.
The thirty-third day of spring, 515 AV
He sat with candles burning a steady blue, casting their chilly light upon the pages that had slowly begun to be filled with little black scribbles of varying design and size. His quill scratched against the paper, a trail of black left behind to seep into the material as he finished the final line of his theoretical focus. He had been researching the possibilities of putting glyphs into the weave of his shields, for no purpose more than the potential that it was something he could do. So far, however, his investigations had yielded little promise. It didn't help that his comprehension of glyphs was limited to his relatively minimal artistic ability and skill in the actual magic itself. He still imagined it to be possible, however, until he was better acquainted with both magics, it seemed something out of his reach. Setting the quill aside, Keene ran his ink stained fingers through his hair, eyes slowly closing as he drew a steady breath to end the surprisingly frustrating bell of practice that had given way to little progress.
In the darkness of his own mind, he saw him. He always saw him. Boswell would drift in and out of focus, but Noven was always crystal clear. Perfect. His heart skipped a beat as the man smiled, then he frowned, then, he disappeared, just as he always did.
Shifting forward, Keene leaned an elbows onto the wooden table's surface, wearily pressing his fingers into his eyes before he opened them once more to stare down at the silent pages of half a season's worth of work. He missed him, whether he wanted to admit it or not. The letters had not made the divide any easier. If anything, they had made him ache even more, but it was not something he couldn't put aside for the sake of what he had to do. Sighing, he rose, a far different looking man than when he had arrived at the cave's mouth seasons ago. He was often tired and battered, two things that he had come to find comfortable. If a day left him restless, it was his own fault. There was more to do in a day than bells to do them, and Keene spent each to the best of his abilities. He had learned much, though still not enough, and while the days had stretched into seasons and his restless night grown all the more so, there was still so much left to learn.
Having come to the conclusion that his shields would remain glyphless until he had a better grasp of the magic itself, Keene turned to exit the cave, res drifting from his lips to gather up the flames and pull them along behind him to light the way. As he stepped out into the expanse of the valley's morning, the fire was snuffed out, the pale blue liquid seeping into fingers that passed through it. Drawing a deep, centering breath, Keene stepped through the intricate web of sheilds he had constructed, the tasked djed doing nothing to stop his advance as if the shimmering multi-hued construct was nothing more than a minor hallucination. The cliff was windless, an empty plain of muggy heat even as early as it was in the day. The stillness and quiet of the Sahovan wilderness set in around him, a familiar mix of scene and sensation. He had grown content, whether he realized it or not, and he found his mountainous domain well suited to his proclivities: isolated and quiet, it served a far better training ground than his house in Zeltiva ever had.
Turning to face his shields, Keene set about checking them just as he had every morning since Atziri's command that he begin to weave the protections he'd been practicing for so long. Djed drifted from his fingers, a fog of unlimited potential that slid along each layer as he examined them, taking into account the thickness, the weave, and the stability of each. Sometimes, the cloud would shift, buffering a section with a diluted task in a patch or feeding the djed into the slight flicker of strength of another. As he worked, Keene focused all his thoughts onto what was before him, Noven's smile and voice and smell... They all were folded up like a good book and tucked away. He could not afford sentimentalities in his daily life. Things had become too painful, and in that pain lived a heavy, sluggish dampening of his abilities, something sizeable enough to turn the tides of an impromptu battle from favorable to his final, and that was something he refused to allow, even for Noven. Especially for Noven.
When he had finished with the maintenance, Keene stepped back, giving the shields one last check before turning to head up towards the tree he had been dutifully watering for the past season. It was a good warm up for the day, and as he jumped up to latch onto the side of the cliff's face and hoist himself over with no small amount of effort, his heart already began to beat a few ticks faster. Brushing himself off as he rose to stand, Keene felt a familiar rush of air greet him with a playful tousle of his hair, displacing the muggy heat with a more tepid breath of relief. He greeted it as had become customary, letting the wind drift through his fingers for a few ticks before starting up the hike. As he went, Keene stretched his arms, pulling first one up and over behind his head then the other, swinging them back and fourth once that was done. He was not the greatest climber, but the hundreds of times he'd gone up and down the particular mountain path had not only worn a trail of use, but had conditioned his body to be much better prepared for the journey.
The thirty-third day of spring, 515 AV
He sat with candles burning a steady blue, casting their chilly light upon the pages that had slowly begun to be filled with little black scribbles of varying design and size. His quill scratched against the paper, a trail of black left behind to seep into the material as he finished the final line of his theoretical focus. He had been researching the possibilities of putting glyphs into the weave of his shields, for no purpose more than the potential that it was something he could do. So far, however, his investigations had yielded little promise. It didn't help that his comprehension of glyphs was limited to his relatively minimal artistic ability and skill in the actual magic itself. He still imagined it to be possible, however, until he was better acquainted with both magics, it seemed something out of his reach. Setting the quill aside, Keene ran his ink stained fingers through his hair, eyes slowly closing as he drew a steady breath to end the surprisingly frustrating bell of practice that had given way to little progress.
In the darkness of his own mind, he saw him. He always saw him. Boswell would drift in and out of focus, but Noven was always crystal clear. Perfect. His heart skipped a beat as the man smiled, then he frowned, then, he disappeared, just as he always did.
Shifting forward, Keene leaned an elbows onto the wooden table's surface, wearily pressing his fingers into his eyes before he opened them once more to stare down at the silent pages of half a season's worth of work. He missed him, whether he wanted to admit it or not. The letters had not made the divide any easier. If anything, they had made him ache even more, but it was not something he couldn't put aside for the sake of what he had to do. Sighing, he rose, a far different looking man than when he had arrived at the cave's mouth seasons ago. He was often tired and battered, two things that he had come to find comfortable. If a day left him restless, it was his own fault. There was more to do in a day than bells to do them, and Keene spent each to the best of his abilities. He had learned much, though still not enough, and while the days had stretched into seasons and his restless night grown all the more so, there was still so much left to learn.
Having come to the conclusion that his shields would remain glyphless until he had a better grasp of the magic itself, Keene turned to exit the cave, res drifting from his lips to gather up the flames and pull them along behind him to light the way. As he stepped out into the expanse of the valley's morning, the fire was snuffed out, the pale blue liquid seeping into fingers that passed through it. Drawing a deep, centering breath, Keene stepped through the intricate web of sheilds he had constructed, the tasked djed doing nothing to stop his advance as if the shimmering multi-hued construct was nothing more than a minor hallucination. The cliff was windless, an empty plain of muggy heat even as early as it was in the day. The stillness and quiet of the Sahovan wilderness set in around him, a familiar mix of scene and sensation. He had grown content, whether he realized it or not, and he found his mountainous domain well suited to his proclivities: isolated and quiet, it served a far better training ground than his house in Zeltiva ever had.
Turning to face his shields, Keene set about checking them just as he had every morning since Atziri's command that he begin to weave the protections he'd been practicing for so long. Djed drifted from his fingers, a fog of unlimited potential that slid along each layer as he examined them, taking into account the thickness, the weave, and the stability of each. Sometimes, the cloud would shift, buffering a section with a diluted task in a patch or feeding the djed into the slight flicker of strength of another. As he worked, Keene focused all his thoughts onto what was before him, Noven's smile and voice and smell... They all were folded up like a good book and tucked away. He could not afford sentimentalities in his daily life. Things had become too painful, and in that pain lived a heavy, sluggish dampening of his abilities, something sizeable enough to turn the tides of an impromptu battle from favorable to his final, and that was something he refused to allow, even for Noven. Especially for Noven.
When he had finished with the maintenance, Keene stepped back, giving the shields one last check before turning to head up towards the tree he had been dutifully watering for the past season. It was a good warm up for the day, and as he jumped up to latch onto the side of the cliff's face and hoist himself over with no small amount of effort, his heart already began to beat a few ticks faster. Brushing himself off as he rose to stand, Keene felt a familiar rush of air greet him with a playful tousle of his hair, displacing the muggy heat with a more tepid breath of relief. He greeted it as had become customary, letting the wind drift through his fingers for a few ticks before starting up the hike. As he went, Keene stretched his arms, pulling first one up and over behind his head then the other, swinging them back and fourth once that was done. He was not the greatest climber, but the hundreds of times he'd gone up and down the particular mountain path had not only worn a trail of use, but had conditioned his body to be much better prepared for the journey.