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    Cia
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

Take Flight - 9. Chapter 9

“While we wait for the Alchemist, I thought you might like to try out your wings.”

Birch stumbled against a small table near the fireplace. “What?”

“We’ve been ignoring them because we have bigger problems, but… you have wings, Birch. Flying is the one thing I never thought we’d share. I love the freedom of soaring through the air.”

“I-I don’t know.” Birch licked his lips. “What if I fall?”

Sayer could remember some rough tumbles when he learned to fly. The field wasn’t too hard, but Birch had been injured a lot recently. “How about you try over the bed? That way, if you fall, you’ll bounce.”

Birch took a deep breath and let it out slowly. “You’ll show me what to do?”

“Of course!” Sayer grinned. He bounced up on the bed. “If I’m going to wear my wings, I’ll usually wear a robe or tunic with slits built in, but I didn’t put one on this morning.” He stripped off his shirt, dropping it onto the floor.

Birch’s gaze roamed all over his chest. Sayer held in a smirk at the heat held in Birch’s eyes. They wouldn’t have enough time to fool around and have a flying lesson though. “You’ll need to take off your shirt.”

“Oh.” Birch turned bright red. He slowly unbuttoned his shirt and slid it off. “Now what?”

“Close your eyes.” Birch shut his eyes. Sayer relished the trust his beloved showed when he let Sayer tell him what to do. “Now see your wings, feel them behind you, stretching and flexing.” Sayer didn’t have to close his eyes to bring out his wings; he’d been hiding them since he was young, but Birch needed the visual.

Sayer’s back tingled. He shrugged his shoulders and stretched his wings out before folding them down tightly to his back. Birch’s wings took longer to appear, shimmering in the air before the pure white feathers coalesced into reality behind him. They flared wide, creating small draft. Birch didn’t seem to notice he was up on his toes without even trying.

He was going to be a natural, Sayer just knew it.

“Now come up here with me.” Birch climbed up on the bed and Sayer showed him how to flex his wings, using his shoulder positions to change their angle. “Okay. Let’s try flapping them, just once, and leave them out to catch the air.”

Birch licked his lip. “Will you hold onto me?”

Sayer smiled. “Of course.” They clasped hands. “Ready?”

His beloved nodded.

“Okay… flap.” Their wings spread and then whooshed through the air, sending them both into the air several feet. “Wings out, far as you can keep them.”

Birch had a little wrinkle between his eyes but his wings stayed out. They slowly fell toward the bed, bouncing a little. Sayer flexed his knees and steadied them both.

“I did it!” Birch laughed. He squeezed Sayer’s hands. “I did it. I flew!”

Sayer laughed with him. “Well, a little. But that was a great start. You have wonderful control.” Birch tugged him in close, letting go of his hands and hugging Sayer around the waist under his wings.

“I still flew.” He stretched up and captured Sayer’s lips in a heated kiss. His tongue dipped in and touched Sayer’s, coaxing it out and into his mouth.

“Ahem.” The door opened after a rushed knock.

Sayer broke apart from Birch slowly, reluctantly. He looked over the smaller man’s wings.

“You called for the Alchemist?”

Venson, a squat dwarf fae, stood beside the slender human man who was fiddling nervously with his glasses.

“We did.”

Birch was bright red again. He hopped off the bed and reached for his shirt. “Ahh, sorry. We were just—” He stared at his shirt, the wrinkle back between his eyebrows. “Crap. No wing slits.”

“There are a few shirts in the bureau that should work. Get me one too, will you, Birch?”

Sayer stepped off the bed. “We did call for the Alchemist. Thank you for coming so quickly.” He ushered their guests to seats by the open balcony door.

“What can we do for you?” Venson asked.

Sayer pulled on the shirt Birch offered him, then used a breeze to do up the back. He almost stumbled forward into their guests when he misjudged the effort. “Shit.”

The Alchemist’s mouth dropped open. “My lord!”

“You can see it, can’t you?”

Birch sank down into a chair opposite their guests. “What can he see?”

“Power.” The Alchemist pushed his glasses up his nose. “I made these, and with them, I can see the power that the fae use.”

“Really? How?”

“The magic has colors.”

Birch nodded. “Like when Haverlseen told me to find the well of magic inside me, and my colors were different from his colors when he gave me energy.”

“Exactly. With these, I can see the power’s source and how it flows.”

“And that is what we need you for.”

Venson and the Alchemist exchanged looks. “I’m afraid we don’t understand, my lord,” Venson said.

“Your beloved can see the flow of magic. Birch brought up the idea our magic isn’t going wild on its own. He thinks something is causing the surges, and for lack of a better word, polluting the fae.”

“Is that even possible?”

Birch leaned forward in his chair. “In the human world my job was to investigate environments affected by pollution. I tracked the effects, found the cause, and figured out ways to eliminate the problem and help the ecosystem recover from the damage as much as possible, at least. If the magic were a river, flowing through the fae realms, that individuals can dip into and use… when why can’t something ‘upstream’ be causing a problem.”

The Alchemist nodded quickly. “Yes, yes, I see exactly what you mean. It might work! We can find out what’s causing the Darklings!”

Sayer hated to burst their bubble, but… “First we have to be lucky enough to find a source of pollution.”

Copyright © 2014 Cia; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
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I can just feel the giddiness and excitement Birch felt with his first flight. Now granted he didn't really fly but was sorta suspended in the air. But to a man that the only way he knew to fly was in a plane the very idea of being able to move through the air by your own power would be amazing. also even though they have to actually find this source of pollution they have still come along way in realizing at least how the problem is being manifested even if they still need to find the root cause. Great chapter Cia, looking forward to next week's.

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Love the way you are blending human environmental biology with the concepts of magic in the fae's world, Cia. I am a passionate proponent that some of the most innovative and exciting things come from the sometimes chaotic bumping together of two ways of thought -- whether scientific disciplines, modes of artistic expression, or languages and cultures. Here it is again! Now, I just have to be patient for A WEEK!!! to see how environmental biology and magic are going to come together. :unsure:

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On 10/23/2013 07:32 PM, Daithi said:
I can just feel the giddiness and excitement Birch felt with his first flight. Now granted he didn't really fly but was sorta suspended in the air. But to a man that the only way he knew to fly was in a plane the very idea of being able to move through the air by your own power would be amazing. also even though they have to actually find this source of pollution they have still come along way in realizing at least how the problem is being manifested even if they still need to find the root cause. Great chapter Cia, looking forward to next week's.
Sorry for the late reply! The root... oh, the root... you may be closer than you know. :P I'll leave you with that. LOL
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On 10/23/2013 08:35 PM, hillj69 said:
Love the way you are blending human environmental biology with the concepts of magic in the fae's world, Cia. I am a passionate proponent that some of the most innovative and exciting things come from the sometimes chaotic bumping together of two ways of thought -- whether scientific disciplines, modes of artistic expression, or languages and cultures. Here it is again! Now, I just have to be patient for A WEEK!!! to see how environmental biology and magic are going to come together. :unsure:
The curse of a flash story, updates are mandated at set times. :P But at least they come each week, right? I like mixing things, contemporary/paranormal/fantasy/sci-fi... and making the mundane magical or the magical mundane. More coming Wednesday!
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