41st of Spring 513AV
The Bharani Library
Midday had arrived without fair cautioning from Syna. The scorching orb was tucked away, clear of view. Murky thickets of dreary silver patched the entire heavens in an opulent and serrated quilt of storming clouds until not a solitary morsel of troposphere could shoulder through. The draught that sauntered between erected skyglass was damp, chilly, and scented by the peak of the mountain. The icy air whipped at Marvasa’s uncovered cheek, clawing down the slack hems of the cotton top stretched out beneath the leather coat draped over him. It was divine. The consecrated snowflake impressed to the interior of his forearm pleasingly quavered beneath its coverings, glistening a paler shade than even the inkless mars of skin his body was parceled so tidily in. Summers in Avanthal, he recalled, would at times bear a resemblance to this. A frigid waft of Morwen’s breath upon her return, the clatter of mutt drawn sleds scraping across the moist terrain from freshly melted snow and ice, and the stain of maroon on the snow boot of every Vantha from the abundance of trodden berries that had flourished and fallen from their bush before being picked.
Rain was descending in the pitter of tiny dips upon the delicate lusters of cut-glass. The sound traversed the rooftops before the first peck of moisture daubed the slope of his nose in a hospitable salutation. Mara tilted his chin toward the sky, lost deep in a reminiscence of home, stilled in his tracks and observing the rushed downpour. The sky was swiftly riddled with extended streaks of tumbling rain, like paint being streaked off a canvas. A whitish glow occupied the shadowed space in the crook of his vision as if the sun had precipitously found its potency and reemerged from behind the barricade, but trailing behind was a stomach-turning detonation that left his ears ringing. The sound assured him that it was thunder instead undulating athwart the city once more.
Making haste in light of the advancement of the tempest, the healer’s steps splashed on the dappled path leading him to the yawning cavity of a prodigious structure. He knew it well. Standing tall amidst the great city, the Bharani Library was renowned for its splendor and knowledge. It was all he had desired, no, required when he disembarked for Lhavit. Now it seemed an empty reminder that he had run out of time. An amassed material at his disposal, and it all was for naught. It was misspent for there was no victory in the information he had learned. He could not help but sense he had investigated erroneously, and though the building could not be to blame, the sight of it reminded him he harbored some irrational ill feeling toward it.
He took an unsure step backwards. Clumped strands of sodden raven now clung to his face and chubby globules dripped down his chin. He grumbled to himself looking back at the emptying streets, and hurried himself headfirst into the building. A hot huff of breath made a vapor of a cloud to contrast his chilled soggy form. Darkly tipped digits streaked the sky’s residue from his expression and then encircled the reedy chest from arm to arm as he continued inside. The sole of his boots squelched and squealed across the marble as he lurched on a neglected puddle. Lacking grace, he caught himself along the frame of the vaulted entrance. The structure effervesced, even in the shortage of light strewn through the exposed crystal gables. Floor after stacked floor twisted around the buildings frame, imbibing him into the recesses of its bowels.
Another citizen of Lhavit, a female, with choppy rust colored hair and a rounded figure, was positioned at the mouth of one of the rackets of shelves. She crooked to her side at the sight of him, some recognition satisfying her tensed reaction, but a sense of apprehension stirred in along with it. She gave him a nod in acknowledgement as their eyes locked and then reverted to the spines of the volumes she was skimming across.
Marvasa thought it superlative to meander across the way, out of her path. He pivoted and made his way to a less acquainted area of shelves. A towering marble sculpture of a man with open arms stood between the edges of two neighboring rows. Across from him, on the opposite end, a female with a similar bearing mimicked him. The half-blood made his way past him and in between the tall edifice. The backs of the books whispered their titles in undersized golden script and an assortment of burnished relics crowned the display. If there was any previous doubt, each tome proved to resolve it. The name of Leth glowered down at him from the perched ledge. The god of the moon, the sacrificial lover, he was not well versed on the matter. It was unnerving now to be standing amidst so much of it, his clasp squeezed about his own arms, digging into the fabric of his sleeves, an exhale stolen from him.