When the boys arrive at the bonfire, they find that it is not a bonfire, but a "tairgear" trick . The airbeast tells the boys that he has faced a number of "idiots" on the road, but that the guy who tried to fly was "not like the rest" . He tells them that he tried to "aim for the sun" , but the wings melted. The boys wonder if a human could do such a thing, and the airbeast wonders whether he is worthy of carrying a "flying emblem" or not. He asks the boys to stay back, and when they do, he tells them to "stay back" and not to open the door. When they do so, he says, he is surprised to find that they are undressed. He says that he did not feel bad about beating buccha, and that he knows that he can do something "as awesome as airbeast" if he chooses to do so. He reminds them that the road ahead of them is "more intense and violent" than the one they are on. He urges them to sleep well, and then he calls out to them.
When the boys arrive at the bonfire, they find that it is not a bonfire, but a "tairgear" trick . The airbeast tells the boys that he has faced a number of "idiots" on the road, but that the guy who tried to fly was "not like the rest" . He tells them that he tried to "aim for the sun" , but the wings melted. The boys wonder if a human could do such a thing, and the airbeast wonders whether he is worthy of carrying a "flying emblem" or not. He asks the boys to stay back, and when they do, he tells them to "stay back" and not to open the door. When they do so, he says, he is surprised to find that they are undressed. He says that he did not feel bad about beating buccha, and that he knows that he can do something "as awesome as airbeast" if he chooses to do so. He reminds them that the road ahead of them is "more intense and violent" than the one they are on. He urges them to sleep well, and then he calls out to them.