Winter 35, 507 A.V.
Iredeth sat on the floor, crossed legged, her skirt forming a canopy between her knees. She stared at a point in the air before her with half-lidded eyes. She was performing what she called her after-magic routine. She had just animated a new doll, which lay a few paces away from her. She had put a lot of work into that one, trying to infuse it with as much personality as she could. It wasn’t exactly a failure, but it wasn’t a success either. All the doll could do was move when commanded to do so. It had no free will, no thoughts, no feelings… Of course, Sirella had warned her student that it would take much more skill than she currently had to fully animate an object, but naturally, Iredeth had tried to do so nonetheless. Now, she was meditating to regain her strength and refocus her mind. Her after-magic routine.
She let her mind wander through that single point of air, infusing it with great importance, and weaving her entire concentration around it. She focused on her breathing, inhaling and exhaling on a count of five. The air that passed through her nostrils was pure, with a distinct moist quality to it. With every breath I take, I take life. With every breath I expel, I release life. She let her thoughts flow along with her breathing, coming and going as they pleased. She retained no one thought for longer than it would naturally stay in her mind. One day, my dolls will breathe just as I breathe and they will understand what it means to breath. If only every person could understand what a blessing it is to inhale and exhale life through their lungs. She shifted her hands subtly, letting them drop from her knees to the cold, stone floor. She felt the chill of the granite and tried to let it seep into her hands, to gather the cold and hold it to her heart.
If only they knew what it means to touch and feel and to understand what they touch. My dolls do not know it, but they do not have the means to know. The people have the means, but they still do not know. She pressed her palms against the floor, moving her hands further and further forward, until she leaned across her crossed legs, her body almost horizontal to the floor. She stayed in this position for a few chimes, and then stretched lazily, arching her back and bringing her arms behind her neck. She lowered her head as far back as it would go. With the veins standing out through the pale skin of her neck, it looked as if her neck would snap at any moment. Not pale enough. Not pale enough to be a real Symenestra. She chased the bitter thought away, suppressing it before it ruined her concentration. Her body formed an elegant backward arc – a bird on the cusp of flight.
Iredeth sat on the floor, crossed legged, her skirt forming a canopy between her knees. She stared at a point in the air before her with half-lidded eyes. She was performing what she called her after-magic routine. She had just animated a new doll, which lay a few paces away from her. She had put a lot of work into that one, trying to infuse it with as much personality as she could. It wasn’t exactly a failure, but it wasn’t a success either. All the doll could do was move when commanded to do so. It had no free will, no thoughts, no feelings… Of course, Sirella had warned her student that it would take much more skill than she currently had to fully animate an object, but naturally, Iredeth had tried to do so nonetheless. Now, she was meditating to regain her strength and refocus her mind. Her after-magic routine.
She let her mind wander through that single point of air, infusing it with great importance, and weaving her entire concentration around it. She focused on her breathing, inhaling and exhaling on a count of five. The air that passed through her nostrils was pure, with a distinct moist quality to it. With every breath I take, I take life. With every breath I expel, I release life. She let her thoughts flow along with her breathing, coming and going as they pleased. She retained no one thought for longer than it would naturally stay in her mind. One day, my dolls will breathe just as I breathe and they will understand what it means to breath. If only every person could understand what a blessing it is to inhale and exhale life through their lungs. She shifted her hands subtly, letting them drop from her knees to the cold, stone floor. She felt the chill of the granite and tried to let it seep into her hands, to gather the cold and hold it to her heart.
If only they knew what it means to touch and feel and to understand what they touch. My dolls do not know it, but they do not have the means to know. The people have the means, but they still do not know. She pressed her palms against the floor, moving her hands further and further forward, until she leaned across her crossed legs, her body almost horizontal to the floor. She stayed in this position for a few chimes, and then stretched lazily, arching her back and bringing her arms behind her neck. She lowered her head as far back as it would go. With the veins standing out through the pale skin of her neck, it looked as if her neck would snap at any moment. Not pale enough. Not pale enough to be a real Symenestra. She chased the bitter thought away, suppressing it before it ruined her concentration. Her body formed an elegant backward arc – a bird on the cusp of flight.