Lyra Crow Top
When she reached the bridge Lyra stopped. The river was a black mirror and the city flickered across it in broken stanzas. In the jacket’s breast pocket she slid out the plates and looked at them again. Patterns suggested things — orbit, recurrence, places in the sky where the air felt different, humming like a remembered song. She traced a finger along a curve and felt, absurdly, a kinship with the people who had once mapped stars on wet animal skins by torchlight. They, too, had tried to hold the sky’s shape and call it law.
Her target was the Observatory Vault, perched on the hill as if it had grown there to watch the city. The vault’s doors were plain and brutal — iron ribs and a keypad with numbers that had been munched by decades of fingers. She didn’t plan to batter it down. The Crow Top’s left cuff contained a small folding tool set: picks, a micro-suture, a ceramic shim. Lyra had learned to open things people thought closed, to twist rules and tumblers until they confessed. lyra crow top
Inside the vault, stacked in a humidity-controlled alcove, lay celestial plates stamped with coordinates — fractal maps of places no one alive fully understood. Governments wanted them. Scholars whispered about them. Lyra wanted them for herself. She eased the heavy lid back an inch at a time. The Crow Top’s shoulder pads deflected the lid’s edge when it rebounded, sparing skin and bone. A tiny rivet fell and made a soft clack. She froze; breath slow and measured. Silence answered. The jacket seemed to hold its own breath with her. When she reached the bridge Lyra stopped
At dusk the town leaned into its shadows, roofs glazing like black coins under a bruised sky. Lyra kept to the narrow alleys where lamplight failed to reach, moving with the small, precise steps of someone who needed to be unnoticed. She wore the Crow Top not for fashion but as armor — a cropped jacket of matte leather stitched with a dozen secret seams and reinforced at the shoulders. It fit like a promise: compact, concealing, ready. Patterns suggested things — orbit, recurrence, places in
The Crow Top had kept her warm, quiet, mobile. It had saved her skin and, somewhere, muffled the sound when a guard’s boot struck the iron grate by the vault. It was not a miracle; it was a partnership. Every tool in its folds had a purpose. Every worn seam told a story. Lyra reached the bridge’s midpoint and tucked the plates beneath the boardwalk, into a place that would be hard to find by casual search but obvious to someone who knew to look there — to someone like her.