Sqair

Chapter 87: When the Sun Darkened

Chapter 87: When the Sun Darkened


Once, a very long time ago, the Sun went dark. It was not night, and it was not a new kind of day. It was a black sun, like a shut eye in the sky. People lit small fires and stood close together. They spoke softly because loud voices sounded too big in the dark.


Then the Light Beings came. They were shaped like people, but they shone from within, gentle and warm. Wherever they walked, the dark stepped back a little. They showed the people how to keep a steady fire, how to make lamps that did not bite the fingers, and how to smile even when you were afraid. They called themselves "⨅╎ᔑ⍑ᓭ"


The Light Beings made the Stars shine - Tiny lanterns on very long strings. Sometimes, when the clouds forgot to crowd, the Beings pointed up and said, "There! Do you see?" And for a breath, the people did. They saw pricks of brightness and felt taller.


Life became easier. Children learned new games that needed only a little glow. Wounds disappeared where light shone. The people loved the Light Beings, and the Light Beings seemed glad.


Time passed. The people grew bold. They asked the Beings to shine on this house and not that house, on this path and not that path. They made new words that sounded like please but were really do it. They built foreign bodies, slots, containers... All for light, and tried to keep it. They tied strings to lamps and mocked the Moon with their songs.


Some say the people tugged too hard and made darkness out of the light. Others say the light hid itself and is waiting. But one thing is certain: the stars were covered by a white blanket, never to be seen again.


The reader clicked once - as if it wanted to keep talking and was embarrassed it could not. The mist at the windows pulsed in on a slow wind. Lanterns popped as droplets met warm glass.


No one spoke immediately.


Hikari’s mouth had parted on the word stars and forgotten how to close. In her head, the clouds disappeared like steam. Tiny lanterns on long strings. She felt, acutely, how heavy the ceiling of the world had always been, and how much she wanted to see through it just once. Her fingers tightened. Esen stared at the table as if there were equations in the grain and if he looked hard enough the math would reveal itself. Lynea’s eyes were glossy, but not from tears - she looked full, like a cup that had been carefully filled to the lip. Feris breathed a soft "woah" and then, remarkably, let the word be the only one.


Keahi folded her arms, not defensive - steady. "What else is on it?" she asked, because grounding a thing is a kind of mercy.


"Only that" the broader Warden said. His hands rested in the wood like he’d earned the right.


Solomon had not sat. He did not look like a boy, not in the face. He looked like the person you end up being when rooms keep handing you keys you didn’t ask for. The story had folded into his posture without changing it. He didn’t try to fix it with words.


"Can we copy it?" Raizen asked, practical because someone needed to be. His eyes were on the reader’s edges, the tiny solder points where wood met wire, the way the light pulsed - not like electricity, like breath.


"We have already made one" the thin Warden said, with the pride of a small victory polished often. "Two would be better. Ten would be safer."


"Ten" Solomon said, as if he had planned to say that before he heard it. "Ukai keeps the original. We take copies. If the story is true, or if it is a dream, it matters the same amount until we can tell the difference."


Nobody – not even Arashi could find a joke for this...


"Thank you" the broader elder said to Solomon, and the thank you landed in a place that had no room for ceremony and still made room. "There are more fragments here, and drawings. They are not as good as a child’s voice. But they are what we have. We can show you the Moon the way we remember it looks when it is behaving."


Hikari leaned forward as if tugged. "Please."


Graphite at first - circles and small marks - then pigment, old and patient: a pale disk with a soft shadow and a field of tiny points around it like freckles on a beloved face.


Hikari lifted two fingers and stopped just above the paper. "It’s... shy" she said, smiling like a person who had been handed a secret and would not cheapen it by saying thank you too loud. She tucked that feeling away like a note in a pocket where it wouldn’t fall out.


Alan shifted on his bench. Pain took his breath for half a beat and gave it back. "We’ve had three nights" he said, voice a dry twig. "In all my years here. When the clouds thin enough at the edges." He lifted his chin toward the windows. "The city goes quiet and does not pretend it is for any noble reason. We are just looking up." He paused, added, almost to himself: "It makes you want to be better at everything. These... Stars... Nobody ever saw them. Not from what I know..."


Solomon’s gaze landed on him and moved on - not dismissing, placing. "When the Sun was black" Solomon murmured, rolling the word in his mouth, testing its weight. "Light Beings came. People asked them to choose. People pulled."


"And shadows came after the light..." Esen said, not quite meaning to.


"Maybe" Lynea nodded. "Or maybe the light hid and something else came to drink what we spilled."


"We don’t get to know yet" Raizen said, not with resignation, with acceptance. It sounded like the way he had said we don’t get to kill a man in a storm. His eyes were on the little chip on the table. He could build a reader for that, he thought absently. He could build ten.


Solomon set his palm lightly on the wood. "I will need exact copies and an escort for each one" he said to the elders. "We will carry them like children, not like data. Ukai will be credited in every ledger and every story. I will not have your tree erased."


The broad Warden smiled sidelong. "We’re pretty good at not falling" he said. "We will be good at not being erased."


The thin elder slid the seed from the reader and back into its copper loop with two fingers that had braided a thousand ropes. "We tell this story to children" she said, "to remind them that wanting is not the same as taking. It is possible" she added dryly, "that adults should hear it more often."


Keahi’s eyes had gone to the slit windows again, to the mist and the bridges, to how high everything insisted on being. "When do we leave?" she asked. Not because she wanted to. Because the world rarely cares.


"Soon" Solomon said. He didn’t look away from the seed. The dark in his eyes didn’t belong to storm-light. It belonged to thinking about a black sun and a voice that sounded like it remembered how to be kind. "Before the weather decides to teach us humility again."


He turned to the eight. "Eat. Sleep if you can in a city that rocks. We move at first light that is mostly gray. Ukai has offered us guides and ropes that know new knots."


"And him?" Ichiro asked, without looking at Alan when he said it.


"Alan speaks for himself at the gate" Solomon answered. "Not our business."


Alan bowed his head once, which was what you do when thanks would be poorly shaped for the room.


Hikari reached for Raizen’s cheek, and whispered to his ear, very close, as if nobody else was allowed to hear: "Do you think... We’ll ever... see them?" she asked. "The stars..."


"Let’s hope..." Raizen whispered back, not really knowing what to say.


They filed out past the reader and the seed and the elders who were suddenly less like a council and more like grandparents who had kept one good story alive. Bridges accepted their feet again. Mist closed and opened around them like a slow breath.


Down on the plaza, kids were back to running ropes. A drum tapped a pattern and another answered. A kite-bird drifted through a beam of lanternlight and winked away.


At the last bend, Raizen glanced over his shoulder. Through the slit of the door, he could still see the table, the little chipped chip on the wood, and Solomon’s hand, steady on the place where stories had just been. The boy’s face had quieted into a kind of fury that made rooms respect him. Outside, the sky stayed stubborn. The city walked on ropes over air and didn’t fall. Somewhere in the mist, a child’s voice finished its story in a room none of them could see: when the Sun was black, the Light Beings came, and for a while, everyone could see.