Tsaba copied out rows of knitting patterns. She copied out rows of barrier runes. She sought a way to marry them.
The thing about knitting was that each stitch had the sides pulled into the same shape by neighbouring stitches. If stitches couldn't be pulled into the same interlocking pattern, they weren't used together. Tsaba had tried to make the 'skeletons' the cores, of each rune interlock, but each was different; what she needed to do was to find a common interlocking pattern within them, an make that the core.
So... pretty much exactly how she'd learned to draw a focus glyph, except instead of distilling a core from the glyphs of others, she was doing it from her own.
Glyphing could be extremely frustrating. It was like learning a language, except without being given an alphabet or any sort of context; it was like being handed a large book in a tongue and hand you didn't know and being told, "This is a book about elephants. Not copy it until you understand it." The Valterran had destroyed so much, had reduced what should be a creative art to an imitative one. It had left them with a handful of sigils and wizardly instinct, and from there, they had to try to recreate the art. If only she knew more...
But...
She did know more, didn't she? She'd painted other sigils, fresh sigils, on her skin mere days ago; she'd done it on instinct, as she had a hundred times before. Tsaba picked up her brush and quickly drew the runes from her body transfer ritual along the bottom of the page. Left hand, right hand, left foot, right foot, chest, forehead, tongue. They came easily, as they always did. She laid them out in approximate relation to each other as they were on a body, each stroke familiar and right. The long vertical line with the intersecting smaller X forming the core of each. The two circles laid over the chest rune, one smaller than and sitting inside the other, like a double wall where the inner was pierced by the lines of the X, and the outer only by the vertical line. The equilateral triangles laid over the wrist runes. The extra lines on the tongue, turning the X into a many-pointed star; the same thing on the forehead with an added horizontal line, making it look like a compass symbol. The little half-moons on the feet.
She'd never really noticed the vertical-line-X combination forming the center of each rune before. Well, of course she'd noticed it; she just hadn't found it noteworthy or important. But laid out as the runes were... her eyes flicked to her pile of notes, to an example focus. And she could see what was wrong with it.
She picked up her brush and etched out another focus glyph, as if she were writing a rune on a body. She started with the core lines. They were present in her focus normally, but a little uneven, a little off, because of her normal stroke order. Around them, she added the rest of the skeleton, and then the peripherals.
Yes. That was more... well, that was definitely Tsaba's 'handwriting'.
She traced a finger down the vertical line in her chest rune, then along each stroke of the X. Under her breath, almost without realising, she murmured, "Djed." She similarly outlined the two circles. "Djas."
The djed lines, the backbone, didn't show up much in her barrier runes. Not more than you would expect from mere coincidence. That made sense. They were the heart of nothing; they were a wall. 'Daeq', they should read. Perhaps 'Korad' or 'Randjaq'. Perhaps a complex compilation of the intent of all three. If was not something that she had the information to decode. But it was important, she realised, to focus less on the core of an individual unit, and more on its effect on the whole. Like knitted stitches pulling each other into place.
Tsaba bent back over her parchment, and kept writing. |
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