Timestamp: 50th Day of Spring, 513 A.V.
The room was bare and relatively spartan, with just the bare essentials for teaching – a semicircle of desks, a lectern, some blackboards and over it all a vast banner of the Dusk Tower's crest, the metal threads of the tapestry gleaming in the skyglass glow.
Six nervous young Lhavitians were sat behind the desks, casting glances at one another and talking in a desultory, stilted fashion when Alses walked in the door, her new robes swirling impressively about her form as she did so. She'd gone for purple, this time, in an attempt to fit in a little more with the Dusk Tower's general colour scheme, and it had to be admitted that the rich colour suited her just as well as her favoured crimson. She'd clung for grim death to the gold, however, and the glyphic sigils had been embroidered to her exacting directions in that warmly-scintillating thread. The robes looked very fine, Alses thought, resisting the temptation to run her fingers down the shimmering silken folds, enjoying the whispering caress of the fine fabric against her skin.
'Don't catch them in the door, don't catch them in the door, don't catch them in the door,' ran like a rogue mantra through her brain as she stepped through and into the classroom proper, ready to face the scrutiny of people who, just a few days ago, she'd have considered her peers. Now, they were her students, and that was an idea that took some wrapping her head around.
“Good morning, everyone,” she trilled, eyes skipping in self-defence over the six worryingly keen individuals staring at her, in the case of two of them their gazes disconcertingly magnified and focused by eyeglasses.
“My name is Alses, and we'll be going over some of the basics of auristics together.” her smile ran into the collective brick wall of their stares, and she cleared her throat. “Well, how about we start by finding out what you all know about the discipline? Anyone?”
There was a moment of pause, and then the words began to fly thick and fast, bewildering and confusing her with their speed.
“I've heard that you read souls when you use auristics. Is that true?”
“Well, that's not quite right-” Alses replied helplessly, but the Junior Inquisition was in full flow, steamrollering effortlessly over her words.
“Can you see what we're thinking?”
“No, not-”
“Have you got eyes in the back of your head, miss?”
"Well-"
“Miss, what does 'wavered sea-foam of desire' actually mean?” That one had a textbook - 'When had he had the chance to get one of those? Alses wondered, slightly wildly.
“Can you explain three-dimensional djed harmonics, please? I did some reading and I'm not sure I fully grasp the concept...”
“I've heard that powerful aurists can overwhelm the auras of other objects; how does that work? Does it have anything to do with Tellurian's Expansive Theory of Soul Dynamics? And what about changing your own aura? Doesn't that contradict the principles of Conflation? And-”
In her room at the Towers Respite, Alses shot bolt upright, bedclothes falling away from her sweat-soaked form and eyes darting wildly into the corners of the room before blessed reality asserted itself and her conscious brain took charge.
“Oh, thank Syna for that,” Alses breathed into the terror-scented air, one hand pressed to her hammering heart. “A dream. Just a dream, just a dream...Just a dream, Alses. They won't know Tellurian from a teacup. They really won't. Besides, Tellurian's theory has nothing to do with aura swamping. What was I thinking of?”
Hands still shaking, Alses pushed away the tangled, rumpled, sweat-stained bedclothes, opened the windows as wide as they'd go and breathed deeply of the cool night air, scented with the earliest spring flowers from her garden below. The city of crystal light and fantasy blazed in the dark, a mass of towering topaz spires and jewel-like domes, an earthbound star glorying in Zintila's tapestry of stars overhead and in the silvery moonlight which stole colour from everything – but not the starry city, no, its rainbowed raiment shining in defiance of the moon-thief, even the plants glowing with otherworldly bioluminescence.
It was some mineral in the soil that did that, turning even the plants into seas of moving light, but such mundane concerns were very far from Alses' mind as she hung half-out of her window and drank in the sight of the never-sleeping city. Even this late, there was a red glow and a plume of spark-shot smoke rising from the smithies abutting the Azure Market, Touch of Fire chief among them; the forges had no conception of time, after all, and demanded feeding no matter the bell. Lulls never lasted long in the city; her unusual system of rest and work bells saw to that, and her citizens were industrious to boot, turning out almost all the city needed to survive and indeed the luxuries it exported by the ingenuity of hand and brain and a healthy dollop of hard work.
Regardless, the sight was still a beautiful one – the starkly empty Unforgiving unrolling on all sides, full of dramatically silver-lit peaks and shattered cliffs and scree-slope sides, plunging away into dark forests and hungry ravines...and then, rising majestically on five great peaks in the middle of it all, Lhavit, the Diamond of Kalea, living up to its name, a beacon to be seen far and wide.
The muted chimes of the city bells echoed softly through the shining streets, reverberating from the mountains which ringed Lhavit, a gently-resonant announcement of the fourth bell of the morning that centred and calmed Alses, turning her mind from vague tumbling thoughts, still scattered from her dreams, to something a little more coherent.
'Too early to head over to the Dusk Tower, I expect,' Alses thought, still shackled in her mortal chain until there was a lightening in the eastern sky and the first lemon-yellow ray of sunshine lanced over Kalea, heralding the new day.
'But it's also far too late for me to even bother trying to sleep again,' she realised, with a mildly irritated sigh. By the time she'd quieted her thoughts and got comfortable again, it would hardly be worth the half-bell or so of sleep she'd manage to get, rising unfulfilled and tetchy and decidedly not prepared for her first day of teaching.
“Syna above, why did I have to remind myself of that?” Alses groaned, padding around her room for towels and all the other paraphernalia of bath-time. That was one of the signal benefits of the Respite, its baths were always hot and ready, thanks to the hot springs welling up from Kalea's volcanic heart, and a good long soak in supportive, mineral-rich water would be just the thing to let her mind go blank and relax her before the stressful business of the day – this day in particular. And if she used enough bath oil, the slightly sulphurous smell would be quite, quite unnoticeable.
Thus buoyed, a pale Konti slipped out into the currently-sleeping halls of the Respite, heading for the half-subterranean chamber that was the home of its communal bathing pools and the sweet relief immersion in hot water promised.
The room was bare and relatively spartan, with just the bare essentials for teaching – a semicircle of desks, a lectern, some blackboards and over it all a vast banner of the Dusk Tower's crest, the metal threads of the tapestry gleaming in the skyglass glow.
Six nervous young Lhavitians were sat behind the desks, casting glances at one another and talking in a desultory, stilted fashion when Alses walked in the door, her new robes swirling impressively about her form as she did so. She'd gone for purple, this time, in an attempt to fit in a little more with the Dusk Tower's general colour scheme, and it had to be admitted that the rich colour suited her just as well as her favoured crimson. She'd clung for grim death to the gold, however, and the glyphic sigils had been embroidered to her exacting directions in that warmly-scintillating thread. The robes looked very fine, Alses thought, resisting the temptation to run her fingers down the shimmering silken folds, enjoying the whispering caress of the fine fabric against her skin.
'Don't catch them in the door, don't catch them in the door, don't catch them in the door,' ran like a rogue mantra through her brain as she stepped through and into the classroom proper, ready to face the scrutiny of people who, just a few days ago, she'd have considered her peers. Now, they were her students, and that was an idea that took some wrapping her head around.
“Good morning, everyone,” she trilled, eyes skipping in self-defence over the six worryingly keen individuals staring at her, in the case of two of them their gazes disconcertingly magnified and focused by eyeglasses.
“My name is Alses, and we'll be going over some of the basics of auristics together.” her smile ran into the collective brick wall of their stares, and she cleared her throat. “Well, how about we start by finding out what you all know about the discipline? Anyone?”
There was a moment of pause, and then the words began to fly thick and fast, bewildering and confusing her with their speed.
“I've heard that you read souls when you use auristics. Is that true?”
“Well, that's not quite right-” Alses replied helplessly, but the Junior Inquisition was in full flow, steamrollering effortlessly over her words.
“Can you see what we're thinking?”
“No, not-”
“Have you got eyes in the back of your head, miss?”
"Well-"
“Miss, what does 'wavered sea-foam of desire' actually mean?” That one had a textbook - 'When had he had the chance to get one of those? Alses wondered, slightly wildly.
“Can you explain three-dimensional djed harmonics, please? I did some reading and I'm not sure I fully grasp the concept...”
“I've heard that powerful aurists can overwhelm the auras of other objects; how does that work? Does it have anything to do with Tellurian's Expansive Theory of Soul Dynamics? And what about changing your own aura? Doesn't that contradict the principles of Conflation? And-”
In her room at the Towers Respite, Alses shot bolt upright, bedclothes falling away from her sweat-soaked form and eyes darting wildly into the corners of the room before blessed reality asserted itself and her conscious brain took charge.
“Oh, thank Syna for that,” Alses breathed into the terror-scented air, one hand pressed to her hammering heart. “A dream. Just a dream, just a dream...Just a dream, Alses. They won't know Tellurian from a teacup. They really won't. Besides, Tellurian's theory has nothing to do with aura swamping. What was I thinking of?”
Hands still shaking, Alses pushed away the tangled, rumpled, sweat-stained bedclothes, opened the windows as wide as they'd go and breathed deeply of the cool night air, scented with the earliest spring flowers from her garden below. The city of crystal light and fantasy blazed in the dark, a mass of towering topaz spires and jewel-like domes, an earthbound star glorying in Zintila's tapestry of stars overhead and in the silvery moonlight which stole colour from everything – but not the starry city, no, its rainbowed raiment shining in defiance of the moon-thief, even the plants glowing with otherworldly bioluminescence.
It was some mineral in the soil that did that, turning even the plants into seas of moving light, but such mundane concerns were very far from Alses' mind as she hung half-out of her window and drank in the sight of the never-sleeping city. Even this late, there was a red glow and a plume of spark-shot smoke rising from the smithies abutting the Azure Market, Touch of Fire chief among them; the forges had no conception of time, after all, and demanded feeding no matter the bell. Lulls never lasted long in the city; her unusual system of rest and work bells saw to that, and her citizens were industrious to boot, turning out almost all the city needed to survive and indeed the luxuries it exported by the ingenuity of hand and brain and a healthy dollop of hard work.
Regardless, the sight was still a beautiful one – the starkly empty Unforgiving unrolling on all sides, full of dramatically silver-lit peaks and shattered cliffs and scree-slope sides, plunging away into dark forests and hungry ravines...and then, rising majestically on five great peaks in the middle of it all, Lhavit, the Diamond of Kalea, living up to its name, a beacon to be seen far and wide.
The muted chimes of the city bells echoed softly through the shining streets, reverberating from the mountains which ringed Lhavit, a gently-resonant announcement of the fourth bell of the morning that centred and calmed Alses, turning her mind from vague tumbling thoughts, still scattered from her dreams, to something a little more coherent.
'Too early to head over to the Dusk Tower, I expect,' Alses thought, still shackled in her mortal chain until there was a lightening in the eastern sky and the first lemon-yellow ray of sunshine lanced over Kalea, heralding the new day.
'But it's also far too late for me to even bother trying to sleep again,' she realised, with a mildly irritated sigh. By the time she'd quieted her thoughts and got comfortable again, it would hardly be worth the half-bell or so of sleep she'd manage to get, rising unfulfilled and tetchy and decidedly not prepared for her first day of teaching.
“Syna above, why did I have to remind myself of that?” Alses groaned, padding around her room for towels and all the other paraphernalia of bath-time. That was one of the signal benefits of the Respite, its baths were always hot and ready, thanks to the hot springs welling up from Kalea's volcanic heart, and a good long soak in supportive, mineral-rich water would be just the thing to let her mind go blank and relax her before the stressful business of the day – this day in particular. And if she used enough bath oil, the slightly sulphurous smell would be quite, quite unnoticeable.
Thus buoyed, a pale Konti slipped out into the currently-sleeping halls of the Respite, heading for the half-subterranean chamber that was the home of its communal bathing pools and the sweet relief immersion in hot water promised.