515-SPRING-79
16F, Gug Andjak
The quiet scribble of the carving knife scratched in contrast to the pristine silence of the Gug Andjak. It was the buffer day that Aedi had given himself in the event of delays in the creation of his Judgement project, and it was a day well-earned. There was nothing much he could do other than to guard his project well, rehearse his lines and to simply wait for the day of reckoning tomorrow.
It was fortunate that the communal work spaces were available to visitors, and he highly appreciated the availability and variety of raw materials in each of the workshops and labs. He had been informed that higher quality materials and more advanced components would have to be requisitioned for in the Synchrograph Office, though it was also loudly hinted that the office would much prefer to process requests by Sahovan residents.
The Isurian visitor had used the common workshops as an opportunity to soothe his frayed nerves in the sole rest day, and nothing made him feel better than to banish the unnatural silence with the familiar noise of metalworking. It had been a simple matter of heating and molding the iron ingots into the shape of small carving blade, then going to town with the forging hammer and whetstone.
However, this time there was a little twist, and he actually used the white-hot heat to weld the freshly forged carving blade into a bone hilt. A bone hilt that he had roughly carved from what seemed to be some sort of a thigh bone. Or perhaps it could have been a bone that belonged to some other limb. In any case, it was one of the freely available raw materials and he really had no idea as to its origins.
It doesn't really matter though, despite his inability to pry any relevant information using his meager understanding of aura perception. The most that he could extract from the random piece of bone was its physical structure. Lacking anthropological or biological knowledge, this was also useless to him in attempting to deduce the bone's origins.
Whatever.
He was trying to buy time anyway, and doing something that put his mind at ease. The knowledge lay hidden and rusty in his mind since he had not been doing much of it since that first time in Pitrius Citadel, and so it brought back nostalgia and homesickness as he carved circles in the bone.
Aedi had left the lab when he managed to weld the iron blade and bone hilt together into a functional tool, and instead walked the corridors of the Gug Andjak in a curious attempt to see if there were other users of the communal facilities. As he walked, his carving blade scratched incessantly as he absent-mindedly inscribed a generic list of traits and characteristics within the glyphed circles, perhaps in a hopeful attempt to draw something, anything, out of the residual soul of the bone.
As he reached the highest floor of the Gug Andjak that a visitor was allowed to go, he noted with a distinct lack of glee that the layout looked completely identical to the four floors below it, and he highly suspected that it was the same all the way up. The Isur continued his path along the silent corridors, with only the frequent scratching of glyphed descriptions upon the hilt of his improvised product to keep him company.
16F, Gug Andjak
The quiet scribble of the carving knife scratched in contrast to the pristine silence of the Gug Andjak. It was the buffer day that Aedi had given himself in the event of delays in the creation of his Judgement project, and it was a day well-earned. There was nothing much he could do other than to guard his project well, rehearse his lines and to simply wait for the day of reckoning tomorrow.
It was fortunate that the communal work spaces were available to visitors, and he highly appreciated the availability and variety of raw materials in each of the workshops and labs. He had been informed that higher quality materials and more advanced components would have to be requisitioned for in the Synchrograph Office, though it was also loudly hinted that the office would much prefer to process requests by Sahovan residents.
The Isurian visitor had used the common workshops as an opportunity to soothe his frayed nerves in the sole rest day, and nothing made him feel better than to banish the unnatural silence with the familiar noise of metalworking. It had been a simple matter of heating and molding the iron ingots into the shape of small carving blade, then going to town with the forging hammer and whetstone.
However, this time there was a little twist, and he actually used the white-hot heat to weld the freshly forged carving blade into a bone hilt. A bone hilt that he had roughly carved from what seemed to be some sort of a thigh bone. Or perhaps it could have been a bone that belonged to some other limb. In any case, it was one of the freely available raw materials and he really had no idea as to its origins.
It doesn't really matter though, despite his inability to pry any relevant information using his meager understanding of aura perception. The most that he could extract from the random piece of bone was its physical structure. Lacking anthropological or biological knowledge, this was also useless to him in attempting to deduce the bone's origins.
Whatever.
He was trying to buy time anyway, and doing something that put his mind at ease. The knowledge lay hidden and rusty in his mind since he had not been doing much of it since that first time in Pitrius Citadel, and so it brought back nostalgia and homesickness as he carved circles in the bone.
Aedi had left the lab when he managed to weld the iron blade and bone hilt together into a functional tool, and instead walked the corridors of the Gug Andjak in a curious attempt to see if there were other users of the communal facilities. As he walked, his carving blade scratched incessantly as he absent-mindedly inscribed a generic list of traits and characteristics within the glyphed circles, perhaps in a hopeful attempt to draw something, anything, out of the residual soul of the bone.
As he reached the highest floor of the Gug Andjak that a visitor was allowed to go, he noted with a distinct lack of glee that the layout looked completely identical to the four floors below it, and he highly suspected that it was the same all the way up. The Isur continued his path along the silent corridors, with only the frequent scratching of glyphed descriptions upon the hilt of his improvised product to keep him company.