Timestamp: 80th Day of Winter, 507 A.V.
Seidaku lay sprawled on an unmade bed in what he liked to think of as meditative contemplation, but an observer would call a petulant sulk, scowling at the ceiling with his arms crossed over his chest. Over a fortnight since he had seen Wrenmae's display of magic, and he had little more than a name for what the boy had done.
Morphing.
The display had been fascinating, but even he had been perceptive enough to see that the boy did not want to talk about it. Despite an obvious skill with the arcane arts, he suffered from an common - and deserved, he admitted to himself - belief that magic was somehow inherently wrong. His response to that thought was a loud, "Humph!" He had heard all of the cases against magic. It had caused the Valterrian, it meddled with forced 'man was not meant to control', it twisted the mind and soul toward evil, and others even less rooted in reality.
He knew the truth, though. Any historian could tell you, as his master Vauthor had taught him, that uncontrolled emotion, a "human" failing, had caused the Valterrian. And for the other two points, fire was dangerous if one let it run rampant, and it could burn, maim, and kill. In much the same way, magic without careful control could burn the mind and body of the user.
He was more frustrated with a lack of resources than he was with Wrenmae, of course. Even though the boy made a convenient target of his ire, he knew that the ire was misdirected and if faded as quickly as it had flared. The information on Morphing was even less readily available than it had been on Summoning, which at least had a scientific grounding. The tomes he had found in the Sunken Conundrum had been little more than rhetoric; "The mind and the Djed know the true shape of a body moreso than the physical shell. The shell is clay, the Djed is blade, and the mind, sculptor."
Nothing in either of the books he had been able to unearth had given so much as a starting point, beyond the fact that it would 'come from within'. The Scholarly Abode of Intellectual Pursuits had been even less fruitful. For such an enlightened group, they had been surprisingly reluctant to even discuss magical theory. Disappointingly superstitious.
Still contemplating, he would never admit that it might be sulking, he rolled off of the bed and began pacind the length of his room, back and forth.