The morning light grew steadily brighter, transforming the dark sky into various shades of blue, soon to ignite into a fiery orange on one side. It was a beautiful sight, but that wasn't why everyone on board was so excited.
The real thrill ca from what was about to happen next. The ship, which looked more suited for the sea than the sky, was slowly approaching a sloping path that ended abruptly at the edge of a valley—no barrier, nothing to stop it from plunging over the edge.
For those like Katherine, who had experienced this before, the excitent was palpable. She couldn't wait for the dive. But for others, like Cassian, experiencing this for the first ti, it was a different story. Fear gripped him as the ship inched closer to what felt like a leap into the unknown.
Cassian had asked one of the crew mbers why the ship needed to dive first before flying, but all he could make out from their confusing explanation was sothing about building montum. He didn't care much for the details—he just wanted to survive in one piece. Standing next to Katherine, he clutched the rope tightly, knuckles white with tension.
Noticing how terrified he was, Katherine tried to reassure him. "Don't be scared, Cassian. Even if sothing goes wrong and the ship keeps diving, you know I can fly, right? So just try to enjoy it."
Cassian nodded, choosing to believe Katherine. But still, his grip on the rope tightened further, and he felt his heartbeat quicken with every passing second. He glanced around, noticing the mix of expressions on the other passengers.
So were just as terrified as him, their hands gripping the railings or ropes like lifelines, while others looked excited—so even laughing in anticipation of the plunge.
His gaze shifted to Katherine. She, too, was holding onto the rope, but her face was lit up with excitent. Her eyes sparkled with the thrill of the mont, the very idea of the dive filling her with joy. It was as if she had done this countless tis before. Cassian could hardly understand how soone could be so relaxed about falling off a mountain.
The ship began to tilt, slowly at first. Cassian's breath caught in his throat as the massive vessel slid down the slick path toward the valley. The wooden deck creaked beneath his feet, the sound sending shivers down his spine. The ship picked up speed, the slope growing steeper with each second. Cassian's heart pounded violently in his chest, feeling as though it would burst at any mont.
He could hear people gasping, so shouting in excitent. Others, like him, were too scared to make a sound. The wind whipped through his hair as the ship accelerated, and he felt the first lurch in his stomach. His feet were starting to lift from the deck, and panic surged through him.
The ship was surrounded by a shimring magical barrier, glimring like a do of light that protected the passengers from being thrown overboard.
Just as the ship reached the edge of the slope, it nosedived into the valley. The mont it left the ground, everything seed to slow down for Cassian. His feet floated above him, his entire body weightless as the ship plunged through the air. He glanced at Katherine, who was still gripping the rope but smiling brightly, her excitent at its peak.
Cassian's heart raced. His knuckles turned white from gripping the rope tightly, every muscle in his body tense. He could see other passengers, so more relaxed than others, though a few who couldn't hold on properly were thrown against the barrier, bouncing back with a mixture of shock and laughter. The magical field crackled softly, containing the chaos as the ship hurtled downward.
The wind howled around them, making the ship creak and groan as it picked up speed. Cassian felt his stomach drop—like it had been left behind sowhere at the top of the mountain. The valley below rushed up at a terrifying pace, and his vision blurred, overwheld by the sheer speed of the fall.
His body tensed involuntarily as if bracing for impact, and he instinctively shut his eyes, trying to block out the terror that gripped him.
But then, through the screams of passengers around him—so filled with fear, others bursting with wild excitent—he rembered Katherine's words: "It's more fun than flying... You feel truly free and weightless." The ship wasn't crashing, it was gliding, diving like a bird swooping toward the earth. His heart was racing, but sothing in him shifted.
Instead of fighting the sensation, he started to surrender to it.
With great hesitation, Cassian opened his eyes, his breath catching as he looked out at the stunning scene unfolding below. The green valley, bathed in the soft light of dawn, stretched out endlessly beneath them. The ship wasn't tumbling uncontrollably—it was falling with grace.
His grip on the rope loosened, and the overwhelming fear that had consud him just monts before started to fade, replaced by sothing strange and new. The rush of air no longer felt like a threat but a force lifting him, holding him in a strange, exhilarating limbo between sky and earth.
Katherine had been right. For the first ti, he felt that weightlessness she had described. His fear lted away, replaced by a sense of freedom he had never known. The world seed distant, his worries insignificant as he soared down with the ship. The wind whipping through his hair felt freeing, like he had let go of sothing heavy he didn't even know he'd been carrying.
For a fleeting mont, Cassian forgot about everything—his near-death experiences, the strange journey he'd found himself on, even Katherine's unpredictable nature. All that mattered was this feeling, this strange sense of release. He wasn't just falling; he was flying, in a way he had never imagined possible.
The ship continued its descent, the ground rushing up to et them, but instead of dread, Cassian now felt a wild exhilaration. This was freedom—raw, untad, and intoxicating. His heart raced, but not with fear. He looked over at Katherine, who was grinning, her eyes sparkling with the sa joy she had described before. He gave her a nod, understanding, finally, why she loved this so much.
For the first ti in what felt like forever, Cassian smiled, fully letting go of his fears. He was alive, and for now, that was all that mattered.
The ship had finally fallen far enough to build the montum it needed. Suddenly, its bow began to lift, and the terrifying weightlessness shifted into a crushing force as every passenger slamd into the deck. Groans of pain echoed across the ship, but it was short-lived, as their surroundings transford.
Cassian blinked in awe. They were now soaring through the clouds, bathed in the fiery hues of the rising sun. The once intimidating plunge was now replaced by a breathtaking view, the sky ablaze in shades of orange and gold as they floated above the clouds.
"That was incredible!" Cassian exclaid, his face lit up with the biggest smile, his eyes sparkling with excitent. Katherine, seeing his happiness, couldn't help but smile brightly herself. "Told you it'd be fun," she said, a satisfied gleam in her eyes.
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