The screen was bathed in neon greens and ghost-light purples—the . But they weren't dancing over the Arctic. They were shimmering above a tropical canopy so dense it looked like velvet. The camera panned down, handheld and shaky, revealing "Kat"—a researcher in a faded vest—adjusting a heavy tripod.
Suddenly, the video began to tear. The tracking jumped, the colors inverted into a solarized mess of hot pink and black. The audio looped— seeing this... seeing this... seeing this... —until the player crashed, leaving Elias staring at his own reflection in the dark monitor. He checked the file size: . Paradisebirds Kat Polar-Lights 9(1).mpg
As she spoke, one of the birds took flight. It didn't flap so much as glide on the magnetic currents, leaving a trail of sparkling dust that hung in the air like static. Kat reached out a hand, her fingers disappearing into the glow. The screen was bathed in neon greens and
"Version 9, take one," Kat muttered, looking directly into the lens. Her eyes reflected the impossible light. "They aren't just watching the lights. They’re feeding on them." The camera panned down, handheld and shaky, revealing
"Are you seeing this?" Kat’s voice was barely a whisper, competing with the humid buzz of the jungle.
The video was gone. But when he looked out his window at the suburban streetlamps, for a split second, the air seemed to shimmer with a faint, tropical green.