before the ink is dry
Posted: Mon Jan 25, 2021 11:18 pm
15 Frost 120 Steel
Talon adjusted the strap of the satchel over his shoulder. He looked at the facade of Ale’ephirum. It was a fine enough establishment from the outside, as was to be expected for a business within the Plaza of Jeweled Arches. It was time for one of their regular Scrivening tutoring sessions. Talon had to admit, he was struggling somewhat to grasp some of the greater concepts of what Lyra had, thus far, been trying to teach him. While he understood pictography in the sense that it applied to runeforging, it was breaking beyond the box of that framework that was proving to be a struggle. He stepped up to the door, knocked twice and then entered into the establishment.
Ale’ephirum was a cozy place in Talon’s opinion. It reminded him of the libraries at the Academy and what he imagined the library within the tower of the Circle of Spells looked like. There was a distinctly arcane feeling to the place and it appealed to the scholar in him. Talon would be the first to admit that he did not always have the patience for obscure text or mysterious puzzles that was sometimes required to grasp the greater heights of magic. He was a builder, a crafter, his mind took pleasure in creating things which in and of itself was a fairly straightforward process. All Talon had to do was figure out what components to use in his crafting and then build a bridge between them to make them function appropriately. That was less of a mystical process and more of a mechanical one to him. It required patience and a methodical approach.
Still, the sorcerer in Talon did sometimes enjoy the higher mysteries and the puzzle they presented. It was not as though he were incapable of grasping them when he put his mind to it, he simply found that such things were not where his passions lay.
“Lyra?”
Talon had learned rather quickly that Lyra did not enjoy the use of titles. So he opted to refrain from using them, though his upbringing winced every time he addressed someone he respected as a teacher without an honorific. It would be yet another thing that he had to grow accustomed to. Talon stepped further into the shop, closing the door behind him. He took the strap off of his shoulder and brought the satchel into his hand properly. The gentle chime of glass touching glass announced easily enough what was inside. It was the latest batch of inks that she had requested. They were of the relatively simple sort and thus had not taken long or much effort on his part to create. He guessed that this particular batch was meant simply to help restock some of her more general supplies as opposed to more specialized inks.
Talon adjusted the strap of the satchel over his shoulder. He looked at the facade of Ale’ephirum. It was a fine enough establishment from the outside, as was to be expected for a business within the Plaza of Jeweled Arches. It was time for one of their regular Scrivening tutoring sessions. Talon had to admit, he was struggling somewhat to grasp some of the greater concepts of what Lyra had, thus far, been trying to teach him. While he understood pictography in the sense that it applied to runeforging, it was breaking beyond the box of that framework that was proving to be a struggle. He stepped up to the door, knocked twice and then entered into the establishment.
Ale’ephirum was a cozy place in Talon’s opinion. It reminded him of the libraries at the Academy and what he imagined the library within the tower of the Circle of Spells looked like. There was a distinctly arcane feeling to the place and it appealed to the scholar in him. Talon would be the first to admit that he did not always have the patience for obscure text or mysterious puzzles that was sometimes required to grasp the greater heights of magic. He was a builder, a crafter, his mind took pleasure in creating things which in and of itself was a fairly straightforward process. All Talon had to do was figure out what components to use in his crafting and then build a bridge between them to make them function appropriately. That was less of a mystical process and more of a mechanical one to him. It required patience and a methodical approach.
Still, the sorcerer in Talon did sometimes enjoy the higher mysteries and the puzzle they presented. It was not as though he were incapable of grasping them when he put his mind to it, he simply found that such things were not where his passions lay.
“Lyra?”
Talon had learned rather quickly that Lyra did not enjoy the use of titles. So he opted to refrain from using them, though his upbringing winced every time he addressed someone he respected as a teacher without an honorific. It would be yet another thing that he had to grow accustomed to. Talon stepped further into the shop, closing the door behind him. He took the strap off of his shoulder and brought the satchel into his hand properly. The gentle chime of glass touching glass announced easily enough what was inside. It was the latest batch of inks that she had requested. They were of the relatively simple sort and thus had not taken long or much effort on his part to create. He guessed that this particular batch was meant simply to help restock some of her more general supplies as opposed to more specialized inks.