15th Spring, 508 A.V. It was two days since the game had ended with Hadrian managing to secure Zephyrus Shadowrunner as a mentor, probably by the skin of his teeth. Zelina was avoiding him, which was probably for the best after the Drykas adventurer had revealed how serious her attack had been. Zan seemed discomfited, but Hadrian thought he saw a note of respect from the older student. He was probably wrong, he assured himself, but if he wasn't ... that was odd. Not that Hadrian cared. He wanted knowledge, not friends. In truth, he was going to have to hide his admiration for Zephyrus. He seemed to be so capable and self-contained, much as Hadrian hoped to be before too much longer. Of course, there was still so much to learn. "The art is long, and life is short," he murmured to himself. Though he was waiting outside the professor's office, he had gone to Caelum to wrap his ankle because he wouldn't put it past the man to conduct his teaching somewhere less orthodox, which would require walking on Hadrian's part. Normally he walked all over the place all the time, working off excess energy and focusing his thoughts. Lately he was fidgety as that recourse was not advisable on his ankle. While he sat there on the bench outside the office waiting for Zephyrus, he decided to do a little practicing. Some people criticized him for his 'little tricks', but he considered such minute things to be efforts toward greater control and familiarity with the djed and his skills. Usually they were minor enough that they did not require too much energy, the which he saved for larger tasks. He blinked, turning on his magic vision, and looked down at his hand. The glow was of a familiar quality; it was, after all, him. The patterns seemed ever sharper as he got more used to Auristics, though he was getting a little frustrated with his progress. Azilis remained better than him at it, but she had been lucky enough to have an auristics professor for a father while Hadrian was the black sheep of his merchanting family. He glanced at his ankle, noting how the energy was darker, more chaotic. But upon closer examination, he recognized patterns that he took to mean his body was working to fix itself. Not for the first time, he breathed in, breathed out, and attempted to divert his excess energy to his heart center to collect, and then down his torso and down his leg to supply himself with what he needed to heal. It wasn't healing, per se, this odd use of the Flux that he and Azilis had been practicing, but an experiment on non-violent applications of the discipline, to see if instead of speeding up movement, one could speed up healing, or instead of increasing strength, one could increase constitution. His logic was based on the idea Caelum had told him: that the body needed energy in the form of food and sleep in order to heal itself. Well, he was just providing a different sort of energy. The best, in his estimation. It felt a little better, but that was inconclusive. It might just have been in his head. Hadrian had been early, but these little things helped him pass the time, and at this point he didn't even know if Zephyrus was late or not. In an effort to remain occupied, he stopped watching the flow of djed down to his leg and the subsequent brightening of that portion of his aura, and instead looked to his hand again. With concentration, he managed to push res out through the pores of the tip of his index finger, keeping up a steady flow that he bade transmute into water with a focused thought. It was the focus that he sought with this little exercise, directing the res out through limited apertures, maintaining a steady flow and a steady transmutation. He had hoped for fire, thinking it would be helpful to an academic wizard who had only his wits upon which to rely for his protection, but the gods had deemed water his primary element. Of late, he was coming to terms with this. Water was more subtle, more ... insidious? ... an element. It required finesse, and that was more training for the mind than lobbing fireballs. So he would have to be creative. And focused. Always focused. He watched the water drip from his fingertip to the bench beside him on one spectrum, while also watching the djed flow down his arm toward his finger, watched the bright pinprick of light at his fingertip that he thought of as the reaction, the transmutation of djed into res, and then res into water. He watched the water, too, its aura clear and clean, and somehow overlaid with a bit of Hadrian, its creator. Then he sat erect, assuming a practiced posture as the graphomancer had taught him, and brought his finger down to the tiny puddle with studied grace and began to form a glyph. It was a meditative practice when he worked on his calligraphy, and he almost fell into a light contemplative trance just then. He observed his thought from inception to creation, and then to the codification of it, the crystallization of it, as a glyph. Water, the thought. Water, the element created. Water, the glyph. "Adra," he murmured, naming it in Nader-canoch. |