61st Day of Spring
514 AV
514 AV
The door clicked shut behind him with a distinct snap. For the first time since he arrived, Elias was alone. Undoubtedly nervous, he surveyed the room, taking in the lab he had been assigned to with a trained eye for particular details. Shelves and cabinets of old magical tomes and arcane texts lined the far walls, no doubt for easy reference to those pesky details that proved too illusive for the pondering mind alone. A number of basins along with a trough of water sat nearby, its contents shimmering with the infused power of the glyphs that covered each one. They were meant for dousing the item, as Elias already knew, but he suspected the trough was for emergencies given its almost ridiculous size. Runaway magic however, was no laughing matter, and despite his first reaction upon seeing the thing he eventually found himself grateful for it. Truth be told, he was grateful for any and all of it. The tongs, the mirrors and scopes, the hammers and books. Just being back in a lab like this, basic as it was, so filled him with excitement and hysterical happiness he could barely stop himself from bursting out into dance. He loved to magecraft, and finally, he was being given a chance to do it again.
The most interesting and most important item, of course, was waiting for him on the pedestal at the center of the room. The patient, the blank canvas, whatever you wanted to call it, to Elias, it was more than just a straight edged dagger. By the time he was done with it, it would be a work of art. He took a step closer, inspecting the marble pedestal it was placed upon with a scrutiny he had adopted from the professors back in Zeltiva. He was satisfied with the blackened glyph work etched into the white stone, noting how it traversed more than just the flat slab the weapon lay upon, but also snaked all the way down to the base as well. Pedestals were a common sight in most labs, but they weren't particularly necessary in the least bit. Convenient, yes, but they were simply a glyphed work station for the magecrafter to toil away upon, meant for those who weren't as inclined as a poorer mage was to getting on their hands and knees every time they needed to create something. With some chalk and a little bit of elbow grease, Elias could whip up a drawing on the floor that could very literally accomplish the same thing, but if he said he wasn't glad he didn't have to, it would have been a lie.
He refrained from touching the simple weapon and moved past it, careful not to disturb anything else in even the slightest. He inspected the hammers next, thrilled to see there was more than just one set, and that each were comprised of half a dozen different metals each. He had one himself, it had been something he had simply refused to leave Zeltiva without, even despite the grim undertaking that bogged down his thoughts upon his leaving the port city. He turned from the hammers with a smile, taking just a moment to breath deep of his new lab. The air of anticipation was sweet, and he found himself barely able to contain his eagerness anymore.
Lazarin was meant to be here with him, but that was about a bell or two from now. Elias had arrived much earlier, too animated by the prospect of crafting again to even sleep properly the night before. The man may have despised him and thought him nothing better than a traitor, but even he had seen the folly in simply discarding Elias when instead he could have used him. That was why he was here, he wanted to impress his professor before they even began. Perhaps then the two could become more cordial, and in turn, their academic relationship could bestow even more upon Elias than the occasional scowl he was getting now. The young mage knew more than a little about this world magic, and if he was meant to learn even more from this man, he was determined to win him over. If nothing else, at least he could work off some of this excitement while he waited.
Moving over to the cabinets, the novice found himself a jar of inscribing paint and a few brushes to go along with it. In the next chime he was on his hands and knees, wielding the two as fiercely as a gladiator in the pit wielded sword and shield. Thick, powerful strokes signified the barrier meant to keep out the ambient djed. Most mages preferred to work in a sterile environment, completely barren and void of the natural magical energy that permeated the very air. In the beginning Elias had been much the same, but as his studies advanced and his understanding of what he was doing began to excel beyond simple comprehension, he quickly realized while a charged arena was dangerous, a contained one was superior. Instead of dismantling and dissipating the djed, it was much better to have that whirling energy directed straight into his work, guided to his will to better enhance the djed of the item and whatever else was required.
It felt good doing something he knew, something he understood and could control. There would be much more to complete before he was anywhere near ready, but no matter how much his aching knees complained, the novice wizard was just too excited to stop.