Home Gilded Ashes Chapter 346: Under the Same Sky

Gilded Ashes

Chapter 346: Under the Same Sky
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Chapter 346: Under the Same Sky

The second day was the sound.

Raizen remembered it arriving the way a gentle rain arrives - gradually, ambiguously, the kind of change you noticed only when someone else mentioned it. He’d been in the yard, the year he was ten, kicking a leather ball against the grain storage wall, when his mother had stopped in the doorway and tilted her head.

"Do you hear that?" she’d asked.

He’d stopped kicking. Listened. Heard nothing - the wind, the chickens, the distant sound of someone hammering.

"Hear what?"

His mother had stood in the doorway for a long moment, her head still tilted, her eyes unfocused in the way they got when she was listening to something far away. Then she’d shaken her head. "Never mind. Maybe it’s nothing."

But it wasn’t nothing. Raizen learned that later - years later, pieced together from overheard conversations and half-understood explanations. The sound on the second day was real, but only some people seemed to hear it. A faint sound, they said. Musical, in a way that was hard to describe. Slow and steady, changing gradually, shifting through patterns that almost made sense but never quite resolved into a melody.

Calming. That was the word they all used. Whatever the sound was, however it reached them, it settled something in the people who heard it. Made them slower, gentler, more inclined to sit in doorways and watch the sky than to argue or rush.

His mother had heard it. She’d never said so directly - she wasn’t the kind of person who announced things about herself - but Raizen had seen it in the way she changed on the second day. The softening in her posture. The way she hummed without realizing it, a melody that wandered through notes he didn’t recognize, drifting in and out of patterns that felt familiar even though he was certain he’d never heard them before.

She’d hummed it while cooking. While folding clothes. While sitting on the roof beside him on the second night, her hand on his back, the clouds still glowing white above them.

He’d tried to hum it back, to immitate it, once. Couldn’t catch it - the notes slipped away from him the moment he tried to remember them, dissolving into silence like water through open fingers.

"Don’t force it" his mother had said, still humming. "If it’s meant for you, it’ll find you."

It never found him. Not that year, not any year after. The sound on the second day remained something other people experienced and Raizen didn’t, a door that opened for some and stayed shut for him.

He hadn’t minded - he had the third day.

The third day was the aurora.

It came at dusk, and he saw it for the first time the year he was six - the year he’d finally been allowed to stay up late enough to see it from the start. He’d climbed ridge, his mother too tired to make the walk, and he’d sat in the soft grass with his knees pulled to his chest and watched the sky erupt into colour.

Threads first. Thin lines of light that appeared between the clouds - not breaking through them, not parting them, but weaving between them, as if the cloud layer had seams and the light was finding every one. The first threads were pale blue. Then green. Then gold, and red, and a violet so deep it looked like a cut in the sky.

They multiplied. Spread. Wove into each other the way rivers merge, the colours bleeding together and separating again further down, creating patterns that shifted and reformed and never held the same shape for more than a few seconds. Aurora after aurora, threading through the gaps in the clouds, layering on top of each other until the sky was a tapestry of moving light that stretched from horizon to horizon. All the colors reflected in the sea, making the view even more breathtaking.

He’d sat on that hill for three whole hours, neck craned, mouth open, watching the colours chase each other across the ceiling of the world. His eyes had watered from not blinking. His neck had ached for days afterward. It was the most beautiful thing he’d ever seen at the time.

Sitting alone on a ledge in a village that didn’t matter to anyone outside of it, Raizen had looked up and seen something that made him understand, for the first time, why people used the word wonder.

The memory faded. Slowly, the way memories do - the colours dimming, the ledge dissolving, the soft grass under his knees becoming the wet steel of the elevator platform under his boots. The sky above him was Ukai’s sky, now raining again, not his village’s. The clouds were still glowing white - the first day. Day one.

Which meant day two was coming.

And day three.

The platform reached Ukai’s lowest level, and Raizen stepped off onto solid wood. Kenzo was in front, hammer floating next to his shoulder, his eyes still drifting upward every few steps. 𝘧𝑟𝑒𝑒𝘸𝘦𝘣𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝓁.𝘤𝘰𝓂

The festival was tomorrow. The firefly festival - the event the whole city had been preparing for, the thing the unicycle boy had been delivering sky lanterns for, the reason Saffi’s eyes lit up every time someone mentioned it.

Raizen looked at the glowing clouds one more time through a gap in the canopy. White. Even. Sourceless. The same light he’d watched from a clay roof with his mother’s hand on his back, years ago, in a life that felt like it belonged to someone else.

"Hey, Kenzo" Raizen muttered.

"Hm?" Kenzo turned his head the smallest degree.

"Was the sky like this when you were a kid, as well?"

Kenzo slowed down, until he was next to Raizen "Well... Yes, as far as I can remember"

Raizen scratched his head. "And have you ever seen what’s beyond?"

"Beyond?" Kenzo tilted his head, in confusion.

"You know... Beyond the clouds... What’s after?"

Kenzo turned his head just enough for Raizen to see his eyes. There was something in them Raizen had never seen before. Not fear. Not annoyance.

Confusion.

Kenzo opened his mouth to speak-

But something stopped him.

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