It
was only around three in the afternoon, but the streets were already
getting livelier by the second as the weekly preparation for the
weekend slowly took place.
Marketday lived up to
its name, and the streets were bursting with haggling merchants with
their carts, merrily announcing their wares and starting localized
price wars with their rivals right by their sides. Seventh reckoned
that the Main Market was probably filled to bursting with the
townsfolk hunting for new goods, low prices, and the best deals of
the week.
A wild torrent of
people squeezing all around. That was in Seventh's mind something to
avoid like a plague.
Walking through the
streets, slowly approaching his humble abode, the sellers didn't seem
to have anything interesting to sell, and Seventh arrived at the
Bloated Badger without stopping to make any purchases. To his
displeasure, the tavern was also packed full of people.
The back wall with the
fireplace had disappeared behind the wall of merry tavern patrons of
all sorts and sizes, ranging from tall and sleek drakes to short and
stout dwarves, convening closer to the bar counter where their
shorter tables were located.
All voices mixed in
together, creating an oscillating buzz and hum that loudly praised
the past week's daring deeds and silently cursed the troubles drowned
with alcohol. An already slobbering Knight was waving his tankard
around in long arches, loudly telling a riveting tale of his brutal
fight with a feral pack of diretrolls.
The warm tingling of
success and having made something concrete with his Skills was still
lingering in Seventh's extremities, making him pause entering.
He usually woke up
early to eat breakfast alone, went to the sewers alone, killed
anything he could alone, and returned to the inn to wash himself with
a washbasin. He had taken a proper bath once during the week, after
the whole lunerian incident.
But he hadn't once
stayed at the tavern long enough to meet other occupants, not to talk
about popping in for a mug of ale after a long day of work.
How about after a long
week of work? That's normal, right?
No pressure.
Relaxation.
But there were people. Noises and voices.
Stares lingering for a
fraction of a second longer than Seventh liked, and the fear from the
dungeon rose its ugly head.
Fear of being seen.
Being found out.
Seventh looked down at
his legs. They had been happy to run him straight to the Guild after
killing monsters. It would be wonderful if his legs would make a
decision for him now.
Something metallic
clattered on Seventh's left, making him flinch and look. Annise had
barreled out of the kitchen and had casually thrown a pile of washed
drink-trays on the wooden surface of the counter.
She slowed down a
notch, noticing Seventh, and cracked her crow's feet open with a
smile. “Finally decided to appreciate the Distiller's fine arts,
eh?”
Seventh took a small
step back while making a thin smile. “No-I-uh, have studying to do
and... can I pay an advance fine? I have a tome and... I'm going to
try cast Light, maybe many times?”
Annise let out a
frustrated, maybe even a little disappointed sigh. “Nah. It's all
good. You've been paying the Pyromancer-tax so much that even I start
to feel like a predatory landlady. You you're happy
without a drink?”
“Positive.”
Seventh squeezed the tome under his arm, making the leather crinkle
inaudibly. “Besides, I was told not to spill beer on this.”
“Alright, well, see
you at breakfast.”
Annise disappeared to
the tavern's chaos, and Seventh retreated up the stairs into his
room. There, he could hear a low murmuring below his feet and
occasional loud laughter.
Seventh dropped the
heavy leather-bound tome on his bed and opened the shutter to let in
some natural light. He had candles, but they cost money, and sunlight
was more appealing, more lively.
He looked at the tome,
sighing deeply.
After sending his
adventuring gear to his voidspace and changed to his casual wear—
heavily repaired grey tunic and matching trousers— he sat down on
his bed, propped the book open to the first page, and started to
read.
Tomes were
instructional books for one spell or a family of spells. For example,
there could be a tome detailing how to advance through Firebolt to
Searing Ray and eventually to Fireball. Seventh's loan-tome detailed
only the low-tiered Light spell that everybody could learn given
time.
All the tome had was
the necessary magical theory to comprehend the spell's basic nature
and a guide to lead the caster through knowledge, imagination, and
construction of the spell. Barely one hundred pages thick, the
yellowing parchment was slowly crumbling on the edges, and old ink
that had started to turn brown ages ago, making the reading just a
little bit more challenging.
It was clear that the
tome had multiple previous owners. Judging from the collection of
additional notes scribbled in the margins, clarifying some details,
and personal notes. Most notes were congregated to the page with a
picture of a ray of light entering a triangle and coming out as
multiple colorful rays— or so the description said, there weren't
any other colors other than the dull brown.
The tome had a vague
explanation that the light was an ethereal substance mirroring the
sun, the stars, and the divine beings who had created it to chase off
the darkness of the Void and breathe in the light of civilization
into the Integrated Species. Basically, a short fairy tale without
any good knowledge to lean on.
Vague as it might be,
the explanation gave Seventh a lot to think about. Firstly, his own
Elemental Affinity was Entropy, a combination of Fire and Darkness,
which made learning Light-based spells much harder for him, Darkness
being the opposite magical affinity, and the Fire part didn't really
help.
And a Necromancer
trying to learn a spell closely affiliated with Life? More fun.
A tiny row of neat
handwriting under the triangle with rays of light called the
phenomenon a refraction, but one of the later owners had blacked out
most of the text with a blunt judgment of his own: “Preposterous!”
Since those two
handwritings appeared more than a dozen times, Seventh had started to
think of them as Neat and Preposterous during his long hours of
deciphering the tome.
Neat's notes verged on
vandalism by dropping in useless trivia— Seventh didn't even
understand how the light worked, not to talk about some invisible
violet light— but they had a good grasp of magic and a knack for
clarifying things down to Seventh's level of arcane study. On the
other hand, Preposterous used grandiose words and complicated
metaphors, making his notes indescribable word salad.
At the very end, the
book detailed a collection of circles, triangles, and squares filled
with magical symbols, sigils, and runes connected with a complicated
spider's web of lines and smaller circles. Magical diagrams are used
for the imagination and keeping the magic stable.
There were even newer
ones added by the previous owners. Neat was the latest one to add
their work, but as usual, Preposterous had vandalized the diagram,
almost punching through the parchment during his enraged eradication
of Neat's work.
Between the amusement
and frustration for his previous peers, Seventh had slowly learned
the basics of spellcasting without using his Skills that just
auto-casted them— like his Shadowbolt.
When using the System
to auto-cast, all the spellcaster needed to do was have enough mana
and chant the activation phrase with intent for the System to cast
the spell.
Wizards didn't use the
System, but manipulated the mana themselves. They constructed the
spells on the fly, usually tweaking them to be more powerful and
efficient depending on the surrounding mana. A Fireball was much more
powerful inside a volcano than on a glacier— not that you actually
needed a Fireball in a volcano.
They didn't gain any
spells from the System either, but their skills pivoted to amplifying
magic, mana regeneration, and memorization of spell diagrams. Of
course, Wizards learned spells as Skills like anybody else just by
the sheer use of them, but usually they used their own style of magic
instead of “basic cookie-cutter plebeian dabbling of the arcane
majesty” like Preposterous had put it.
Having read the tome a
couple of times already from cover to cover, Seventh was confident to
try casting. He had already learned Whisper Wind this way, and that
had taken just two stops at the guild for short study sessions before
he had been able to slowly cast the spell.
Garth refused the
honor of helping his student, so Seventh bribed Fang to endure his
barrage of magical whispering until he gained the Skill. Both Light
and Whisper Wind were low zero-tier magic that needed under a hundred
casts until the Skill gain. Upper-tier magic needed more repetition—
known as grinding in adventuring circles— up to thousands of times
or just plain old genius.
A sprinkling of luck
was also always welcome.
Seventh looked at the
first diagram, carefully studied the formation and the intended mana
flow. Scribbling his own notes on a separate piece of parchment, he
was ready for the first try.
He had, hopefully,
enough knowledge of how the spell worked, enough imagination to put
together a diagram inside his head, and mana for the construction of
the spell in the real world.
He had chosen a
circular diagram since he had used them when learning Whisper Wind.
Calming his mind, the Meditate activated and slowly stilled his
thoughts, focusing on the magic.
After the whole Thrust
and thrust debacle, Seventh had checked his skills for further
shenanigans and was pleasantly surprised by some of his Skills.
Meditate, for example, gave him a small Concentration buff when
focusing on one singular problem. It also helped with falling into
sleep— which made sense since he had gained the Skill during a
long, sleep deprived trek inside a dungeon.
The diagram slowly
took shape in his head. Circle to contain the magic, conversion of
his mana into light through a maze of symbols, location at the point
of his finger, shape was made with a circle with a dwarvish rune of
to make it a sphere, duration as long as the spell had
mana...
The spell ready,
Seventh dropped it from his head, past his heart and lungs, into his
Essence. There, the diagram came to life, cracking with arcane might
and put forth the inscribed instructions.
Seventh's eyes flashed
with pure white, and he was blinded for multiple minutes.
Muttering curses until
he gained his sight back, Seventh wrote the effect down next to his
notes and a copy of the diagram he had used. He should probably stay
away from the dwarvish runes until he learned the language, but they
were used heavily in Valerian spellcrafting for their ruggedness and
simplified nature. The runes even looked like they belonged in the
diagrams with their sharp corners, straight lines, and mystical look.
Flipping through to
the end of the book, Seventh looked over the glossary of the runes
and symbols used in the examples and noticed that the rune on the
diagram and in the glossary were slightly different. The one on the
diagram looked like a slim D with a diagonal line in the middle, but
the glossary version also had small dots inside, just above the line.
Stolen from its rightful place, this narrative is not meant to be on Amazon; report any sightings.
“Gods damn the one
who proofread this crap!” Seventh muttered and tried the spell with
the other rune. It also made his eyes flash with light.
While making his eyes
literally sparkle was a nice party trick, it wasn't what Seventh was
trying to do, and he promptly moved to the next magical circle and
concentrated on building magic inside his head. After failing, he
tried to find a mistake, made a note of it, and tried again.
And again.
And
Seventh had lost count
of how many times he had already failed when he lit a candle to read
after the sun had set below the city walls. He didn't use his magical
lantern since it connected to his mana flow, and he didn't want to
mess up spells because of it. Seventh could appreciate the irony of
lighting a candle to study Light.
He had improved from
flashbanging his eyes, but now he was exploding lightballs inside his
arm, making his bones show for a fraction of a second as his flesh
backlighted them. Seventh was worried how his arm had started to feel
tingly after the last couple of casts, and decided that he should
quit for the day.
Conceding defeat,
Seventh read the tome yet again, stopping to stare at the symbols in
the back while, hoping he would get an epiphany or something. The
tome didn't start to speak to him, he didn't see any hidden meanings
at the symbols, and in the end, he just fidgeted with a loose corner
of the cover and stared blankly at the yellowed pages.
He gave up for the
day.
"Ya
look like crap," Annise said the next
morning when Seventh appeared at breakfast.
"Oh,
thank you. You are the of my day, as always, Annet,"
Seventh answered dryly while piling porridge on his bowl.
The older woman
narrowed her eyes. "There was some
rudeness in there. Should I fine you for the spells after all...?"
"
I haven't cast a single spell since I have just miserably failed at
every try."
Annise made an
apologetic nod. “Ouch. Why are ya studying spells anyway? Trying to
become a Mage? Or Heavens forbid, a Wizard.” She shuddered at the
thought.
There was a minute,
but very important distinction between Mages and Wizards. Mages
gained spells through Skills and focused on one singular Affinity,
buffing the damage and effect with additional Skills. Pyromancers and
Cryomancers were the most well-known and popular ones.
Wizards hated
Mages, mostly because the best magical institution known in every
corner of the world was the Mage's Guild, and Mages hated Wizards
back.
“Nah. Just some
basic learning of magic, that's all. I don't believe I have the
correct aptitude for wizardry.”
“Nope.” Annise
grinned. “Yer don't have enough fancy words and sneer for proper
twinkly-fingery.”
“That might be the
most pleasant compliment I have heard all my life,” Seventh said
with an appreciative tone.
“Any day, darling.”
Annise continued her morning routine of piling all the yesterday's
cups, mugs, bottles, steins, and small barrels used up in the last
night as Seventh ate his porridge and bacon sandwiches before
returning to studying.
Instead of going
straight into spamming different diagrams, Seventh looked over the
ones he had used and started making one of his own. Most of the
diagrams assumed the caster knew how to convert their mana into the
needed element, but some diagrams were a little odd, assuming the
caster had Light affinity.
Seventh had learned
during Whisper Wind training how to separate the Fire and Darkness
from Entropy and slowly distill them to neutral mana. He had used the
so-called purification array in the center of his diagram like it was
usually done, but he had started to suspect it was the problem.
While it made the
casting safer, it also slowed it down, and since the spell activated
inside his arm, it might be too weak to move outside of his body.
Magic needed some extra ooomph to break through the caster's mana
channels and change from internal magic into external.
Looking at his
sketches of improved purification array inside a circular diagram,
Seventh scratched his head. It looked like crap.
“Maybe Darkness is
just... too different? It is the absence of light... emptiness? Do I
just need more mana, change this into that, and make a wiggle to
there...”
Seventh slowly
squeezed his hand into a fist to get his blood pumping faster to get
rid of the painful tingling inside his arm. His latest batch of tries
had failed pretty much the same way, light in his arm. He was on the
verge of just slamming a full manabar to the spell to see what
happened.
If the damn power is
the problem, I have enough of that to keep advanced undead up and
kicking for months!
Just before going
through the cast, Seventh calmed down due to Meditate and slowly
disassembled the diagram without a cast. He gently banged the back of
his head against the wall while thinking.
Spellcrafting wasn't
about raw power and forcing the magic to do things. It was a gentle
ushering of natural laws to bend to the caster's will for a moment.
There was something he
just didn't get.
As the tingling
stopped, Seventh focused on the next try. Careful diagram, dropping
it into Essence, meticulous mana control, aaand...
“
Seventh's arm bones
glowed within, emanating slicing pain all the way from his fingertips
up to his shoulder. A cold tingling continued forwards, making his
heart beat faster after losing a beat.
Caressing his arm,
flowing with phantom pain, Seventh breathed slowly, closing his eyes
and just thinking about the problem.
The diagram was now as
good as he could get it without going to a Wizard and asking them to
do further refining work for him. That wouldn't help much unless the
Wizard also told him how it worked to the nitty-gritty minute
details. That would cost a pretty copper, and Seventh was on an
adventurer's budget.
"Fuck,"
Seventh cursed again and squeezed his hand into a fist. The failure
hurt more than the mana leaking out from the wrong places. Failing to
cast more advanced spells would cause even more damage, maybe even
kill the careless Wizard.
Seventh mumbled curses
as the tingle slowly disappeared. He had even been so careful with
his diagram, too! How anybody could cast like this on the fly during
a battle without accidentally firing lightning bolts out of their
necks was a mystery to him.
Maybe thoughts like
this are the reason I'm a necromancer and not a Wizard? He
thought and rolled his eyes.
Waiting for the
tingling to stop, Seventh calmed himself and backtracked to the page
with the triangle. He looked at the blacked-out text and cursed
Pompous for sabotaging others.
“Why couldn't you
just let the Neat's text be?” he asked from the judgmental
handwriting. “Whatever he— or she— had said can't be so bad.
You're Wizards for crying out loud, talk it through!”
Having entered the
stark raving mad portion of spellstudy, Seventh was sure he was close
to a breakthrough or absolute madness leading to lichdom. He was
starting to understand why so many of his compatriots slipped into
the madness and need of immortal life without the longevity of higher
ranks.
It was time for a long
walk. Long enough for him to forget which one of his inkjars would
make the best phylactery.
The next day, after
breakfast where Annise compared Seventh to a destitute drunkard who
had been sober for a week, he read the tome from cover to cover,
staring at the collection of symbols, fidgeting again with the cover.
It had to be his
understanding of light.
His diagram was
workable. Even Identify to the parchment had resulted in the System
labeling the parchment as “Diagram of Light spell — Entropy
variation, ink on parchment.”
At this point, his
mana control was still rough, but serviceable. He didn't wax and wane
between the runes, backtracking to make small adjustments or let his
mind wander. His mind stormed through the diagram with arrogance fit
for a Wizard.
That left the
knowledge as his problem. Light from Darkness, something from
nothing, abundance out of absence.
Lying on his bed, his
thoughts wandered back to the creation of phylacteries, and where the
closest dilapidated tower might be. How much would the rent be?
He jerked upright and
marched two steps to his door. ”Oops, let's not go there. Villagers
would come with pitchforks after hearing a Necromancer had moved into
a menacing tower.”
Great, now I'm talking
to myself. The first sign of insanity.
Thoughts don't count,
it's the talking that is worrisome.
Popping out to
replenish his rapidly disappearing stockpile of parchment and ink,
Seventh stopped to stare up at the sun. It was perfectly round and
full of light. A natural manifestation of the spell he had been stuck
on.
Closing one of his
eyes, Seventh lifted his finger, making it look like the sun was on
his fingertip. He kept his hand up until a nice guardsman asked if he
was quite all right.
“Erh, yes. Just
wondering how I would create a sun on my fingertip.”
The guard didn't even
blink at the statement. “As long as you don't do it inside the
city, I don't care. Move to the side, though, you're blocking the
street, oh mighty Wizard.”
Returning to his room,
Seventh nailed his final diagram design on the wall with blown-out
examples of the runes he had used and their translations, meanings,
and uses.
A drawing of the sun
was above them all. Giving Seventh something to stare at when he
needed a break.
He hadn't even tried
to cast the spell today. He was tired and frustrated.
It wasn't like he
needed the spell. He had lanterns, candles, torches, and his
Wandering Eye, so he would have light and Basic Darkvision when
needed, but it was about the principle.
Or just pigheaded
stubbornness, but Seventh liked the principle bit more.
A silent scraping
sound pulled him out of his reverie. He tried to hear it again, but
whatever it was, it was already gone. Shrugging, Seventh continued
his intense staring at the wall.
Scrape
scrape scrape
Again, almost silent
scraping, like parchment and wood being split gently open.
Biting his lower lip,
Seventh slowly looked down at the tome on his lap. It was open at the
triangle page, the black block of text noticeably smaller than
before. Seventh had tried to use the Inkstone to check if he could
remove only Preposterous' ink, but no luck.
His right thumb was on
the corner of the back cover, gently ripping it more and more open as
he nervously fidgeted with it.
Horrified, Seventh
quickly flipped to the back to check the damage. Garth had threatened
to cut Seventh's ears off if he dared to earmark the pages. What
would he do if Seventh accidentally ripped the cover off?
Shuddering slightly,
Seventh saw that the page wasn't torn or ripped. The cheap glue had
just yielded to Seventh's nervous tick, separating the parchment from
the leather-covered wood.
Only Seventh didn't
see wood beneath, but more parchment. Looking closely, he could see
the last page of the tome had been glued to the back cover.
Probably just a
cheap fix, Seventh thought while wondering if he had any glue.
A neat, tiny
handwriting was peeking beneath the loosening parchment. Seventh
immediately recognized it as Neat's work. Without thinking, Seventh
carefully pulled the cheap sheepskin, revealing a hidden diagram
design and a block of tiny handwriting.
Even while feeling
excitement from finding something hidden, Seventh grimaced and looked
the book over. ”Sorry, Garth. I will fix it, I promise.”
Then he read Neat's
last entry.
I fear that my
habitual need to spew borderline nonsensical snippets of information
in this book might annoy one or two of the following owners of this
tome, mistaking my help for vandalism and defacing work I have made
earlier in these pages.
That is why I decided
to draw another diagram here, along with information that may yet
survive on the prism-page.
Most who glance
upon a prism see only the lie it tells at first glance: that white
light is simple, and color is complexity. In truth, the prism does
not create colors, it merely reveals what was already bound together,
forcing unity apart along lines of resistance. The prism does not
add. It divides.
Black does the same
thing, but in reverse.
Where the prism
forces separation, darkness forces convergence. Where light is
splayed into its fragments, darkness draws fragments inward, pressing
them together until distinction fails. This is why a perfect black
does not shine, yet is never empty. It is not the lack of light, but
Mana is energy, and
energy cannot be destroyed. It must exist in
some form, even when it refuses to be seen.
Thus, darkness the
phenomenon is merely the absence of light reaching the eye, but
. It is not a
void, but a pressure. Not emptiness, containment. A state where all
paths of release are folded inward, where light is not gone, but held
so tightly it cannot escape as radiance.
With my diagram, you
should be able to convert any mana to Light Mana and feed the spell
gently without barbaric poking this tome encourages.
Also, consider
starting from the middle, not from the edges. Magic is all around us
in all dimensions, not in just a flat plane, but that is entirely
another matter, and I'm running out of space. I mean, they are called
tiers for God's sak—
A traveler, misplaced,
but not lost.
Seventh chuckled at
the date. Of course, somebody was learning Light in the middle of
winter.
Two hundred and
twenty-seven years after the Empire's fall... Sixty-two years ago?
Seventh thought as he looked at the tome's cracked leather back
and fraying pages. Just how old was the thing?
Seventh stared at the
message for a long time. Enough for him to need to light a candle as
the darkness fell, and he couldn't see the small handwriting anymore.
Neat had... an odd way
of putting things, and Seventh probably understood most of the
instructions incorrectly, but help was help, no matter how little.
They were slightly
rambling— like all magical textbooks and tomes— but Seventh felt
a kinship between him and them. Neat understood what they were
talking about, but stumbled while trying to get the words out in a
logical manner on parchment.
Where the words failed
and fell on deaf ears, diagram shouted loudly. It was bold,
unconventional, and utterly fascinating.
While humans and elves
used circles and curved lines, opposed to dwarven squares, triangles,
and runes, Neat had made a dodecagon with a circle in the middle with
two triangles pointing at each other, tips ever so slightly cutting
into one another. The triangles were surrounded by interconnected
runes and symbols that Seventh hadn't seen before, but Neat had made
a legend under the diagram, explaining shortly what the markings
meant.
Peculiar construction
aside, the spell was standard Light, very much like Seventh had
himself made, and had only a couple of deviations where the mana came
from due to the center and the triangles. The triangles identified
the mana Affinity by letting it flow through symbols, filtering it,
and peeling it layer by layer until there was only pure Mana, and
sent it to power the diagram further.
That was the answer to
one of Seventh's problems. He had been feeding mana from the outside,
thinking of the diagram as writing on a flat plane, but like Neat had
been starting to say, magic was everywhere. It had multiple
dimensions, and if Seventh imagined his crafted spell as a floating
image, he could more easily control his manaflow.
The mana issue mostly
sorted out— Seventh would need to actually try the multidimensional
imagining of the diagram— he started to make quick notes about
Neat's description of mana, especially about Darkness.
There was a major
difference between magic and the real world. With logic and math, you
couldn't fling lightning out of your hands or make balls of light.
Magic could.
It had its own rules,
borrowing some from the real world just to make everything more
difficult to comprehend and muddy the waters. Mana changed
everything, gave nothing a substance, something to grab onto, twist,
and change.
Seventh's leg started
to tap the floor on excitement. He had to fight against himself not
to just try the diagram outright. He had to study and understand how
it worked before he had a snowball's chance in Hells to succeed using
it.
Slowly and carefully,
Seventh copied the diagram with the symbol legend on a full page of
parchment and the message on a second parchment. He used Fine
Drafting for everything, even for normal writing, but he wanted to be
This was going to be something to keep and cherish. The
System agreed and raised Seventh's Fine Drafting to F-rank.
The diagram wasn't
anything special in a first glance. It didn't use advanced theory,
and all it used was simple symbols, but the way it all interlocked
together into a complicated, almost automated, was something Seventh
hadn't seen, not to talk about thought about. It was something only
an experienced Wizard could do.
But why was it in an
old tome, hidden away for decades? It was clearly something you could
publish— Gath had left style guides for magical research papers
“accidentally” lying around Seventh.
Probably a prodigy
who was just starting on their Path, Seventh thought as he
prepared to use the diagram. After a final peek at his notes, his
mind stilled, and the spell took form.
When he moved it into
construction, he remembered the hint about starting from the middle,
not the sides. Hastily making a quick correction, the mana stuttered
in the diagram, but the rugged design held until it slowly dissipated
from Seventh's Essence.
Was the last-second
change a mistake? Had he ruined the spell with a rogue strand of mana
in the wrong place? How about the runework? That looked
a little spotty to him...
Opening his eyes in
confusion, Seventh was greeted with an azure glow lighting up the
room.
His very first
successful Light.
A feeling started to
spread from his fingers and toes. Not the painful tingle of failure,
but something he was slowly becoming used to— even friendly with.
Happiness reached his
chest and heart as Seventh smiled at the simple magic he had
achieved. He slowly lifted his hand, covering the badly drawn sun
drawing with the ball of magical light.
His magic wasn't
yellow and red with pleasant radiance of warmth, but it was his...
mostly. The credit of the diagram belonged to his fellow student,
separated by centuries, but not by understanding.
Excitedly, Seventh
walked out of his room and down the stairs before noticing the loud
hubbub. It was already night, and the tavern was full.
Annise was behind the
counter, cleaning mugs when Seventh appeared with a wild grin on his
face, unwashed hair sticking all around, and shaggy, untrimmed beard.
“I CAST LIGHT!”
Seventh cheerfully yelled at her and proudly presented his spell. A
couple of the nearest patrons snorted and chuckled at Seventh.
The tavernkeeper
slowly nodded, eyes moving towards the large sword hanging above the
counter. “I see that, yes. Say, have you been doing just that for
the weekend? Need a pint?”
Seventh lifted both
hands up in the air and shouted, “Next round's on me! NO DOUBLES!”
After the fastest ones
had cleared from around Annise and Seventh had paid for the round, he
took a tankard of mead upstairs to make the grinding of the Light
spell all so much more pleasant.
Looking at the tome,
opened at the page with a collection of diagrams, Seventh set his
tankard on the table, replacing it with a quill. Even when Garth had
threatened him, Seventh felt that the page was lacking something
important, and under the pain of losing his ears, his quill scraped
on the parchment.
He already had the
design memorized, and using Fine Drafting sped up his work, in just
ten minutes, a freshly drawn dodecagon gleamed on the aged parchment
with the signature of its creator.
H.D.M 13.14.227 a.E.f
The System approved, raising up his Fine Drafting yet again. Now it was at double-E. The Skill must've been teetering on the edge of rank-up to activate after such small gesture, or spell diagrams were excellent training for it.
After gently blowing
the ink dry, Seventh carefully wetted the old and failing glue to get
some stickiness back to it and carefully hid the message and diagram
again in case of future Preposterous Junior destroying Neat's work
again. He left the corner slightly frayed so a frustrated future
student of arcane arts, like Seventh, could find the hidden knowledge
when it was needed the most.
slightly more challenging than I initially thought.

