By the lights of Feral Eclipse

The backstage world was always a chaotic hum before a show, like the quiet seconds before a thunderclap. Lights buzzed, cables coiled underfoot like restless serpents, and the air carried the metallic scent of sweat, amps, and electricity.

High above the stage, Thane clung to the truss like it was part of him—muscles taut, clawed feet gripping the metal framework with casual confidence. A busted lighting fixture hung limp in his hand like a broken tooth, its glass eye dark against the glow of the surrounding rig. The house was already filling with fans, their muffled roars building like a tidal wave behind the curtain.

Thane growled low in his throat, fur bristling as he twisted a stubborn bolt with one clawed hand. “Damn thing better not short again…”

Down below, Gabriel stood near the monitors, his sleek black fur glinting in the ambient lighting. His bass guitar hung comfortably from his shoulder, crimson and fierce. But his eyes—icy blue and sharp—weren’t on the instrument. They were fixed upward, locked onto Thane.

“No harness?” Gabriel called, ears twitching back nervously. “You’re seriously just hanging up there?”

“I’m fine,” Thane shot back without looking.

Gabriel took a step closer, voice rising just enough to draw glances from the rest of the crew. “Thane, seriously — just… be careful!”

That was the last straw.

With a huff, Thane spun around on the truss, teeth bared in a scowl. In a single, fluid leap, he dropped to the stage floor like a thunderbolt—boots absent, clawed feet slamming onto the wood with a thud that shook the rigging. The sudden movement made a few humans nearby flinch.

He stalked toward Gabriel, tail lashing behind him.

“Don’t you start!” he snarled, fangs flashing. “Not when I’m already up to my ears in busted gear and late cues!”

Gabriel stepped back, momentarily wide-eyed. “Whoa—hey—I was just worried, alright? You’re halfway to a nosedive and I—”

Thane’s ears flicked, and for a moment, silence hung between them like a tightrope.

Gabriel softened, his claws curling around the neck of his bass. “You scared the crap outta me. That’s all.”

The tension cracked, just a little.

Thane’s shoulders lowered, his brow easing—but only slightly. “Yeah, well… it’s not the lights I’m mad at. Just everything else.”

“Then come back up with a harness next time, genius,” Gabriel smirked, tail flicking once.

Thane grunted, turning back toward the truss. “Fine. But only because if I fall, you’re the one cleaning up the fur and guts.”

“Deal,” Gabriel chuckled. “But I’m not holding the mop.”