I took the stars from my eyes and then I made a map I knew that somehow I could find my way back - f + m – Timestamp: 27 Summer 514 AV The afternoon was wasting in the heat. All of the sane people had completed what duties and chores required them to be out in the sun in the earliest hours of the day when morning held the world more gently. They now labored over responsibilities that allowed them to remain below, in the cool, cavernous Within that sprawled underground the very earth upon which Caelum stood. The ethaefal reveled in the heat, unconcerned with the rising temperature as he placed a seashell on the corner of a large sheet of paper. A battered wooden table sat at the far edge of the Sanctuary's herb garden. There was also a chair, peg legged and high backed, but it was disdained in favor of standing. Caelum had convinced Aweston to help him drag the old piece of furniture up from one of the empty bedchambers before it got too hot. It sat now in the thick grass and was stacked with what seemed a conjurers assortment of materials. Large sheets of paper sprawled over the center and were weighed down at their corners by polished rocks and sea shells collected by Lillian and Tasival in their endless journeys of make-believe to and from the beach. A wooden cup held charcoal sticks sharpened to varying degrees of fineness and no less than three fourtain pens were scattered around an equal number of ink tins -- black, blue, and carnelian bright. At the edge of the desk was a sweating pewter pitcher and a ledger book with row after row of painstakingly neat handwriting dictating a list of plants and recipes, values and remarks. Summer white horns gleamed like pearls as he bent over, a sheaf of hair washed in gold this season spilling mostly into his eyes. One of the pens was held up and his eyes were narrowed with concentration as he looked from the sprawl of his precious herb garden to blank sheet of paper before him. A few completed maps were already rolled up, tied to stay with a bit of twine, and set to the side. They held diagrams of what plants were in their growth stages and location now and where he needed to rearrange a few of his more finicky, rare plants next. His eccentricity had not allowed him to linger on that single task. Instead he tugged on the worn hem of his second hand tunic, short sleeved for the heat, and began to sketch the first sweeping lines of a rune in the middle of the paper. Glyphing was a magic that he was not incredibly well versed in. Of course, the type of magic Caelum understood best was that of the divine. Glyphing, however, he had learned first in the water light of Ravok and the muted roar of the waves as the tide swept in at the bottom of the sea cliff was almost familiar. The magic had been necessary for the nonetheless impossible task his master had set before him, and he had neglected it much since departing Delucia's service. The wind kicked, bringing the scent of his honeysuckle along the far back trellis. He inhaled and held the smell of it in his mouth, in his lungs, and felt his focus cause the whole of the world to still on this sweltering afternoon. It was the simplest trick of meditation, an equally as hard won necessity, but it aided him in the sketching of the third straight line radiating through the sickle moon curve that began his rune. Fortunately, most residents of the Sanctuary were accustomed to the odd behavior of Kavala's often elusive friend. He lived in an apartment above the healing clinic and was a chief healer for Kavala despite the fact that he owned his own business in town. He had a reputation that was beginning to bloom in Riverfall, but it was still small and enigmatic. A konti toddler named Lillian lived here as well and followed him around, calling him daddy and a dark-eyed former slave could constantly be found in his shadow or in the company of Larik. They and Kavala seemed to know him well, but few others. Straightening, he squinted down at the rune he had drawn. It had an elegant flow, but he was not quite satisfied. He tapped excess ink off the steel nib of his pen and considered starting over. |