But Luziel was fading. His wings, once of silver and sapphire, had become translucent. The melancholy was not a poison—it was a thinning. He had given his substance to the village: a little warmth here, a little hope there, a dream of a full belly to the deserter, a memory of her husband’s laugh to the widow.
“That sounds like hell,” said the deserter.
The priest wept. Not from despair, but from relief. To be unseen by God, but seen by an angel—was that not a kind of grace?
The sweet, aching knowledge that someone once loved them perfectly, and that love did not save them—but it made them real.
Winter deepened. The horse died. The charcoal burner froze in his sleep. The butcher, driven mad by hunger, began to eye the mute girl. Luziel stopped him with a single word—a word that had no human sound, only the memory of a star collapsing. The butcher fell to his knees, not harmed, but emptied. He spent his last days carving spoons from fallen branches.