5th Summer, 509 A.V.
The candle did nothing to illuminate the room, though it sufficed to give light to the battered old desk where he worked. Triphilar glanced apprehensively from his parchment to the wooden bowl of ashes sitting at the corner of the table. Three years ago such a mundane item would never had been so intimidating. He busied himself inking his quill. The blackness of the stuff had already spread to his fingers, the first two and the thumb. Some sand had kept him from smearing the parchment. It probably didn't matter though, Triphilar thought to himself as he set the quill against the parchment as he had countless times before.
The path came almost easily. The woven pieces of his glyphing runes appeared in dark contrast to the egg color of the parchment. The practiced movements of the hand saw the scribing of a path sigil along the parchment. It wove in a way that was a contrast to the spiked runes of Ephilar. Triphilar carefully drew the point of the quill across the fibers of the parchment with precision. Indeed, the precise markings were the intent. A flaw here or a warbling of lines there could mean pain later on. The runes, not quite words and not quite picture, nonetheless told a story. It was one he was very familiar with. The tale had come to pass and would come again for him.
It was the tale of a magic, a structure for the act.
Triphilar looked up from the desk at the door. It stood sentinel, barring the unknown in which his father undoubtedly resided. They had both been very zealous about the studies. If Triphilar had been older and wiser he may have been more worried about the unhealthy obsession, but he was a mere thirteen. He was happy to have found a connection to his father, though the unnaturalness of the manipulation of djed left his nerves frayed. He knew, even at this young age, that to do the workings they did was to walk the line between life and death.
The youth set the quill to parchment once again. The weaving of the thin runes he imagined as threads in a rope, entwined and with parallels to guide. The ink was the shoulders of a long, white roadway. He had drawn them first this way as a remembrance of his mother. A smile crossed the smooth face as he etched the runes on the page. The weaving of the path was not the rigid and confining work of a channeling. He scribed in the more relaxed weave of runes of a path designed to guide but not confine. It was a method of focusing for a spell that was complex. A comfort in the chaos, if you will.
The quill did not waver in his hand anymore as he continued his candlelit work. Once the boy's mind was awash in the method, his nerves steadied and in their wake, his fingers. He reached the end of the path and immediately began a secondary barrier with an entirely different intent to the pathway. This barrier spiraled in a circle with the intent to spread djed, but not release it. The flow of the runes dictated the scope of the djed. This was all to control the movement of the djed, fore Trip had yet to attempt a personal magic of such magnitude and the glyphing map would help guide him. Or so his father said.
Triphilar glanced at the door once again.
The candle did nothing to illuminate the room, though it sufficed to give light to the battered old desk where he worked. Triphilar glanced apprehensively from his parchment to the wooden bowl of ashes sitting at the corner of the table. Three years ago such a mundane item would never had been so intimidating. He busied himself inking his quill. The blackness of the stuff had already spread to his fingers, the first two and the thumb. Some sand had kept him from smearing the parchment. It probably didn't matter though, Triphilar thought to himself as he set the quill against the parchment as he had countless times before.
The path came almost easily. The woven pieces of his glyphing runes appeared in dark contrast to the egg color of the parchment. The practiced movements of the hand saw the scribing of a path sigil along the parchment. It wove in a way that was a contrast to the spiked runes of Ephilar. Triphilar carefully drew the point of the quill across the fibers of the parchment with precision. Indeed, the precise markings were the intent. A flaw here or a warbling of lines there could mean pain later on. The runes, not quite words and not quite picture, nonetheless told a story. It was one he was very familiar with. The tale had come to pass and would come again for him.
It was the tale of a magic, a structure for the act.
Triphilar looked up from the desk at the door. It stood sentinel, barring the unknown in which his father undoubtedly resided. They had both been very zealous about the studies. If Triphilar had been older and wiser he may have been more worried about the unhealthy obsession, but he was a mere thirteen. He was happy to have found a connection to his father, though the unnaturalness of the manipulation of djed left his nerves frayed. He knew, even at this young age, that to do the workings they did was to walk the line between life and death.
The youth set the quill to parchment once again. The weaving of the thin runes he imagined as threads in a rope, entwined and with parallels to guide. The ink was the shoulders of a long, white roadway. He had drawn them first this way as a remembrance of his mother. A smile crossed the smooth face as he etched the runes on the page. The weaving of the path was not the rigid and confining work of a channeling. He scribed in the more relaxed weave of runes of a path designed to guide but not confine. It was a method of focusing for a spell that was complex. A comfort in the chaos, if you will.
The quill did not waver in his hand anymore as he continued his candlelit work. Once the boy's mind was awash in the method, his nerves steadied and in their wake, his fingers. He reached the end of the path and immediately began a secondary barrier with an entirely different intent to the pathway. This barrier spiraled in a circle with the intent to spread djed, but not release it. The flow of the runes dictated the scope of the djed. This was all to control the movement of the djed, fore Trip had yet to attempt a personal magic of such magnitude and the glyphing map would help guide him. Or so his father said.
Triphilar glanced at the door once again.