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The mont ca quietly at first, a subtle hum running through the deck, almost imperceptible under the soft patter of feet and whispers. Then, a low vibration shook the floor, faint at first, like the heartbeat of the world beneath them.

Lira rose from her seat, clutching her spatial bag, her eyes wide as the dragonfly-shaped wings of the Azure Wing shimred. The translucent panels pulsed rhythmically, sending prismatic reflections across the polished wooden deck. She could feel the elent thrumming through the air, a steady pulse that seed alive.

"Brace yourselves!" Instructor Veyra’s voice rang out, commanding yet calm. The students obeyed instinctively, gripping the bench edges or the railings that shimred with protective wards.

Slowly, impossibly, the ship began to lift. The floor beneath their feet vibrated gently as if the vessel were stretching itself upward, shaking off the stone stairway and gliding into open air. The walls and ceiling curved above, enclosing them in a cocoon of enchanted glass and wood, while the wings beat with grace, the motion smooth and hypnotic.

Lira’s heart leapt as the Academy below shrank with every rising inch. The courtyard, the cobblestones, even the towering spires of the main halls beca miniature in her gaze, colors blurring into neat patches of green and gray. She gripped the edge of her seat, but the wind that seeped through the small ventilation channels carried no chill, only the exhilarating scent of fresh air and freedom.

Beside her, Maelin let out a low whistle. "By the stars... look at the wings!"

They stretched farther than she had realized, veins of light running through the translucent mbranes. The dragonfly shape was perfect, not just rely decorative, but functional, lifting the colossal ship effortlessly as if it were nothing more than a leaf on a breeze. The entire vessel seed alive, responding to unseen currents, tilting gracefully as it caught a higher wind.

Lira pressed her hands to the rail, feeling the gentle lift against her palms, the elent humming faintly in response to her earth-and-air senses. The forest lining the Academy grounds beca a patchwork quilt of shadows and light, rivers glittering in miniature like threads of silver. Birds flew alongside them for a mont, startled but unafraid, their wings flashing in the sa rhythm as the ship’s colossal ones.

A collective gasp swept through the students as the horizon broadened. The mountains beyond the Academy glimred in early sunlight, their peaks piercing the clouds, and sowhere farther, rivers glowed faintly with mineral-rich water. Lira’s stomach tightened, not with fear, but with awe.

"Steady, everyone," Teacher’s calm voice echoed through wards that transmitted it clearly to all corners of the deck. "Let the ship adjust. This is only the beginning."

The vessel tilted slightly, climbing higher. Clouds brushed the underside of the wings, cool mist curling around the outer hull. The wind whistled past the small openings, tugging lightly at hair and robes. Students clung to one another or leaned into the rails, faces lit with wonder, laughter mingling with squeals of delight.

Lira felt a thrill that seed to seep into her very bones. The wind responded to her subtly, just a flicker, just a curl, but it made her aware that her power, even here, could stretch and bend without leaving the safety of the ship. Her fingers traced invisible patterns in the air, and a strand of ivy from her satchel stirred as if sensing the currents outside.

The Academy fell away completely now, a distant cluster of towers, roofs, and spires. The ground rolled beneath them, hills and forests shrinking, rivers threading like silver through valleys. The sky seed impossibly vast, and sowhere beyond, the Dragon Lands waited, unseen but palpable and full of promise, danger, of the unknown.

Lira exhaled slowly, letting the awe sink into her chest. She was flying, not with wings of her own air elent, but she was moving, soaring into a world that had only existed in books and dreams. She felt the quiet certainty that she was ready for what was coming.

Once the ship had reached a steady altitude, the hum of the engines, or rather, the magical pulse that powered the vessel, softened to a gentle vibration beneath their feet. The teachers allowed students to move about the lower deck, and a slow current of excitent passed through the ranks as they began exploring.

Lira stepped carefully from her bench, her fingers brushing along the smooth, polished railings. The wood felt warm, humming faintly beneath her touch, almost as if it recognized her presence. She noticed faint carvings along the walls of dragonflies in flight, patterns of wind and leaves intertwined, and for a mont, she traced her fingers along the lines, feeling the air around her stir in response. The smallest currents of wind lifted a strand of her hair, allmost as a heartbeat.

Maelin was already ahead, peering into compartnts and peeking under benches. "These sleeping quarters are... massive," she said, bouncing lightly on the edge of a low platform. "And look, elent crystals everywhere. This ship practically glows!"

Lira wandered to the edge of a small observation window. The sky stretched endlessly beyond, clouds drifting beneath them, and she could see the faint shimr of protective wards overlaying the hull. Sothing in the way the magic humd resonated with her own abilities. She raised her hand slightly, and a tiny curl of wind rose, circling her fingers and then settling around a glowing rune embedded in the window fra. The rune pulsed once, soft and responsive, and for a mont, Lira smiled.

"This ship... it’s alive," she whispered. Not literally, she knew, but it responded. Subtly, attentively, to presence, movent, even the currents of air and earth she carried with her.

Maelin glanced back, laughing. "What are you doing, bookworm? Talking to the walls now?"

Lira shook her head, still watching the rune glow faintly. "Not talking. Feeling. They’re... listening. Just a little. The ship, I an. I think it can sense magic."

Curiosity drove both of her deeper into the lower decks. There were sleeping platforms, each with soft cushioning and glowing night-crystals that seed to adjust light according to the ti of day, or perhaps the traveler’s need for comfort. Storage compartnts lined the walls, each sealed with a simple lock and a shimring sigil to prevent objects from shifting during flight.

A small common area beckoned next, tables and chairs carved with intricate leaf and wind patterns, runes set into the wood that gently vibrated with protective enchantnts of other elents. Lira sat for a mont, placing her hands lightly on the table surface. Her vines stirred slightly within her, curling toward the table’s edge, and a soft breeze swirled around her fingers. The ship humd in reply.

"See?" she murmured to herself. "You can feel it."

Even Maelin noticed, though she didn’t understand the subtlety. "You’re always so... in tune with things," she said with a grin. "I can barely make my fire spark without burning myself."

Lira’s lips quirked. "It’s not the control of elent. It’s the world noticing you too." She paused, looking up at the soaring ceiling of the ship, the light bending along the dragonfly wings above. "I think... maybe the ship will help , if I listen."

Ti seed to stretch as the students wandered, peered out windows, and settled into their spaces. Nervous chatter mingled with laughter, the occasional squeal at the view, and the teachers’ calm instructions guiding everyone to remain seated or careful around the crystal wards.

Lira lingered by another observation panel, tracing a delicate vine pattern etched into the floor. The connection was faint, almost imperceptible, but she could feel the subtle interaction of the wind lifting slightly around her, the vines of her elent shifting as if in response. A small thrill ran through her chest.

This is different, she thought. Not the Academy, not the forests, not the practice halls... sothing new. And I am a part of it.

As the ship sailed higher, the clouds brushing the edges of their enormous wings, Lira allowed herself a deep breath. The Dragon Lands awaited, but for the first ti, she didn’t feel afraid. She felt ready and strangely, she felt the ship itself quietly agreeing.

The first few days aboard the Azure Wing passed in a blur of discovery, adaptation, and quiet awe. Students quickly learned to navigate the ship’s unusual layout. Sleeping platforms, each enclosed by soft, glowing wards, had a faint hum that adjusted to the occupant’s rhythm. The mattresses themselves seed to mold to the body, giving every sleeper perfect support. Lira found hers by the observation deck, where she could watch the horizon at all hours, feeling the gentle vibrations of the wings through the floorboards beneath her.

Dinner was an experience in its own right. The communal hall, lit with soft floating lanterns, slled faintly of herbs and sothing almost sweet, a scent that shifted as the ship soared higher or tilted in a turn. Tables were carved from polished wood and reinforced with protective runes, and the benches seed to adjust automatically to accommodate every body. Food appeared in neat portions, warm and nourishing, carried by magical plates that hovered alongside servers or glided silently along narrow channels embedded in the floor.

So students struggled with the ship’s hygiene chambers at first. The rooms were small, enclosed with glimring glass panels and faintly humming crystals, and the process was brisk. Entering the chamber, a student was bathed in a gentle spray of enchanted water and light, a combination of cleansing magic and airflow that left the body refreshed and dry within minutes. No soap, no towel, no fuss; everything was automatic, efficient, and a little disconcerting to those who weren’t used to being cleaned at the speed of magic. Lira adjusted quickly, since she had sothing simmilar in her academy room.

Beyond the practicalities of daily life, the students quickly discovered one of the ship’s most srizing features: the observation deck. The walls were a combination of crystal and open lattice, and the enchantnts allowed anyone standing there to see the land far below as if through a magical telescope. Hills, forests, rivers, and tiny villages unfolded beneath them like a living map. Clouds swirled at eye level, and occasional bursts of wind rattled the decks, carrying scents of distant forests or oceans.

Lira found herself drawn there at all hours. She could watch the patterns of rivers winding through valleys, see how forests gave way to plains, and observe mountain peaks catching sunlight long before anyone else on the deck noticed. The way the wind moved around the ship, interacting subtly with her own air affinity, gave her a faint thrill. Sotis a stray current of wind would curl around her fingers, teasing the vines in her satchel to stretch or twitch in response.

The longer they were in the air, the more comfortable she felt. First-year students were still wide-eyed at every turn, shouting to each other across decks or marveling at the ship’s magic, while second-years like herself had begun to develop routines of quiet study sessions, quick als, and careful exploration of hidden nooks.

Even the teachers allowed small freedoms now, letting students wander the decks in pairs or small groups, as long as they kept a safe distance from the crystal-protected engines and the wings’ massive hinges. The hum of magic that powered the vessel beca part of the background of their lives: a constant, steady rhythm that reminded everyone they were floating not just through air, but through sothing extraordinary.

By the end of the first week, the students were no longer gawking at the ship itself. They had learned its rhythms, adjusted to its strange routines, and even found small pleasures: a favorite observation spot, the quiet hum of a particular hallway, the subtle way sunlight glimred through the dragonfly wings at certain hours.

Lira, as always, drifted through these routines with her own quiet awareness. She moved her hands lightly over rails, letting air currents swirl in playful patterns, letting the vines in her satchel sense the ship’s magic. It was comforting, her powers and the vessel, coexisting, subtle, intertwined. From her vantage points, she could watch the world below grow closer, vast and mysterious, waiting for the day they would finally touch it.

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