Azola blinked. So Jilitse wasn’t yet willing to send her off to Mashaen, instead she wanted that Azola stayed with her a little longer. She was thinking about doing something with Malia herself, that was obvious. The younger Nuit inwardly shrugged. If Jilitse would be the teacher herself, she was the last to interfere. After all, she just wanted to learn. Her instructor just needed to be competent. Jilitse was as weird as every Nuit in her own, unique way, but she undoubtedly was competent enough.
Waiting for what was to come, Azola relaxed. Sahova was confusing, but also so exciting! She tasted the unfamiliar air, felt the atmosphere and knew that she would get used to it in due time. If she was lucky, she would call it her home by the end of the season.
The next words she took in with interest. Jilitse loved Mashaen? Another facet of that inscrutable person. It tasted bland, like something said again and again until it had lost its original meaning. Azola wondered whether Jilitse was still feeling the same for him than she had felt at their first meeting. So she had been one of the first volunteers of the Sahova Project. That meant … she was over 500 years old! Significantly older than Malia herself and one of the oldest Nuit at all. From one minute to another Azola was looking at her opponent with much more respect. What had she experienced during those countless years? Azola’s own story was quite extraordinary, speckled with foreign cultures and strange encounters, but now she was even more interested in Jilitse’s story. However, she could be patient. She had come because of Animation, not because she liked listening to others telling their life stories.
Considering that decision, the next question was more to her liking. She nodded and just opened her mouth when Jilitse continued to talk. First she told her the basics about circles and sources what was basically what Azola had already read back in Syliras. When Jilitse showed two almost identical gears to her, Azola curiously placed the smaller one in the smaller circle. She was paying close attention to what Jilitse was saying and doing. However, a few things she didn’t understand at the first time. “What do you exactly mean with emotional attachment? And what other soul can one use except their own?”
Then she tilted her head, lost in thought, and eventually commented: “If the object you want to animate mustn’t have a soul … Are plants qualified?” Her mind was already running a search for objects she could animate without too much further knowledge. Of course, she would have to learn a few additional things to make Animation easier and more efficient. That was the first time she actually got an idea of how difficult Animation was.
But now that she had begun there was no way back. Never.
Her thoughts went back to the lesson she was just receiving. Although it didn’t show, she was grateful that Jilitse didn’t send her off to Mashaen or ignored her or worse. Azola had a nice set of moral principles she usually stuck to … so she memorized that sort of debt. If Jilitse ever needed something Azola could give, she would gladly help her. Her mind worked like that.
The commands in the ancient language echoed in Azola’s ears. She hoped that she didn’t have to learn Nader-Canoch to imbue commands into her golems. So there was a second layer and a third layer she needed to make sure the golem received. Quite complicated, but she hadn’t expected anything else. “How does the teaching process look like in detail?”, she asked. The last part had sounded quite short and direct, but Jilitse had skipped the most important detail.
Then she nodded. It sounded like a fair deal. Give me an example of what you can do and I’ll determine whether you’re worth or not, Jilitse’s small quest seemed to convey. Azola, however, started with tilting her head, inspecting the laboratory and thinking about what she could do with the tools she had at hand.
OOCSorry for the huge delay! Was uninspired. And 1) I try to call her Azola from now on and 2) will think about the object she wants to animate in the next post.