Timestamp: 24th Day of Summer, 513 A.V.
Location: The Dusk Tower
The twenty-fourth day of Summer, and magic hummed in the air. This was the time that, by common agreement, the Circle of Towers of Lhavit recruited in earnest, vying with one another in extravagant displays of magic and mastery to entice the next generation from Lhavit's youth. With the Djed Storm having dealt a punishing blow to mages and recruitment last year, each and every Tower was doing its utmost to win a record number of novices and bring their numbers back up.
For the Dusk Tower, this was perhaps slightly less urgent than for the other two; the aurists had got off comparatively lightly when the throes of chaotic, fighting djed had poured over the city. A few masters had succumbed to insanity under the onslaught, mostly those who'd been exerting themselves the most, trying to divine and understand the complex surge of the storm as it rolled in, but there had been no fatalities and precious few injuries. Most of House Dusk's family, staff and retainers had come through the ordeal relatively unscathed. Not at all like the others: the Dawn Tower had torn itself apart – literally – from the inside out, reimancers drunk on power rampaging through their own home and destroying everything in their path, intoxicated by the sheer unending energy the storm gave them, and the Twilight Tower had haemorrhaged novices and masters alike.
The Morphers had lost all control over their bodies, their powers goaded into uncontrollable life by the surging free djed of the storm, forcing all but the very greatest of the masters to shift and shift and shift and shift, warping their bodies far beyond what was normal or sustainable. Abominations – the twisted masses of flesh and fur and feathers and other, less-identifiable things that had once been practicing mages of skill and repute – had poured forth from House Twilight, inflicting horrible casualties before a determined rally by the Shinya had put them down, and the Twilight Tower had been much diminished by those losses.
In comparison to the other two Houses, the Dusks had sailed through the storm with barely a scratch, their home intact and most of their staff and servants safe.
Fire-fountains and sparkling ice sculptures bedecked the still-spartan grounds of the Dawn Tower, controlled whirlwinds picking up long streamers of coloured dye and making them stand out brilliantly against the sky, a very visible and flamboyant symbol of masterful control. There was fire of every colour of the rainbow, water continually being raised and sculpted into beautiful shapes, currents of shimmering air dancing in the sky and the very earth itself arranged into pleasing patterns by the House's reimancers.
They were emphasising control and all the manifold benefits that controlled reimancy brought, all its myriad peace-time applications – small wonder, considering what had happened to them during the Djed Storm.
The Twilight Tower, too, they were out in force – they'd a choir of Morphed songbirds serenading visitors to their grounds, a beautiful harmony and descant that chimed sweetly over everything else. Morphers were everywhere, demonstrating the flexibility and power of their discipline to awed and appreciative children and adolescents – they were even giving a lucky few an aerial ride over the city, having transformed into some form of giant bird not dissimilar to the Wind Eagles that occasionally visited.
There was pomp and pageantry galore – the Towers bedecked with banners and the streets strung with bunting, the squares closest to each of the three Towers chock-full of impromptu stalls that had sprung up, selling sweetmeats and refreshments to all and sundry. The Shinya had a heavy presence in the middle of it all, bulking in skyglass armour and ready to respond at the slightest hint of trouble, the horrific toll that overgiven mages en-masse had inflicted on their ranks still burning bright in their collective memories.
As an additional measure, the Catholicon had disgorged large numbers of immaculately turned-out healers – many of them glittering with Rak'keli's mark – who were welcomed into the Towers' grounds with open arms. Their pristine white tents were a reassuring sight to the more cautious mages and citizens alike – they were well-versed in dealing with most types of injury, from common crush wounds as might be sustained in a crowd to the more esoteric aspects of overgiving. They couldn't outright cure overgiving, of course, that was beyond all but the gods themselves, but the healers could at least speed recovery in the more minor cases.
Alses – dressed in her finest instructor's robes as she passed through the banner-bedecked gates of the Dusk Tower – bowed her thanks to a coterie of passing medics as she made her way through to the Tower proper and Mr. Secretary, the overall coordinator of the event.
The poor fellow looked harried, flicking through sheets of papers and barking orders from his command post – orders which even the masters of the Tower were obeying with alacrity, relying on the secretary and his staff to keep everything running on a smooth and steady, even keel. The instructors had come up with the overall vision for the Open Day, and handed over all the nitty-gritty details of its execution to the Tower's legion of staff – small wonder Mr. Secretary commanded respect and obedience.
He still found a smile for Alses, though, glancing up with his monocle flashing in the light and bestowing her with a wide grin. “Hallo, Alses,” he said quickly, attention rapidly switching to another pile of papers. “Good to see you. Opening time in a bell or so. Exciting, isn't it?”
“Chaotic, more like,” she observed with a quiet smile of her own. He laughed, briefly.
“Only to the untrained eye. We're keeping close tabs on everything, never fear. Which reminds me, your students have all turned up and they're waiting in Staging Area Three-” he dragged over a large map of the Tower and its grounds, liberally festooned with flags and markers of seven different colours “-that's the southern courtyard, by the way-” he tapped the map for emphasis “-and you are...” his finger danced across the intricate squiggles and dots of rainbowed ink “...here, with your mirror and your scrolls – we've found you a big bureau, so they've all been stacked neatly in there – next to the sparring ring where Lady Dusk's performing.”
Alses nodded. “Thank you, Mr. Secretary. Can we ask where the Catholicon tent is?”
His finger trailed aimlessly over the paper for a few moments, eyes scanning vigorously from side to side, before he located it with a triumphant stab. “There, see? Not too far from you.” Curiosity tinged his voice for a moment. “Planning on needing their help?” he asked.
“Planning?” Alses echoed. “No. Aware we might need them, if not for ourselves then perhaps for one of the prospectives, yes. Besides, our students will need to know where it is, so they can direct people there, if necessary.”
Her students were one of the subtler methods the Tower was using to keep order; they were skilled enough, now, to at least be able to recognize strong emotion in an aura, even in the middle of a crowd, and that enabled them to intervene before things got out of hand – or to call for Shinya backup should it be sufficiently serious. It rarely was, according to those who had more experience with these Open Days; the Lhavitian character didn't lend itself well to explosive displays of temper, but no chances were being taken. Some might still be bitter about the bloody price exacted by the Djed Storm, after all, and they might use this time when the doors of the Circle of Towers were thrown wide open to take some form of revenge. Students were also useful as guides; they were easily recognizable amongst the crowds and knew the Tower and its grounds very well.
It was oddly gratifying to walk at the centre of a protective gaggle of her students, a don being escorted to her place by zealous novices who peeled off either singly or in pairs as they reached their designated spots. Alma made a beeline for the Seiza, bulking in their flame-red robes, whilst Alses, for her part, pulled a face and quickened her step – the judiciary, even though there was always a call for experienced aurists in that line of work, weren't her favourite branch of the city government, it had to be said, and she thought she'd caught a glimpse of iron-gray hair and a cadaverous face amongst the gaggle of functionaries and guards. Meeting that austere and arrogant judge again was decidedly not on the list of things she wanted to do.
Their procession took them past a tight knot of merchants, who called out cheery greetings, waving pudgily beringed fingers and spreading silken robes in shallow bows as she passed. They were at the Dusk Tower to talk to the older prospectives about the manifold benefits of an aurist's education; contract-work was very lucrative, both for aurists and merchants alike. It kept the traders honest in high-level, sensitive discussions, and it saw that the wheels of commerce turned smoothly in the city without the need for vast amounts of regulation and scrutiny. Common practice in Lhavit, vanishingly rare elsewhere, conmen, charlatans and swindlers got very short shrift indeed, their lies and elisions clear as day to the experienced aurist.
The grand garden was clearly signposted all over the place, directing people to its verdant wonders to take part in aura hunts, showing off the subtle art of finding things others thought lost or buried – the winding pathways and pools of the gardens were perfect for that. Alses hid a smile at the discreet sign for mind-reading, every aurist's little conceit. True mind-reading was, of course, impossible, but with a fair amount of skill and a few leading questions it was easy enough to give the impression.
Rather than taking any of these paths, though, she headed down the main causeway, making a beeline for the sparring ring where Chiona Dusk would be demonstrating the more advanced powers an aurist wielded – subterfuge, misdirection and sensing of intent to name but a few. Alses' little domain in the Open Day was a raised dais nearby, the enormous mirror she'd crafted to the best of her ability shining brightly in the sunshine, a vast and heavy bureau by its side and stuffed full of glyphed scrolls.
There was a festival atmosphere in the air, even this early, and Alses waited for the bells to ring out slightly nervously, pacing up and down the dais and checking again and again that the mirror was still working. Irrational, yes – it'd work to the end of time – but nonetheless something she felt compelled to do, displacement activity taking her mind off the dwindling chimes until the gates were thrown fully open and the day commenced in earnest.
Location: The Dusk Tower
The twenty-fourth day of Summer, and magic hummed in the air. This was the time that, by common agreement, the Circle of Towers of Lhavit recruited in earnest, vying with one another in extravagant displays of magic and mastery to entice the next generation from Lhavit's youth. With the Djed Storm having dealt a punishing blow to mages and recruitment last year, each and every Tower was doing its utmost to win a record number of novices and bring their numbers back up.
For the Dusk Tower, this was perhaps slightly less urgent than for the other two; the aurists had got off comparatively lightly when the throes of chaotic, fighting djed had poured over the city. A few masters had succumbed to insanity under the onslaught, mostly those who'd been exerting themselves the most, trying to divine and understand the complex surge of the storm as it rolled in, but there had been no fatalities and precious few injuries. Most of House Dusk's family, staff and retainers had come through the ordeal relatively unscathed. Not at all like the others: the Dawn Tower had torn itself apart – literally – from the inside out, reimancers drunk on power rampaging through their own home and destroying everything in their path, intoxicated by the sheer unending energy the storm gave them, and the Twilight Tower had haemorrhaged novices and masters alike.
The Morphers had lost all control over their bodies, their powers goaded into uncontrollable life by the surging free djed of the storm, forcing all but the very greatest of the masters to shift and shift and shift and shift, warping their bodies far beyond what was normal or sustainable. Abominations – the twisted masses of flesh and fur and feathers and other, less-identifiable things that had once been practicing mages of skill and repute – had poured forth from House Twilight, inflicting horrible casualties before a determined rally by the Shinya had put them down, and the Twilight Tower had been much diminished by those losses.
In comparison to the other two Houses, the Dusks had sailed through the storm with barely a scratch, their home intact and most of their staff and servants safe.
Fire-fountains and sparkling ice sculptures bedecked the still-spartan grounds of the Dawn Tower, controlled whirlwinds picking up long streamers of coloured dye and making them stand out brilliantly against the sky, a very visible and flamboyant symbol of masterful control. There was fire of every colour of the rainbow, water continually being raised and sculpted into beautiful shapes, currents of shimmering air dancing in the sky and the very earth itself arranged into pleasing patterns by the House's reimancers.
They were emphasising control and all the manifold benefits that controlled reimancy brought, all its myriad peace-time applications – small wonder, considering what had happened to them during the Djed Storm.
The Twilight Tower, too, they were out in force – they'd a choir of Morphed songbirds serenading visitors to their grounds, a beautiful harmony and descant that chimed sweetly over everything else. Morphers were everywhere, demonstrating the flexibility and power of their discipline to awed and appreciative children and adolescents – they were even giving a lucky few an aerial ride over the city, having transformed into some form of giant bird not dissimilar to the Wind Eagles that occasionally visited.
There was pomp and pageantry galore – the Towers bedecked with banners and the streets strung with bunting, the squares closest to each of the three Towers chock-full of impromptu stalls that had sprung up, selling sweetmeats and refreshments to all and sundry. The Shinya had a heavy presence in the middle of it all, bulking in skyglass armour and ready to respond at the slightest hint of trouble, the horrific toll that overgiven mages en-masse had inflicted on their ranks still burning bright in their collective memories.
As an additional measure, the Catholicon had disgorged large numbers of immaculately turned-out healers – many of them glittering with Rak'keli's mark – who were welcomed into the Towers' grounds with open arms. Their pristine white tents were a reassuring sight to the more cautious mages and citizens alike – they were well-versed in dealing with most types of injury, from common crush wounds as might be sustained in a crowd to the more esoteric aspects of overgiving. They couldn't outright cure overgiving, of course, that was beyond all but the gods themselves, but the healers could at least speed recovery in the more minor cases.
Alses – dressed in her finest instructor's robes as she passed through the banner-bedecked gates of the Dusk Tower – bowed her thanks to a coterie of passing medics as she made her way through to the Tower proper and Mr. Secretary, the overall coordinator of the event.
The poor fellow looked harried, flicking through sheets of papers and barking orders from his command post – orders which even the masters of the Tower were obeying with alacrity, relying on the secretary and his staff to keep everything running on a smooth and steady, even keel. The instructors had come up with the overall vision for the Open Day, and handed over all the nitty-gritty details of its execution to the Tower's legion of staff – small wonder Mr. Secretary commanded respect and obedience.
He still found a smile for Alses, though, glancing up with his monocle flashing in the light and bestowing her with a wide grin. “Hallo, Alses,” he said quickly, attention rapidly switching to another pile of papers. “Good to see you. Opening time in a bell or so. Exciting, isn't it?”
“Chaotic, more like,” she observed with a quiet smile of her own. He laughed, briefly.
“Only to the untrained eye. We're keeping close tabs on everything, never fear. Which reminds me, your students have all turned up and they're waiting in Staging Area Three-” he dragged over a large map of the Tower and its grounds, liberally festooned with flags and markers of seven different colours “-that's the southern courtyard, by the way-” he tapped the map for emphasis “-and you are...” his finger danced across the intricate squiggles and dots of rainbowed ink “...here, with your mirror and your scrolls – we've found you a big bureau, so they've all been stacked neatly in there – next to the sparring ring where Lady Dusk's performing.”
Alses nodded. “Thank you, Mr. Secretary. Can we ask where the Catholicon tent is?”
His finger trailed aimlessly over the paper for a few moments, eyes scanning vigorously from side to side, before he located it with a triumphant stab. “There, see? Not too far from you.” Curiosity tinged his voice for a moment. “Planning on needing their help?” he asked.
“Planning?” Alses echoed. “No. Aware we might need them, if not for ourselves then perhaps for one of the prospectives, yes. Besides, our students will need to know where it is, so they can direct people there, if necessary.”
Her students were one of the subtler methods the Tower was using to keep order; they were skilled enough, now, to at least be able to recognize strong emotion in an aura, even in the middle of a crowd, and that enabled them to intervene before things got out of hand – or to call for Shinya backup should it be sufficiently serious. It rarely was, according to those who had more experience with these Open Days; the Lhavitian character didn't lend itself well to explosive displays of temper, but no chances were being taken. Some might still be bitter about the bloody price exacted by the Djed Storm, after all, and they might use this time when the doors of the Circle of Towers were thrown wide open to take some form of revenge. Students were also useful as guides; they were easily recognizable amongst the crowds and knew the Tower and its grounds very well.
It was oddly gratifying to walk at the centre of a protective gaggle of her students, a don being escorted to her place by zealous novices who peeled off either singly or in pairs as they reached their designated spots. Alma made a beeline for the Seiza, bulking in their flame-red robes, whilst Alses, for her part, pulled a face and quickened her step – the judiciary, even though there was always a call for experienced aurists in that line of work, weren't her favourite branch of the city government, it had to be said, and she thought she'd caught a glimpse of iron-gray hair and a cadaverous face amongst the gaggle of functionaries and guards. Meeting that austere and arrogant judge again was decidedly not on the list of things she wanted to do.
Their procession took them past a tight knot of merchants, who called out cheery greetings, waving pudgily beringed fingers and spreading silken robes in shallow bows as she passed. They were at the Dusk Tower to talk to the older prospectives about the manifold benefits of an aurist's education; contract-work was very lucrative, both for aurists and merchants alike. It kept the traders honest in high-level, sensitive discussions, and it saw that the wheels of commerce turned smoothly in the city without the need for vast amounts of regulation and scrutiny. Common practice in Lhavit, vanishingly rare elsewhere, conmen, charlatans and swindlers got very short shrift indeed, their lies and elisions clear as day to the experienced aurist.
The grand garden was clearly signposted all over the place, directing people to its verdant wonders to take part in aura hunts, showing off the subtle art of finding things others thought lost or buried – the winding pathways and pools of the gardens were perfect for that. Alses hid a smile at the discreet sign for mind-reading, every aurist's little conceit. True mind-reading was, of course, impossible, but with a fair amount of skill and a few leading questions it was easy enough to give the impression.
Rather than taking any of these paths, though, she headed down the main causeway, making a beeline for the sparring ring where Chiona Dusk would be demonstrating the more advanced powers an aurist wielded – subterfuge, misdirection and sensing of intent to name but a few. Alses' little domain in the Open Day was a raised dais nearby, the enormous mirror she'd crafted to the best of her ability shining brightly in the sunshine, a vast and heavy bureau by its side and stuffed full of glyphed scrolls.
There was a festival atmosphere in the air, even this early, and Alses waited for the bells to ring out slightly nervously, pacing up and down the dais and checking again and again that the mirror was still working. Irrational, yes – it'd work to the end of time – but nonetheless something she felt compelled to do, displacement activity taking her mind off the dwindling chimes until the gates were thrown fully open and the day commenced in earnest.