21st Summer, 507 A.V.
Some were always trying to ice skate uphill.
The best laid plans often went awry, but one couldn't think in that vein if one wanted to accomplish anything great. Or, rather, one should be aware of Murphy's Law--that anything that can go wrong will go wrong--but one should still be bold, be detail-oriented, and, if possible, be careful.
So he had done his homework, but still he was trying something that might just be beyond him, or in a manner that just would not work. He couldn't know until he tried.
As of that day, his meager skill with reimancy allowed him to conjure up a bit of water, which could have practical application, he supposed, but was not what he had hoped for. Hadrian wasn't a pyromaniac, but he was worthless in a fight and he knew it. If cultural immersion failed, he was going to need some way to protect himself. What element caused the most obvious damage? Fire.
Water was all well and good, but the best he had managed was wetting a colleague's trousers while said colleague slumbered away in class, and he had felt a little bad after the fact. Not that bad, but he would have to be more careful with fire and less likely to turn it against someone for whimsical purposes.
Hadrian had planned ahead. It was the aestival solstice, so the element of fire should be more powerful than the others. His sleeves were rolled up above his elbows and his skin scrawled with glyphs, sigils, runes--calculated to work with what he had to conjure what he didn't. He would be a pyromancer yet.
Algiz, Protection. Uruz, Strength. Eihwaz, Defense. Kano, Opening, Torch. Laguz, Flow, Water. Thurisa, Gateway. Dagaz, Breakthrough. Sowelu, Sun.
It should work. Or, rather, it could work.
The practice room was bare except for protective glyphs around the walls that would keep just about anything from getting out without the proper incantation to activate the release. But Hadrian didn't need anything. He set a red candle in the middle of the room and tried one last thing: prayer.
"Holy Ivak," he said simply, "please bless my endeavor."
He bent down, struck a lucifer, and lit the candle.
Fingertips brushed over the runes inked onto his forearms and hands, careful not to smudge them. He said each one in sequence, and then focused his djed out of himself with much effort. Personal magics were not his forte.
He stared into his cupped hands and felt the djed almost perspire out of his pores, then evaporate, swirling under his limited control into a loose, slowly spinning sphere of dimly glowing energy. Once he had accumulated the energy, he took a deep breath. From here, he could transmute the gathered Res into water, but he wanted fire.
"Burn," he commanded.
The djed pulsed, darkened, and struggled against him, trying to assume a liquid form despite his will set against it. Minutes passed as he tried to bend the Res to his purpose, but it continued to change into something between energy and liquid.
Frustrated, he said again, "Burn!"
The near-liquid djed darkened, reddened, and if one could say that it was made up of little particles of Res, then each one began to vibrate and hum audibly. Eyes of chlorine blue opened wide, wider, widest and suddenly he lost whatever control he had over it, at which point the Res turned to water.
Incredibly hot water, but water all the same. It sizzled against the sudden barrier his runes provided, spilled down and doused the candle. And then it overpowered his jerry-rigged protections and began to burn his hands.
Hadrian shrieked like a wounded little girl.
"Son of a whore bitch arse shyke bugger bugger bugger!"
Shaken, he stumbled toward the door, somehow managed to vocalize the key and release himself from the magical prison, and then dropped his hands so the too-long sleeves of his new student robes fell over his injured hands. White-faced, he elbowed the door open and hurried out of the room.
He all but ran to the university clinic, which, due to savvy planning, wasn't far at all from the College of Magic.