy one younger, high and ragged. Close. Maybe

  my age.

  Well. It is my Blooming day.

  “Fuck it,” I mutter, already grinning, my ears pricking forward and my

  tail lifting into a high flag. All the nerves, anxiety, the pent up

  frustration and anticipation… yeah, it would be fun to blow off a little

  steam before I have to be super serious.

  I reach inward, brushing the cool bright well of free Starfire under my

  sternum. It answers swiftly and eagerly, pressure and heat sliding out

  along my ribs and spine, then streaming down my limbs. My stride

  lengthens. The biome’s resonance catches my acceleration. I feel the

  deck’s Toneweave tense under my pads, a low hum chasing my feet as I

  start to push.

  Starfire surges, threading my muscles in a lattice of light and force.

  The world stretches thin. Air thickens around me, resisting. Sound

  smears into a single high whine in my ears as I slam through the sound

  barrier.

  The shock comes all at once: air piling up in front of me, then tearing

  loose in a hard CRACK that slaps the biome deck and ricochets through

  the acacias. The sonic boom shudders the living grass panels, rattles

  branches, sends nearby fauna exploding away in a storm of wings and

  hooves. I feel the deck’s lattice ringing fiercely. Auriga will be

  annoyed with me, but she would hopefully understand. It would be bad to

  be cut loose here of all places.

  Too late to worry about that now.

  The clearing opens in front of me in a blur of color: river glittering

  to my left, acacia shadows to my right, and dead center, exactly what I

  expected: two bigger girls, one on each side of a smaller one they’ve

  got half-curled on the decking. She’s covered in blood and in the brief

  glimpse I got, I saw they’d worked her over hard. Her limbs were angled

  unnaturally, her ribs actually sunken on one side. Veyth faction stink

  on both of the attackers.

  Tariya I recognize instantly.

  I don’t slow down and she turns, eyes wide, just in time to see me.

  The pressure wave hits her a heartbeat before I do, air slamming into

  her, ripping her stance apart. Then I’m driving through where she is and

  I turn just enough at the last instant to keep from slicing her open

  with my claws, turning a killing blow into a broad, brutal slap.

  Impact detonates down my spine. Tariya leaves the ground in a spin, body

  folding around the hit. She vanishes sideways in a blur of limbs and

  hair, smashing into the living decking a couple dozen meters away. Soil

  and root-mat spray, the Toneweave underlay groaning as it craters around

  her.

  I dig claws into the grass to brake, tail lashing hard to pivot.

  Starfire sings its beautiful song along my bones, bleeding out into the

  deck as I ground myself. It leaves a faint heat-haze trail in the air

  behind me, a comet-smear of light that fades as I whip back toward the

  second attacker.

  She’s faster than Tariya and she’s already moving, lips peeled back from

  her teeth, Starfire bright around her fists. Her first punch is an

  overcommitted straight for my head, a tight white halo of compressed air

  screaming around her knuckles. She’s not supersonic, even though she’s

  already burning brighter than she should be.

  I drop my center of gravity, bending backward so my spine parallels the

  living decking and the compressed air from the pressure wave snaps past

  my face with a flat, painful whump, tugging at my ears and the surface

  of my skin. Hot, bitter dissonance ripples through the local Resonance

  where she blows tears at the biome’s normal harmonious hum.

  I go all the way down, catching myself on one hand and the ball of one

  foot, free leg already coiling, then I unwind.

  My kicking leg scythes up and across in a diagonal sweep, toe claws

  fully extended, aimed across her ribs and gut. Starfire pulses down my

  hip like a hammer blow, vectoring into the strike. The air hisses off my

  foot in a thin, sharp snap, close enough that the shock front hits her a

  blink before my claws do, robbing her of balance.

  Her guard is only OK, but more than I’d thought she’d have for someone

  who thinks bullying counts as practice. She starts to twist with it, arm

  dropping to cover. Not enough. I feel contact along the tops of my toes,

  then the heavier drag as my claws bite and drag through fabric and

  flesh. Her stance buckles, and she stumbles sideways with the force of

  the hit, clawed feet ripping trenches in the grassed decking.

  I ride the momentum, roll through, and come up already on her again.

  Out of the corner of my eye I catch the smaller girl, bloody, shaking,

  scrabbling backwards into the acacias, dragging one leg that doesn’t

  look right. I’m glad she is aware enough to get distance. I’ll deal with

  them first, enough to drive them away, then I’ll have time to care for

  her.

  The second girl snarls and surges back at me, Starfire flaring harsher

  now, yellow-white around her shoulders and fists. She throws a tight

  combination at my head and throat, each strike leaving little ripples in

  the air, tiny pressure pops that sting my skin even when they miss.

  I push my Starfire into enhancing my perceptions, my Resonance awareness

  instead of raw speed for a beat, listening.

  The deck’s Toneweave is still ringing, but under that, I can feel her

  rhythm, breath, stance, the way she leans a fraction heavier on her back

  foot. Every punch she throws sends a small, ugly note down through her

  legs into the decking.

  I move between those notes.

  Slip left: her fist whistles past my ear, trailing a line of hot air. I

  answer with a short, savage elbow into her ribs, feeling the Starfire in

  my shoulders focus, condense, then drive straight through the point of

  contact.

  Step in: her knee comes up for my gut; I catch it with my forearm, let

  the impact roll through my body and out into the deck instead of my

  stomach. I’m tossed backward, rolling to my feet smoothly and I come

  back in hard.

  I rake her forearm with my free claws on the way past.

  She swears, flinching, then tries to buy space with a wild,

  Starfire-flooded haymaker, but she’s fucking slow.

  I duck under again, this time stepping into her instead of away. My

  shoulder hits her centerline, and I let a controlled burst of Starfire

  out through my legs and core, driving us both sideways. The deck buckles

  under the sudden force, grass panels tearing around our feet.

  We’re close enough that I can smell her fear under the acid Veyth

  perfume. I want to taste her blood on my tongue, to end her treacherous

  life here, but there is an injured kitling who needs med care.

  “Hi,” I say, and grin in her face.

  Then I drive my fist up into her midsection and I don’t hold back on the

  power. Starfire funnels down my arm in a clean, bright vector, the air

  around my knuckles compressing.

  When my fist lands, the sound is more crack than thud, echoing off the

  river and up through the acacias. The shock ripples out in a visible

  ring of disturbed air, flickering through the leaves behind her. The

  biome deck’s Resonance screams for a heartbeat then settles, leaving a

  ghost of her in the space she had been occupying. She folds around the

  hit, flying backwards.

  Somewhere beyond her, Tariya is finally peeling herself out of the

  crater she made, spitting blood and dirt, eyes gone wide and feral as

  she drags herself upright on an acacias splintered trunk.

  Good. I hope it fucking hurt when she went through that trunk.

  Tariya staggers forward, still spitting dirt and blood, Starfire

  starting to leak off her in ragged little flares. The second girl is

  hunched over her own ribs, clutching her side where I planted that

  punch, but she’s still upright, eyes fixed on me.

  About time they’re taking this seriously.

  The biome is not happy. I can feel the Toneweave’s hum gone tight and

  thin under my feet, flex patterns jittery from the hits we’ve already

  traded. Air still wobbles around us from my first boom, the grass

  leaning in slow-motion waves as the resonance settles. *I’m sorry,

  Auriga. I’m trying to damage you as little as possible.*

  “All right,” I say. “I’m guessing you started this shit. What the fuck

  is wrong with you? Beating on a chorus mate, a convergencemate and a

  kitling to top it all off. How small do you have to be to pick a fight

  that one sided?”

  Tariya ignores me, giving a short, ugly shout and kicks off. Her

  Starfire floods her limbs in a thick orange blaze, heat shimmer crawling

  off her shoulders. The air around her buckles as she pushes, there’s a

  hard, sharp crack as she blows through the sound barrier straight at me,

  the shock front chewing the grass into a ragged V in her wake.

  The second girl isn’t far behind; her own Starfire spikes cleaner and

  whiter, a narrower cone of pressure hugging her body as she sprints.

  Both of them leave drifting contrails of light and disturbed air, their

  Mach cones overlapping and sparking where they touch.

  For a heartbeat, everything is noise and pressure and motion. Then I

  respond.

  My Starfire surges up my spine in a cool, almost metallic rush, not

  flaming like theirs, but bright and dense and sharp. The world around me

  narrows to a lattice of lines and timings, the cadence of their

  footfalls, the angle of their shoulders, the rhythm of their breath

  echoing through the deck’s Resonance.

  The moment their shockwaves touch me, I push. It’s less a single crack

  and more like a chord: three overlapping notes as we all cross that edge

  at once. Air slams flat against my face and then let’s go; for an

  instant I’m running in a tunnel of low pressure, Mach cone clamped tight

  around my shoulders, the world outside blurred and warped.

  To everyone watching, we’re just lines of force and flickers of light.

  To me, it’s slow enough that I have no problem seeing and keeping track

  of my opponents.

  Tariya comes in at a high angle, leading with a right hook, claws out

  and not holding back now, aiming to take my head off. Her cone bites

  into mine, shock fronts grinding together in a jagged white ripple. Her

  timing’s good, but she’s telegraphing way too much. Also, this is her

  signature when she’s pissed and I think we crossed that line a couple

  strikes ago.

  I snapped sideways across her line in a micro-step the Chorus

  swordmasters drilled into us until I was sick of it. The move tears my

  cone open on one side; air claws at me, trying to drag me back into

  normal speed, but I lean harder into Starfire and let Resonance carry

  the rest.

  Her fist shears past my cheek close enough that the compressed air

  strips tears from my eyes.

  I answer with a backhand that’s more vector than muscle, claws still

  sheathed. Starfire focuses through my wrist, and my hand hits the side

  of her jaw just under supersonic, so the shockwave and the impact arrive

  almost together.

  The sound is ugly. The deck’s Toneweave shrieks and then drops half an

  octave.

  Tariya spins away, her cone collapsing into a messy spiral as she

  cartwheels end over end. The shock trail she leaves gouges a shallow

  trench across the grass, clippings and soil thrown high in a ragged fan.

  She hits the ground in a tumble and doesn’t pop straight back up this

  time.

  One down. For the moment.

  The second girl is on me before Tariya finishes rolling.

  She slides past on my left, a shrieking thrown spear, shock cone clipped

  tight, Starfire ringing off her in a high, whistling tone. She snaps a

  kick at my knee as she passes, the air at her foot going hard enough to

  sting when it grazes me even though she misses clean.

  I pivot with her, keeping my cone overlapped with hers so the pressure

  gradients don’t tear my joints apart. For a few heartbeats we’re

  circling each other at supersonic, overlapping Mach cones carving a

  twisting tunnel in the air that picks up and sends debris tumbling.

  Every time we cross paths there’s another sharp pop as the shock fronts

  clash.

  She commits first, a high feint, shoulder twitch, Starfire flare, then

  she vanishes low, foot skimming the deck. She comes up under me in a

  rising uppercut, the cone on her leading fist tight as a knife edge. If

  she lands that under my ribs, I’m visiting the medbay or the morgue.

  Bitch, you just made a mistake. Starfire rushes down my spine and out

  through my limbs. I flow around her line like water, let her fist cut

  through the space my chest was just in, and as she overextends, I anchor

  my foot in the deck. I feel the biome under me, roots and Toneweave, the

  slow song of the river, not as separate things but as one linked

  pattern. I push my Starfire down into that, just for a heartbeat, and

  Auriga is immediately present, agreeing to hold.

  With that fulcrum under me, I spin and whip a heel into the side of her

  knee.

  The impact lands at just over Mach 1.

  Her cone shatters in a glittering ring of pressure. The air around her

  leg explodes outward; grass rips up in a circular wave. Her body tries

  to keep going in one direction while her leg is blown out from under

  her, and torn apart.

  She screams and goes down hard, skidding across the deck on her back and

  carving a long scar tens of meters through the greenery. Her Starfire

  flickers wildly, trying to compensate, trying to heal the catastrophic

  damage I just did. Not for weeks, if I let her live. I haven’t decided

  yet.

  By the time I straighten, Tariya is struggling up again, eyes unfocused

  but hate still burning.

  I don’t give her a chance to rebuild.

  One breath. One step.

  I focus Starfire into a straight-line vector acceleration and go through

  her. All of that momentum, focus and my mass is packed into a narrow

  lance. The cone narrows to a needle around my leading shoulder. Tariya’s

  guard is still coming up when I hit her center mass, claws out and still

  accelerating.

  The impact hammers through her for the most part, but I have to still

  ground some through the deck instead of taking the part of her hit that

  she managed to get through. The Toneweave howls. Tariya leaves my

  shoulder at an angle, body folding around the force, and sails out of

  the clearing into the trees with enough momentum to go through some of

  the trunks.

  She doesn’t come back.

  Silence falls in layers after that. Shockwaves echo off the river

  cliffs, then fade. The biome’s Resonance begins repairing the damage we

  caused, Auriga grumbling at me the whole time. Starfire still stretches

  my perception of time, so it feels like I have whole minutes to just

  stand there and breathe while my heart hammers against my ribs.

  Then I realize the smaller girl is gone.

  “Shit.”

  I let my acceleration drop, taking the slap of air back into my face as

  the world rushes down to normal timing. The leaves all fall at once.

  Dust and grass fragments patter onto the decking.

  I cast my senses outward, Starfire enhancing Sense instead of Vector.

  The Resonance of the biome is messy, torn grass, bruised Toneweave,

  little pockets of dissonance where impacts hit, but underneath that I

  can pick out the thin, jittery note of panicked breathing.

  Acacias. Left side of the clearing. She’s gone to ground in the thorned

  shadows.

  I pad that way, ears flicking, tracking the tiny disruptions: a bent

  branch here, a scraped trunk there. The faint metallic tang of blood,

  both hers and theirs, laces the warm scent of sap and dust.

  Behind me, there’s movement.

  The second girl is up again. Wobbling, but up. Her Starfire is a mess

  now, sparking and flaring erratically, a faint shimmer wraps weakly

  around her fists. But her eyes are full of hate and despair, knowing she

  will at minimum face exile if I let her live after this.

  And they’re focused past me, into the trees.

  “No,” I say, already turning, but she’s faster than I expect in that

  state.

  She launches herself toward the acacias, not at me. Her movement is

  sloppy, she’s leaking Starfire everywhere, but it still flattens grass

  and snaps branches as she blasts into the shadows.

  “Come out,” she shrieks, voice breaking around the edges. “Or I’ll

  fucking kill you Starfall whore!”

  There’s a sound in her tone I don’t like. Not just cruelty. Something

  hollow and desperate under it. *Mistake, Rachel. You made a mistake.

  Keep that girl from dying now*

  She knows how fast I am. She saw what I just did to Tariya. Threatening

  a hostage is a stupid tactic.

  I don’t understand it, and I don’t have the luxury to stand here and

  analyze it.

  I call more Starfire, this time colder. Tighter.

  I lift my hand and trace a quick curve in the air, fingers leaving a

  faint after-image of pale light. Simple warding geometry, the kind they

  use to muffle test explosions and training mishaps. I twist it, though,

  just a little, nudging aside light and air resistance.

  The sight-ward snaps shut around me with a soft thrum.

  The world goes muffled. Colors smear at the edges of my vision where

  light ducks around the ward’s boundary instead of touching it cleanly.

  In the Resonance, I’m suddenly… less. Not gone, but blurred, like

  someone smudged my pattern.

  To normal eyes, I’m just not there anymore.

  I roll my shoulders, testing the feel of it. The ward tugs faintly when

  I move too fast

  I breathe once, deep.

  Then I move. Acceleration slams me back into the cone. This time, I

  shape the Starfire tighter, hugging the pressure wave to my body,

  letting the sight-ward ride along its surface. The boom that follows is

  smaller and strangled, sound funneled up and away instead of out across

  the clearing. To anyone watching, it’s just a sudden, violent shove of

  air and a flicker of warped light with no obvious source.

  The distance between me and the acacias disappears.

  The second girl has the smaller one by the throat now, dragging her up

  against a trunk. Her Starfire is flowing down and around her free arm,

  coalescing in her hand and fingers, too bright, too sharp. She’s on the

  verge of killing that Kitling. I don’t give her the chance.

  I come in on a shallow angle, leading with my claws this time. Starfire

  narrows along my arm in a razor line, not quite my lethal filament, but

  close. The cone around my hand compresses into a wedge, a little ripple

  ahead of it tearing the air and bending the light.

  She starts to turn, some instinct screaming that something is wrong.

  Too late.

  My arm passes through her forearm just below the elbow.

  For me, it feels almost clean, resistance, then a sudden give as

  Starfire, speed, and physical force all agree on the same solution. The

  shockwave hits a fraction of a heartbeat later, hammering bark and

  leaves outward in a burst.

  For her, it’s a lot worse. The smaller girl drops as the grip on her

  throat just isn’t there anymore. I’m already reaching with my other arm,

  scooping her against my side with a twist that drags her out of line

  with what follows.

  I plant a foot in the second girl’s chest and let one last controlled

  burst of Starfire loose. I’m ninety percent sure she’s already dead when

  the kick sends her flying backwards out of the trees, a streak of blood

  and sound, crashing into the clearing and skidding a long, tearing

  another scar through the battered grass. The biome’s Resonance surges.

  I land in a crouch, the smaller girl clutched to me, sight-ward still

  humming faintly around us, Starfire burning hot and bright under my

  skin.

  Only then does the shaking hit my hands.

  I don’t know a lot of healing geometry or song, but I do know a little.

  Now that the fight is over, I’m starting to panic a little at how badly

  she’s been beaten. Her shimmering blood stains her lips and has made a

  small pool under her head where she’s lying in the grass. I begin to

  create the geometry, hands describing its lines in the air as I sing

  quietly, just trying to stabilize her until I can get her to a med

  chorus. The kitling coughs, spattering my face with her blood, and I

  want to fucking cry. She can’t be more than fourteen standard, and this

  was… no, I need to focus on the healing. Drawing my focus back in line,

  I swallow, try a tone… and I begin singing. The healing geometry I know

  hangs, burning a violet gold over her and in front of me. I hear a few

  bones snapping back into place and squeeze my eyes shut. “Kitling.” I

  finish the healing song I know and give her a few moments to settle

  again. I examine her once again, and she is at least stable enough to

  move. I gently slide arms under her and lift. I’m moving as smoothly and

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  gently as I can, but she still whimpers, her claws digging faintly at

  


      
  1. I settle her as best I can. “I’m taking you to the med chorus.


  2.   


  You’re going to be fine. I won’t let anything happen to you.” I can feel

  the tears on my face as I speak. I check my free Starfire pool, down by

  a third, but plenty left. I slowly begin circulating Starfire through me

  again, and start running.

  III

  The kitling is conscious, which makes it worse. Long-limbed, sharp-eyed

  even through pain, two years from Blooming. Fourteen standard at most,

  which puts her right at the threshold. She keeps trying to curl in on

  herself and spasming with the agony of internal damage and broken bones

  being jostled.

  Blood is drying on my throat and collar. Some of it is hers. When she

  coughs, it’s wet, and she sprays my face with fresh. I angle for the

  nearest lift channel. The closest med chorus to the Central River Atrium

  sits one deck up on Auriga’s Heartline.

  “I’m taking you to a med chorus,” I say, low, letting my ears lift to a

  neutral tilt and my tail curve mid?curve with a slow single tip?curl,

  the Silent?Cant for quiet reassurance. “Stay with me Kiki.”

  Her claws tighten against my kaftan and she whimpers, which tears at my

  heart.

  The lift channel takes us up swiftly, gently, with no sudden jolts or

  jerks that would hurt the Kitling more than she already is. The

  Heartline decks open in front of me.

  Auriga’s presence brushes my mind. “Route me, please, Auriga.” Out loud,

  I say, “What are you called, little one?” She coughs again, a mist of

  blood settling on my skin. “Nyss…” hacking cough, “Nyssira.” Her voice

  is strained, filled with agony. “Almost there, Nyssie,” I murmur.

  Auriga returns and says, “Med Chorus Bay Seven is nearest. Healer Monika

  is present.”

  My stomach drops, then steadies. Of course she is.

  Today of all days. My Blooming day. Mom waiting. The whole ship watching

  who I’m about to become, then this.

  The lift opens, and I run.

  Bay Seven’s threshold field ripples as I hit it flaring and bursting as

  I blast through it.

  “Second mom!” I call.

  Second Mother Monika stands in the opening in sleeveless med blacks.

  Short. Muscular. Built for close work, healing or hand-to-hand,

  depending on what the moment might bring.

  Her eyes lock on the girl in my arms and her face tightens.

  “Treatment cradle,” she snaps. “Now.”

  The med chorus standing by leap into motion immediately. No questions,

  no chatter, swift and economic movement. Sterile tools are collected and

  set next to the treatment cradle. Diagnostic panels hum to life and

  previously blank surfaces display statistics and test sequences.

  I cross to the nearest cradle and lower Nyssira carefully.

  The moment my arms leave her, she reaches after me, breath catching in a

  rough, ugly rasp. She tries to push herself up and fails.

  “I’m here,” I whisper. “Be still. I’m not going anywhere yet.” I take

  Nyssira’s hand, stroking my thumb across her knuckles and singing

  softly, the tears and rage returning.

  Monika puts her hand on my forearm, still sticky with Nyssira’s blood. I

  look down at my blood covered hands and my fury rises more, the desire

  I’d felt during the fight, to kill both of the treacherous cunts and

  take their Starfire. Under the fury and growing bloodlust, I feel the

  horror and pain of seeing one so young and vulnerable beaten and broken

  like this. *She’s not much younger than you, is she?* I think. I have to

  close my eyes and slip into the practice of the Veil. “Tell me what you

  did to help her, daughter,” Monika asks.

  “I stabilized her the best I could,” I answer. “I used the little

  healing geometry I know and I sang to help support the healing. I heard

  bones shifting, and I waited until I was sure she was as stable as I can

  make her. I put those who did this down, but I don’t know for how long,

  so I didn’t hang around.”

  Monika’s eyes move over Nyssira’s body, the blood, the bruising, the

  damaged throat and misaligned bones. Then she inhales once.

  Her nostrils flare.

  “Veyth faction?” she asks, although she doesn’t need to.

  The name scrapes against my nerves. The smell of those two is still on

  my skin acid-sweet under sweat and blood.

  Monika makes a sour face and looks like she wants to spit.

  She uses scissors to start gently cutting Nyssira’s top away, exposing

  bruises, swollen ribs, what looked to be a broken clavicle, her swollen

  and misshapen throat. While she does that, I step away to wash my hands

  and get a cloth so I can at least clean the blood painting her face.

  Nyssira bares her teeth at Monika, but she doesn’t flinch. She places

  her hand gently at Nyssira’s sternum, feeling her breath. I watch how

  her Starfire flows into Nyssira as I gently swab her skin. She deadens

  Nyssira’s pain first before starting. It spreads further until it finds

  her injuries, and begins to steadily heal them. Bones my healing efforts

  hadn’t touched move back into place and flesh reknits.

  Second mom interrupts my thoughts by asking, “Where did you find her?”

  I blink, refocusing on Monika. “In the Central River Atrium biomes when

  I was heading back from my run,” I say. “Near the acacias. It was two

  against her. I reacted before I thought. It’s not fucking fair!” Second

  mom smiles at me. “Very little is, my lovely daughter. You got her soon

  enough, and the first aid you did was helpful. She should be fine, given

  time, healing and rest.” I exhale, settling onto a stool next to

  Nyssira’s treatment cradle.

  Monika’s jaw tightens. “You’ve informed the First Spiral?” I nod. “Am

  now.” I glance at the time display by the entrance. *Auriga?* *I’m

  here.* *Please let my matriarch know I will be late. I need to grab a

  shower now and with everything else…*

  *She is aware of the situation. I made her aware when you committed to

  fighting the two Veyth supporters.* I send my gratitude to her and with

  a gentle squeeze of Nyssira’s hand, I reluctantly let go… or try to.

  Nyssira clings tighter to my hand, so I stay seated a moment longer,

  rubbing her knuckles gently. Yelena, another of ElyndraMom’s mates hands

  MonikaMom an auto injector filled with a sedative, some kind of nervous

  suppression drug. Now the blood is gone, the battered state of her face

  is very apparent, and my heart squeezes again, hands shaking with the

  desire to find them and… *slow, deep breaths, Rachel* I think. *Remember

  your training* I get a handle on myself again and look up from Nyssira’s

  face to see MonikaMom looking at me. “She’ll be safe here, Kiki.” The

  pet name she always uses makes me smile a little. “Mooomm…” She snorts

  quietly. “She’s safer here than in her own chorus, apparently.” “Maybe

  ElyndraMom will agree…” Monika looks at me. “What, daughter?” “What do

  you think about bringing her in to our chorus? They hurt her, badly, one

  of their own chorus and… from the look of her, she hasn’t eaten in too

  long either, and with how plentifulfood is, that is inexcusable.”

  MonikaMom frowns. I can tell she is unsure about the idea, but what she

  asks is, “What are your plans for the rest of the morning?” I don’t

  answer. She sighs. “Kiki, you’ve already got at least two matriarchs

  pissed at you for… what is it? Oh yeah, future claiming their daughters.

  Don’t you think we should talk about this?” I look at her incredulously.

  “Seriously? Are you talking about Lyssi… my voice catches and I have to

  stop a moment. I clear my throat, then resume,”Saskia and Lyssara?

  Nothing has happened between Lyssara and I except some talking and

  nuzzling. And Saskia…” Her hands were up now, a defensive, “Stop,”

  gesture. “Sorry, Kiki, I shouldn’t have brought up those two. Of course

  we can talk this over as a chorus.” I suddenly find that I have no

  desire to talk to her anymore. Searching for an excuse to leave, I

  glance at the time display again, then at Nyssira. I see Nyssira’s eyes

  fluttering, trying to stay open. I take her hand again gently and lean

  in, speaking close to her ear, the soft tuft tickling my lips. “I’ll

  return as soon as I can, Nyssie. My second mom is taking care of you.

  You’re in good hands.” She doesn’t say anything, she drifts closer and

  closer to complete sleep. I squeeze gently and let go, stepping back.

  “Please take care of her.” “Of course,” Monika says and gives me a

  gentle smile. “I know you’ve got responsibilities, so go.” She doesn’t

  push, and gratefully, I give her a respectful bow and leave.

  IV

  I slip out of Bay Seven on quiet feet, the corridor lights are

  unforgiving when it comes to all of the dried blood on my throat and

  collar, my hands and arms and soaked into my kaftan. The kaftan itself

  is ripped to hell, not designed for what I had just put it through. It

  would need to be recycled, since it was unsalvageable. Auriga’s presence

  brushes my mind, showing me the quickest route. I keep my pace steady,

  head high and shoulders back, and take the nearest lift channel down

  toward my quarters.

  I pause for the threshold field dispersion, then step in, already

  peeling the knee-length kaftan off my body. It hits the recycler intake

  with a wet slap. I step straight into the bathing stall and crank the

  water hot. I rinse first, long and thorough, letting the water carry the

  worst of the blood, dirt, and debris down the drain. Then I scrub

  properly: shoulders, arms, throat, ribs, hands, under my claws, between

  pads, behind ears. I use the simple act of bathing as a kind of

  meditation. It might cost me a bit more time, but I need to recenter. I

  tilt my head and work cleanser into my mane until it runs clean, fingers

  combing through to the roots, then rinse until the water is clear. Then

  conditioner for my mane and tail, lather and rinse.

  I shut off the spray, and towel off with brisk, practiced strokes. I

  pull a brush from my spatial chest and work it through my mane in clean

  passes, roots to ends, untangling, smoothing, setting it the way I like

  it to sit. Then I dress fast and simple: soft snug bottoms that don’t

  bind at the hips or knees, and a fitted top that leaves my shoulders and

  arms bare, dips just enough at the front to show a hint of cleavage, and

  opens at the upper back. No rips, no blood, nothing that smells like

  Veyth corruption and sweat. I leave my feet bare, and give my tail a

  flick to make sure it was properly threaded. When I’m done, I check

  myself once, clean, contained, presentable, then turn back toward the

  threshold field, and beyond that the gardens and my waiting matriarch

  and First Spiral.

  V

  I leave my quarters with one thought foremost. *I’m not sure I’m doing

  as well as I believe.* Oh, it’s not the violence. Every Felis is well

  acquainted with violence by the time we are bloomed, with out exception.

  Not all of us are warriors, but we are who we are. That doesn’t mean

  that we do this to our daughters and sisters. Kitlings, our daughters,

  are sacred to us. I’m not stupid or naive enough to believe that we

  never fight amongst ourselves, but it’s been a very long time since

  we’ve had any kind of big internal conflict. Why bother? The cosmos, the

  entirety of the multiverse, is surely big enough for everyone to exist,

  right? I shake my head at my musings. Ultimately, sophonts have choice,

  the ability to walk their own path, and people will do what they want.

  *Only ten minutes late.* The gardens are only a few decks away, the

  sprawling sweep of lush greenery and water part of my mother’s place as

  the First note of her chorus, and Chordweaver of Auriga.

  ElyndraMom’s table sits where the riverline bends, half under a canopy

  of trained vines. The table is simple, but Elyndra Starfall at that

  simple table makes it regal.

  She’s already seated, her posture relaxed but upright, her hands folded,

  her gaze lingering on the water for a moment before turning to me. “Good

  morning, daughter.” She speaks in Common-cant. I stop at the edge of the

  pavilion and bow deeply. “Good morning, Matriarch.” I respond also in

  common-cant, a practice every Felis maintains. Outside of immediate

  chorus we keep to Common-Cant, but our Silent-Cant, the unvoiced

  language of ears and tail, still runs beneath it, carrying courtesy and

  intent for those attuned… chorus. It’s not a good sign or a bad sign, I

  think, my tail giving two quick tip?curls in anxious Silent?Cant. *She

  has always been this way with all of us, even her chorusmates in

  public.* She is First Spiral, and while that isn’t like other leadership

  positions outside of the lineages, it still requires certain public

  appearances. Thus my nerves and anxiety.

  Her eyes flick over me: clean clothes, dampness where my mane hasn’t

  dried fully, the way I’m holding myself… a little too tense and stiff

  where I took a couple hits earlier, and my traitorous tail. The bruises

  and cuts are already starting to heal, but they still exist. She doesn’t

  mention the time. Out of all my moms, ElyndraMom is the one who is best

  at seeing through and calling out my shit. It isn’t always pleasant, but

  truth is always better than ignorance. Instead, switching from

  common-cant to heart-cant-hearth, she says, “How is your body, my

  daughter? Speak truth with me.” For a flash moment, I’m there again,

  watching as those two bitches beat and break Nyssira, and the fury and

  grief threaten to come back. *Nyssira is safe and in MonikaMom’s care.

  She isn’t… nothing can get to her past MonikaMom* I shake my head. I

  take a breath, schooling my face and shifting my ears into a Neutral

  Lift and my tail into a Low Drape, and say, “Bruised and a few cuts. My

  Starfire pool is…” I pause to check, “about three fourths full. I need

  to meditate and integrate.” A faint softening touches her mouth, and she

  nods. Her ears tilt more forward and she asks, And your mind?” “You came

  here from bathing and the med bay, correct? You would not have had a

  chance to meditate afterward. I hold her gaze.”No. And I am troubled,

  matriarch. *She* grows louder, more bold.” My ears slam into a Hard?Pin

  and my tail freezes rigid. That earns me a real smile, brief as a blink.

  “Ilyra Veyth always pushes boundaries. This isn’t the first time, but it

  is escalating quickly. I fear I know why and something must be done

  eventually,” here she stops and sighs. I blink. My matriarch isn’t

  emotionless… She’s reserved though, and it’s only when she speaks in

  heart-cant that I really know her emotional state of mind. She taught me

  to read the tells and little gestures, but she has had significantly

  more experience than me. ’We’ll address that.” She says. ElyndraMom

  gestures at a low seat across from her and I take it as Two pre-Blooming

  girls ghost from the garden path. They can’t be more than eleven

  standard. One carries a tray with a covered bowl and an obviously warmed

  stack wrapped in cloth; the other carries cups and folded cloths, and a

  lidded pot that smells like shepherd’s tree and spice. Their hands are

  steady, their posture carefully precise. They come to the table, kneel,

  and set breakfast down with practiced precision. No chatter. Not even

  any fidgeting. *Kitlings aren’t supposed to be that still* I think. They

  rise and withdraw to the edge of the pavilion, remaining standing after

  they serve, a respectful distance back, eyes lowered, ready to run for

  anything we ask. I find it… distasteful. ElyndraMom follows my gaze

  without turning her head. “They are in voluntary service rotation. They

  requested the gardens this quarter-cycle. They like the riverline. It

  still makes you uncomfortable?” I nod. “Yes mother. It feels, wrong.”

  She reaches out and takes my hand and squeezes. “Keep that discomfort,

  that awareness of them as people, daughter. That will keep you from

  being careless.” I nod, no worries there. *I don’t think I could accept

  people serving me.* Mom lifts the lid from the bowl. Steam rises.

  Beanpot broth, thick and mild, the daily pot made of legumes and greens

  with a low spice and no Starfire content. Beside it, hearthcakes:

  stone-plate mealie cakes stacked under cloth so they stay soft at the

  center, with a small dish of marula glaze and fire-chilli relish set off

  to one side. Simple, safe food, all of it free of Starfire. ElyndraMom

  pours the tea herself, not letting the girls do it, and slides my cup

  across to me. “Eat,” she says. I dive in, ravenous. The hearthcake is

  warm in my mouth, the marula sweet for half a heartbeat before the

  vinefire heat opens behind it, and the broth finishes it perfectly. The

  little moan of pleasure makes ElyndraMom smile. This has always been my

  favorite post fight food.

  ElyndraMom watches me for a bit longer before she says, “Tell me about

  Nyssira.” I swallow my mouthful, take a sip of tea before speaking. “I

  found her in the Heartflow Atrium biomes, about a quarter kilometer from

  lift channel 508. All I know is her name. Nyssira. I know too that I

  will be following up with her chorus. If they are not involved in this,

  I’ll bring her home and ensure she has everything she needs to recover.

  If they are involved… I smelled the Veyth corruption on both of them.

  It’s close enough to feral that it’s hard to mistake. If they are

  involved, I will not allow it to stand.” Mom’s gaze sharpens.”You’re

  positive it was Veyth?” I nod, ears pinned and tail rigid. ElyndraMom

  goes very still, and I can feel her presence pushing steadily against

  me, not overwhelmingly, but steady and pervasive. Even the two Runners

  feel it from where they are standing, and one begins to cry quietly, her

  face full of terror. I stand, angry at mom for not keeping a tighter

  control over herself, and at these two Runners for volunteering to serve

  anyone. I cross the seating area, and drop to one knee before them. I

  draw the weeping kitling into my arms and stroke her mane gently,

  tenderly massaging her ears and rubbing her back. As I comforted her, I

  also push back steadily against mom, pressing outward with my

  Fundamental Harmonic . I get she’s upset, but this is over the line.

  “Go,” I say to the other Kitling, and she looks at me, at mom, and darts

  away. “Why?” I ask without turning, or stopping my ministrations to the

  young one. I don’t bother expanding. She knows what I mean. “Apologies,

  daughter.” She draws her Fundamental in, and the extreme pressure of her

  presence fades from the pavilion. I keep my face blank as relief loosens

  my ribs, and I too draw in my Fundamental. When she has calmed herself,

  ElyndraMom says to the still weeping young one with her face buried in

  my shoulder, “You are dismissed for today. Please accept my apologies,

  little one. Thank you for your help this morning.” I give the Kitling a

  squeeze and she straightens, still watery-eyed but slowly getting

  herself in order. “Yes, Aunt Elyndra.” I catch mom’s face lighting up

  with joy and my own grin is equally ridiculous. She turns back to me and

  clamps me in a tiny, fierce hug. “Thank you big sister.” I kiss the top

  of her head and she darts away, already drying her eyes and calling

  after her friend.

  I look up at my matriarch. She is still smiling, and I know my face is

  wearing the same expression. “Well, since you haven’t had a chance to

  meditate and integrate this morning, let’s do it here. It’s perfect, you

  have to admit.” I look at my cradlebearer, the woman who bore me and

  gave physical birth to me. “Can we talk about your loss of control

  please? You basically traumatized those Runners, and you are old enough

  and high level enough to know better. What is going on?” I expect her to

  refuse to talk about it, which is her go to move honestly.

  “Do you know the origin story of the lineages?” I shrug, ‘Sure. Who

  amongst us doesn’t?”

  “Sadly, Star, all too few. In the span of our lifetimes, it wasn’t that

  long ago. But the dissonance has an impact, even here I suppose. Tell me

  your understanding of the origin story of the lineages.”

  I stare, surprised, then frowning I began to recall and recite.

  “Before all things, there was song, vast and deep, harmony unsung, in

  endless sleep.

  From the One, three woke: Flow took breath and learned to roam, Light

  found form and built a home, Pattern stirred and saw the whole, harmony,

  structure, memory: one soul.

  Three peoples rose: Felis follow where currents guide, Dracil build with

  steady stride, Mnethari watch the woven tide, three paths walking side

  by side.

  The first balance:

  Felis mend the strain, Dracil set the frame, Mnethari keep the weave.

  Thus does the Lattice of the Cosmos stay whole.

  The fracture: one sang alone; the song turned thin, a crack began where

  none had been.

  Three responses: Felis mended where the wound lay bare, Dracil shelter

  those in need of care, Mnethari mapped the future’s snare, each one with

  a part to bear.

  The young races: new worlds whispered, some sang bright, some can’t yet

  sing, but hold a hidden light.

  Three interpretations: Flow says longing starts the day, Light says form

  must lead the way, Pattern says threads choose their play, truth has

  room for each to say.

  The threefold principle: when many voices weave as one, the First

  Harmony is begun.”

  “Well sung, daughter,” she speaks in Heart-cant. “Your voice is as fine

  as ever. Now, as to why? Partially, it’s because it’s what we’ve always

  done, as smooth brained as that sounds. We’ve only come to open warfare

  among the named clans three times in living memory. It’s partially who

  we are. We fight, fuck, hunt, and move.”

  I want to give her the time to finish, I really do, but… “Forgive me,

  matriarch. I could have sworn I heard you just say we fight each other

  because it’s what we do.” My ears are half pinned back and the tip of my

  tail won’t stay still. I’m not quite angry at her, but seriously?

  “I said partially,” her voice was calm, but an edge of faintly amused

  irritation runs through it. “The other part is probably more personal.

  The short explanation is that if you would have been born two hundred or

  so years ago, you would have had a den sister. Ilyra Veyth took her from

  me when she was just bloomed. Until we had you, I had no real desire to

  have another child.”

  Tears gather at the corners of her eyes, and she makes no effort to

  brush them away. My ears fold back slowly, then return to neutral, and

  her hand grips mine, accepting the wordless apology. “I am worried,

  daughter. I have no desire to lose another daughter, but I cannot keep

  you here against your will. And with the guests we have coming for your

  blooming and for the singularity event in a month, there is a lot of

  opportunity for accidents.” I bow my head briefly, then, “What was her

  name?” ElyndraMom’s face freezes, then she says, “Celeste. Her name was

  Celeste.” Together, we bow our heads and I imagine what it would have

  been like, growing up with a den sister. “Let’s meditate and get back to

  a reasonable morning. It’s your blooming morning, after all, and you’ve

  got a long day ahead of you.” I hesitate. “Now?”

  “Yes. Now.” ElyndraMom stretches and her mask slips back in place. She

  waves me out of the pavilion and follows close behind.

  VI

  The Heartflow Atrium air is always damp in the morning, being by the

  river, it’s damp all day, but it’s cool in the morning, which is why my

  mom takes breakfast and trains here. It smells like wet soil, crushed

  leaves, and something citrus-bright from the trained vines on the

  pavilion. Water rushes past in a ribbon about two kilometers in width…

  Auriga’s Heartflow.

  The mist from the river clings to my skin. Somewhere overhead birds

  chatter and call, going about their business of living, pollinating,

  having babies and so on.

  In a small clearing shaped into the acacias and reeds on the bank,

  ElyndraMom faces me, “Neutral cadence.” I face her in neutral and run

  the breath: inhale four, hold two, exhale six. On the first round, my

  breathing is off, I don’t get a full breath… I’m breathing into my

  chest, not my diaphragm.

  “Lower,” she corrects, and in the second round, my breath is deeper, my

  shoulders soften, and my hands loosen.

  “Good. Driftwork.” ElyndraMom’s voice is soothing.

  We start with Quiet Step Walk, slow forward steps, then slow back steps.

  I feel my weight roll toward the inside edges of my feet and correct

  until pressure is even across heel and pads. The air tastes faintly

  mineral when I swallow. The scent shifts as the airflow changes; the

  citrus note brightens, then fades.

  Arc Turn: hips initiate, shoulders follow. My first pivot is slightly

  too wide; my ankle tightens.

  “Smaller. Hold Cadence through the turn.”

  I shorten it. The pivot tightens, and the ankle relaxes.

  Crescent Reach and Thread Hands: arms circle, wrists turn, hands pass

  without gripping. ElyndraMom watches my fingers.

  “Quiet the Claws.”

  I loosen them. Nails stay disciplined, hook-ready, not tense.

  Low Coil Rise and Side Drift: controlled down and up, then lateral steps

  with level hips. Heat builds in my ankles and hips, from exertion, not

  strain. I hear the water more clearly as my body returns to balance.

  Rail Pivot: a light tap against one of the trunks in midair to redirect

  my motion. My twist is a half beat slow.

  “Mind your hips, daughter,” ElyndraMom says. “Run it again.”

  I repeat until the turn is aligned. Hips, then shoulders, then hands.

  Back to neutral. Breath steady.

  “Now, cadencework. Short holds.” I don’t comment, only falling into

  cadence.

  Stacked Spine Stand comes first, alignment and breath. Inhale four, hold

  two, exhale six. My mouth is full of the taste of the biome’s air. Then

  low Coil Hold… my thighs tremble a bit on the fourth breath.

  “Remember to stack, daughter.” I grimace, but she’s not wrong.

  I shift my pelvis a fraction and the tremble reduces.

  Ridgeback Hold next, Open Rib Gate, Hip Hinge Line. My left side resists

  where I took a hit earlier, but I breathe and stretch into the move

  until the resistance eases. Ankle Cadence Hold makes my feet feel

  grounded, and I don’t even have to worry about rolling or collapsing

  this time. Wrist and Claw Quiet, controlled flex and release. I feel

  satisfaction as no tension creeps in to my hands or forearms.

  Long Spine Fold to down-regulate.

  “Reset in Hush.” ElyndraMom stands still across from me. We match breath

  and posture without effort and I close my eyes. The Starfire from

  earlier is gathering and refilling my pool more rapidly. There is quite

  a lot of it. I must have actually stolen from those two. *What a shame.*

  I guide some of it toward my spiral, letting it settle like a mist, then

  flowing into the whorles and angles. As the Starfire integrates, I note

  with pride that I am now copper kindled. *It’s nice that some good came

  out of that event.* *That and Nyssira is safe now.*

  I open my eyes and she has returned to the pavilion. I re-take my seat

  across from her and pick up a freshly poured cup of tea. “Better?” she

  asks. “Yes,” I say, and mean it. “Good.” She taps the table once. “Now

  we speak of consequences.” I want to be angry, but she is the First

  Spiral. Mom continues, “Auriga has the incident logged. Monika will file

  the medical account. Security was at the site within minutes. The Veyth

  faction will not be permitted to shape this story.” My ears flick in

  acknowledgement. “They’ll try anyway.”

  “They always do,” Mom agrees. “So we will not let them.” She pauses.

  “You will have to give a formal statement on your Bloomingday, daughter.

  I’m sorry. I would have you avoid politics on this day of all days if I

  could, but it isn’t possible with something like this.”

  “What about Nyssira?”

  “Monika will keep her safe,” Mom says. “When she is well enough to be

  moved later, she will be relocated to a quieter bay with fewer patients.

  Did you have something in mind?”

  I nod. “Her chorus needs to be investigated. Like I said before, If they

  aren’t actively supporting Veyth, then I’m sure they’d be glad to rid

  themselves of some traitors. If, as is more likely, they are involved,

  then we remove a thorn in your side. Besides, even if they aren’t

  involved, they are clearly neglecting her. She is malnourished and

  showed signs of previous beatings. This wasn’t the first time. She

  deserves better. I want to give it to her” My claws flex once.

  ElyndraMom leans forward and touches my hand, her Hearth register rich

  with her compassion and anger at the situation. “First, you are an

  adult, bloomed today. You can do as you choose. Living and working as a

  chorus is not always easy, but its worth it. I knew Nyssira’s

  Cradlebearer. She would have rather her daughter been safe.” She pauses,

  fury etched across her face. “This will be investigated and dealt with.

  Like I said, though, you are going to need to make a statement.” I

  scowl. “What do you expect me to say?” I throw up my hands. “Oh, yes, I

  did kill two of your chorus mates in the Heartflow Atrium this morning.

  They were kicking the absolute shit out of a girl in the beginning days

  of her threshold years. Am I sorry it happened? Well, no, no I’m not!” I

  snarl and stand, my ears hard-pinned to my skull and my tail stiff

  behind me. She just watches me. “No one is asking for your apologies

  daughter,” she says dryly. “I suppose you could say that if you chose,

  but I was thinking something more like a notification of the event and a

  reminder about the consequences of attacking a Starfall in our home.” I

  pause, forcing my face smooth, and regard her. She is standing now too,

  and is leaning across the table, discarded cups and dishes between us.

  “You are my daughter, the High-Daughter of clan Starfall. As such I

  entrust you with this duty, daughter.” She switches to Heart-cant-vow

  and I blink. “I request with standing that you find the source of this,

  and make a firm example.” As she speaks, my fury doesn’t disappear, but

  it begins to refine, to focus. *This was her plan, for me to handle this

  myself.* I take a step back, and give her a deep bow of respect. “Yes

  matriarch,” I respond in Vow register. I straighten and she gives me a

  firm nod. “Good. Ridding ourselves of this infection is imperative, and

  you will have Auriga’s gratitude,” here she pauses and switches back to

  Hearth Register, “and my gratitude as well, my daughter.”

  My throat tightens with emotion and I only nod.

  ElyndraMom settles back into her seat, and I take my own as well. “Two

  more things, daughter before you have appointments to keep. First, some

  news. We are having a celebration in your honour tonight, as well as

  having some guests from the Eclyptine.” I blink. The eclyptine is a flag

  ship of the Voidfrost clan. As vast as Auriga, but the biomes and

  interiors as a whole are quite different. Fortresses to our great living

  biomes. “Who?” I ask, trying not to sound to eager. ElyndraMom knows me

  way to well, though. Her laughter rings like sweet bells in the atrium

  air. “Xela Voidfrost, for one. She’s…” “Veyra Voidfrosts daughter,

  daughter of the First Alchemist? Yeah, mom, I know who she is.” Her

  laughter fills the pavilion again. “Good, good Kitling. We are also

  playing host to two Voidfrost choruses and one mixed chorus containing

  Xela. The other two in that particular chorus are Lyssara Starfall and

  Kaelra Starfall.” I feel my heart skip. *Lyssie’s going to be here too?*

  Mom does this sometimes. Just drops major bombshells like it’s not a big

  deal, and just moves on. “Wait, wait! Lyssie… Lyssara is going to be

  here and this is how you tell me?” Her ears flick and she cocks her

  head. “Ah, there is some history there, isn’t there?” I roll my eyes.

  “Um, yeah, mom, you could say that.” “Well, that brings me to the second

  peace of this morning’s business. I wanted this to be more of a

  ceremony, but it’s not about me, is it. Happy bloomingday, daughter. May

  this gift serve you well.” ElyndraMom gestures to the side, and that’s

  when I notice the box properly. It’s been there the entire time,

  untouched. A neat rectangle wrapped in violet-gold paper that catches

  the garden light. A fine silk ribbon crosses it, tied with elegant

  precision. My pulse jumps. “What is that?” I ask. Mom’s mouth curves

  again. “A gift.”I stare at it. Mom grins and the expression makes her

  seem a lot younger than she acts most of the time. “I know you want to

  open it, so do it.”

  I lift the box. The ribbon is cool and smooth beneath my fingers, and I

  slide it free without tearing anything. I set the package down a moment

  and catch my mane, pulling it back and weaving the ribbon through. I

  return my focus to the package and, unwrapping it, reveal a plain box,

  dark, smooth, expensive in its restraint. It bears the mark of Clan

  Starfall.

  Inside is not jewelry, but a Crownstone.

  A pendant-keystone, Hushsteel dark and about one centimeter in

  diameter,, with faceted edges. It sits in a fitted recess, and I can

  feel it without touching it, it’s presence, it’s potential. *A growth

  item!*

  Under the Crownstone is a folded Quietweave harness.

  The fabric is exquisitely soft and absorbs resonance and stray Starfire.

  When I lift it free, the fold opens just enough to show the shape: a

  sternum-and-rib seat with a flat retention line built to disappear under

  clothing and still hold under force.

  And then I see the twin holsters. A dual heartseat arrangement stitched

  into the inner face of the harness, close enough that they’ll move as

  one with me, but separated cleanly so they don’t crowd each other. One

  pocket is shaped for the pendant in the box. The other is empty, waiting

  for my caster.

  My throat tightens, sharp and sudden.

  Mom doesn’t look at the Crownstone. She watches me.

  “That,” she says, nodding once at the pendant, “is your Crownstone.”

  “My Aegis,” I manage.

  “Yes.” Her voice is calm. “Owner-locked. Spiral and Starfire aligned. It

  will answer to you and no one else.”

  “The second pocket is for your Caster core. You will forge it with Aya.

  Not with me.”

  I look up. “You’re not witnessing?”

  “I am your matriarch,” she says, quiet and final. “I cannot be your

  witness.”

  Aya Starfall. My mother’s mate and chorus member. Strictest of my

  mother’s chorus mates. She cannot interfere, but she is and always has

  been a perfectionist. Mom’s gaze stays steady. “She loves you. She wants

  you to be the best you can be. Now put the harness on.” I shrug out of

  my top and toss it over the back of my chair. I unfold the Quietweave

  and settle it across my shoulders and sternum. The fabric molds to my

  form, fitting neatly and comfortably. Mom gestures at the box.

  I lift the Crownstone from its recess. It’s heavier than it looks. I

  slide it into the first heartseat pocket. It’s a snug, silent fit,

  retention flap laying flat across it.

  The second pocket stays empty. Mom nods, a gesture of finality. I shrug

  back into my top and gather the box and paper, folding one into the

  other and replacing the lid. “You have a lot to do today. Go and forge

  your caster first. When you are finished, come to Transit Well 12. We

  will greet our guests together, and get them settled, and the

  celebration will start at 19:30 ship time.” I bow. “Yes, Matriarch.”

  ***

  I link with Auriga as I step out of the gardens. *Route?*

  *Forge chamber. Aya Starfall.*

  *Acknowledged*

  Auriga’s presence is calm and soothing, easing a little of the anxiety

  remaining. The route lights up in my mind, an awareness of AyaMom’s

  location and the quickest path to get there.

  I take a deep breath of the atrium air, and consider again my matriarchs

  choice for dealing with the Veyth situation. The harness moves with my

  breath, never catching or creaking. The Crownstone is a new presence,

  warming with my body heat and steadily growing more aligned with me as I

  feed it Starfire.

  I pass crew who bow and wish me a happy Bloomingday. I offer a smile and

  my gratitude and keep going, not wanting to make AyaMom wait any longer.

  She’s already going to look at me like I disappoint her. I think I’m

  more nervous about this than my breakfast meeting with ElyndraMom.

  I step into the waiting lift channel and the ride is smooth and quick.

  When the field dissipates, AyaMom is already there.

  She is small for a Felis, maybe one hundred seventy centimeters tall,

  but her posture is loose and dangerous, ready to move at a moment’s

  notice. She looks up at me as I step out of the lift, and for the first

  time in quite some time, she is smiling at me. “Welcome, High-Daughter

  of Starfall. Even on Bloomingday, especially on Bloomingday, one must be

  punctual. Having heard what happened, however, your delay is

  understandable.” My brain kind of locks up for a minute. *It can never

  just be, “I’m glad to see you well daughter.” She always has to point

  out how I failed too.* “Yes, AyaMom,” I respond automatically,, for want

  of anything else to say. She stands outside a plain threshold,

  sleeveless, hair pulled back. Her eyes flick to the harness line under

  my clothing, then to my face, then to my hands.

  Suddenly switching to Heart-cant, she says quietly, “I am glad you are

  well, Rachel. When I heard,. I was worried. Knowing you, perhaps I

  should not have been.” She bows her head briefly and touches the

  threshold field. It disperses with a soft ripple. “Come in. Daughter”

  I’m still having a little trouble processing how the conversation

  changed from what I was expecting. *This morning is not going how I

  thought*, I think as I step into her work space. AyaMom gestures to the

  table. “Sit, daughter.” I settle into one of the chairs, my back

  straight and my tail curled around me to keep it out of the way. AyaMom

  sets two objects down on the tabletop.

  First is a Hushsteel blank, a compact faceted prism, as dark as a

  starless night in the physical realms. Second is a crush-safe Stellarum

  capsule, smaller than the one I expected, measured down to the Grain.

  One full bar of stellarum. I stare for a moment, in awe of the amount of

  work and energy that went into creating or obtaining that amount of

  stellarum and hushsteel.

  She doesn’t push them toward me yet. What she does is sit across from

  


      
  1. “For a long time now, I have been aware of how my actions have been


  2.   


  received by you. You believe I am too hard on you specifically. Not to

  mention that I’m well aware of the fact that you see me as chorus

  breaker.” This isn’t entirely correct. I know my other mothers discussed

  bringing her into our chorus. She was vetted and participated in the

  traditional process of rejoining a chorus. So, no, I don’t see her as a

  chorus breaker. She must see something in my eyes, because she says,

  “Speak your mind, daughter,” In Heart-cant. “As you say, MotherAya. I

  don’t believe you are a chorus breaker. I do believe based on observable

  evidence that you are manipulative, inflexible, and you drive the

  Pouncers and Runners too hard. You’ve always driven me hard as well, but

  that isn’t really the issue since I am the High-Daughter of our clan and

  hard work is expected of me. I respect you, but I do not like you.”

  “Thank you for your honesty, and for your respect.” Here, she pauses to

  take a deep breath. “To be perfectly honest,” she starts, and I shake my

  head. “Whenever people say that, it means they are about to lie, or

  misdirect. No thank you, MotherAya.” She stares at me a moment. Then she

  begins to grin, and breaks out in to laughter. “You may not like me, but

  I like you, daughter. Please, be at your ease. We are Bloomed women.

  Honesty is necessary among those who must live and work together, is it

  not?” I nod slowly. “As you say, MotherAya,” I repeat, but say nothing

  else. Her grin widens a hair, and she says, “Well then, let’s get to

  your forging. This is a crucial time in any Felis’ life. Not all choose

  to forge a caster, but many do. Do you understand how this process

  works?”

  “I weave my true concepts into the lattice of the prism and feed it

  Stellarum.”

  “Essentially, accurate. You will weave the true concepts you have

  developed, as well as yourself and your personal truth. The caster is

  part of you, daughter, as are your ears and tail.” I nod, deep enough to

  show respect and catch her brief smile. AyaMom’s hand grips my wrist

  gently, and her skin is warm and smooth. “So there is no disharmony

  between us, I have always loved you, daughter. From the first moment

  your Matriarch introduced me to you. I push, because your safety and

  long life are more important to me than anything else.” I stare at her,

  shocked. *Is she trying to destabilize me before the forging?* I give

  her words the consideration they are due, sitting in silence a moment.

  *If this is some attempt to destabilize me before my forging, could she

  be a part of the Veyth Corruption seaping into our clan and our home?*

  *If she really means it, this can be an important development in your

  relationship.* I shake my head again. “You have my gratitude for your

  words, AyaMom.” *I’ve got to give a little bit I guess.* Her smile this

  time is lovely, almost radiant. An acceptance of my words and the

  meaning behind them.

  “Now,” she claps her hands, seemingly more relaxed after her words,

  ’let’s begin the process of forging your caster.” As she stands, she

  gestures for me to do the same. “Find your cadence,” AyaMom says

  quietly, “and we’ll get started.” So I do. I fall easily into the 4-2-6

  breath cadence and using that as a steppingstone, expand my awareness

  through Sense, feeling Auriga’s vastness around me, the woven tapestry

  of song and life that is our home. AyaMom is restraining her Fundamental

  Harmony, but the shape of her is still brilliant and full of power and

  *her* song. I close my physical eyes, only feeling the shape of the

  room, brushing up against it’s boundaries. Once I’m accustomed to the

  ambient song of my area, I carefully put up the containment and

  grounding wards. “Very good!” AyaMom says. *Seriously?* *Is she fucking

  with me?*

  “Take up the prism.”

  I lift the restform into my hands, it’s cool weight real, and full of

  potential. Carefully, I reach through Weave and begin to weave the

  threads of concept and self into the lattice of the prism. First, self,

  because you cannot have anything without a base of self. The pattern

  settles into the lattice, and it’s surprisingly beautiful, an infinite

  fractal mirrored spiral, *my* mirrored spiral. My body is distant, I am

  so focused on the weaving. I’m still aware of the trepidation, though.

  Not like I was hiding it, sure, but now I *couldn’t* hide it. *Well,

  here goes everything.*

  Next in the weaving are the true concepts that I have refined and grown

  throughout my training. I draw the concepts from myself, not removing

  them, but weaving them through the pattern I imprinted upon the restform

  prism. First comes Shear, what it means to cut, to sever, to separate

  cleanly. The feeling of weaving something so integral to my core is

  fucking strange. Not bad, but weird, like something you are positive is

  supposed to stay inside being slowly and steadily drawn out. I keep

  breathing, checking my cadence and focus. Still good. Next is Vector.

  What it means to adjust angles instantly, and no crossing the space

  between points. What it means to accelerate at an angle away from the

  target and still land a clean blow, or to change angles and accelerate

  through a target if necessary. What it means to be a projectile,

  vectored perfectly and no way of tracing the shot back to its source. I

  check stability after weaving Vector, and take a brief pause for the

  next weaving. The last is Weave. I could spend the next two hours trying

  and failing to explain what it’s like to thread the concept of a thing

  through that thing. I almost lose my guidance of the thread of concept,

  as the passing thought, *Lyssie would be perfect at this* flickers

  through my awareness. I barely manage to correct the drift I’ve fallen

  into, and bring everything back into alignment. On the edge of exhale

  and verge of inhale, I begin channeling Starfire into the restform, and

  it opens, flowing over my hands and forearms. The caster shifts, still

  fluid and unstable seeming, seeking a baseline wearable form. After a

  moment, twin bracers, from elbow to knuckles wrap my forearms. Short

  blades extend from my wrists, then retract, or rather flow back into the

  substance of the caster. Longer blades emerge from wrist to elbow, and I

  move smoothly through several Astral Fang forms. I return to neutral, or

  Ready stance and the longer blades are reabsorbed. *one final truth.*

  The bracers flow back down my forearms and reform into the caster

  restform. I close my physical eyes again, and reach through Weave.

  *Misdirection.* Even in my focus, I see the pride in AyaMom’s eyes and I

  almost drop my weaving again.

  When I am finally done, I open my eyes and gaze at the relatively small

  prism, ten centimeters in length and about a centimeter in diameter.

  Reverently, I slide the prism into its place at my heart, then call it.

  The bracers are on my hands and forearms in a blink of the eye, short

  blades already extended. I dismiss the caster, and AyaMom stands, taking

  a step back and bows to me. “Well done, and well forged, Rachel

  Starfall, bloomed High-Daughter of clan Starfall. May you always find

  harmony. May your enemies fear you, and never know your position. May

  those you love thrive under your protection.” I bow to her and she

  rounds the table, and takes me in an embrace that is just one more in a

  series of what the fucks this morning. “Happy Bloomingday, Rachel.” I

  hug her back, then take a step back. “We have guests from the Eclyptine,

  according to ElyndraMom.” She nods. “Yes, yes. She wants you there to

  greet them, I’m sure.” I laugh quietly. “She does. Will I see you

  there?” “You will, daughter. Now go on. I’m proud of you.” “Thank you,

  AyaMom,” I say, and this time, I mean it.

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