Thirty-seventh day of Summer, 513 A.V.
Knowledge was truly a wonderful thing, be it in the delicate hands of a Symenestra or the the slightly more clumsy ones of a human. It mattered not to knowledge who spoke its being, who embraced it with gentle caress, or who besmirched its very name. To knowledge, all things were on an equal footing, no different than any other. Thus, what better way to understand that which he did not than through the pursuit of such an indifferent beast? It wasn't the most easy of journeys, but so far it had been not only enlightening but enjoyable as well.
Take, for example, the library. The residents of Zeltiva had named the magnificent depository of bound and filed knowledge after a long deceased traveler, a wise decision in Duvalos' opinion. What better why to increase one's stores of knowledge than to travel the world and experience all there was in both life and death? Yes, the idea was pleasing. The name? Not quite so much.
However, the name of the structure aside, there was certainly no arguing that the place held a magnificent grandeur, whispering to those that would listen of untold riches stored within the yellowed pages of a musty tome or forgotten ledger. It was that allure that had drawn the Symnestra to the library in the first place, but once inside he was rather overwhelmed by the sheer volume of what lay before him. He was overwhelmed, a feeling he was becoming quite familiar with. Unsure of where to begin, Duvalos crept his way between the many shelves too timid to lift a single thing and destroy the neatly arranged rows.
His golden eyes hungrily scanned the spines that happened to have writing upon them, though many had blank or embellished bindings void of any kind of legible markings. He had been unprepared and now suffered for it. His eyes flicked from one book to the next as his feet landed upon the floor with a startlingly loud noise for how careful he was being. At that particular moment, there were only several people within the building, each spaced far enough to create the illusion of solitude. At least, it seemed that way until Duvalos came across a middle-aged woman with book in hand moving in his direction.
Ordinarily, he would have let her pass in peace. After all, it was a library and socialization wasn't on the tip of everyone's mind. Yet, he could not help himself but to catch her attention with a tight lipped smile and a gentle request for some assistance. "My apologies if I am interrupting something, but I-" He paused, trying to gather what it was he wanted to ask now that he'd managed to grab her attention. "But I'm rather lost as to what I should read first."