Timestamp: 63rd of Summer, 510 AV
Sitting in front of a desk and chewing on the bottom end of a pencil was a girl with a thoughtful expression on her deathly pale features.
Malia had returned to Syliras just a few days ago and now started to carry out the plan that had formed in her head. The first step included practicing her Animation skills. Yesterday, while going for a walk through Stormhold’s third tier, she had paused for a while at Kova’s Well. It hadn’t been a mistake, for after a while she detected the corpse of a bird swimming in its otherwise clear water. Suddenly the Nuit had been hit by an idea. She had wrapped her cloak around the wet sparrow – the outer layer, mind you – and taken it with her.
The rest of the day she had spent with purchasing a pair of cheap, but waterproof gloves, a scissors and a set of cutlery and tearing the poor bird’s corpse apart to the bones. There had been several problems, of course, but given that she had followed her instinct without further ado, she considered what she’d got so far as not bad a result. She had spent several chimes removing first the feathers, then the skin from the little creature. From the flexibility of the limbs and the softness of the skin she could tell that it hadn’t been dead long. She had to work quickly before the rigor mortis made it impossible to further explore its anatomy. So she carefully, but efficiently handled scissors, knife and fork and worked herself through the muscle layer. Of course, as an Animator Malia was mostly interested in the mechanism of the wings’ movement. It proved to be difficult to discern anything in the miniscule mess she had created yet, but she was prepared to take extensive notes on a nearby sheet of paper when getting to the bones. During the process she found out that the tiny breastbone was shaped like a ship’s keel, obviously to support the air pressure weighing on the wings in flight. Compared to the body of the sparrow, the wings were large, but also very flimsy. The long feathers she had previously removed from both wings apparently added a lot of square footage to keep the bird in the air. While working Malia started to record what she found out about the skeleton, staining the paper and pencil with dried blood, wet feathers and the stench of death.
The sparrow’s wings consisted of three major sections. The first bone was connected to the breastplate and straight. The second section featured two bones that were slightly curved and pointing towards each other. They had some kind of thumb attached at the top and faded into the third pair of bones. From those last bones the longest and thickest feathers had been stretched out. When finished, Malia looked over the sketch she had done with satisfaction and made a few corrections here and there. A thicker line, a more obvious curve, a few softer lines to hint at length and type of feathers … Then she used more pressure on the pencil to draw a bird’s shape around the detailed wing bones so that she knew how to construct the rest of the body. The tail feathers she sketched with detail as well. A few words were written at the side of the paper, notes to record the measure of weight, a few ideas for material and anything else of importance that came to her mind. Then she cleared up the mess on the desk, opened all windows and left the apartment to throw the sparrow’s remains and the bloodstained gloves away. The cheap set of cutlery and the scissors she would wash and store away for later use.
While returning, her gaze rose to the sky and she wondered if she would dissect a human like this one day. Malia knew that she would do anything to come closer to her ultimate goal, but still … she played with the mechanisms of life. Perhaps she also played with the dignity of the dead person. But then she wiped the doubts away. When someone was dead, there was neither dignity nor anything resembling a soul attached to their corpse. Everything that was left was rotten flesh and bones. How would the Nuit be able to occupy those corpses if that wasn’t the truth?
While Syna’s light gradually vanished, Malia returned to her desk and examined the sketch. At several places the paper featured bloody fingerprints and other blurred marks. It was now that she realized that anatomical knowledge could have been drawn from the library as well, but obviously it was too late for changing her method now. The rest of the night she stared at the sketch and wondered how she would be able to make her plan going.
The main issues were the weight and the movement, especially the latter. She might have to spend several hours observing birds in flight and learning how they moved. That also meant more sketches. And the time needed to teach the construct all those movements during the ritual she didn’t even add to her calculation yet. The next step was paying a visit to Mister deGrey and his Mechanical Marvels shop.
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