e
Midwinter found Alses – or Sela, as she preferred to be when chained down to a Konti form – in the dreaming hallways of the Bharani Library. The place was grand and beautiful by day, yes, but at night it had a special grandeur all of its own – both inside and out.
On the outside, some enterprising architect had made the most of the monumental Alahea-Suva fusion architecture that the celestial city sported as its own style. Most prominently, nestling everywhere amongst the collections of columns, the dramatic friezes and frescoes and sudden sheer drops into the lower heights, around the snarling faces and snatching claws of gargoyles and grotesques there were guttering oil lamps scattered across the grandly frowning façade, the pale stonework thrown into harsh relief by the leaping flames, high relief and deep-graven shadow.
Entrances should be made by firelight.
The doors were themselves massive, making staff and supplicants alike insignificant, but the intricately-cast bronzework was so finely weighted on its gargantuan hinges that they swung open and shut with barely a whisper, preserving the golden silence of the precious, precious library. Lit by the softly changeable light of skyglass glowglobes – the accumulated knowledge was far too great and far too valuable to risk a flame, even behind a double-glass cover – its whole character changed.
Even the dust motes, usually flaring gold in Syna’s forgiving light lancing in through the many windows, changed – bright silver, now, reflecting Leth’s pale imitation, brilliant points of light in the blue-washed hues of the night library.
With her copy of The Reader’s Guide to the Library in one hand – to interpret the unusual navigation system that had evolved over the centuries since Bharani’s founding – Alses ghosted under the wrought-iron arch between the Seekers’ desks, nodding a greeting to the poor unfortunates on duty before briskly making her way to Centre Point, the heart of the library and so, for Alses, the best place to plan directions to and from.
The shimmering trail of glyphs set into the floor led her unerringly there, the echo of her footfalls drunk into silence by the thick pile of the carpets and the listening shelves. At the centre of a sort of atrium that pierced all floors of the Library, Centre Point and its towering, intricate clock was like the spindle of a spinning wheel – everything rotated around it, everything led to it.
And thus, as a consequence, everything led away from it, too.
Alses leafed quickly through the Reader’s Guide, index finger running down the dense text and the occasional clarifying diagram, hunting for the section that would further her goals today. She was after anything that could shed more light on teaching, that arcane process she found herself engaged in, more often than not stumbling around in the dark without any real guidance. It was only by dint of her own prodigious skill in auristics that she’d managed to keep her lessons on-track so far, and without anyone being the wiser as to her own state of confusion.
The solution had come to her embarrassingly slowly. Lhavit was, after all, a city of instructors and teachers in all sorts of disciplines, from magical to the mundane, and so someone, somewhere, had surely penned some sort of work on their techniques, tips and tricks for dealing with students and conveying information.
Thus, Bharani Library, the city’s repository for knowledge, and her current quest, following the obscure and esoteric marks of the glyphs – forged in metal that glowed golden in the day and hard silver at night – through the miles of shelving, round the great pillars that held up the weight of the entire edifice, up the sweeping staircases and then finally down and along the aisles to her destination.
Well, hopefully her destination, anyway. It was at the focal point of one of the many light-wells peppering the library, a circular room three stories tall, topped with a gleaming glass dome and lined with curving shelves and an intricate telescoping stepladder system Alses had never really dared to use. Some of the gearing looked rather vicious.
Alone in that part of the library, Alses craned her neck to look at the towering ranks of books and the occasional cold glimmer of an artifact on the higher shelves. Her fingers trailed absently over the elegantly-bound volumes on the lower shelves whilst she scanned the upper reaches for the titles she wanted, the gilt flashing in the light.
No.
No, it was no good – she’d have to use the telescoping contraption to stand any chance of getting what she wanted.
Approaching the sleeping beast of brass and iron, all cogs and knurled wheels and strange pedals, Alses examined it cautiously. There, at least, there was a stroke of luck – some kindly soul had engraved – onto a mounted plaque there for the purpose – the operating instructions, in a fine and clear hand.
One little worry down, several million more to go. Gingerly, Alses seated herself in the contraption, recalling the instructions.
‘Disengage brake (B),’ she thought once comfortable – or as comfortable as it was possible to get, anyway – casting around for the knurled lever marked with an ornate ‘B’. She found it quickly, prominently marked just like the instructions said, and obediently pulled it when pushing seemed to do nothing. There was a rather anticlimactic clunk noise, and nothing else appeared to change.
‘Pedal to the desired position,’ That was the next instruction, and for all its weight the telescoping ladder moved smoothly and silently on incised rails, effortlessly following the curve of the shelves.
Re-engage brake, Alses remembered that one and how to do it, pushing the B-emblazoned lever forward and down and feeling as much as hearing the clunk of the brakes slotting into place under the machine.
‘Pull gear lever (G) to change to vertical motion,’ was the next – and rather enigmatic – command, but the helpful instructions hadn’t led her wrong thus far and the shelf set she needed gleamed directly overhead, maddeningly out of reach – for now.
There were rather more serious noises this time; the clanking and clunking of metal and the gleaming shift of various parts of it moving in a disquieting mechanical way, but they quickly settled. As Alses cautiously began to pedal once more, she saw what had happened – the mechanisms had shifted so the force from her pedalling was directed upwards, making the platform telescope skywards.
Well.
That should make things easier.
e
Timestamp: 50th Day of Winter, 513 A.V.
Location: The Bharani Library
Location: The Bharani Library
Midwinter found Alses – or Sela, as she preferred to be when chained down to a Konti form – in the dreaming hallways of the Bharani Library. The place was grand and beautiful by day, yes, but at night it had a special grandeur all of its own – both inside and out.
On the outside, some enterprising architect had made the most of the monumental Alahea-Suva fusion architecture that the celestial city sported as its own style. Most prominently, nestling everywhere amongst the collections of columns, the dramatic friezes and frescoes and sudden sheer drops into the lower heights, around the snarling faces and snatching claws of gargoyles and grotesques there were guttering oil lamps scattered across the grandly frowning façade, the pale stonework thrown into harsh relief by the leaping flames, high relief and deep-graven shadow.
Entrances should be made by firelight.
The doors were themselves massive, making staff and supplicants alike insignificant, but the intricately-cast bronzework was so finely weighted on its gargantuan hinges that they swung open and shut with barely a whisper, preserving the golden silence of the precious, precious library. Lit by the softly changeable light of skyglass glowglobes – the accumulated knowledge was far too great and far too valuable to risk a flame, even behind a double-glass cover – its whole character changed.
Even the dust motes, usually flaring gold in Syna’s forgiving light lancing in through the many windows, changed – bright silver, now, reflecting Leth’s pale imitation, brilliant points of light in the blue-washed hues of the night library.
With her copy of The Reader’s Guide to the Library in one hand – to interpret the unusual navigation system that had evolved over the centuries since Bharani’s founding – Alses ghosted under the wrought-iron arch between the Seekers’ desks, nodding a greeting to the poor unfortunates on duty before briskly making her way to Centre Point, the heart of the library and so, for Alses, the best place to plan directions to and from.
The shimmering trail of glyphs set into the floor led her unerringly there, the echo of her footfalls drunk into silence by the thick pile of the carpets and the listening shelves. At the centre of a sort of atrium that pierced all floors of the Library, Centre Point and its towering, intricate clock was like the spindle of a spinning wheel – everything rotated around it, everything led to it.
And thus, as a consequence, everything led away from it, too.
Alses leafed quickly through the Reader’s Guide, index finger running down the dense text and the occasional clarifying diagram, hunting for the section that would further her goals today. She was after anything that could shed more light on teaching, that arcane process she found herself engaged in, more often than not stumbling around in the dark without any real guidance. It was only by dint of her own prodigious skill in auristics that she’d managed to keep her lessons on-track so far, and without anyone being the wiser as to her own state of confusion.
The solution had come to her embarrassingly slowly. Lhavit was, after all, a city of instructors and teachers in all sorts of disciplines, from magical to the mundane, and so someone, somewhere, had surely penned some sort of work on their techniques, tips and tricks for dealing with students and conveying information.
Thus, Bharani Library, the city’s repository for knowledge, and her current quest, following the obscure and esoteric marks of the glyphs – forged in metal that glowed golden in the day and hard silver at night – through the miles of shelving, round the great pillars that held up the weight of the entire edifice, up the sweeping staircases and then finally down and along the aisles to her destination.
Well, hopefully her destination, anyway. It was at the focal point of one of the many light-wells peppering the library, a circular room three stories tall, topped with a gleaming glass dome and lined with curving shelves and an intricate telescoping stepladder system Alses had never really dared to use. Some of the gearing looked rather vicious.
Alone in that part of the library, Alses craned her neck to look at the towering ranks of books and the occasional cold glimmer of an artifact on the higher shelves. Her fingers trailed absently over the elegantly-bound volumes on the lower shelves whilst she scanned the upper reaches for the titles she wanted, the gilt flashing in the light.
No.
No, it was no good – she’d have to use the telescoping contraption to stand any chance of getting what she wanted.
Approaching the sleeping beast of brass and iron, all cogs and knurled wheels and strange pedals, Alses examined it cautiously. There, at least, there was a stroke of luck – some kindly soul had engraved – onto a mounted plaque there for the purpose – the operating instructions, in a fine and clear hand.
One little worry down, several million more to go. Gingerly, Alses seated herself in the contraption, recalling the instructions.
‘Disengage brake (B),’ she thought once comfortable – or as comfortable as it was possible to get, anyway – casting around for the knurled lever marked with an ornate ‘B’. She found it quickly, prominently marked just like the instructions said, and obediently pulled it when pushing seemed to do nothing. There was a rather anticlimactic clunk noise, and nothing else appeared to change.
‘Pedal to the desired position,’ That was the next instruction, and for all its weight the telescoping ladder moved smoothly and silently on incised rails, effortlessly following the curve of the shelves.
Re-engage brake, Alses remembered that one and how to do it, pushing the B-emblazoned lever forward and down and feeling as much as hearing the clunk of the brakes slotting into place under the machine.
‘Pull gear lever (G) to change to vertical motion,’ was the next – and rather enigmatic – command, but the helpful instructions hadn’t led her wrong thus far and the shelf set she needed gleamed directly overhead, maddeningly out of reach – for now.
There were rather more serious noises this time; the clanking and clunking of metal and the gleaming shift of various parts of it moving in a disquieting mechanical way, but they quickly settled. As Alses cautiously began to pedal once more, she saw what had happened – the mechanisms had shifted so the force from her pedalling was directed upwards, making the platform telescope skywards.
Well.
That should make things easier.
e