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Guest
Guest
Fingers ran along the cool bindings of the books that lined the bookshelves, unconciously leaving a thin trail of ice to accompany the dust already lingering there. The ice melted away only seconds after, sparse droplets of water the only sign of their existence. His eyes scanned over each book title that was at his current eye-level, dismissing one after another. He blinked once as he reached the end of the bookshelf, fingers pausing on the last book. Giving a small shrug, he began walking backwards, fingers tracing the same, now damp trail as his gaze fell down to the next row.
He wanted a book. Not a book on the evolution of mankind, nor 10 steps to writing a good essay. What he happened to be looking for was a book that would help him better understand both himself and what he was. A book that would, in a way, help him to gain better control over his gifts. It was unlikely he'd find one fitting his description perfectly, but there was always the off chance he could find something clos-
His eyes locked onto a rather large text seated near the end of the fifth shelf, the deep blue cover making the fading black font almost unreadable. Slipping the book off the shelf, he gave a small noise as he shifted the heavy book in his arms. It turned out to be much heavier than he had thought it would be. Turning the book onto its back to get a clearer view of the title, he offhandedly dusted off the cover and wrinkled his nose at the amount of dust. Evidently, this wasn't a very popular book.
The Miracle of Water, he read silently to himself. This... this would do. Personally, he preferred a text that would discuss the concepts of water itself and the science behind it rather then one that would attempt to teach you, step by step, how to control gifts related to elemental control. Those were no help, the ones he'd read had been vague and their directions had hurt him more often than helped him. The focus exercises were usually rather ridiculous and their end results were usually an unplanned nap on his part.
Every person was different, so obviously, the way they would command their powers would be different too, right? There was no one way to go about it, and the chances of finding someone who used their powers the same way as yours were slim; at least, that was his opinion. With a sigh, he shook his head and cleared his thoughts, making his way toward a nearby empty table.
Setting the book down unceremoniously, Altair slid into the nearby seat and opened the book. He shifted himself into a comfortable position, elbow on the table and chin resting in his palm as he flipped the book open, settling in for a comfortable read.
Water has often been called the lifeblood of all living things...
((Pardon the length, I'm experimenting with my writing style :x))
He wanted a book. Not a book on the evolution of mankind, nor 10 steps to writing a good essay. What he happened to be looking for was a book that would help him better understand both himself and what he was. A book that would, in a way, help him to gain better control over his gifts. It was unlikely he'd find one fitting his description perfectly, but there was always the off chance he could find something clos-
His eyes locked onto a rather large text seated near the end of the fifth shelf, the deep blue cover making the fading black font almost unreadable. Slipping the book off the shelf, he gave a small noise as he shifted the heavy book in his arms. It turned out to be much heavier than he had thought it would be. Turning the book onto its back to get a clearer view of the title, he offhandedly dusted off the cover and wrinkled his nose at the amount of dust. Evidently, this wasn't a very popular book.
The Miracle of Water, he read silently to himself. This... this would do. Personally, he preferred a text that would discuss the concepts of water itself and the science behind it rather then one that would attempt to teach you, step by step, how to control gifts related to elemental control. Those were no help, the ones he'd read had been vague and their directions had hurt him more often than helped him. The focus exercises were usually rather ridiculous and their end results were usually an unplanned nap on his part.
Every person was different, so obviously, the way they would command their powers would be different too, right? There was no one way to go about it, and the chances of finding someone who used their powers the same way as yours were slim; at least, that was his opinion. With a sigh, he shook his head and cleared his thoughts, making his way toward a nearby empty table.
Setting the book down unceremoniously, Altair slid into the nearby seat and opened the book. He shifted himself into a comfortable position, elbow on the table and chin resting in his palm as he flipped the book open, settling in for a comfortable read.
Water has often been called the lifeblood of all living things...
((Pardon the length, I'm experimenting with my writing style :x))