Spring, Day 48, 514AV
"He stood there in the door way, covered in the blood and flesh of those he'd killed, and I thought to myself, this is it. This is how I die. In some shyke hole of a mobster lair by a murdering savage more beast than man. But then...he spared me. Stopped mid hack because of what he saw."
He turned and lifted his shirt to show them. It was a faded mark of ruddy, reddish hue on his lower back, easily mistaken for a peculiar birthmark. Smooth to the touch and unrecognizable in form except to those who didn't know exactly what to look for. Nov and those closest to him had always thought it looked like an oddly shaped hand with wriggling fingers. Something for the runts to make up stories about and whores to feign interest over. Nothing more, nothing less, and certainly nothing special.
Oh, how wrong they had all been.
"I'd given up figuring out my past, and then this happens," Noven continued, voice hushed in the uncertainty of it all. "The Myrian changed everything. He said it was ink, not a birth mark, and asked if I was Raging Fires, whatever that is. Which meant someone put it there for a reason. Only I can't...I can't remember any of it, except maybe the pain, and when I try..."
Closing his eyes for a tick, the cook let the hem of his shirt drop and turned back around. "...I get...headaches. Like I'm not supposed to be thinking about these things. Crazy talk, I know, but I don't know how else to explain it. I do see flames sometimes, though. Big, roaring fires that have nothing to do with the night Old Calyn died. And I can hear a woman's voice if I ignore the pain long enough, too. A woman I swear I know, or used to know, but I just can't remember..."
Noven stared at his companions then, struggling to avoid delving into his murky memories again and torn between gratitude and anxiety that the two people he'd trusted enough to seek help from were witnessing such lost, hapless babbling. But even more so because he was afraid. Very afraid. Afraid of what he might find, and of dying before he uncovered the whole truth.
Most of all, he feared where this was leading him. Because for the first time in a long time, he had not one, but two things other than vengeance to live for.
--Later that day--
Nov stood there, slack-jawed, before row after row of book shelves that seemed to go on forever with no end in sight. His first thought was that there were more books in here than people he'd met in his entire life, so vast was the collection that it defied all expectation and imagination.
"So this is a library," was all the merc said.
After that, it was a fairly straightforward process of locating certain books with the help of some junior assistants, then a desk upon which to stack their finds, and finally a plonking of bottoms into seats as the research began. He would have liked to claim that the actual research bit went just as smoothly, only it was a mere matter of chimes before Noven started to feel truly out of his element.
It was quiet. Absurdly quiet. What few sounds that did occur were muffled by thousands of tomes, and the reverent air of academia served only to deepen the feeling that they'd somehow walked into an ancient forest of paper, leather, and wood. Used to the constant din of the Berth, the surliest of the three companions who had visited Zeltiva's prestigious library that day found his ears ringing from so much silence. His mind buzzed with agitation. His left knee jounced in visible unrest. And his troubled eyes scanned the same sentence over and over again, comprehending nothing.
Nov let the book fall over his stomach and raised a frustrated palm to his eyes. "This isn't working," he muttered, lifting the book to place it face down on the table. "I read too slow, and I barely understand a petching thing it's saying."
The Sunberthian fugitive was not an educated man. That he could read and write at all was something of a minor miracle--and certainly nothing that the city he'd been raised in had engendered. Both Calyn and Nona had been surprised by his literacy. An uncommon skill for an orphan to have, to be sure, but it was clear from the very beginning that the scrappy boy who had so mysteriously appeared one dark, uneventful night had no penchant for academia. He could grow deaf to the world if he was lent a good story, or lose himself in the task of taking apart and putting things back together. He was good at that, once upon a time.
But the moment he found something of beauty, of any worth at all, it would get destroyed. Most of the time by the other children. Others by ill luck or the ill bred of the slums. And when that happened, there was only one way Noven knew how to respond: he fought. Fire with fire, blood for blood.
Such instincts didn't exactly make for a model student.
Even so, the man could be rational when he needed to be. There had to be a better system. A more efficient way of doing this. Sitting still and trying to process the dry, long winded descriptions of this location and that religion was obviously not his strong suit. But carrying dozens of pounds' worth of books one small mountain at a time was. Or, at least, more so than this mind numbing task of skimming chapter after chapter for relevant information.
Nov looked at his companions, one fair and one dark like him. It was still hard to grasp the possibility that he and Kaie shared the same heritage, even though their similar coloring and attitude suggested it likely enough. "Maybe I should go find more books and bring them back while you two do the searching."
There were a good number of tomes stacked and strewn across their table, but the shelves contained so many more to go through. Hundreds upon thousands, if looks were anything to go by. With weary but unwavering determination, Nov stood from his chair and picked up a few books they'd already rifled through and deemed useless. The trio didn't have much to go on, other than Myrian culture in general and any relevance it had to tattoos or some clan called the Raging Fires. It was going to be a long and arduous search. Hence, Matthew's erudite presence and Kaie's direct involvement. He couldn't think of any two people better for the job, except maybe Bitzer, who was hopefully preoccupied with a different sort of investigation altogether.
"Any other stuff you need me to find while I'm out there?"
Course, he had an agenda of his own, separate from this research, that he was itching to fulfill. But he would need to find one of the assistants to help him and he didn't want to burden his companions further.
They were going to need all the energy and focus they could get.