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Chapter 34 - Chapter 34: The Feather That Waits

Far from the trench and the dense forest, in a quieter estate surrounded by

plum trees and shaded courtyards, Sky sat in his ornate bronze cage beside

the general's study. Once, his feathers were bright and iridescent. Now, they

had dulled with time, and he moved more slowly, his eyes not quite as sharp.

But his gaze still searched the horizon every morning.

The general, old and grizzled now, sat nearby sipping tea. Crown Prince

Linhua, no longer the same sharp-tempered youth who once rode to battle,

was now an emperor of another country — calm, thoughtful, and weighed by

responsibility.

> "He still watches the wind," the prince said quietly, as he stood beside the

cage.

The general nodded. "He's never forgotten them."

Sky ruffled his feathers and let out a soft trill, eyes resting on a distant

branch. Sometimes, when the light hit the sky just right, he would chirp the

same name he once repeated every day: Li Xian.

It had been decades.

They were both gone — Ren Xu and Li Xian — martyred in the final clash of

that brutal war. Sky had seen them fall, had circled above their broken

forms, and had refused to leave for days.

Eventually, he was brought back by the general, who swore to care for him.

For years now, the macaw had lived in the care of the royal family, respected

by all — not as a pet, but as a symbol.

Of loyalty.

Of sacrifice.

Of waiting.

The prince's children visited the macaw often. His eldest son, now seventeen, had started training in court diplomacy. The second, a boy of

twelve, was spirited and often tried to mimic Sky's cries. The youngest, a

daughter of sixteen, was graceful, clever, and sharp-eyed. She often sat by

the cage with books and spoke softly to Sky, as if he understood every word.

He always tilted his head at her. Something in her reminded him of…

someone.

Still, the bird waited.

He did not know that Ren Xu and Li Xian had returned, reborn in another

land, far beyond the mountains, across borders drawn by men who had

never known them. He did not know that the fates had begun to spin their

threads again.

But somehow, the old ache in his chest was softer today.

And as the sun dipped low and painted the sky with the same hue as Ren's

old war robe, the macaw closed his eyes, murmured something only the

wind could hear, and dreamed of flight.

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