Tsaba was silent, her face blank, for almost a whole chime as she digested this information. Eventually, she said, "Thank you, that information will be valuable in future interactions." She made a mental note to consider the appeal of a second edition of her book -- one 'Things about the modern world' book for Sahova, and one 'A nuit's perspective on the modern world' book for the mainland. Perhaps she could help combat some of those perceptions, at least in academic circles. "I suppose it makes sense for mortal people to naturally dislike what is essentially a reminder of their own future," she said thoughtfully. "I grew up in Sunberth, and we kind of got that we weren't supposed to talk about my father's 'condition', but I always assumed that was a result of the local dislike of magic. I don't really see why a nuit would murder their loved ones, or murder at all. If we were a race of murderers, we would've been wiped out by now.
"The thing to understand about nuit," she added slowly, thinking carefully about each sentence before she spoke, "is that we are not, compared to humanity, all that threatening. I have met some nuit who do not value human life very much, because it is so brief; I've also met people like my father, who extend that life through their medical arts and, in certain cases, the Daek-Nuit. It never really occurred to me that nuit might kill to create new bodies, but I suppose that some probably would. There are also humans that don't value human life very much, and I strongly suspect there are humans that don't value nuit life at all and would kill all nuit on sight if they could. I think..." at this point, Tsaba started taking notes to muse on later... "I think it's important to remember that nuit are, as a whole, weak and slow. A nuit against a human of similar age really isn't a contest. Older nuit could be dangerous if only because they have time to perfect magical arts and soforth, but that's about it. Nuit also have much less reason to attack people. The only human resource that we have an interest in, besides perhaps knowledge and preserving salts, is bodies. Humans kill each other all the time, constantly, for food or land or money. Money means less to a nuit because time means less and our needs are lower; we have no need to food at all. We could still conceivably kill for religious reasons or whatever, but we have much less motivation to kill humans than humans do. The fact that our needs are directly linked with the death of others doesn't make them linked with more death than human needs.
"Most nuit, I think, would prefer to get their bodies via above-board means, if only because it would be pretty difficult to cover up a murder if you have to go around wearing the victim's body. Sahova imports bodies from the mainland, for instance. I've seen humans tricked into death on Sahova, but only to extend their lives by turning them into nuits. The concept of nuits as nightmare-haunting killers is... new to me." And probably, come to think of it, why the others thought her plan to leave Sahova was ridiculous. "This is largely our fault, I think; it is a consequence of exactly the sort of insular behaviour that I came here to mitigate. If we communicated with others more, perhaps we'd be less mysterious and therefore less terrifying." Although the Archwizard could just as easily be playing up the mystery on purpose. If he cared about what happened on the mainland.