The Weight of Air
The air in Sector 4 always tasted like recycled ozone and anxiety. Elias adjusted his collar, feeling the subtle hum of the atmospheric regulators against his neck. Below him, three thousand meters down, the world was a blur of gray smog and forgotten history. Above, the glass domes of Aethelgard caught the sterile, filtered sunlight. Here, control was not just a policy; it was the architecture.
Elias was a Senior Structural Analyst, a title that meant he spent twelve hours a day ensuring the floating city didn’t drift too far from its tethered equilibrium. He liked order. He liked predictability. But lately, the predictability felt like a cage tightening around his chest.
His only deviation from the script was Barnaby.

Barnaby was a terrier mix, small enough to fit in the designated pet zones but spirited enough to defy the quietude protocols. In a city where noise levels were monitored by drones, Barnaby’s bark was a rebellion. But it was also the only thing that made Elias feel truly alive.
They stood now on the observation deck of their residential spire, the wind whipped into a gentle, regulated breeze by the city’s outer shields. It was 18:00 hours. Recreation time.
Elias reached into his bag and pulled out the object. It was a small, bright disc, green and light blue, made of a dense, multi-layered polyester canvas. It looked absurdly simple against the backdrop of chrome and glass. The packaging had called it the Chuckit! Zipflight Flying Disc Dog Toy, Small. Elias had bought it during a supply drop, drawn by the promise of 'high-flying action' in a place where flight was strictly for transport drones.
He tossed it.
It didn’t fall like the heavy metal bolts of the construction yards. It soared. The aerodynamic shape caught the artificial wind, gliding in a perfect, elongated arc across the transparent floor of the deck. Barnaby, eyes wide with the kind of joy that seemed outlawed in Aethelgard, scrambled after it. The disc was lightweight, designed for long-distance games, and it floated beautifully, giving the dog time to track its path.
For a moment, the hum of the city faded. There was just the arc of the disc, the scramble of paws, and the soft *thwack* as Barnaby caught it mid-air. The bright colors of the toy provided increased visibility, a stark contrast to the monochrome grays of their lives. It was a small thing, this game. But in a world obsessed with verticality, watching something move horizontally with such grace felt revolutionary.
"Good boy," Elias whispered, the words feeling strange on his tongue. He rarely spoke aloud.
Barnaby dropped the disc at his feet, tail wagging in a rhythm that defied the metronomic ticking of the city’s central clock. Elias picked it up. The material was durable, yet soft enough to be gentle on Barnaby’s mouth. It wasn’t meant for chewing—Elias had learned that the hard way when Barnaby once tried to gnaw on the edge—but it was built for the throw. For the action.
A chime echoed through the deck. The daily efficiency report.
"Citizen Elias Thorne," the synthetic voice announced, smooth and devoid of empathy. "Your biometric readings indicate elevated heart rate variance during non-work hours. Please remain for a brief scan."
Elias froze. His heart was racing, yes, but from the joy of watching Barnaby play, not from stress. The system didn’t distinguish between the two. It only saw deviation from the norm.
He looked at the disc in his hand. Green and light blue. A splash of color in a gray world. He remembered the product description: *Designed for action... floats in water.* They had no water here, only the misters that kept the air humid enough to prevent static discharge. But the principle was the same. It was meant to be thrown, to travel, to be caught. To connect.
A drone descended, its lens focusing on Elias. "Please place your hand on the scanner."
Elias didn’t move. He looked at Barnaby, who was staring up at him, the discarded disc lying between them. The dog’s loyalty was absolute, unregulated by algorithms. It was a bond that existed outside the control grid.
"Citizen," the drone warned, its tone sharpening. "Non-compliance will result in a deduction of comfort points."
Comfort points. That’s what they called the privilege of staying in the upper sectors. If he lost enough points, he and Barnaby would be relocated to the Lower Drift, where the air was thinner and the views were nonexistent.
Elias took a breath. He thought about the disc. How it flew. How it required trust—that when you threw it, you believed it would come back. Or that the other would catch it.
He didn’t scan his hand. Instead, he threw the disc again.
It wasn’t a test throw. It was a maximum effort throw, aimed toward the far edge of the deck where the glass met the sky. The disc sailed, a green-blue comet against the white sky. Barnaby bolted, faster than Elias had ever seen him run. The dog leaped, jaws snapping shut around the canvas edge just as it began its descent.
The drone hovered, confused by the lack of biometric data.
"Citizen Thorne," the voice said, slightly louder. "You are in violation of stillness protocols."
Elias smiled, a rare, fragile expression. "I am exercising," he said, his voice steady. "As permitted by Section 8, Paragraph 4: 'Physical maintenance of citizen and companion animals is encouraged for optimal health metrics.'"
The drone paused. It scanned Elias’s heart rate again. It was high, but stable. The variance was due to physical activity, not anxiety. The system recalculated.
"Acknowledged," the drone said. "Efficiency restored. Return to residential quarters in five minutes."
The drone ascended, retreating into the ceiling vents.
Elias exhaled, his shoulders dropping. Barnaby trotted back, the disc held proudly in his mouth. He dropped it at Elias’s feet again, waiting.
Elias picked up the Chuckit! Zipflight Flying Disc. It was slightly frayed at the edge from Barnaby’s enthusiastic catch, but it held. It was durable. It was light. It was theirs.
In a city built on control, Elias realized, freedom wasn’t about breaking the walls. It was about finding the spaces between them. It was about the arc of a throw, the trust of a catch, and the simple, unregulated joy of a dog who loved you enough to run into the thin air.
He threw it one more time, watching it soar into the vast, regulated sky, a tiny green-blue promise that they would land safely.
🛍 Product Featured in This Story

Chuckit! Zipflight Flying Disc Dog Toy, Small (6"), Green and light Blue
$10.65
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