Yellow Jacket

Lore drop: The Tale of She Whose Shadow Fell as She Rode the Wind


A Neuman Tale, spoken in the breath between sky and bone

Among the younglings on the training decks of Neuman vessels, there is a tale told without ceremony, without comfort, and without the soft illusions other species cling to. It is a story delivered the same way the wind speaks to wings, sharp and unyielding. They tell it as they stretch their wings along the launch rails, as they sharpen their instincts against the sky. It is the tale of She Whose Shadow Fell as She Rode the Wind, a name formed in a single word when spoken in the Neuman tongue.

She stood on the launch rail with her cohort, wings folded tight, eyes fixed on the horizon. Every youngling stood the same: unblinking, breath measured, posture still as if carved from the vessel's hull. Down below, the endless blue ocean swirled in shifting currents, but none of them allowed a glance toward it. Down meant distraction. Down meant forgetting who and what they were.

The command came in a clipped tone.

Fall.

They stepped from the rail in the same breath, bodies giving to gravity with disciplined trust. The sky seized them immediately. She fell with the others, wings tucked close, body aligned as if she had been shaped for this moment.

A sudden crosscurrent slammed into her shoulder. It did not break her posture, but it pressed into her awareness like a thumb against a bruise.

Her body shifted half an inch. Her heartbeat stuttered, quickened. Her path tilted.

Above her, the instructor rode the wind with practiced ease, his voice cutting cleanly through the rushing air.

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"What did you feel?"

She did not dare look up, nor did she slow her descent.

"The wind pushed me off my line," she said.

"And what do you intend to do with that?"

"Correct it," she answered. "There is nothing else worth doing."

She snapped her wings open, let the updraft lift her ribs, and allowed the sky to settle her weight properly. She adjusted once to counter the force, then again to smooth her angle, her movements efficient and purposeful. The tight coil inside her chest loosened. Thought gave way to instinct.

She rose in a broad arc, looping around the vessel before returning to the rail. Her landing was silent. A breath later, the rest of her cohort touched down around her.

The instructor walked along the rail, his gaze sweeping over her posture, the subtle shifts in her breathing.

"You recovered well," he said. "But you looked down for half a breath. Why?"

"To judge my fall," she replied. "I wanted to see the shape of it."

A ripple of reaction passed through the other younglings. Curiosity. Appraisal. The beginning of respect.

The instructor exhaled through his teeth, a thoughtful sound.

"Then remember this," he said. "A fall is not something you observe. A fall is something you ride. By the time you stop to look at it, the sky has already decided the outcome for you."

She bowed her head in acknowledgment.

"I understand."

"Good." He stepped back and raised his voice so it carried across the entire deck. "This one has earned her name. Speak it."

The younglings echoed it together, their voices merging into a single resonant note.

Keha

A sound that, when translated with careful breath, meant:

She Whose Shadow Fell as She Rode the Wind.

It was a name earned not by perfection, but by falter, correction, and ascent.

The tale is recited every season. When the younglings line up along the rail and the wind pushes at their feathers, the instructors speak the final lines so the story lives in their wings, not just their memories:

"Wind will strike you. Currents will shift. The sky will test the shape of your wings. Let your shadow fall where it must. And never let the ground teach you anything."

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