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YD6-71 (ZA) Phantom Flights Through a Labyrinth, and Boys: Across Continents

BOOK SYNOPSIS: Step into this journey of becoming, where the cosmos whispers its secrets, and identity blooms like dawn. This story is an unfolding suite of chapters clarifying my book: The Code: Horizon of Infinityâa philosophical memoir exploring: How The universe Sculpted Our Minds. Through Aetheria, the lens of consciousness, aware of her need for a body to reveal herself and exercise her wishes, the narrative leads to her birth and the name she will claim: Sunshine.Â
Chapter Preface: Between JFK and Jan Smuts, the path blursâParis, perhaps, or Brussels lost in a contrail of forgetting. This is the phantom return: not to a place, but to sons waiting behind court orders, to a brotherâs embrace, and an ex-wifeâs silence. Aetheria guides the descent; Nyx veils the route. In the quiet hum of reunion, the question remains: Who gets to arriveâand who is allowed to stay?
#PhantomFlight, #MemoirInTransit, #FathersAndSons, #LabyrinthOfMemory, #ExileAndArrival, #AcrossContinents,Â
YD6-71 (ZA) Phantom Flights Through a Labyrinth, and Boys: Across Continents
Riding on an Aladdin rag, with New York gifts in my luggage, and J.F. Kennedy is long behind. Londonâs Heathrowâcosmic, deja vuâwide corridors with leading signs that read, âExit.â The rolling walkway carries me among far-spread travelers. I dawdled in the gleaming wash of the floor slipping past. Then my stride awakensâto walk on. Thoughts trickle of passengers: A brief crossing over the North Sea channel breezes through, then eastwardâthrough France. Eric waits. And faithful to my sister Ingrid, the journey emerged unfeasible.
Iâm caughtâentangled at the cruxâsplitting the skies, by a ten-day sleepover nudging Johannesburg into mind. I slogged my calf-bloated suitcase through Heathrow terminus, just as a British Airways flight boarding crossed my path. I jungled through Sabena exigenciesâa run to the Foreign Exchange hatch, then back againâbefore a clean red carbon ticket issued in hand.Â
I swore at myself, weaseling through the suffocating crowd, sweating out my original wish for Londonâbooked a year earlier, born in the moment of an idea, walking through Sandton Cityâs mall where Iâd drawn my departure tickets. A launch point to shed Jean and her legal team, piggybacking on my name. But the world has changedâsince its needs.
On those end-of-year festive season flights, I seem to shed the worst of life behind. Looking forward carries its own promiseâflickering in a labyrinth of crisscrossing journeys: Rio de Janeiro, Tel Aviv, Paris, Brussels. While my body cringes in its seat, mind twiddling. . . doodling in mid-existence, fading behind the boarding pass.Â
Iâm consuming another summer open-date flightâParis hovering like a half-consumed destination. Walking the ground, overhead signs flash: a fork blinks. âPassengers in transit.â I just spotted the easy way out of an adventureâbut impatience weaves through me. I must wait until the end-of-year to catch my courseâsaddened that reaching my boys still isn't an option.
The music resonatesâa voice breathes, âon the wings of love.â Cosmic, atmosphericâa gauzy spray paints my mind, like traces of Roman roads beneath asphalt. 1961 camouflagedâregretful behind progress. The rural airport has changed over the years. I walk the concrete apron to the terminal, shadows of memory trailing behind.
Across the gleaming corridors, past the grown plate-glass crystal barrier that chokes the passengers at passport control. I taper down the concourse. A carousel, self-service, heaving of luggageâpassing under the scrutinous eyes of customs officers. Year after year, I slip through with an outdated computer for Lionel to tinker with. Or Peter Fewâs ordered video camera. Now, Gavin's radio. Lionel's printer. I pass, chilled with anticipation of being stopped.
Thenâat the whisk of smoked glassâmy eyes leap free, held back by a crowd of greetings eyes, eager, but Iâm invisible, not their character. Repose my steps, to scan through a crest of eyes and shouldersâfumbling my purse, pecking among the scatter of international coinsâa twenty-cent piece. Beneath my search for a phone, a dark-blond boy breaches clear from a gateway of thick sliver tube that holds back the crowdsânearing. In a stroke, his round face shades from his mother, Caroline, to feature my brother Ivo, as a childâbut he vanishes beneath my eyelid, as Ivo himself, figures, a head-and-shoulders above, pressing his giant frame through the throng. He emergesâsolid, towering.
Cosmic, my words echo, âHoe wiste U dat?âHow did you know I arrived today?â We stroll behind Sheldon, his arms raised, hands steering the trolley stacked with luggage, gliding across a gleaming wash of the floor. From the peeking eye-slit of lightâAetheria's mirage spies on us, bending Heliosâ reach to her own whisper. It dawns on me, intuitive: âIlona.â The usual family telegraph making its rounds, threading whispers through her siblings.
Cautious of the black hollow of the zebra line, but drawn by the surge of white-stepping stones of piano keys, the rhythm of our pace threading through the cast shade. Beyond the edge of the angled concrete columns, tethered to the overhead driveway logic architecture for âdepartureâ trafficâshoved the furthest thing from mind right now. We stepped into Helios at the crest of the day, the asphalt fading beneath the bright blaze of the Highveld summers, blurring the plaza and spilling into a glimmering parking lot beyond a shady curb. Sunlight prickles my face. I turn again to Ivo. âHoe wiste dat ik vandaag zou komen, Deze morgen?âHow did you know I'd come today. This morning?â
Contrary to Ilonaâs draping shadow, Ivo echoed: âDe M'ma het, gisteravond gebeld en gezegd dat je misschien vandaag op de vlucht zou zijn.ââMother did phone last night, saying you might be on the flight today.â We stepped the pebbled paved plaza down the curb. Ivo and Sheldon, in a breath, debated the parking spot amidst the glitter of glass and sleek undulations of metal. The heel of my steps cushioned in the softened tar, carrying me to the metallic silver-gray Mercedes as its trunk lid lifted. My luggage fluttered at Ivo's handsâlike wingedâbefore being stowed into the dark depths. Sheldon's flat palm brought down the trunk shut. We climbed aboard and drove away.Â
I gazed through the framing windshieldâan extension of a flightâhovering, still seated in the comfort of the Aladdin rug, the magic cloud of my life being tended to. My mind doodled over the airport's intricate roads, drifting from year to year. Only the Holiday Inn tower seems to have gained a moat around its island, and Ivo, justifying the detour, notched to the historic pivot, âIk sal langst hier. . .âI'll try this way; itâs shorter, I think.â
Steering the car, a fragmented course blotched uncertainties. My seat, no more uncomfortable than in flight, yet my egoâever surpassingâbegged to wrestle doubts. I flipped through them: âAm I the only one bugging siblings for a place to lodge?' Squelching guilt as I rode with gifts in my luggageâinvoluntary to seeing the old year out and the new year in. Â
We stopped at the intersection by the road sign, where the traversing thoroughfare was stitched with a dual railway lineâshy, peeking against the azure sky. A sketch of conventâs black washing linesâmemory strung out to dryâspanning electrified cable punctuated gantries, threads hung from another hemispheric. A gauze of Johannesburg blurring distantâvalleys weaseling through the wavy hillsâresurges a quarter of a centuryâmore carriage than careerâgrounding what still hovered.
Exhaustedâmy spirit still trailing in the jetâs contrailâmy brother, a decade my junior and at peace with the landmarks of the present, weasels onto a horseshoe overpass above trickling highway traffic, threading into a suburban street. The wheel coils a turnâinto a side road. No sooner, we face a cul-de-sac, a flicker of deja vuâan island in the sky, a recollection of my landing, bright-colored fins shimmering among distant airport structures. He veers counterwise, but no sooner, a gateway to a villa in the sky risesâits eaves shading the fenestrated facade. The car rocks through the gutter and halts on the brick driveway before a green garage door.Â
âBut! This is not your house.â I exclaimed, thinking he made a courtesy stop.
âHet is thuisââIt is home--we moved. A bigger house. Sold the other.â
Then, Ivo, as if things happen in a flockâamong siblings. "Het hele gezin is verhuisd.âThe whole family has moved. Ilona to Hazyview, Igor to a smaller house at the far end of Randburg. Kidding me. âHet is al goed. . .âit's good I came to the airport; you wouldn't have found anybody.â
In a half-daze, I stepped to the rear of the car. "Leave it for now, I'm tired," my voice rhymed from behind the monster of my ego, gnawing at the fact that no verbal invitation had been extended to lodge with his family. But Sheldon and Ivo, untroubled, swung my luggage into sunlight. After them, I pressed the trunk lid into its shadowed depth.
Father and son led the way, through a facing gate bathed in the golden haze of an alleywayâwedged between the garage and a precast concrete wall that peeked over the bright white house gable of the house. A side gate swung open, and a pelt of fluffâa puppyâshot between our legs. Meanwhile, the father, an Alsatian, stood poised in the haze that blanketed the green backyard lawns. Ears pricked, alert to Ivo's command. Sheldon couldnât master the pupâs erratic, wild greeting loopsâno shouting could heel him.Â
The kitchen window flickersâour reflection slipping past. We turned the corner to a stable door off the patio, Ivo stressing with the bottom leaf to keep the dogs outside. But Aetheria rides Heliosâ light, spilling into the kitchen, bending the glare like threads of a mirage. In the shadowy depth, Caroline figures at the stove, steam billowing from simmering pots. Behind her, the two little girlsâthe smaller one sucking fingersâhalf-tethered at their motherâs skirtâshy, silent, yet driven by curiosity to welcome the stranger in me.
"Hi! Ivan." Caroline blurted,Â
I sink through my kneesâbentâtall as my brother is, sheâs a little woman. We meet in an uneasy embrace, a brief kissâher voice resonating: "I'll show you where. . ."
Turning away, Caroline and the girlsâCharleen and Sherrileeâslip ahead of me through the gaping doorway of the kitchen. To the far right, Igor and Sheldon's shadows vanish, their presence echoing a narrow passage wall, exchanged in a piped echoâsteps in the shadows.Â
Until in the distant peeking doorway light, the little crowd jostlesâfluttering before a wing of a saucer that dissimulates the planterâs manicured street-front yard. Aetheriaâs flavor lingersâin the mirage. Bend in Helios' light, it crosses the shade of the eaves, pleading to the wallâs almost fully waking window, spilling over the trims and windowsill. Silhouettes gathered and bustled, emerging in Sheldonâs room.
"Come now, get out of the way." Caroline, with her Moon in Virgo, resonates with firm authority. Ivo echoes her in fewer, deeper tones. Little shoes scuffled, retreating across the parquet like a small storm pattering behind the blind wall, their echoes piping through the passageway.
A gauzy veil of light cleared to reveal Carolineâneednât mentionedâthe neatness spoke for itself. An inviting bed ran along the lateral wall, dressed in a brown-and-white checkered duvet. An oversized black pillow puffed with quiet pride beside the windowâs deepâtrimmed folds of gathered drapes.
I sized up the shelvesâparked with a collection of scaled-down cars, airplanes, motorbikes. At my feet, on the bare parquet, stood an antique chest. Atop it, a museum piece: a mechanical typewriter, with a few blank sheets neatly stacked beside it. âWhat does a young boy of ten do with a typewriter?â I wonderedâforgetting, for a moment, my own legacy behind De_Pâpa, my fatherâs typewriter. I thought, this is so fantastic. So neat, so preciseâa world apart from my school exercise book, a quilt, and an ink pot to dip. âJust a flyâs walk. . .â echoed my teacherâs voice, as I scribbled tracing the faint ruled lines in my exercise book.
Then I turned, throwing a glance toward Caroline and my brother, the last trickle through the gaping doorway. My luggage posed at my feetâan unspoken invitationâlingering in stillness after Sheldonâs reluctance to leave his room. "First things first," I voice, edged with an apologetic reverenceâ"Can I use the phone to call my boys?"Â
"It's in our bedroom, Ivan. Go in, you'll be at ease, to speak with your boys." Carolineâs words resonate like a pointer. "There."
I hesitated before darkness pooling in the angle, the shadows of sentinels juxtaposed at the corner where the passageway veers toward the rear bathroom and toilet doors. In my baffled pause, Carolineâs hand led, swinging the door inward, gesturing behind the door leaf, "There is the phone."Â
In my hesitation for a phone in another spot, I sensed the thick atmosphere of intimacy I couldnât shy from. My mind bruised on the king-size island of a bedâsquare and softâin the gloom of drawn thick curtains, cracked with slivers of sunlight. Carolineâs sillage of fresh air trailed behind.
The red phone stared, gleaming rat-eyed, cornered and ready to leap. I snatched the handsetâlyrical, a heartbeat, a verse woven into my fingertips, dialing. I turned away from the breeze-swaggering drapes, swung my hips into the cane chair, its creaks rocking me willingly. âIsnât that fun?âÂ
I waited, as the distant, muffled ringing stretched thin, tautening my patience.
âMaybe I dialed the wrong number?â echoed in my head, nagging. IÂ redialed, my mind lending itself to the keypadâs rhythm, tracing the 8-0-2âthe Kelvin exchange rising from the savanna, as an incantation threaded memory. It rhymed with 5-00-5, the house before the cradle of Lionel and Gavinâbut there is no answer.
The reed creakedâlamentablyâas I was brought to the verge of anxiety. Flirting with thoughts: âIf Jean had learned the date of my arrival. . .â her Sun in Rat, raising her wrath like a storm on the horizon.
I left the chair rocking behind me, and out the gaping doorway. I walked the little wooden block floor, in refrain cosmic music sigh resonating in mind:Â
âIn the misty moonlight;Â
By the flickering firelight;Â
Any place is all right;
Long as I'm with you. . .âÂ
The melody wove into memoryâLionel and Gavin, captivated by those remnants from one of my construction sites. As the afterglow of sunset pressed against the sliding doors, shadows thickened before bedtime. They would balance each piece with careful fingers. Then pauseâbreaths heldâbefore pulling one free from the bottom to their delight, watching the tower crumble in a cascade of laughter.Â
By evening, after another try to reach my boys, I walked a memory map traced by the chevron parquet underfoot, each step an echo of their small hands stacking wooden blocks. I glanced through the gaping kitchen doorway, silent in its shadows. Beyond it, the next juxtaposed yawning doorway, they framed wooden dining furniture hunkered in darkness. Then, came around the wall, distant voices coming to fetch me. I brushed off the lingering stare of lounge upholsteryâsilent, heavy, watchfulâas if shaking off dust from a forgotten room.
I crossed the somber bar-room and paused at the bright thread of light slipping beneath the flagstone step under the archway. Offside, the Alsatiansâ sad eyes flickering beyond the glazeâoccasional and watchful, begging to enter. Nyxâs dark cloak wrapped their shadows, her gaze lingering behind the glass of the patioâs French doors with wing windows, watching what I saw from my angle.Â
Ivo's large arm draped over his chubby little wife, the three siblings twisted by their feet, eyes hovering over the coffee table. Fixated on the flickering colors of the television screenâabsorbed in a cartoonâs whimsical chaos. Â
I stepped into the limelightâno one perturbed by my intrusion into their cozy leisure. Catching Carolineâs inquisitive glance, I shrugged off the thought, its edges slipping out, gathering into a voice that lingered in the air. âI'll try again, later in the evening.âÂ
A cosmic rhyme drifted in, unbidden, threading through the stillness:Â
âIs it all in the stars tonight?
Is it all in . . . mind?Â
That . . . will never come?
A sentimental dream, my feelings based on instinct.âÂ
The words half-resonate, linger like stardust caught in the fluorescent light. Â
Angelic and dozy, the children left for bed, from finding my place besides my brother on the wide couch. "Aren't you tired?" Carolineâs echoes past Ivoâs chest, lingering in the air for the umpteenth time.
"Yes," my breath rolls out, "but if I go to bed now, I won't fall asleep."Â
The midnightâs broadcast on SABC flickered, then the screen swarmed with a gray gauzeâstatic. We rose and drifted off, trailing through the passage until the corner doors. With a soft exchange of âGoodnight,â we disappeared into the rooms beyond.
I climbed into bed. âBlack sheets?â A breeze from my arrival swept across the black pillow, soothing my head. Who wouldâve thoughtâNyxâto slip into the arms of Morpheus.
Helios' peeked through the curtain cracks, after the birds had fluttered and chirped, splashing silly among the silent leaves of the bush, before the household awoke. I stirredâcocooned in the covers, weathering out patience.
By nine, I had dozed through worldsâlanding, taking flights, checking my next options. My skeptical Warthog lay curled in its lair, while my free-spirited Gemini hovered, lingering for a place to nail myself down, to carve out a career I could bring among the normalâresponsible.Â
My thoughts drift to Ivo and Caroline's household awakeningâtiny footsteps pattering in and out of rooms, warming the milieu after Nyxâs chill. Punctuated by those overriding giant stompsâuntil frightful, evacuated peace returned through the house. I dressed and went searching for the little family. Helios' glow seeped through the windows, illuminating their scattered silhouette around the kitchen table for breakfast. With hawk's eyes on my wristwatch, holding back for ten o'clockânot to rattle Jeanâs feathers that bear upon my boys.Â
Caroline offered her phone line, guiding me between the facing archwaysâopposite an African artistâs hand-whittled bar counter. The somber sideboard cradled a docile beige phone. I dialed, poised, listened to the distant ringing tone, dispatching the Hydra eyes of my mind's familiar craft, settling shyly, embedding the pine ceiling hovering the floor-through entrance.Â
Helios' flaring across the north and south yards, glowing against the amber-bullion-glazed entrances. Light threads through the glass, coalescing in the hallwayâa golden-bright mirage, suspended in the heart of home. In the shadow pooled by the northern entranceâcradle the phone.Â
The line livens, Gavinâs voice chirps like morning's birds fluttering in the leafy swells. "Where are you, dad?" he askedâthen fell into a thoughtful hush.Â
"In New York," I replied, pausingâwaiting for his response. It didnât come.
"But, Dad. . . you're so clear," Gavinâs voice resonates, feathered with hesitation. I caught the edge of his doubt. I held the silence too long, feeling the pull of his longing.
Extending my tease for Lionel, I shortcutâsaddened, leaving Gavinâs little heart adrift, held in that silence, the doubtful sonance of his voice, "but Dad? You're so near."Â
"No, Gavy. . . " my voice breathes. "I'm here in South Africa. With Ivo."
A tremor of doubts crept back in his voice. "Are you? Daddy!" Beneath it, a vibrancyâcertain in its ebb, his radiant little heartâI felt blossoming inside my chest. Breaking my cruelty, on a breath that reached into the past. "Gavy! How is your tummy?"Â
"It's all right. Daddy."Â
As this little boy could melt me to tearsâpuncture my heartâback in New York, when, with the help of his brother, his nightmare emerged, sentient of a flight crash. I sensed the truth unspokenâthe cause, untenable: his longing. I had briefed Gavin about London, about the stopover where Iâd changed courseârescheduling my flight.Â
Then, I heard his peaceful voice rolling and fade through the house: "Lionel. Lionel. . ."Â
The line held in a hush. In retrospect, I caught a pressure before an air current from the far playroomâstirring through the architecture, slipping across the loungeâs piled carpet. Footsteps squelch across the embossed Italian ceramics, surge in my mind. Then broke the silence.
"Hi, Dad. Where are you?"
âLionel! What happened last night?â
"Weâre at Grannyâs, unpacking the carton boxes. . .â His voice surges to mindâJeanâs motherâthen fades just as swiftly, like a distant dream slipping through the edges of wakefulness.
Yet, it was crucial to sense the prevailing temperature in their household. "Lionel," and in another breath. "Go ask your mother if you can come with me to Hazyview. To see Bon'ma and Bom'pa." I hung in suspense on the thin thread of a hollowed line. His spirit in tide and ebb hard to follow in his retreatâwithdraw. Tasked with standing up to Jeanâlounging, facing the illusion of the past on a television. Flinging over my sentient expectationâbounced backâhis voice cracks through the line: "We can only come on Sundays."Â
I understood. In Jean's language, that meant; NO.
"Lionel," I loosely insinuateâthis isnât a visit; itâs a sentence. "Go back to your mother. Tell her, "I didn't come from New York to see you on Sundays.â But then I was back on a flight. The skies opened; turbulence gave way to the calm. . . of oblivion. The ridicule of ten-to-five echoed across distant mountains, fading into an atmospheric gray blur, stirring up the past years. In despair, last year, I laid charges at the Bramley police stationâanything I could think of: blackmail, extortion, contempt of courtâknowing nothing would come of it.
âLionel,âââI've kept my side of the agreement all year. I wrote to your mother and made payments to your and Gavin's Bob account.Â
Gavin returned, his little voice cutting through the line. "Daddy! My mother doesn't want to let us go with you."Â
"Where is Lionel?" I gasped.
"Lionel is inside. He says he doesn't want to talk anymore."Â
"Gavy!" I urged, "Go and call him back. Tell him, I promiseâno more messages. I just need to explainâ."Â
A long pause stretched across the line, then Lionel returned. "Yaa?"Â
"You shouldn't be in the middle of this"â"I'll speak to Peter.âÂ
"Peter's gone to Sun City," Lionel sighs. "For seven days."Â
"Lionel, don't worry,"â"I'll sort this out. We'll be together for the holidays." The words had just rolled out, that my mind snatched backâan instinctive bank reconciliation, running through the numbers. "Call Gavin."Â
When I hooked the handset, I repeated my promise to GavinâLionel wouldnât explain what had happened. The line had gone cold, but I was burning.
I flipped through the White Pages of the telephone directory and dialed the number. âSun City Hotel,â the native woman answered, then patched me through. The receptionistâs voice returned: "There is nobody." On the edge of her imagination, the hotel's paging system echoes a cosmic rhymeâMister Few, there is a call for you. Please pick up the phone. Wherever you are.Â
I waitedâmy routed call tracing a path through the homeland, threading across Bophuthatswana's villages of mud hutsâhow I wished it were so. Instead, from Kempton Park, I reached Hillbrow. Where I used to pick up Janine. I followed her pointing finger, listening to her Jazz, as we slipped onto the asphalt, stretching into the night toward the Magaliesbergs. Headlight vanishing beneath Rustenburg streetlights, before resurging on a stretch, then fading as we weaseled past the glowing parking fields, straight up the hill, and parked alongside Sun City Hotel. The ex-croupier unleashed herself into the casino, swallowed whole by the roulette table. Â
"Peter Few," my brother-in-lawâs voice broke through, splintering my sense of place. To figure out his pudgy silhouette, short trimmed beard, that telltale hesitation caught behind his breath. Â
"You didn't guess it could be me, did you?" as I listen for my reception with this Leo.
"No." Short of breath, his breath short, gasping to match the urgency.
"I've just landed."â"And Jean is up to her usual malice. She won't let me have Lionel and Gavin."
"We're coming back tomorrow afternoon," Peter echoed.
âTomorrow?ââfloated beyond the distant hills.Â
By dusk that following evening, along the graded curb, the Nissan Bakkie came to a halt before the house. I had roamed the shopping center and the streets of Halfway Houseâimpatientâuntil five to seven. When I pulled into Vorna Valley onto the grassy sidewalk. I peeked across the clinker-brick precast wall, behind which the houseâs fenestrated facade sat quietâits drapes drawn. Off to the side, the driveway was bare.
Headlight splashed against the locked steel-framed wooden gates. Peter unwound the window. "Hi, Peter,"â"Hi, Rita," as she stepped out, cutting the light beam, the gates swung, the driveway lay bare in a spill of light. "Should I close the gate?" as the red taillights of the coasting Mercedes. Stopped. Fluttering the wing doors. The entrance awakened from darkness with lights greeting, and figures flitted unpacking the car. As I slouched an approach, âDo you want me to shut the gates?âÂ
"Yes," Peter throws back, lugging bags from the car's trunk after Rita disappeared briefly inside the house. I followed, in a rescue mission for two innocent little boys.
"Take a seat," echoes with a shutting door. as Peter settled down more bags by the kitchen counter. Rita slipped through the back doorway with her two daughtersâa few years younger than my boysâushering them through their last leap to bed. I lingered behind, pulling out a chair at the round table with the widest view of the open L-shaped living area, watching as Peter unpacked food from the fridge and spread it out across the worktop.
Rita joined her husband. With the kettle on the boil, she poured three cups. "Ivan, you don't take milk? No sugar?"Â
"That's right." My voice flirted in the air, untethered.
"And how are Lionel and Gavin?" Ritaâs question shimmered.
"I haven't seen them yet," my reply drifted on a breeze. Â
Peter touched the sore subjectânot with the expected magic wand, of a phone call, but with a discourseâ"I thought about it. Rita and I discussed it, and there is nothing I can do. Jean will not move. She has proven that before. She even told Rita to get out of her house. It had to do with the letters."Â
âThe letters?ââawakening a ploy I didnât remember.Â
âThe ones Rita used to hand the boysâquietly, once a week, when she visited.â Peter voiced. "Jean found out." It sparked a thought when my boys complained, back when we were still a family: âIf you ever want to hide something from your motherâtuck it in her wardrobe. Or with her stuff!â
"What about Ronnie?â broke through my thoughts.
âHe won't talk to his sister,â Peter echoed. âRonnieâs wiped his hands off the affair. He doesn't want anything to do with it anymore. He told Jean, âIt's your life, and you better sort it out.â Said she was wrong to use the children."Â
"What about Jean's mother?" fluttered in my doubt, distanced and fragile.Â
Peterâs voice emanated from behind the kitchen counter, busy with snackwiches. "The only one who can still move her," meaning, Jean's mother, âis the old lady herself." If Lionel had to go to his grandmother with the unhappy jam. . . I believe sheâd talk seriously to Jean.âÂ
But! Don't forget,â Peter insisted, âthe old lady wiped her hands off paying lawyers. If the old-man were still alive, heâd have let her follow throughâthat holographic milieu living before me ever since Jean packed her bags with her boys--lawyer hatching cases, folders spread on her lap. Peter sighs, âJeanâs motherâyou know how tight she is with her money.â He breathed in another thought. âBut! Lionel is her apple's eye. If anyone could get something moving, itâd be him."Â
Peter brought his snackwich to the table, and with it, he quietly highlighted the old-lady's indifference toward Gavin. It twisted the knife in my chest. It hurtâknowing Jean preferred Lionel too. The toasts left a few crumbs on the china, as Peter addedâoutside, Nyx lingered, an eye staring through the crack of the curtain into the light, while Rita stood adrift, free from her mother and wifeâs shores. "There is only one solution, then," Peter said. "You need to speak to her."Â
Deep inside, I knew he was right. But the deceitâyears of itâmade the thought unbearable. "I don't want to do that," slips out of my mind, to them both. âTalking to Jean?â creeps, chilling under my skin, infeasible. My heart sagged under the weight of not resolving anything tonight. Then the lion cub in Gavin purred his distant words, crumbling the monster of my ego to rubble. I stepped out of the rubble. "I think you're right, Peter."â"I think. . . I feel it's what Jean wantsâto speak with me."
Trailing Peter into the sleeping quarters, behind a side door, the click of a switch lit the Kalamazoo System salesmanâs study. He turned away, leaving me behind his desk. I dialed my boysâ house number. Lionel answersâhis voice staunch. âYou deserve to be punished for what's happening with us,â crossed his mind. And I knew--Iâd have to wait. Wait until he grew his senses, maybe into adulthood, and relationship did the talking. I sighed--"Lionel, will you call your mother?"Â Â
Lionel came back on the line, "She doesn't want to talk to you." Through Lionel's doubt, my mind gives that little edge on meâ"Just tell your mother, "--âif she wants to solve mattersâshe better talk to me."Â
He couldnât have said more than two words before Jean's voice sprang to live through the earpiece.
At the labyrinth of open fight tickets and gateways, I linger. Each year, my boys grow a notchâthe little one trying to catch up with his brother. Yet, in my heart, they remain just that: the little boys, caught in a thought. And when I stand again at the hubâcontinent shifting behind me. the past year is still unconsumed. The road ahead across Africa spells one thing: a problem I canât shy fromânot unless I want to see the fool in me.
You are welcome to read all the chapters and explore more at my website: How the Universe Sculptured Our Mind. I spend an absurd amount of time chasing expressionâperhaps to shame. But the challenge is mine, updates may occur without notice, shaping the timeline, perceptions. The gift is yours: thoughts, echoes, reflections. I take them with gratitude. And youâwho are you, reading these lines, stepping into my genre, my style, the quiet current of my subject?
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Updated Phantomflight reference~
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Purple Tigerâs memory of seeing Phantomflight flying around?~
Purple Tiger lied in her nest, waiting for her mate to return. She heard chirping and opened her eyes to see Phatomflight hovering over her nest.
Both exchanged greetings before Phatomflight flew off and Purple Tiger returned to napping.
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Stills from aerial showreel for @visusfilmsandmedia . For full video check link in bio đđ đđđ https://youtu.be/j1m3yHwk9hc . . . . #punedrones #visusfilmsandmedia #travelwithdrones #dronelife #djiglobal #phantom4proplus #phantomflight #natgeo #commercialshooting #punebuilders #travelwithdrone
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YD6-71 (ZA) Phantom Flights Through a Labyrinth, and His Boys Across Continents
Chapter Preface: Between JFK and Jan Smuts, the path blursâParis, perhaps, or Brussels lost in a contrail of forgetting. This is the phantom return: not to a place, but to sons waiting behind court orders, to a brotherâs embrace, and an ex-wifeâs silence. Aetheria guides the descent; Nyx veils the route. In the quiet hum of reunion, the question remains: Who gets to arriveâand who is allowed toâŚ
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Ghostglide the Light Fury
(I already posted the pic but hereâs some info!)
Ghostglide is a melanistic Light Fury whose tail is more rigid then a normal one. Heâs often mistook for a Night Fury due to his colors and his tailâs appearance. Phantomflight is his younger sister though he adopted her and is only a few hours older then she is. He is curious, but naturally wary, of other dragons he may encounter.
His family is still very much alive. His mother is also melanistic but otherwise is average. His father, however, has orange eyes and the same rigid tail. His egg got lost and he hatched away from his parents and grew up with Phantomflight. He has met his parents on occasion but now as a young adult he doesnât really stay around them as he makes sure his sister stays out of trouble. But he will visit them if he wants to.
It is unknown why his father has such an odd tail; It may simply be a defect that has not proved to give the dragon any problems in flight and Ghostglide can still fly just as well as any others.
One of his odd traits is that when using his invisibility his markings are still visible which led to humans calling him Ghostglide due to looking like a gliding ghost.
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Ghostglide
A Light Fury with melanism whose dark instead of light. His tail seems more rigid than usual, and is key in telling him apart from others. Due to his colors, heâs often mistook for a Night Fury at a glance. Heâs only a few days older than Phantomflight, and got his name from looking like a ghost when he would disappear on sight by his plasma burst.Â
Despite that, heâs wary but curious of others and keeps his adopted sister out of trouble. In groups, him and his sister are often easily noticed as their colors are different than what you would be expecting. They donât seem to have a family, but they seem to see a dragon somewhere else as their adopted parent.
Ghostglideâs marks lightly glow in flight.
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Phantomflight
This Night Fury got her name from looking like a ghostly dragon flying around when the skies were dark. She is albino, and lacks the usual dark colors one would see. Her tail fins are also less rigid, and look more like a frilly one. Thanks to this, it is common for a quick glance to mistake her for a Light Fury.
Phantomflight is quite curious as she is mysterious. Why her tail is different could be a genetic mutation, and her colors from a unknown ancestor. Whatever the case, she often can be seen with her adopted brother. He found her as an egg when he first hatched, and from then on saw her as a sibling though they are not truly related.
Like a typical fury, she excels in quick flight and uses plasma bursts. Her pink spines can glow if she focuses enough. But sheâs mostly playful and prefers to goof around freely in her home.
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Phantomflight
- An albino Night Fury
- Her tail fins are somewhat smoother than average
- Lives in the hidden world with an adopted brother
- Eyes are pinkish
- Faint spotted marks
- Often mistaken as a Light Fury
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Ghostglide
- A melanistic Light Fury
- Tail fins are more rugged than average
- Adopted brother to Phantomflight
- Eyes are orange
- Faint blue spots
- Lives with his adopted sister
- Often mistaken for a Night Fury
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Compilation of my furies minus ones I havenât drawn yet
Ghostglide (Melan Light Fury)
Phantomflight (Albino Night Fury)
Feathersparkâs mom (Night Fury)
One Eye (Light Fury)
Featherwind (Featherfury)
Featherspark (Featherfury)
Not drawn yet: Snowfluff and proper Bonefury
Featherfuries are based on the feathery night furies you could make in the original httyd game.
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Headcanons for Phantomflight and Ghostglide?~
Siblings since hatchlings, their parents were friends.
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Anyone remembers interstellar? The concrete jungle. @visusfilmsandmedia . #tinyplanet #phantomflight #punedrones #dji #phantom4proplus #aerialphotography #aerialshoot #panomode #cityscape #drone_countries #punedrones #nightphotography #interstellar #tinylicious
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The concrete jungle. Tiny Planet 3 @visusfilmsandmedia . #tinyplanet #phantomflight #punedrones #dji #phantom4proplus #aerialphotography #aerialshoot #panomode #cityscape #drone_countries #punedrones
#punedrones#tinyplanet#dji#aerialshoot#panomode#phantomflight#phantom4proplus#cityscape#aerialphotography#drone_countries
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The concrete jungle Tiny Planet @visusfilmsandmedia . #tinyplanet #phantomflight #punedrones #dji #phantom4proplus #aerialphotography #aerialshoot #panomode #cityscape #drone_countries #punedrones #djiglobal #tinylicious #urbanphotography
#phantomflight#punedrones#dji#tinyplanet#tinylicious#phantom4proplus#urbanphotography#aerialshoot#panomode#cityscape#djiglobal#aerialphotography#drone_countries
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The concrete jungle. Tiny Planet 2 . . #tinyplanet #phantomflight #punedrones #dji #phantom4proplus #aerialphotography #aerialshoot #panomode #cityscape #drone_countries #punedrones
#phantomflight#cityscape#tinyplanet#panomode#drone_countries#aerialshoot#aerialphotography#dji#punedrones#phantom4proplus
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