The seventy-sixth day of fall, 514 AV.
From his perch at the edge of the plateau, Keene stared off into the distance where the strange, yellowish fog emanated from within the citadel. The sapling had grown a marginal amount, it was something easy to inspect with his daily waterings, though the actual growth was hardly exciting. It was healthy though, and as Keene had eased himself over the ledge to let his feet dangle against the rocky face, he had noticed the strange, sickly cloud looming on the horizon. He wondered if it was a meteorological event or if it was merely the side-effect of some large scale spell or project. Strangely enough, he couldn't discount either as possibilities. Since his arrival, the weather had been much less predictable than that of Zeltiva's. The waterspouts near the beginning of his time on Sahova had been strange enough, but he had found the constant cloud cover an even stranger anomaly. Tropical climates were not those that had been covered in the majority of the books he'd read, but the clouds seemed a bit unnatural to him, much in the same way the entire citadel held an aura that seemed to push against nature rather than embrace it. In fact, the whole island felt like that.
He glanced back to the sapling, it's small frame just a reiteration of the strange, near alien feel of the land he had come to call home. Letting his gaze swing back to look out over the world below him, Keene let his chin rest in the palm of his hand, supporting it with an elbow firmly planted on his knee. With his duties fully explained, he had had more time to sit and think in a sense. While he only had a about a bell to rest at the top of the plateau, only a small amount of it was alloted to actual rest. He'd been practicing his shielding for a few bells every morning for a good while, and though steady progress had been made, Keene found the art of shielding a journey of small, slow steps. It didn't serve to deter him from his goals, but it was a magic that required close, analytical involvement from start to finish. After having had his meeting with the Wizard Relos, Keene had begun to spend most of his time dedicated to shielding picking apart what it was he was creating. If a shield ended up tasked too weakly or incorrectly, Keene dug into both structure and creation in search of a reason. If it were too weak, too uneven, or too short-lived, he spent most of the time crafting smaller shields with the hope of doing something that gave the same response.
Turning his attention down towards the triangle of earth in front of him, Keene slowed his breath, letting his mind clear and focus on that which was his djed. Reaching out, he let the scales begin to trickle from his fingers while he imagined the light from the sky firmly and carefully in his mind. He no longer tried to shape the djed that tumbled down in little scales, instead he allowed it to pool before him until it was a desirable size. Using his fingers to delicately lift and manipulate the scales with his will, Keene began to construct the shield. The straight sided nature of the scales, when not forced to bond to each other the moment they were created, fit together quite nicely, forming relatively straight lines with each pass of his hands as the shimmering shards shifted from the sheen of the pool to the ever increasing shape of the shield. As he worked, Keene moved slowly, but confidently. He'd found there was an optimal speed to working. Moving without fluidity resulted in a jarring of the scales that sacrificed flow for accuracy, compromising the overall longevity (and potentially the stability). His breathing, too, remained much more under control with the careful, meticulous construction, rather than the rushed - in comparison - tactics he had employed before.
As the slivers of light fell into place, Keene made sure to continually infuse them with tasked djed. It had taken a bit to get the hang of it without creating new particles, but it had proved to extend the life of the shards by quite a bit, as his newer method of shield construction required many more chimes than before. If the scales started disappearing before he could bind them to the shield, they were useless. Thus, the process was incredibly mentally intensive. The island, however, was well suited to his shielding studies. On the plateau, there was no life aside from himself, the tree, and whatever creatures were too small to cause him any distraction. The air, while still heavy and hot, was clearer somehow. It gave him a better place to think, to concentrate. Shielding required his full attention and them some, having to worry about his environment was far too much of a bother to do things in the cave where the flickering of the light was far too distracting to be of any use. He had completely underestimated the complexities of shielding when he had first started. The passive nature of the magic had lulled him into the idea that it was a simple sort of thing. Those thoughts had long since passed, replaced with a growing respect for the practitioners of the art.
From his perch at the edge of the plateau, Keene stared off into the distance where the strange, yellowish fog emanated from within the citadel. The sapling had grown a marginal amount, it was something easy to inspect with his daily waterings, though the actual growth was hardly exciting. It was healthy though, and as Keene had eased himself over the ledge to let his feet dangle against the rocky face, he had noticed the strange, sickly cloud looming on the horizon. He wondered if it was a meteorological event or if it was merely the side-effect of some large scale spell or project. Strangely enough, he couldn't discount either as possibilities. Since his arrival, the weather had been much less predictable than that of Zeltiva's. The waterspouts near the beginning of his time on Sahova had been strange enough, but he had found the constant cloud cover an even stranger anomaly. Tropical climates were not those that had been covered in the majority of the books he'd read, but the clouds seemed a bit unnatural to him, much in the same way the entire citadel held an aura that seemed to push against nature rather than embrace it. In fact, the whole island felt like that.
He glanced back to the sapling, it's small frame just a reiteration of the strange, near alien feel of the land he had come to call home. Letting his gaze swing back to look out over the world below him, Keene let his chin rest in the palm of his hand, supporting it with an elbow firmly planted on his knee. With his duties fully explained, he had had more time to sit and think in a sense. While he only had a about a bell to rest at the top of the plateau, only a small amount of it was alloted to actual rest. He'd been practicing his shielding for a few bells every morning for a good while, and though steady progress had been made, Keene found the art of shielding a journey of small, slow steps. It didn't serve to deter him from his goals, but it was a magic that required close, analytical involvement from start to finish. After having had his meeting with the Wizard Relos, Keene had begun to spend most of his time dedicated to shielding picking apart what it was he was creating. If a shield ended up tasked too weakly or incorrectly, Keene dug into both structure and creation in search of a reason. If it were too weak, too uneven, or too short-lived, he spent most of the time crafting smaller shields with the hope of doing something that gave the same response.
Turning his attention down towards the triangle of earth in front of him, Keene slowed his breath, letting his mind clear and focus on that which was his djed. Reaching out, he let the scales begin to trickle from his fingers while he imagined the light from the sky firmly and carefully in his mind. He no longer tried to shape the djed that tumbled down in little scales, instead he allowed it to pool before him until it was a desirable size. Using his fingers to delicately lift and manipulate the scales with his will, Keene began to construct the shield. The straight sided nature of the scales, when not forced to bond to each other the moment they were created, fit together quite nicely, forming relatively straight lines with each pass of his hands as the shimmering shards shifted from the sheen of the pool to the ever increasing shape of the shield. As he worked, Keene moved slowly, but confidently. He'd found there was an optimal speed to working. Moving without fluidity resulted in a jarring of the scales that sacrificed flow for accuracy, compromising the overall longevity (and potentially the stability). His breathing, too, remained much more under control with the careful, meticulous construction, rather than the rushed - in comparison - tactics he had employed before.
As the slivers of light fell into place, Keene made sure to continually infuse them with tasked djed. It had taken a bit to get the hang of it without creating new particles, but it had proved to extend the life of the shards by quite a bit, as his newer method of shield construction required many more chimes than before. If the scales started disappearing before he could bind them to the shield, they were useless. Thus, the process was incredibly mentally intensive. The island, however, was well suited to his shielding studies. On the plateau, there was no life aside from himself, the tree, and whatever creatures were too small to cause him any distraction. The air, while still heavy and hot, was clearer somehow. It gave him a better place to think, to concentrate. Shielding required his full attention and them some, having to worry about his environment was far too much of a bother to do things in the cave where the flickering of the light was far too distracting to be of any use. He had completely underestimated the complexities of shielding when he had first started. The passive nature of the magic had lulled him into the idea that it was a simple sort of thing. Those thoughts had long since passed, replaced with a growing respect for the practitioners of the art.