A scene from Veilbreak — told by those who lived it.
From the Book
They sat back down on the blanket, and Soren moved between them. Kaelia wrapped a blanket around the three of them; Soren’s presence pressed close. They marveled at this wild predator cuddled up with them, purring with joy, and at the rising moon, its silver light casting the lake in ghostly radiance. The gentle lapping of waves against the shore created a hypnotic rhythm, like a heartbeat slowing for sleep.
Zephyr leaned back. Let go.
“Tell me something true,” she whispered.
Kaelia considered. “I’ve been thinking about belonging,” she said. “About what it means to find your place.”
Zephyr’s hand found hers beneath the blanket, a gentle encouragement to continue.
“For so long, I defined myself by what I was leaving behind. By duty. By the weight of other worlds.” Kaelia’s fingers absently stroked Soren’s fur. “But today, feeling the water, the Earth, the sun…I felt something new taking root. I didn’t think I would like it here. I thought it would be exile. A slow erasure. But I’m scared to admit the truth: I’m starting to feel at home.”
“Too late. You’re infected,” Zephyr said.
“Terminal,” Kaelia replied. “No cure in sight.”
Time stretched as they nestled beneath the blanket, a trinity of heartbeats—human, synthetic, wild—each mind wandering its own constellation of thoughts while their bodies shared heat against the gathering night.
Zephyr fell asleep.
Kaelia stayed awake for a while, one arm draped across Soren’s body, his purr a gentle tremor against her skin as she tracked the stars’ slow arc across the vault of darkness.
She slept dreamlessly for the first time in months, held by Earth’s gravity and the presence of those she’d chosen to call family.
Kaelia
What she didn’t say
I have stood in war rooms on three worlds. I have calculated the acceptable losses in a civilizational conflict and signed my name beneath the numbers. I held Verin’s face as the light left it, then stood up and kept moving because there was no other option.
I did not expect a lynx.
Soren pressed against me that night with the complete, uncomplicated confidence of a creature who had decided I was safe—not because I had earned it, not because I had proven anything, but because he had assessed me with senses older than language and arrived at his conclusion. I have never been trusted so cleanly in my life.
I told Zephyr I was starting to feel at home. What I did not say—what I was not yet ready to say—was that I was terrified of it. Home, for me, had always meant something that could be taken. I had learned that lesson on Elysara in the most permanent way available.
But that night, under those stars, with Zephyr’s hand finding mine beneath the blanket and a wild predator purring against my side—I let myself have it. Just for one night. Just for those hours.
It was the first time I had slept without dreaming in longer than I can calculate.
Zephyr
What she didn’t say
I don’t talk about what I am. Not directly. Kaelia knows, and that’s enough—or it was, until that night when I asked her out loud whether it mattered that I was made instead of born.
I am an Astrian-Elysarian construct. My sensory architecture is calibrated to detect molecular shifts in atmosphere that no biological lifeform on Earth could perceive. I can read pressure changes, thermal signatures, and electromagnetic variance. I process threat data faster than any Terran technology by a margin that isn’t worth calculating because the gap is simply too large to be instructive.
Soren walked straight through all of it.
I didn’t know he was there until his fur touched my back—impossibly soft, warm, sliding against my skin like he’d always been there and I was the one who had just arrived. No warning. No signal. Nothing in my sensory feed until the moment of contact. A wild animal from a planet we’d been orbiting for over a year had simply decided that the gap between us was no longer a gap and closed it without asking permission.
I have disabled security systems on three worlds. I have walked into rooms full of armed men and already known how it would end before any of them had registered I was there. I have never, in all my years of operational existence, been surprised by something approaching from behind.
He didn’t care what I was. He didn’t assess me. He just… arrived. And then he stayed.
I don’t talk about what I am. But that night, with Soren’s weight warm against my back and Kaelia’s hand finding mine beneath the blanket and the stars overhead doing what stars do without any input from me whatsoever—I wasn’t thinking about what I am.
I was thinking about what I might become.
I stayed awake a little longer than I needed to. I wasn’t ready for it to end.


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