๐น๐๐๐๐๐ผ ๐๐โ๐ (
redwhaling) wrote in
usir2019-04-05 09:21 pm
Entry tags:
this is an illegal library
Character(s): Billie & Daud
Status: Closed
Location(s): Abandoned House, City of the Free Peoples
Date(s) Early April
About: Billie has an odd taste in reading material.
Warnings: Discussion of dead things, necromancy probably.
"Red, that isn't food," Billie says quietly, tiredly, as she nudges the dragon away from the cover of one of four books sitting on the table next to her. The hatchling has been puttering around the tabletop, nosing what she's brought home with her, making sure it isn't actually food before sprawling out by her arm and stretching wings out with a curious chirp.
So far, having the damn thing is turning out to be like having a kitten around. That's something she can tolerate, seeing how Red isn't actually a cat at all and, speaking from the perspective of a cat, that causes less stereotypical irritation. Prodding at the dragon isn't what she's up to, though.
What she's actually down here for, at a ridiculously early hour of the morning, is paging through one of the books in particular. The first three are professionally bound and well-cared for but the fourth one, in front of her? Handmade, hand-written, and clearly something worth losing sleep over at this hour.
Status: Closed
Location(s): Abandoned House, City of the Free Peoples
Date(s) Early April
About: Billie has an odd taste in reading material.
Warnings: Discussion of dead things, necromancy probably.
"Red, that isn't food," Billie says quietly, tiredly, as she nudges the dragon away from the cover of one of four books sitting on the table next to her. The hatchling has been puttering around the tabletop, nosing what she's brought home with her, making sure it isn't actually food before sprawling out by her arm and stretching wings out with a curious chirp.
So far, having the damn thing is turning out to be like having a kitten around. That's something she can tolerate, seeing how Red isn't actually a cat at all and, speaking from the perspective of a cat, that causes less stereotypical irritation. Prodding at the dragon isn't what she's up to, though.
What she's actually down here for, at a ridiculously early hour of the morning, is paging through one of the books in particular. The first three are professionally bound and well-cared for but the fourth one, in front of her? Handmade, hand-written, and clearly something worth losing sleep over at this hour.

no subject
"I think it only rated to be next to it based on how dangerously dull it is in comparison," she says, similarly in jest. Though with that book in mind, she'll reach over to pick it up while Daud goes through the handwritten journal. There are rituals like the one she'd mentioned but that's only scratching the surface of what's written there; dragons and necromancy, excerpts about dragon magic, dragon souls, what bits and pieces of dead dragons are capable of, detailed documentation of dragonborn, dragon blood, and how it all ties back to the massive beasts themselves.
Whereas Strange's book? She cracks it open, finding the page she'd left off on. It's mostly about what dragons are known for eating. That actually makes it a lot more useful to her right now, considering the little red dragonet who's trailed off in trying to mimic Daud and settled back down to watch the two.
"Weird that this book is as illegal as that one," is Billie's initial two cents on that before she turns back around to look at him. "Well, at least that one isn't up for grabs anymore, but I have no idea if it's copied down from some other source or someone's own personal research."
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"And I don't suppose whoever wrote this conveniently left a name or cited sources," he comments, turning it over in his hand to check the front page, just in case. "It's obvious at least a few other people know about this. Using dragon parts as magical components, though ... that would have been heresy even in the old days, wouldn't it."
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"Dragon parts like scales..."
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"You said you found scales in the Courier, didn't you?" He asks, rifling through the pages more actively now, absently skimming for information on dragon parts. Logic would dictate something about scales might also be found with anything to do with claws or horns, but it's a journal, not a book, so that might be asking much. It wasn't something he'd pressed her on, given his already evident unhappiness about the dragon everything, but now's as good a time as any to find out what it could be. That being said...
"If that's the case, then perhaps it means the couriers are from the dragons after all. Or associated with them." And then he looks up at her, briefly. "Is how you've gained an affinity for enchanting your sword?"
Just because he didn't bring it up the first time it came up doesn't mean he didn't notice, Billie.
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"Not only that," she admits in a rather lackluster reveal. This entire conversation on top of a long night is drawing her attention to how, really, she should have gotten sleep at some point. That doesn't stop her from getting up and going to dig around through her own stuff โ what little there is โ until she finds where she's hidden the scale itself away.
That, she brings back to the table. In her absence, Red has taken over Strange's book, though he clearly has no idea what he's meant to do with it. Flop across it and look at the squiggles on the pages, he supposes, though he does look up to trill at Billie when she returns. That earns him an idly brush of fingers over feathery spines on his head and neck, even if she knows she shouldn't be encouraging him to make noise whenever she approaches.
That'll just be something to work on later.
For now, she's reclaiming her seat and putting the scale on the table. It's black, the alchemical symbol for fire etched into it. Some magic may linger on it, residual, faint, but whatever spell had been placed on it is long gone yet eerily similar to what Billie had done to her sword back during the full moon.
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"Hm," is all he says, in typical Daud fashion. She only brought the one over, which makes him wonder... "And you're not the only one who got one of these?"
He asks mostly like he's confirming a fact.
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Because he sure did tell her a lot of additional details beyond just the scale he ended up with.
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She waves towards all the books. The other two on the table are much more mainstream, one about dark magic and monsters and another about empathic spells.
"In the first place."
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"Be careful what you let him see. He may not be inspired to imitate that ritual, but there's enough in here that I'd be worried what he might try to do with the dragon's corpses, given the chance."
He pauses, looking at her shrewdly.
"What do you plan to do, if you find out where they're from?"
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"But I'll keep an eye on him."
Hard not to when she's stuck working with him even without this dragon scale mess. That, what her plan is if she does find them? That's a very good question. She considers it for a moment. Having dragon magic โ or whatever it might turn out to be โ thrust upon her unexpectedly has been an unwanted, if useful, happening thus far.
Red is a fate she chose, however haphazardly that may have been. This? Different. A little off-putting.
"That's going to depend on the who and the where. If Strange is right and it is the dragons, that's out of my league." Daud's, too. There's no better assassin but taking down what's practically a god-tier dragon isn't going to happen. "If it's something a little more our size yanking our chains, I may see about tracking them down in person."
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Of course, that belligerent obstinacy is something she comes by naturally, not something he taught.
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"And? That's it?"
That slips out in a very flat tone of voice. If he's looking for belligerent obstinacy, he's getting it.
All that aside, he does finally come across a few pages based around usage of dragon scales. The one that is most likely to catch his eye is titled "Breath of Idan". The spell is a complicated one requiring an extensive list of materials, a few of which seem near impossible to collect: basilisk venom, elemental tears, phoenix ash, dragon scale, unicorn blood, and stardust.
The spell is alchemical and from the looks of it could be considered dark magic by the current laws of Idan. It creates a touch transfer of magic called an "echo" that grants the first person to touch the enchanted transfer charm of choice an echo of an ability of the original source. The source is the reason for the dark magic connotation as it is specifically defined as heart's blood.
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Because that's how I taught you.
But even as he says that, his expression changes -- not because of what he's telling Billie, but something that's obviously caught his attention on the page. As he reads, he only looks more concerned, but rather than explain what he's found, he turns the book and pushes it closer to Billie.
"I think your scale was enchanted with this."
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That it's a concerned one makes it that much worse.
She'll take the book back when he offers it over, picking out the passage fast enough. It's a quick glance over the words at first but then she's sitting up straighter, backtracking and rereading it all a second time, how she holds herself growing tenser by the second.
"Who would have all of this?" She asks at last. A pointless question. Neither of them can answer it but it's hard not to wonder aloud when every ingredient for the enchantment is wilder and rarer than the last. "Why would they waste it on a total stranger?"
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"And they're either desperate enough to take the risk, or have enough power that this is nothing to them." Which one is more dangerous to them in the long run? Hard to say. "Perhaps they simply thought it would be interesting."
No keeping the touch of bitterness out of his tone, there. Daud's not heard from the Outsider since he came back to life, but this feels uncomfortably similar, being kept blind and in the dark.
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He'll stop when Daud glances at him, perking up immediately and lets out an inquisitive little chirp. Is the conversation about him again? Yes? No?
It isn't, but the chirp draws Billie's attention away from the book and back to the hatchling briefly. She looks less than impressed with the slobber and toothmarks now marring a few pages but she also doubts Strange will care. If anything, he'll consider it a blessing, knowing that guy...
"All the more reason to track down where the scales came from," she sighs and turns back to the page in question. "I don't know if I'll get my answers but I have to try."
Which is funny. Daud isn't the only one who's mind strays towards the Outsider when that hint of bitterness comes out in his words. She'd always wanted to find him, same as Daud had, probably too curious about the spirit for her own good, and now she has her own Outsider to hunt down, only she has no name or idea of who they even are.
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โOr the attention you attract,โ he adds. Is distinguishing herself a good thing? He highly doubts it is, in the long run, but heโs curious too.