11/12/2011
11:00-11:30 - 650 words
1:00-1:30 - 1250 words (+600)
1:30-2:00 - 1800 words (+550)
[First half hour. Jumping past the beginning of the chapter, obviously, but I want to make sure Amaranth's errand and the Twyla/ifrit subplot doesn't vanish.]
"Is this your warrior?" she asked me.
When I looked at the picture, I was sure it was. None of the details had particularly stood out to me at the time when I'd had no idea it would even be slightly important, but looking at it now I recognized the image of the sun in the upper right corner and the upraised arm of the warrior holding a brownish-colored sword.
[]
"The story is called 'Hasan, The Sun, and The Warrior All In Bronze' in this translation," Amaranth said. "The picture doesn't show him wearing it, but the text describes the warrior as wearing a bronze breastplate and helmet that protects him from ifrit magic, and having a magical bronze sword... which probably marks it as one the earlier human stories in this book."
"I don't think that's anything special about the bronze," I said. "'Bronze' used to be almost synonymous with 'magical' when it came to arms and armor, because it was stronger than cold iron to begin with... and a lot better at holding magic. So bronze swords were often assumed to be enchanted by people who didn't have them, and often were."
"I know all that, baby, but I think there's more to it than that," Amaranth said. "Throughout these stories, ifrits are trapped in brass bottles and copper rings, walled in with bronze blocks, and here they're being defeated by a warrior armed with bronze equipment. It really seems like there's a recurring theme of copper and copper-based metals as a weakness."
"Or it could just be a recurring theme because bronze and brass were really impressive at the time the stories were written," I said. "Maravaya was centuries ahead of everybody else in terms of alchemy... that's where we get the word 'alchemy' from. They were outfitting their soldiers with durable bronze blades and dressing their cities up with shiny brass ornaments when humans elsewhere and almost everyone else who lived above ground was making do with the iron and gold they managed to stumble across. It was automatically impressive, and they knew it."
"I'm pretty sure ifrits live in palaces made out of brass," Ian said. "Or at least, the guys in my dad's order think they do... there's like one line in the oath of fire about ifrits in their brass palaces."
"What's it say?" I asked.
"'...and by the ifrits in their brass palaces'," Ian said. "It's just one thing in a whole big laundry list of things they're swearing by, along with the salamanders, phoenixes, fire giants, and the great red dragons. That's why I didn't mention it before."
"Why would anybody swear by giants and dragons in the same oath?" I asked.
"It's not like a pledge of allegiance," Ian said. "Really, it's more just a really long way of saying 'we like fire' than anything else."
"Ian, do you suppose your father would know more about ifrits?" Amaranth said. "I've thought about asking around the elementalism department here, but it might be a sensitive subject because of Professor Bohd's position within it."
"It's possible," Ian said. "But that wouldn't be a conversation I'd look forward to having."
"I'm sure your father would be happy that you were taking an interest in pyromancy," Amaranth said.
"Overjoyed," Ian said. "That's why I wouldn't look forward to it. The other problem is that if he doesn't know, he would never admit it to me, so I might come back with
"I've heard that, too," Amaranth said. "But that makes sense, too... if you were an extremely powerful creature of elemental flame, would you want to live in a palace that could be melted or burned by a careless flare-up?"
[1 hour in.]
When Amaranth returned to our dorm room with the massive Tales cradled against her chest, I could tell she'd been awake all night waiting for a suitable hour when she could come back and not be interrupting Ian and me, or waking us up too early. It was so painful to watch the eager smile fall off her face when she saw the look on mine that when she asked "What's happened?" I almost wanted to tell her it was nothing that couldn't wait.
"He came back," Ian said, while I was still searching for my own response. It was all he had to say.
"Oh, baby," Amaranth said. She pushed the book away and threw her arms around me. "I hope you showed him the door."
"Eventually," I said. "He had some things to say before that."
I repeated the story again. Amaranth listened patiently as I gave her the background leading up to the important bit.
"Baby," Amaranth began carefully after I'd said it, "have you..."
"Never thought of this before? No, I hadn't," I said. "And I'm sorry for interrupting, but I've had three different people ask me that so far today, counting you."
"Who else have you told?" Amaranth asked.
"Just Dee," I said. "I figured she was likely to overhear eventually, and she generally gives good advice. She had some... interesting... ideas, but the big conclusion was that we need to understand his motives. Her suggestion was to contact people who would have known my mother, way back when... the most likely person I could think of is my Aunt Jo. She was the closest sibling in age to my mother, and the only one she really kept in touch with."
"Were you ever close to her?"
"Not especially," I said. "The times that we met, there were always other adult relatives around and since I never saw them very often they all just sort of blurred together. I'll have to think if I can even remember her last name. Her full first name is Joanne, and I'm pretty sure it's one word. I don't know what kind of reception I can expect from her... Dee has the idea that she might be happy to hear from me, but I don't know."
"I really imagine she would be ecstatic!" Amaranth said. "I mean, wouldn't you be happy to re-connect with someone who was so close to your mother?"
"When you put it that way, I feel like I should be," I said. "But honestly, I can't help thinking of her as someone connected to my grandmother."
"Even though I'm sure she loves your mother, I can't imagine that Joanne isn't aware that she has her faults," Amaranth said. "You shouldn't think of her as being on Martha's side or against you."
"I don't," I said. "I'm not even talking about allegiances or anything like that... it's just the way my memories of her are grouped in my mind. I'm not saying I'm going to be treating everything she says with suspicion or being all defensive with her or anything, just... it's not easy for me to think of her as my family. She's my mom's family, which means she's my grandmother's family."
"I suppose that makes sense," Amaranth said. "Or at least, I can understand how it makes sense to you."
"Makes perfect sense to me," Ian said. "My dad's family are all kind of lumped together in my head in one giant, vaguely dick-ish pile. Dealing with the ones who are mostly pretty okay usually means dealing with the ones who aren't, so they all kind of sound warnings in my head when I think about them."
[]
"Is this your warrior?" she asked me.
When I looked at the picture, I was sure it was. None of the details had particularly stood out to me at the time when I'd had no idea it would even be slightly important, but looking at it now I recognized the image of the sun in the upper right corner and the upraised arm of the warrior holding a brownish-colored sword.
[]
"The story is called 'Hasan, The Sun, and The Warrior All In Bronze' in this translation," Amaranth said. "The picture doesn't show him wearing it, but the text describes the warrior as wearing a bronze breastplate and helmet that protects him from ifrit magic, and having a magical bronze sword... which probably marks it as one the earlier human stories in this book."
"I don't think that's anything special about the bronze," I said. "'Bronze' used to be almost synonymous with 'magical' when it came to arms and armor, because it was stronger than cold iron to begin with... and a lot better at holding magic. So bronze swords were often assumed to be enchanted by people who didn't have them, and often were."
"I know all that, baby, but I think there's more to it than that," Amaranth said. "Throughout these stories, ifrits are trapped in brass bottles and copper rings, walled in with bronze blocks, and here they're being defeated by a warrior armed with bronze equipment. It really seems like there's a recurring theme of copper and copper-based metals as a weakness."
"Or it could just be a recurring theme because bronze and brass were really impressive at the time the stories were written," I said. "Maravaya was centuries ahead of everybody else in terms of alchemy... that's where we get the word 'alchemy' from. They were outfitting their soldiers with durable bronze blades and dressing their cities up with shiny brass ornaments when humans elsewhere and almost everyone else who lived above ground was making do with the iron and gold they managed to stumble across. It was automatically impressive, and they knew it."
"I'm pretty sure ifrits live in palaces made out of brass," Ian said. "Or at least, the guys in my dad's order think they do... there's like one line in the oath of fire about ifrits in their brass palaces."
"What's it say?" I asked.
"'...and by the ifrits in their brass palaces'," Ian said. "It's just one thing in a whole big laundry list of things they're swearing by, along with the salamanders, phoenixes, fire giants, and the great red dragons. That's why I didn't mention it before."
"Why would anybody swear by giants and dragons in the same oath?" I asked.
"It's not like a pledge of allegiance," Ian said. "Really, it's more just a really long way of saying 'we like fire' than anything else."
"Ian, do you suppose your father would know more about ifrits?" Amaranth said. "I've thought about asking around the elementalism department here, but it might be a sensitive subject because of Professor Bohd's position within it."
"It's possible," Ian said. "But that wouldn't be a conversation I'd look forward to having."
"I'm sure your father would be happy that you were taking an interest in pyromancy," Amaranth said.
"Overjoyed," Ian said. "That's why I wouldn't look forward to it. The other problem is that if he doesn't know, he would never admit it to me, so I might come back with
"I've heard that, too," Amaranth said. "But that makes sense, too... if you were an extremely powerful creature of elemental flame, would you want to live in a palace that could be melted or burned by a careless flare-up?"
[1.5 hours]
When Amaranth returned to our dorm room with the massive Tales cradled against her chest, I could tell she'd been awake all night waiting for a suitable hour when she could come back and not be interrupting Ian and me, or waking us up too early. It was so painful to watch the eager smile fall off her face when she saw the look on mine that when she asked "What's happened?" I almost wanted to tell her it was nothing that couldn't wait.
"He came back," Ian said, while I was still searching for my own response.
It was all he had to say.
"Oh, baby," Amaranth said. She pushed the book away and threw her arms around me. "I hope you showed him the door."
"Eventually," I said. "He had some things to say before that."
I repeated the story again. Amaranth listened patiently as I gave her the background leading up to the important bit.
"Baby," Amaranth began carefully after I'd said it, "have you..."
"Never thought of this before? No, I really honestly hadn't," I said. "And I'm sorry for interrupting, but I've had three different people ask me that so far today, counting you."
"Who else have you told?" Amaranth asked.
"Just Dee," I said. "I figured she was likely to overhear eventually, and she generally gives good advice. She had some... interesting... ideas, but the big conclusion was that we need to understand his motives."
I was skipping over some things, but I also I hadn't told Ian all of what Dee had said. Her idea about the man's designs for me were not something I really wanted to discuss any further at the moment... talking about them with Dee had been one thing, if only because her differing views on family stopped her from seeing the full extent of the awfulness. Talking about it with someone from my own culture... that just made it too real to face, especially when it was nothing more than Dee's theory.
"Did she have any ideas about how to do that?" Amaranth asked.
"Yeah," I said. "Her suggestion was to contact people who would have known my mother, way back when... the most likely person I could think of is my Aunt Jo. She was the closest sibling in age to my mother, and the only one she really kept in touch with."
"Were you ever close to her?"
"Not especially," I said. "The times that we met, there were always other adult relatives around and since I never saw them very often they all just sort of blurred together. I'll have to think if I can even remember her last name. Her full first name is Joanne, and I'm pretty sure it's one word. I don't know what kind of reception I can expect from her... Dee has the idea that she might be happy to hear from me, but I don't know."
"I really imagine she would be ecstatic!" Amaranth said. "I mean, wouldn't you be happy to re-connect with someone who was so close to your mother?"
"When you put it that way, I feel like I should be," I said. "But honestly, I can't help thinking of her as someone connected to my grandmother."
"Even though I'm sure she loves your mother, I can't imagine that Joanne isn't aware that she has her faults," Amaranth said. "You shouldn't think of her as being on Martha's side or against you."
"I don't," I said. "I'm not even talking about allegiances or anything like that... it's just the way my memories of her are grouped in my mind. I'm not saying I'm going to be treating everything she says with suspicion or being all defensive with her or anything, just... it's not easy for me to think of her as my family. She's my mom's family, which means she's my grandmother's family."
"I suppose that makes sense," Amaranth said. "Or at least, I can understand how it makes sense to you."
"Makes perfect sense to me," Ian said. "My dad's family are all kind of lumped together in my head in one giant, vaguely dick-ish pile. Dealing with the ones who are mostly pretty okay usually means dealing with the ones who aren't, so they all kind of sound warnings in my head when I think about them."
"Anyway," Amaranth said, "after all this, I guess you're probably not very interested in anything else right now."
"I'd love to know what you found out last night," I said. "The fact that it's hard for me to think of anything except the possibility that my father killed my mother doesn't mean that I don't want to think about other things."
[]
"Is this your warrior?" she asked me.
When I looked at the picture, I was sure it was. None of the details had particularly stood out to me at the time when I'd had no idea it would even be slightly important, but looking at it now I recognized the image of the sun in the upper right corner and the upraised arm of the warrior holding a brownish-colored sword.
[]
"The story is called 'Hasan, The Sun, and The Warrior All In Bronze' in this translation," Amaranth said. "The picture doesn't show him wearing it, but the text describes the warrior as wearing a bronze breastplate and helmet that protects him from ifrit magic, and having a magical bronze sword... which probably marks it as one the earlier human stories in this book."
"I don't think that's anything special about the bronze," I said. "'Bronze' used to be almost synonymous with 'magical' when it came to arms and armor, because it was stronger than cold iron to begin with... and a lot better at holding magic. So bronze swords were often assumed to be enchanted by people who didn't have them, and often were."
"I know all that, baby, but I think there's more to it than that," Amaranth said. "Throughout these stories, ifrits are trapped in brass bottles and copper rings, walled in with bronze blocks, and here they're being defeated by a warrior armed with bronze equipment. It really seems like there's a recurring theme of copper and copper-based metals as a weakness."
"Or it could just be a recurring theme because bronze and brass were really impressive at the time the stories were written," I said. "Maravaya was centuries ahead of everybody else in terms of alchemy... that's where we get the word 'alchemy' from. They were outfitting their soldiers with durable bronze blades and dressing their cities up with shiny brass ornaments when humans elsewhere and almost everyone else who lived above ground was making do with the iron and gold they managed to stumble across. It was automatically impressive, and they knew it."
"I'm pretty sure ifrits live in palaces made out of brass," Ian said. "Or at least, the guys in my dad's order think they do... there's like one line in the oath of fire about ifrits in their brass palaces."
"What's it say?" I asked.
"'...and by the ifrits in their brass palaces'," Ian said. "It's just one thing in a whole big laundry list of things they're swearing by, along with the salamanders, phoenixes, fire giants, and the great red dragons. That's why I didn't mention it before."
"Why would anybody swear by giants and dragons in the same oath?" I asked.
"It's not like a pledge of allegiance," Ian said. "Really, it's more just a really long way of saying 'we like fire' than anything else."
"Ian, do you suppose your father would know more about ifrits?" Amaranth said. "I've thought about asking around the elementalism department here, but it might be a sensitive subject because of Professor Bohd's position within it."
"It's possible," Ian said. "But that wouldn't be a conversation I'd look forward to having."
"I'm sure your father would be happy that you were taking an interest in pyromancy," Amaranth said.
"Overjoyed," Ian said. "That's why I wouldn't look forward to it. The other problem is that if he doesn't know, he would never admit it to me, so I might come back with
"I've heard that, too," Amaranth said. "But that makes sense, too... if you were an extremely powerful creature of elemental flame, would you want to live in a palace that could be melted or burned by a careless flare-up? Anyway, it makes sense to me... Professor Bohd would have been looking for protections and countermeasures."
"I suppose," I said. "I don't think it's all that relevant to us, though... we know we don't need countermeasures against Twyla."
"Not everything has to be relevant to be interesting," Amaranth said. "And anyway, don't you think it might be relevant to Twyla?"
"If she had a serious allergy to copper, I think she would have noticed by now," Ian said.
"Yeah," I said. "That would be even harder to avoid than the elven thing with iron, or the human sensitivity to lead."
"The story's not written like copper is something that harms ifrits," Amaranth said. "Just something that can repel and contain their power. If she's having problems with her fire nature, that could give her a place to start."
"If it's true," I said. "I'd hate to tell her that some copper bracelets or whatever will keep her safe and then have this all be a huge misinterpretation."
"Well, obviously you'd have to tell her that certain stories suggest this might be the case, and then it would be fairly easy for her to test," Amaranth said. "I mean, copper's not hard to come by."
"No, but you can't exactly melt it over a candle flame," Ian said. "Even a bonfire doesn't get hot enough to melt copper coins... a certain amount of semi-supervised playing with fire was part of my childhood."
"Well, we don't have to come up with a test right this second for it to be a valid idea," Amaranth said. "I was thinking more about seeing how copper protects things from the heat of her fire... anyway, as curious as I am about all this, Twyla has such a shy demeanor that I have to imagine she'd be more comfortable trying this stuff out on her own.
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