While listening to Jilitse’s comment, Azola turned back to the golem. This time she placed each stitch more carefully and made sure that the pattern was in order just like she had envisioned. After having finished the sewing part, she took the doll and the first foot and tried to attach the overlaying piece of wire to the leg. In fact, she did nothing except plaster it with a large amount of the gluey substance hoping that it would somehow harden in time and allow the doll to stand. Additionally, because she was a perfectionist by heart, she wrapped some thread around the leg and added a few stitches where the leather of the foot and the leg met. Then she did the same with the other leg and foot, trying to use less glue and thread. Sahova appeared to possess more than enough material for golem creation, but one never knew.
Then the doll was finished. Azola placed it at the side of the table – it didn’t stand yet, but she supposed that the gluey substance had to dry and harden first.
A short nod was then directed towards Jilitse. Keeping directives short and simple sounded doable. And about the other advice she had given the younger one … Azola wasn’t keen on replying to that one. Experience would tell, so she would wait for the experience to come. Jilitse sure was a weird companion, she thought once more. A person couldn’t simply spoil someone else’s learning process by telling them what’d happen. The informed person would still try it out, pretending to have forgotten the advice. In the end everything a soul knew distilled to experience anyway. That was what Azola had experienced.
The compass Jilitse handed over next looked strangely familiar. Azola felt that she had seen a similar tool a long time ago, but wasn’t entirely sure. Perhaps, now that her history was more or less clear to her, she had seen it around her father’s offices. So when she placed its tip in the middle of the paper and moved the writing tool around it even her movements felt faintly familiar. That, however, didn’t prevent her from letting the angle slip and what should be a circle become a deformed egg with a rather prominent cusp. Brow furrowed, Azola turned the paper around. Before she continued practicing, she cleared away the tools she had used for crafting the golem. Scissors, leftovers of leather, bark, the needle and thread went back into the spacey bag. Then she continued trying to form circles with the compass.
Come to think of it, she had never been good at drawing. Writing, yes, but drawing … Not being able to draw circles would perhaps prove to be a shame though.
At some point she watched Jilitse drawing a large circle at the floor. So that would be the official ritual circle, but another one was required. Azola remembered how the other Nuit had managed to form a pretty round circle and tried the dot method at the paper. She found that connecting the points was easier than working with the compass. The attention she needed to keep the angle of the compass fell away. While practicing that method, she tried to make the lines between the dots look like little arches so that the overall product would be equally round on all sides.
After about ten chimes of silent practice Azola rose from the desk and approached the single circle at the floor. Kneeling down, she used the compass to place the dots with the biggest possible distance between them and then connected them freehand. The spot where both circles should meet she had unfortunately miscalculated. She thickened the line until it touched Jilitse’s circle and hoped that it would suffice. Next the doll was placed in the middle of the smaller circle – this time it stood. Azola couldn’t help but give a quick smile, although Jilitse would only see her back and shoulders straighten a little.
The next step was the ritual … the actual magical part. Somewhat fidgety inside, Azola stood in front of the source circle and recalled her plan from memory. “I will copy my own life principle so that the golem becomes alive and can obey commands. Then I will imbue three basic directives.” She hesitated briefly. “Will it be necessary to make standing one of the directives? The doll is already able to stand on its own … Then the other two directives will be swinging the arms and bowing the head. I will connect these commands with three command words respectively.” Once again there was a short break. “What do ‘stand’, ‘swing arms’ and ‘bow head’ mean in Nader-Canoch? I think I should learn how to cipher my commands so that only I am able to use them.” A clever thought, perhaps. Of course, she could come up with odd words in the common language, but Azola was too serious and focused for that now.
Glyphing? “I don’t know anything about glyphing, but would like to learn in the future. If that helps with the awakening and teaching process.” Jilitse had mentioned a library, so that would most likely be the location where she could find the appropriate information.
She wanted to ask more questions about the mechanics of teaching commands, but figured that trying it out would probably be best. Experience would teach her, just like Jilitse had said.
Given that the older Nuit didn’t have any more comments, Azola would step into the bigger source circle and start with the ritual. She briefly touched her ears, a silent promise to listen to Jilitse’s voice during the process.