The Serpent And The Wings Of Night Page

And that is the only god left worth praying to—the one that rose on its belly and fell on its feathers, and found the middle air to be a kind of home.

“You would take me to the dark of the moon?” asks the serpent. the serpent and the wings of night

Night watches from its throne of spent light. It sees the serpent’s diamond head breach the cloud layer. It sees the wings carve furrows into the loam. And for the first time, night feels incomplete—neither above nor below, but simply between. And that is the only god left worth

The serpent rises—not in defiance, but in geometry. It coils itself into a ladder, each scale a rung, each muscle a promise of ascent. The wings, weary of the endless horizon, fold themselves into a question. For the first time, they long for a weight to carry, a tether to the warm dirt. It sees the serpent’s diamond head breach the cloud layer

They meet at the hinge of dusk, that narrow door between what crawls and what soars.

So it opens its mouth, wide as a ribcage, and swallows them both.