by Bill Tiepelman
The Winged Promise
There are certain mornings when the world feels suspiciously optimistic. The air hums, the clouds look like theyβve been freshly laundered, and somewhere, someone is definitely about to do something heroic. This was one of those morningsβand Seraphina was already running late. Not that time meant much to a winged unicorn who refused to acknowledge calendars, clocks, or the tyranny of βurgent.β She moved on the schedule of destiny, which is to say, whenever she felt fabulous enough. She trotted into the frost-gilded meadow, feathers ruffling dramatically in the breeze, which was absolutely not an accident. The wind loved her. It had once written poetry about her hair, a fact she rarely mentioned because modesty, like gravity, was a concept she regarded as more of a suggestion. Her mane shimmered in shades of rose quartz and wild sunset, each strand looking like it had a better skincare routine than most sentient beings. Her horn gleamed gold, spiraled to a point sharp enough to slice through bad attitudes and unsolicited advice. βGood morning, mediocrity,β she declared, tossing her head toward the horizon. βYour reign is over.β It was the kind of thing that sounded magnificent when shouted into the dawn, even if the audience consisted mostly of mildly alarmed rabbits. She lifted one hoof, considered the view, and sighed. βStill no coffee stand. Tragic.β To her left, the meadow sloped down toward a grove of trees so ancient theyβd stopped caring about photosynthesis and were now mainly gossip hubs. The elders whispered in creaks and rustlesβhalf prophecy, half rumor. Seraphina caught fragments as she passed: βThatβs her.β βWings like sunrise.β βBit of a diva though.β She smiled graciously, as only someone entirely aware of their mythic status could. Her mission, she reminded herself, was sacred. Somewhere beyond the Frost Plains lay the Sky Gate, a shimmering portal rumored to grant any wish uttered in sincerity. Which, to Seraphina, sounded alarmingly dangerous. Sincerity had never been her strong suit. βIβll just improvise,β she said, because all the great miracles in history were apparently the result of insufficient planning. Halfway through her morning strut (it wasnβt walking, not with that level of sparkle), she came across a man leaning against a broken shrine. His armor was dull, his hair was thinning, and his expression suggested someone whoβd seen too many quests and not enough naps. He looked up at her with the squint of someone who thought they might be hallucinating but didnβt want to be rude about it. βYouβreβ¦ a unicorn,β he said carefully. βPegacorn, technically. Wings and hornβbuy one, get one free.β She fluttered her feathers for emphasis. βYouβre welcome.β βRight.β He scratched his beard. βNameβs Alder. Used to be a knight. Gave it up when I realized dragons have unionized.β Seraphinaβs eyes brightened. βGood for them! Workersβ rights are important. Also, side note, are they hiring? I have excellent flame-retardant qualities.β He blinked. βYouβreβ¦ different from the unicorns I remember.β βThatβs because Iβm not a metaphor for purity,β she replied. βIβm a metaphor for self-improvement and glitter management.β They struck a deal, as one does when divine destiny meets mild existential boredom. Alder had a map, supposedly drawn by a drunken cartographer who claimed to have seen the Sky Gate from a hangover dream. Seraphina had wings, charm, and an unshakable belief that everything worked out for people who looked this good in gold. Together, they were unstoppableβor, at the very least, narratively promising. As they traveled, Seraphina noticed how the light clung to the frost, how each blade of grass glittered like applause. Alder, meanwhile, noticed his knees. They creaked in protest. βWhy do you want to find the Sky Gate?β he asked. She thought about it, head tilted like a philosopher whoβd once read a self-help book. βBecause I can,β she said finally. βAnd because every story worth telling starts with someone being slightly unreasonable.β βYou think youβll get a wish?β βOh, darling,β she said, eyes flashing. βI donβt wish. I negotiate.β The meadow opened up before them, stretching toward the horizon like a silk ribbon left by the gods after a particularly dramatic party. The air shimmered with possibility. Somewhere beneath the snow, a faint turquoise glow pulsed steadily, waiting to be discovered. Seraphina stopped mid-step, ears flicking. βAlder,β she said, her voice low and reverent. βDo you feel that?β He nodded slowly. βDestiny?β βNo,β she said. βWi-Fi. Finally.β And with that, the ground began to hum. The hum wasnβt so much a sound as a polite vibration, like the universe clearing its throat before delivering an important plot twist. The turquoise glow beneath the snow brightened, pulsing with all the subtlety of a disco ball at a meditation retreat. Seraphina tilted her head. βWell,β she said, βeither weβve found the Sky Gate or someoneβs buried an unsupervised magical artifact again. I told them those things should come with warning labels.β Alder leaned closer, squinting at the glow. βLooksβ¦ alive.β βOh, wonderful,β Seraphina said, taking an elegant step back. βI do love when reality starts to have opinions.β The light expanded, peeling away the snow like tissue paper until a massive sigil revealed itselfβan intricate spiral carved into the frozen earth, glowing from within. It was beautiful, hypnotic, and, crucially, buzzing at a frequency known in ancient texts as βPlot-Relevant Energy.β Seraphina peered down at it. βDo you think itβs one of those βspeak your true desireβ situations or more of a βtouch it and die spectacularlyβ kind of thing?β βCould be both,β Alder said grimly. βYou first.β βChivalry really is dead,β she muttered, lowering her muzzle toward the light. βAlright, mystery floor ornament, impress me.β The sigil flared brighter, and a voiceβsmooth, androgynous, and definitely overqualified for this assignmentβfilled the air. βIDENTIFY YOUR PURPOSE.β Seraphina blinked. βOh dear. Existentialism before breakfast.β She cleared her throat. βI am Seraphina, majestic creature of flight, horn, and questionable patience. My purpose? To find the Sky Gate.β There was a pause. The kind of pause that suggested divine bureaucracy was at work. Then: βREASON FOR ENTRY?β βHonestly?β she said. βI was promised a view and perhaps spiritual enlightenment with optional snacks.β Alder muttered, βYou canβt joke with ancient enchantments.β βCanβt or shouldnβt?β she countered. The sigil flickered as if sighing. βACCESS DENIED. BE MORE INTERESTING.β Seraphinaβs jaw dropped. βExcuse me?β βYOUR ANSWER LACKS NARRATIVE WEIGHT.β βOh, thatβs rich,β she said, wings flaring. βIβm a flying unicorn with self-esteem issues and impeccable comedic timing. What do you want, a tragic backstory?β βYES.β βWell, too bad. My trauma arc was discontinued after audience complaints.β The sigil dimmed slightly, almost sulking. Alder stepped forward, placing a gloved hand on her shoulder. βMaybeβ¦ tell it something true. Something real.β Seraphina stared at him. βYou think reality is my strong suit?β He smiled faintly. βI think you hide behind the glitter.β For a moment, the meadow was quiet except for the soft sound of frost melting under the sigilβs glow. Seraphinaβs reflection shimmered in the turquoise lightβa creature of impossible grace, yes, but also of contradiction. She sighed, the kind of sigh that rattled the stars a bit. βFine,β she said softly. βYou want truth? Here it is. I fly because walking feels too much like settling. I shine because someone has to light the way when hope calls in sick. And I make jokes because itβs either that or cry sparkles, and that gets sticky.β The sigil pulsed once. Twice. Then exploded upward in a column of light so bright that even Seraphinaβs vanity paused to take notes. When the glare subsided, the meadow was gone. They stood in open skyβendless blue beneath and around them, like someone had erased gravity from the to-do list. βOh, splendid,β Seraphina said, inspecting the view. βWeβve achieved enlightenment. Or altitude sickness.β Alder wobbled beside her on a floating island of crystal. βWhereβ¦ are we?β βThe In-Between,β came a new voice. Smooth, amused, and accompanied by the faint scent of bureaucracy and lavender. From the mist emerged a figure draped in layers of light, their face obscured by a mask shaped like an infinity symbol. They radiated the serene menace of someone whoβs worked customer service for the divine. βWelcome, travelers,β the being said. βI am the Archivist of Unfulfilled Promises.β βAh,β Seraphina said. βSo basically everyoneβs therapist.β βIn a sense.β The Archivist gestured, and hundredsβno, thousandsβof glowing scrolls unfurled behind them, each one whispering faintly. βEvery broken vow, forgotten resolution, and half-finished destiny ends up here.β βOh, youβre basically the cloud storage of disappointment.β βA succinct summary.β Alder peered around. βAnd the Sky Gate?β βIt exists,β said the Archivist, βbut only those who carry an unbroken promise may pass through. A rare qualification these days.β Seraphina arched a brow. βSo youβre saying I canβt get in because Iβve bailed on Pilates too many times?β βAmong other things.β βWonderful,β she muttered. βA celestial TSA with better lighting.β The Archivist ignored her and turned toward Alder. βYou, knightβwhat promise brought you here?β Alder hesitated. His jaw tightened. βTo protect the realm,β he said finally. βBut I failed. The wars ended without me. Turns out the realm didnβt need protectingβit needed therapy.β βHmm.β The Archivistβs eyes glowed faintly behind the mask. βAnd you, Seraphina? What promise remains unbroken in your heart?β She thought about it. Really thought. Then, softly: βTo never be boring.β The Archivist paused. βThatβsβ¦ surprisingly valid.β βI know,β she said. βI took an oath in glitter.β βThen perhaps,β the Archivist said slowly, βyou may yet earn entry. But only if you prove that your defiance serves a greater purpose.β βDefine βgreater.ββ βSomething beyond yourself.β Seraphina groaned. βUgh, altruism. Fine. Do I save a village or host a motivational workshop?β βThat depends,β said the Archivist, βon whether youβre willing to risk everything youβve ever loved to keep a promise you donβt fully understand.β There was a long silence. Even the clouds seemed to hold their breath. Then Seraphina smiledβa slow, dangerous smile that looked like sunrise preparing for mischief. βWell,β she said, unfurling her wings, βthat sounds fun.β And before anyone could stop her, she dove straight off the island, vanishing into the light below. Falling was not new to Seraphina. Sheβd done it often, usually on purpose and almost always with flair. But this was different. This was not the kind of falling that relied on gravityβit was the kind that relied on trust. The air tore past her wings, streaks of light peeling from her feathers like molten silk. She was surrounded by color, by sound, by the intimate sense that the universe was watching, popcorn in hand, murmuring, βWell, this should be interesting.β Below her, reality stretched open like a curtain, revealingβ¦ everything. Mountains folded into oceans; time bled sideways; galaxies spun like drunk ballerinas. She caught a glimpse of the past (she looked fabulous), the future (still fabulous), and something elseβsomething smaller and infinitely more terrifying: herself without wings. Just a creature on the ground, ordinary and breakable. The vision clung to her ribs like an unwanted revelation. She flared her wings and stopped short, hovering in a space that wasnβt quite sky and wasnβt quite dream. βAll right,β she said aloud, βif this is symbolic personal growth, I want a refund.β From the brightness ahead, a voice spokeβnot the bureaucratic tones of the Archivist, nor the sarcastic hum of the sigil, but something softer, closer, as if it came from behind her heart. βYou are almost there, Seraphina.β βAlmost where?β she demanded. βExistentially? Emotionally? Because logistically, Iβm floating in a plot device.β βThe Sky Gate is not a place,β the voice replied. βIt is a promise fulfilled.β Seraphina blinked. βThatβs it? Thatβs the twist? I couldβve guessed that on page one.β But the light pulsed, patient, unoffended. It wasnβt there to impress her. It was there to reveal her. And in the glowing emptiness, she understood: all her joking, her glitter, her refusal to be ordinaryβit wasnβt avoidance. It was survival. Sheβd never stopped moving because stopping meant remembering how easily hope could shatter. And yet, here she was, wings spread, defying the gravity of cynicism itself. Maybe that was enough. βAll right,β she whispered. βLetβs finish this properly.β The world answered. Light folded inward, creating a bridge of crystal and air that shimmered with every color sheβd ever dreamed in. At the far end stood Alder, looking bewildered but remarkably alive. His armor shone againβnot from battle polish, but from purpose rediscovered. He looked at her, and for the first time in centuries, his face broke into a grin. βYou jumped,β he said. βI fall elegantly,β she corrected, landing beside him. βAlso, I found enlightenment. Itβs very shiny and only slightly judgmental.β βYou did it,β Alder said. βYou kept your promise.β βI said Iβd never be boring,β she said with a wink. βNearly dying midair counts as interesting.β The light around them deepened, coalescing into a great arch of gold and sapphire flameβthe Sky Gate. It hummed with the quiet intensity of something ancient and utterly unimpressed by drama. A single phrase appeared above it, glowing in script so ornate it was practically smug: ENTRY GRANTED: TERMS MAY VARY. βThatβs not ominous at all,β Alder said. Seraphina grinned. βIβve signed worse contracts.β And with a toss of her mane and the kind of confidence that makes gods nervous, she stepped through the gate. There was no trumpet, no burst of divine music. Just warmth, the faint scent of starlight and cinnamon, and the dizzying realization that she was no longer falling or flyingβshe was floating. The world had turned itself inside out, revealing not heaven, not paradise, but a coffee shop. A small one. In fact, it was the same shrine from earlier, only now with working espresso machines and a chalkboard sign that read: βWelcome to The Winged Promise CafΓ© β Now Serving Meaning.β Behind the counter stood the Archivist, now in an apron, pouring milk with unholy precision. βCongratulations,β they said. βYouβve transcended.β Seraphina blinked. βInto barista work?β βInto understanding,β the Archivist replied. βEvery promise kept reshapes reality. Yours demanded joy, so reality obliged.β βAnd Alder?β she asked, glancing back. He sat at a table near the window, sipping something steaming, laughing with a group of wide-eyed newcomers. The weariness in him was gone, replaced by quiet amusement. He raised his cup toward her. βHazelnut,β he mouthed. βGood man,β she said, smiling. βIβll have one too.β The Archivist slid a mug across the counter. On the foam, perfectly drawn in cinnamon, was her reflectionβwings wide, eyes fierce, smirk eternal. βSo what happens now?β she asked. βNow,β said the Archivist, βyou keep your promise. You keep the world interesting.β Seraphina took a sip. It was divine. The kind of coffee that made angels reconsider their dietary restrictions. She turned to the door, where the horizon shimmered like a new page waiting to be written. Outside, the world glowed brighterβperhaps because she was in it. βWell,β she said, flicking her tail, βsomeone has to keep the magic caffeinated.β And with that, Seraphina stepped out into the dawn once moreβno longer searching for the Sky Gate, because she had become it. The Winged Promise was not a destination. It was her. Somewhere above, the universe chuckled softly. βFinally,β it said. βA sequel worth watching.β Β Β Bring a piece of The Winged Promise home. Let Seraphinaβs wit, wings, and wonder brighten your space β or your desk, or even your coffee-fueled journaling sessions. Each piece captures the humor, magic, and radiant defiance of her story. β¨ Elevate your walls with a Framed Print β a perfect blend of fantasy elegance and fine-art realism. β‘ Prefer something bold and modern? Discover the Metal Print, where color meets strength and every feather gleams. π¨ Add warmth and texture with a Canvas Print β perfect for dreamers and dΓ©cor romantics alike. ποΈ Capture your own adventures in a Spiral Notebook, where imagination and ink take flight. π« Or keep Seraphina close with a Sticker that brings a touch of magic to laptops, journals, and late-night ideas. Each item from the Winged Promise Collection is crafted with care and high-quality printing, ensuring every shimmer and shadow sings. Because a promise this bold deserves to live beyond the page β and maybe on your wall.