Spring 18, 512 AV
The Cribellum.
Vesirio’s palms had scoured the leathery faces of books, almanacs, and accounts, every one older than he was. Curious fingers roved between their covers, wide eyes pored over a patchwork of ink and penmanship. Every few seconds, the boy would clear his throat or slurp at a hanging bottom lip.
It was grating on his older sister’s nerves.
“Stop that; go home to your father, I’ll be there soon.”
“Nes,” a mouth sprung open, tongue poised with grievances, “Come on. Please. Just let me do one page. One.”
Dra-Nesyria’s eyes rolled ceilingward, and she made a show of sagging her shoulders in an exasperated sigh. “Fine, if you stay here, you may as well work. One page, and then we’re both done.” She stood, stretching her legs. They had spent much of the day holed up in one particularly dust-riddled wing of the Cribellum, fingering through pages of texts whose ink had begun to run and fade and want for new, crisp pages.
Vesirio eagerly began to scratch a quill into new white parchment with a deep indigo ink he had chosen himself. The twelve-year-old was never far from his much older sister, since she had returned from above—he was voracious for her knowledge, and she thought him a ward more than the half-brother he was.
“I’m going to put these back,” she scooped the remaining texts into her arms, casting a brief glance over the boy’s shoulder. “Make sure you’re spelling everything right—the Common, too. Don’t go guessing at it and scratching it out later. Ask me, okay?”
“I knooow,” Always with the drama, typical Plicata.
The halfblood turned and left him, scraping a path with sandaled feet down a stony corridor, armful of books in tow.
The Cribellum.
Vesirio’s palms had scoured the leathery faces of books, almanacs, and accounts, every one older than he was. Curious fingers roved between their covers, wide eyes pored over a patchwork of ink and penmanship. Every few seconds, the boy would clear his throat or slurp at a hanging bottom lip.
It was grating on his older sister’s nerves.
“Stop that; go home to your father, I’ll be there soon.”
“Nes,” a mouth sprung open, tongue poised with grievances, “Come on. Please. Just let me do one page. One.”
Dra-Nesyria’s eyes rolled ceilingward, and she made a show of sagging her shoulders in an exasperated sigh. “Fine, if you stay here, you may as well work. One page, and then we’re both done.” She stood, stretching her legs. They had spent much of the day holed up in one particularly dust-riddled wing of the Cribellum, fingering through pages of texts whose ink had begun to run and fade and want for new, crisp pages.
Vesirio eagerly began to scratch a quill into new white parchment with a deep indigo ink he had chosen himself. The twelve-year-old was never far from his much older sister, since she had returned from above—he was voracious for her knowledge, and she thought him a ward more than the half-brother he was.
“I’m going to put these back,” she scooped the remaining texts into her arms, casting a brief glance over the boy’s shoulder. “Make sure you’re spelling everything right—the Common, too. Don’t go guessing at it and scratching it out later. Ask me, okay?”
“I knooow,” Always with the drama, typical Plicata.
The halfblood turned and left him, scraping a path with sandaled feet down a stony corridor, armful of books in tow.