28th of Day of Spring
514 AV
514 AV
Elias had many... regrets about the decisions he’d made in his time. One of the lesser of those regrets was that he had chosen not to learn shielding while he was still a student in Zeltiva. He had had the chance to take classes while enrolled in the college of mages but he had instead chosen to spend his days and tuition on reimancy. Looking back, it was an impulsive and reckless decision born of naivety and a childish allure to fireballs and the like. Now that he considered it, he had knowingly forgone the chance to learn to protect himself and others, and the thought irked him daily. That wasn't even mentioning what the initiation process. Most people didn't have the pleasure of knowing what pure res tasted like while it was being forced down your gullet and into your wound. Well Elias knew. He knew!
However, the young mage had a gut feeling that it wasn’t too late. He had been feeling a stronger control over his powers recently and this had given him the confidence to try and learn with a new vigor. A few years older and a few years wiser, Elias could see the true potential in having such a powerfully defensive magic. Now that the Ravok born was now enrolled at the prestigious institute of higher learner, he no longer had any obstacles standing in his path. He didn't plan on taking a class, not at all, all he needed to do was visit the cathedral like school's library.
He would teach himself.
It wouldn’t be easy, but he knew magic, he understood it, and through his wisdom and drive, it obeyed him. Shielding would obey him too soon enough.
Ignoring how silly that sounded, he continued to excite himself for the upcoming. Carrying a random selection of both small and large books on the subject of shielding, he made his way towards a desk near the back of the library, right next to the window. He glanced out the glass as he sat, thinking back to the days before his departure from the city. There had been rumors that staring at the institute was impossible because of some black magic the wizards had cast. He had been dared by his fellow apprentices to gaze upon the black walls of the cathedral for a while five chimes. By the time he was done, his eyes were bloodshot and watering. That had been the last time he had done that... and the last time he went about accepting dares from his damn brothers of ebon.
Stacking the books in a pile with the largest tomes on the bottom and the smallest volumes at the top, Elias began working his way through each book. He knew he didn’t have time to read every word on every page, so he quickly skimmed through each book. It was a fast and almost reckless process, and he was sure to miss out on details at the speed he was going. Each book that followed went through a similar process. Elias would flip through the first few pages, they were always forewords about how wonderful shielding was. A welcome change from most magical tomes in which the first few pages were dedicated solely to flinging dark and ominous warnings that such and such talent could inflict if used improperly. He had learned very quickly how to avoid those pages when he opened a new book back at the college.
A few key words would leap out at him as he roughly skimmed the opening pages of this new one: An ancient practice, survived the ages, a magical filter, tasking, weaving, stacking, etc. The words held little meaning to him right then, but he was quick to note that each of the books had those same keywords. The history of shielding held little importance to him though. Perhaps he would revisit it when he had mastered the basics, he did enjoy history, but at his level there was no point learning about shields the size of castles when he couldn’t even produce a shield the size of his hand.
Flipping past the the usual opening drawl, the pages after were generally an introduction to the dangers of shielding, and the warnings were admittedly brief when compared to the Reimancy books Elias had read. He likened it to a sail running out of wind. Without a strong enough wind, the boat would simply stop moving. Likewise, if a shielder couldn’t produce enough djed or control it, a shield simply wouldn’t form. Oh gods, I've spent too much time in Zeltiva, now I'm making sailing analogies...