“Many people have, many times,” Alses replied with a wry smile. “Personal guides and observations make up the bulk of the Tower library, in point of fact. The problem is simply that auristics is the most subjective of all the personal magics; our impression of the aura of a person will be completely and utterly different to your own, save in a few unusual circumstances – such as when you borrow my stored power with that scroll – and more often than not relating to the written word at the...the depth required is very difficult. Of course, you must also remember that, present openness notwithstanding, House Dusk has long been the most secretive of the great families. Cyphers and codes and reversions and glyphic triggers pepper the books the poet-mages of ages past wrote, just to add an extra soupçon of delight to the mix. As Chiona says, auristics has a dark heart. Secrets and lies are the aurist's bread and butter, and House Dusk has always understood the value of a good secret very well.”
She shrugged, philosophically. “The only way we can think of to do it properly would be with magecraft, to make an artifact of some kind that could assess and evaluate and impress auristic notions straight into the reader's brain. Unfortunately, that's far beyond my resources right now, and even had I the wherewithal, the cost of anything reasonable would take a vast bite out of the Dusk family fortune. Thus, instructors and scrolls galore – much cheaper. Arguably more effective, too; an artifact probably wouldn't be very good for the development of ethics and finesse and all the other, softer skills the Tower tries to instil in its novices.”
Zeran's responses – and subsequent question – satisfied her that they were on the same wavelength as regards instruction. “Of course we agree; I'd be a very poor lookout as a teacher if I didn't.”
Alses shook her head in amusement at Zeran's disparagement of stairs, of all things. “Stairs? Fun? Well...” she paused, considering, trying to put words around the shape of her thoughts. “They're more fun than plunging off the peaks,” she offered.
“Fortunately, the city has a surfeit of stairs between the tiers, so there's really not much need to practice climbing in the city, either. The Unforgiving, though – where I quite agree it'd be an advantage to know how to climb – isn't just a fanciful name. The region would eat most of us for lunch in an instant, whether we imitated the Okomo or not; there's a reason we're traded with by the sea and the air, after all. The Wind Eagles – if you can persuade them to carry you – or failing them, the ships at Port Tranquil, are much safer alternatives, if travel's what you're after.”
Zeran's eyes almost took light at her offhand remark, enthusiasm for powerful magic surging unrestrained – but then something more intelligent applied the brakes before he could even complete his sentence. “Sensible, Companion,” Alses nodded, quietly approving of the restraint which quickly clamped down over his eagerness. Tempered enthusiasm, that was a valuable (and rare) trait, especially in magic, and gentle encouragement was useful in encouraging the trait to remain.
Or so most instructors hoped, at any rate.
Accepting her judgement, his fingers were still eager as he grasped the scroll, eyes feasting on the inky intricacy. An absent comment slipped, likely unbidden, from his mouth as much of his brain was occupied in discerning the meaning behind the carefully-scribed glyphs. Even though it was likely a slip of the tongue, a moment's inattention allowing a private thought out into the world, it still made her bristle. “Does it now?” she asked, keeping her voice level with an effort and a vice-like grip on her own aura. “Well, I maintain Elena Lariat has good taste.”
“A Hypnotist?” Alses, just starting to relax from the comparison, drew in a sharp, shocked breath at Zeran's sudden accusation, her nerves suddenly jangling. Hypnotism wasn't precisely well-regarded in the city, although not outright banned. “What makes you say that?”
Even as she spoke, Alses let the threads of conversation die and sank lightly into her powers, drawing up a little more djed from the great lakes of her reserves and casting it out with practised mental hands in the very thinnest of filigree filaments to wrap around Zeran and the immediate vicinity, targeting and localising her skills to flay any secrets out into the open, hunting for any hint of tampering or poisoning of auras with the subtle, infiltrating fingers of another. Magic, no matter its form, was easily visible to an aurist, vibrant and complex against a more mundane backdrop, easy to sift from the melange and identify.
Well, easy now, at least. The depths of the discipline were her playground, the secrets she'd struggled and striven for in her apprenticeship now locked within her brain, and where once she might have found it difficult to sort the weltering charivari of auras from one another, now they parted and separated at the merest caress of her attention, willingly yielding to her skill.
Nothing.
Alses found nothing, no hint of outside magics; the strongest here were her own, trapped in glyphs or radiating from her own aura. “We can't sense any magic other than our own near you,” she added, “And I'm no Hypnotist.” Despite her reassurances, she was still watching, just in case, tasting the words buzzing against her teeth as they bloomed into red-gold sound and light in her augmented senses.
“We can, of course, watch the fight,” she said, keeping her voice warmly reassuring. “I'm not holding you prisoner here by any means, and I have dispensation to watch the first match or two anyway. But I shan't have it said I desert a prospective or my post...Robert, would you mind holding down the fort for a few chimes? I'll hand out some scrolls, don't fret.”
A smile – and the rosy beginnings of a blush, swiftly fought down – touched her student's features at the request and he surrendered the wicker basket without a quibble. Alses made her rather more stately way down from the dais and the crowds parted readily for her. The combination of glorious Ethaefal, Dusk Tower instructor and burdened lady was a potent one in clearing a path, and it allowed her to easily reach the staked-out perimeter of the ring itself.
As she passed through the respectfully-parted crowd, she handed out scrolls left, right and centre, each one with a clear instruction, until she caught up with Zeran, easily located via his aura, although it took her several chimes. She still wasn't quite sure what to make of him – intelligent and yet unworldly was her best guess, still childlike in some respects. He reminded her of herself a little, especially in the early years of her return to Mizahar, amazed by everything and with little grasp of or care for mortal standards. Some time at the Dusk Tower might help with that; grace was prized, after all, even if not explicitly taught. It tended to rub off, though; she'd found herself more conscious of it lately.
“We can't promise you our exclusive attention, Companion Zeran,” Alses replied quellingly. “The novices are taught in small classes that rotate through the instructors. You'll be taught by me, all right – just not exclusively. When – and if - you reach a reasonable level of skill, though...the Tower does expect its teachers to take on one or two apprentices. I currently have none, so there'd be an opening for you there.”
A raggedy cheer rose in a rippling wave from the crowd – two glittering figures, resplendent in skyglass plate, had entered the ring, saluting the assembled citizenry with their weapons and basking in the adulation of the crowd.
“The sideshow,” Alses murmured with a smile. “Still worth using your scroll, Companion, if only to provide a benchmark for when the masters come out to play. It'll be a short bout; there should be plenty of power left for the main offering.”
She shrugged, philosophically. “The only way we can think of to do it properly would be with magecraft, to make an artifact of some kind that could assess and evaluate and impress auristic notions straight into the reader's brain. Unfortunately, that's far beyond my resources right now, and even had I the wherewithal, the cost of anything reasonable would take a vast bite out of the Dusk family fortune. Thus, instructors and scrolls galore – much cheaper. Arguably more effective, too; an artifact probably wouldn't be very good for the development of ethics and finesse and all the other, softer skills the Tower tries to instil in its novices.”
Zeran's responses – and subsequent question – satisfied her that they were on the same wavelength as regards instruction. “Of course we agree; I'd be a very poor lookout as a teacher if I didn't.”
Alses shook her head in amusement at Zeran's disparagement of stairs, of all things. “Stairs? Fun? Well...” she paused, considering, trying to put words around the shape of her thoughts. “They're more fun than plunging off the peaks,” she offered.
“Fortunately, the city has a surfeit of stairs between the tiers, so there's really not much need to practice climbing in the city, either. The Unforgiving, though – where I quite agree it'd be an advantage to know how to climb – isn't just a fanciful name. The region would eat most of us for lunch in an instant, whether we imitated the Okomo or not; there's a reason we're traded with by the sea and the air, after all. The Wind Eagles – if you can persuade them to carry you – or failing them, the ships at Port Tranquil, are much safer alternatives, if travel's what you're after.”
Zeran's eyes almost took light at her offhand remark, enthusiasm for powerful magic surging unrestrained – but then something more intelligent applied the brakes before he could even complete his sentence. “Sensible, Companion,” Alses nodded, quietly approving of the restraint which quickly clamped down over his eagerness. Tempered enthusiasm, that was a valuable (and rare) trait, especially in magic, and gentle encouragement was useful in encouraging the trait to remain.
Or so most instructors hoped, at any rate.
Accepting her judgement, his fingers were still eager as he grasped the scroll, eyes feasting on the inky intricacy. An absent comment slipped, likely unbidden, from his mouth as much of his brain was occupied in discerning the meaning behind the carefully-scribed glyphs. Even though it was likely a slip of the tongue, a moment's inattention allowing a private thought out into the world, it still made her bristle. “Does it now?” she asked, keeping her voice level with an effort and a vice-like grip on her own aura. “Well, I maintain Elena Lariat has good taste.”
“A Hypnotist?” Alses, just starting to relax from the comparison, drew in a sharp, shocked breath at Zeran's sudden accusation, her nerves suddenly jangling. Hypnotism wasn't precisely well-regarded in the city, although not outright banned. “What makes you say that?”
Even as she spoke, Alses let the threads of conversation die and sank lightly into her powers, drawing up a little more djed from the great lakes of her reserves and casting it out with practised mental hands in the very thinnest of filigree filaments to wrap around Zeran and the immediate vicinity, targeting and localising her skills to flay any secrets out into the open, hunting for any hint of tampering or poisoning of auras with the subtle, infiltrating fingers of another. Magic, no matter its form, was easily visible to an aurist, vibrant and complex against a more mundane backdrop, easy to sift from the melange and identify.
Well, easy now, at least. The depths of the discipline were her playground, the secrets she'd struggled and striven for in her apprenticeship now locked within her brain, and where once she might have found it difficult to sort the weltering charivari of auras from one another, now they parted and separated at the merest caress of her attention, willingly yielding to her skill.
Nothing.
Alses found nothing, no hint of outside magics; the strongest here were her own, trapped in glyphs or radiating from her own aura. “We can't sense any magic other than our own near you,” she added, “And I'm no Hypnotist.” Despite her reassurances, she was still watching, just in case, tasting the words buzzing against her teeth as they bloomed into red-gold sound and light in her augmented senses.
“We can, of course, watch the fight,” she said, keeping her voice warmly reassuring. “I'm not holding you prisoner here by any means, and I have dispensation to watch the first match or two anyway. But I shan't have it said I desert a prospective or my post...Robert, would you mind holding down the fort for a few chimes? I'll hand out some scrolls, don't fret.”
A smile – and the rosy beginnings of a blush, swiftly fought down – touched her student's features at the request and he surrendered the wicker basket without a quibble. Alses made her rather more stately way down from the dais and the crowds parted readily for her. The combination of glorious Ethaefal, Dusk Tower instructor and burdened lady was a potent one in clearing a path, and it allowed her to easily reach the staked-out perimeter of the ring itself.
As she passed through the respectfully-parted crowd, she handed out scrolls left, right and centre, each one with a clear instruction, until she caught up with Zeran, easily located via his aura, although it took her several chimes. She still wasn't quite sure what to make of him – intelligent and yet unworldly was her best guess, still childlike in some respects. He reminded her of herself a little, especially in the early years of her return to Mizahar, amazed by everything and with little grasp of or care for mortal standards. Some time at the Dusk Tower might help with that; grace was prized, after all, even if not explicitly taught. It tended to rub off, though; she'd found herself more conscious of it lately.
“We can't promise you our exclusive attention, Companion Zeran,” Alses replied quellingly. “The novices are taught in small classes that rotate through the instructors. You'll be taught by me, all right – just not exclusively. When – and if - you reach a reasonable level of skill, though...the Tower does expect its teachers to take on one or two apprentices. I currently have none, so there'd be an opening for you there.”
A raggedy cheer rose in a rippling wave from the crowd – two glittering figures, resplendent in skyglass plate, had entered the ring, saluting the assembled citizenry with their weapons and basking in the adulation of the crowd.
“The sideshow,” Alses murmured with a smile. “Still worth using your scroll, Companion, if only to provide a benchmark for when the masters come out to play. It'll be a short bout; there should be plenty of power left for the main offering.”