One by one, the books piled up on the helper golem's tray. Each and every one was a gem mine of knowledge, dangerous enough to be locked away in secrecy. Jilitse had endured enough centuries to know that true power, not the shallow obsession of greedy money hoarders, came disguised as ink stains upon a sheet of paper or parchment. These were not the generic textbooks she had trained herself on for countless years; this was cutting-edge magical research. Borderline techniques not suitable for public use. Revolutionary approaches that gave even masters some pause. Measures and countermeasures. Research journals. Some belonged to Nuits she had known in the past, and who had mysteriously vanished. They had fought their own magic, and lost.
All of it was encrypted, of course, but a good portion of the texts were clear of protection. Coding was a long and tiresome task, and encryption-enabled golem scribes tended to make mistakes that were unacceptable in such writings. What the authors did was encrypt only the critical sections of their texts, teasing the reader with the general nature of the findings, but locking the secrets away from the prying eye with a complex code. The books Jilitse had collected so far were:
"The thin line between man and golem: building the missing link", by Arthur Vidimus, about anthropomorphic golems. About 200 pages of sketches and custom Animation techniques. Extensive sections about building joints from metal and wood, ranging from simple to a full-fledged simulation of the human arm.
"Supervisors, the Minds of Steel," by Court Mage Rupert Pycon. Detailing Albrecht, Baird and Caliman - especially the last one. Written from an Alchemist's perspective with little knowledge of Animation, more anecdotical than technical. Detailing the cruel experiments Pycon performed on Caliman to "incrementally upgrade" its capabilities through exposure to terrifying stimuli.
"What we are, and what we could be," by Yovinkus Wotch, legendary Animator. Seminal research journal on soul transfer. Yovinkus was the father of modern Nuits, though he wasn't one himself. He had turned Animation from a semi-tribal pseudoscience to a rigorous discipline. Mashaen had built upon Wotch's version of the Daek-Nuit to make his own.
"Project D," the red book by Zarik Mashaen. This was by far the most terrible book of the lot. It contained the complete logical and technical schematics to create Mizahar's most advanced Supervisor. The book's 500 pages were filled to the brim with directive lists, concepts ready for teaching, mental organization and a complete recipe for building Drainira from the ground up. Useful only to a master… but if it had taken Mashaen over a decade to make Drainira, someone using this book would only require a small fraction of that time for sure.
"The cosmic closet: a bestiary and compendium of all things Voided," by Aelobius the Voider. It was a collection of creatures and items that had presumably been thrown into the Void in ages past, and occasionally ideas for retrieving them, at the user's own risk of course.
"The Cypheropedia," by <name encrypted>. A list of common and uncommon encryption methods both current and historical. There was enough math in the book to make a Nuit's head hurt, but it looked quite thorough.
"An overview of the Alahean army, before and after Bloodvalley," by Tyreas White, Minister of War under Kovinus I. This was the closest Jilitse could find to a book on the Alahean war budget. It was only to be expected that a magical library would not place too much emphasis on such mundane things as sword-swinging men in armor.
"Sagallius: bonkers with style," by Vuld Shaik. An unofficial biography written by the great chronicler right after Sagallius went insane and had to be replaced with Mashaen. This manuscript was believed to have been lost, like many others by Vuld Shaik, and was probably worth some money on the mainland. This one was the only book not coded with a cypher in any of its parts. Shaik's caustic irony was strong as ever. No surprise the writer never spent three nights in a row under the same roof; he had a unique knack for making enemies, and a preternatural ability to leave just before they got to him.
Eight books so far, and the capacity of her golem helper was exhausted. She could probably hold a couple more on the way out, but no more. The catalogue, if any, seemed to elude the witch for now. Qiao may very well be keeping it safe in his own quarters, after all. No matter what Jilitse thought, it looked like there was nothing here but what met the eye. Just when she was about to abandon all hope, though, something strange happened. One of the books on the Animation shelf started shaking and moving by itself, jumping up and down to attract the Nuit's attention. It landed on the cold floor, flapping its covers like a duckling. It straightened itself and opened itself in front of Jilitse. Rather thin and leather-bound in brown, it had no title or cover text. It showed the witch one of the inner pages, the corner folding on itself and pointing at a mid-paragraph sentence in the text.
"'Take me with you,' said Marie Susanne, her blue eyes sparkling with the innocence of her soul. 'Let's make our dreams come true!'"