Chapter 19
ADA
Iwake to the sky.
Not the aerie ceiling. The full canopy dark above me, wings working, cold air against my face.
My chest is against his chest. My face is at his throat, my legs hanging in the furs he's bound around us both.
His cock is inside me. His knot is locked.
I'm hundreds of feet above the canopy floor.
The last thing I remember is the aerie, the vibration, coming until I couldn't.
He didn't wait for the knot to soften. He just left. With me. Like this.
For nine days the patrol happened without me. Sometimes I'd hear the wingbeats go in the dark, the aerie settling into his absence. He never took me before. I don't know what tonight means. I don't know if it means anything.
I'm full of his cum. Sealed tight around it. Full of it and going somewhere at speed.
I try to pull back enough to look at him. His jaw comes down against the top of my head. Pay attention to this direction. Not that one.
"Where are we going," I say.
He doesn't answer.
Over his shoulder: the canopy. Broken shapes of pre-fall infrastructure through the leaves—the spine of a bridge, the hollow shell of a warehouse, a tower with its top floors collapsed into a pile of concrete that's been colonised by ferns taller than me.
A river I haven't seen before, catching the last of the night's light.
The water is black and still, reflecting the canopy in a mirror that shivers with each stroke of his wings.
His wings. I haven't been able to see them work from this angle before—strapped to his chest, face against his throat, I can only feel the rhythm.
But looking back over his shoulder, I can see where the wing meets his back.
The massive joint rolling with each downstroke, the membrane stretching taut between the cartilage bones, the whole system working with a power and economy that makes my chest tight for reasons I can't name.
He catches an updraft. The wings go from working to still—spread wide, the membrane catching the rising air, and the effect is instantaneous.
Silence. No wingbeats. Just the wind moving across us and the canopy scrolling past below in a slow green river.
He tilts. Adjusts the angle of one wing—a fraction, a subtle shift—and we bank left, riding the thermal in a long spiralling glide.
It is the most beautiful thing I have ever experienced while being fucked.
Below us: the world coming back to life.
Thirteen years since the asteroid, and the green has won.
I can see it from up here in a way I never could from the ground.
The canopy isn't just reclaiming the ruins—it's erasing them.
An entire neighborhood has vanished under new growth, the streets gone, the houses digested by root systems that have broken through the foundations and turned concrete into soil.
A parking structure stands half-consumed, its upper floors open to the sky, every level covered in moss and young trees growing from the accumulated leaf-rot of a decade.
The river bends through what was once a downtown district.
I can see the old streets below the water—submerged asphalt, the grid pattern still visible through the greenish murk.
A bridge stands with its middle section collapsed into the river.
Trees grow from the fallen concrete, their roots threading through the rebar like fingers laced through a skeleton's ribs.
On the intact section of the bridge, a herd of canopy deer picks its way through the weeds that have erupted from every crack.
Their ears swivel as his shadow passes over them, but they don't bolt.
They're used to him. He's been flying over them for eight years.
A flock of birds explodes from the canopy crown below us—small gray shapes with red throats, dozens of them, wheeling upward in a spiral that briefly matches ours before they scatter.
Their calls fill the air—sharp, bright, musical, each one slightly different from the last. He doesn't flinch.
His wings hold steady. The birds eddy around us like we're a rock in a river.
Further out, where the canopy thins toward the concrete fields at his eastern border, I can see the shapes of other things moving through the ruins.
Something massive in the distance, visible only as a disturbance in the canopy crown—branches shaking, a gap opening and closing as something large moves beneath the leaf cover.
Another Shade, probably. Keeping to its side of the boundary.
His chest rumbles against my back. Low. A territorial sound that vibrates through his ribs into mine. Not loud enough to carry. Just the acknowledgment of something else in the grid, something that knows where the line is drawn.
He's running a grid.
His cock flexes.
His cock pressing against the front of my walls, finding the spot without thrusting—that deliberate internal pressure, unhurried—and the thought I was building drains out before I can find its shape.
My cunt clenches. The vibration climbs with it.
The knot is right there against my clit at my center.
I grip the furs and I was trying to think something—
Gone. It's just gone.
He banks left. The movement shifts the knot and the angle. I make a sound into the canopy dark that no one is around to hear.
This is, I understand, the point.
The first half-hour is territorial patrol.
I learn his borders the way I learn anything—the same running map, the same instinct for edges.
His territory is vast. Bigger than anything I've seen any single Shade hold.
He's checking every edge, every border marker, every contested boundary point.
He does this with me knotted to his chest in a fur bundle.
I'm part of the territory now. Just another thing he's holding.
I'm, apparently, territorial signage.
The map I kept on the wall covered this territory in dotted lines and estimated distances.
I drew it from scouting reports, from runners' notes, from intelligence traded with three other settlements across the grid.
I knew where his eastern border ran. I knew where the Ordained's road cut through the south edge.
From here I can see both.
The Ordained's road is a pale scar below—cleared ground where the canopy has been kept back, two parallel furrows cut deep enough to drain water.
From down there it was just a road with men on it.
From here it's a system. The connection to the main artery running west is plain from here, the branch roads splitting toward the Ordained's cache sites.
The pattern is obvious from this height in a way it never was from the ground.
I redesigned the patrol circuit twice around that road after losing runners on it.
I was working from fragments. This is the whole picture.
Settlements register as smoke against the canopy—two I don't recognize, one I do. Northeast. New Reach. Its generator smoke thinner than it should be at this hour.
I file that.
Then he banks over a fold in the canopy I haven't seen before, and below the leaf cover—in the gap where two old buildings collapsed and opened the sky—water.
Still, dark, the surface unbroken. A lake.
Not on any map I've seen. Not on any scouting report, any runner's account, any intelligence New Reach ever traded.
A whole body of water sitting in the ruins of the old world, unrecorded.
On the near shore, a heron stands motionless in the shallows with the patience of something that has never needed to be afraid.
It doesn't look up when his shadow passes over it.
His tail tightens around my waist. I press my face against him and breathe in the mineral-warm scent of his skin while the canopy scrolls past below us.
The dawn is coming—the leaves at the canopy crown catching light in slow progression, the dark retreating sector by sector.
A cold breeze off the river hits my bare shoulders and I shiver against him.
His wing adjusts without thought, curving forward to block the wind.
The warmth behind it is immediate. Complete.
I don't think about how that felt. I don't think about the last time I felt sheltered from anything.
On the wall, we slept in shifts. Two on, two off, the wind coming through the gaps in the concrete carrying the smell of generator exhaust and coal dust. I spent four years never turning my back to an open doorway.
I spent four years with my hand on my blade when I slept.
The first night without a weapon in my reach, my hand opened and closed against the furs for an hour before my body accepted that there was nothing to grip.
I haven't reached for a weapon in over a week. My body has stopped expecting the next threat to come from him.
That should terrify me more than it does.
Instead it feels like setting down a pack I've been carrying for so long I forgot how much it weighed.
The relief of it is physical—my shoulders, my jaw, the muscles along my spine that spent four years braced for the next impact.
All of it unwinding in his arms, in the air above the canopy, with his cock shifting inside me on every wing-beat and the world stretching out below us in shades of green I didn't know existed.
He clears a tree line and drops into a hover at the canopy edge. Below: scrubland. Something large moving through the low ferns—four-legged, heavy, a canopy boar by the shape of its shoulders. Two hundred pounds at least. Tusked.
His tail uncoils from my waist. The loss of it is cold and sudden against my bare skin.
Then it strikes.
Ten feet of prehensile muscle snapping downward like a whip crack. The boar doesn't flinch, doesn't startle, doesn't get a single step. The tail wraps its throat, constricts once, and the animal drops. Clean. No squealing. No thrashing. Just alive and then not.