Her task complete, Tsaba was about to leave, but somehow she didn't feel comfortable leaving the boistrous trio alone. If they broke something, she'd never forgive herself.
Her eyes raked quickly up and down each of them, no more than a glance, but enough to tell her what she needed to know. The flier was relatively harmless now that she was dry, and her conscientiousness in that matter spoke well for her. The man on the floor... well, lying on the floor was a bit weird, but it was hardly a crime. She herself wasn't exactly a role model for standard acceptable behaviour, if the occasional bemused glances from her various acquaintances were anything to go by. He was armed, though; that was suspicious. Although at the moment, with the Denvali activity, it was probably sensible. Her eyes lingered on his hands. Grimy hands weren't good for books. His left hand was big and calloused, and not with writing callouses either. The hand of a worker rather than a scribe. Again, no crime in that. Plenty of labourers liked to read. She hoped he wasn't the type to turn down the corners of pages to mark his place. But the right... Tsaba had never seen flesh quite that colour before. Weird. Possibly a magical effect? An illness?
Tsaba became aware that she was staring, and turned her attention instead to the third person, the shouter. He looked like a normal human to Tsaba's untrained eye, and loud as he might be, he wasn't physically damaging anything. Yet. Tsaba didn't have the authority to throw people out of the library, but she was pretty sure that if she asked them to leave, nobody would challenge her on it. She decided not to leave them just yet, not until she was sure that they wouldn't be trouble.
She slipped her right hand into the left sleeve of her dress and pressed her thumb into the focus glyph there, sending a thread of djed through the glyph and up into her eyes. The glyph heated momentarily and she knew that if she looked, it would be a now-indistinguishable smear -- but she kept it covered. Small dead children with arcane symbols on themselves tended to cause suspicion. Djed settled in her sight, she blinked, and auras began to jump out at her.
Tsaba focused on the man from the floor, trying to look like she was casually observing the scene instead of studying him. Layers or aura sharpened in her mind's eye, and she carefully teased and filtered out his heart rate (normal), temperature (normal), looking for anything unusual.
She wanted to know just what was wrong with his arm.
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