In a few steps he was on us, but I guess he didn't see me moving because all he did was open a sack that was sitting on the driver's chair, and put away some of that jerked beef they had been eating. I knew from the smell. I waited still, until I heard the splash of water on their campfire, and heard the sounds of them turning in. Once it had been quiet for five chimes or so, I sat up, and scanned the area. They were all tucked-in, in their sleeping rolls and tents, fast asleep. Now was my opportunity. I sat there, pulsing my djed as was my fashion, down to each joint in my hands. First the wrist came undone, then, slowly, the fingers, down to the tips. My hands were numb, as my eyed had been, but now I could use their floating energy as I saw fit- within a limited range, of course. I moved my hands forward, through the air, to where I saw the rucksack sitting. I couldn't see it really, because the back of the driver's seat was in the way and it was night. I fumbled with the knot on it for a few chimes, and I worried as I did so, how I might tie it back up like it was before. But, once I got it done, I forgot my worries. My hands floated into the bag and tugged out a little chunk of that sweet salty beef jerky. It wasn't much, and I hoped that meant no one would miss it. I bit pieces off and sucked and gnawed on them for as long as I could help my self, but eventually would scarf them down.
I moved to put my hands back into their place, but stopped myself when I realized I was planning to stay awake until sunrise, and that I'd need to busy myself some how. I poked my head right up to the bars of my cage and saw, in the pale moonlight, a few rocks on the ground by the wheel of the wagon. I pushed my invisible grips over to where one as laying. I grasped the stone and tugged but it was perhaps a few pounds too heavy for me to lift, so I felt around until I found another stone that was lighter. That one I lifted up to my cage, and it did take some effort. As I reeled it in, I even began to move my arms around, extending them and pulling them in like I was beckoning the stone to me. It must just be that a better part of magic is belief and self-confidence, and those motions seemed to help. I pulled the stone up and could see that it was chalky. I set the stone to the wooden bottom of my cage and scraped it across the surface, still using my projection. It made a white mark, though I had to put my eyeball just about a hair away to really make it out. I knew some little bit of glyphs at this point and wanted to practice my vocabulary. My thinking was that I could hit two magics with one stone, and I had time to kill, so I started working on my glyphing.
I suppose that might be taken literally, as the first glyph I started writing was actually “me”. I worked for fifteen chimes just focusing on me, and the idea off me, and who I was, and what that meant, if it meant anything at all. Then I tried to distill that- all those ideas- into a symbol in my mind. I focused on that, and breathed in, and out, really slowly until an image appeared in my head. It was this weird kind of squiggly thing, that I didn't think was entirely accurate of all my nuanced character traits and such, but I spent the next quarter bell struggling to transcribe it down on the floor of that cage nonetheless. I got it down good, but erased it with a rub of my projected hands, which were tired now. I set the chalk down and started to put my hands away slowly, and once I had done so, got to work on glyphing again. I took the chalk up, and say there, leaned against the bars of the cage in the dark of the night. I thought, not about “me”, but “I”. You see, when I was thinking about “me”, I was thinking about all these thoughts I'd had, and things I done, and these preferences- you know “I like this” or “I don't like that”- and I had used those criteria to help define “me”. But after I'd seen my work, it didn't think it quiet fit the script. So, I started to think instead “Hey, what is that does all those things.” I mean, instead of thinking about the thoughts I had and things I'd done and ways I'd felt, and calling those “me”, I started thinking about what was it that was doing all of those things. What was making those thoughts, forming those preferences, preforming those actions? That was the question I was trying to answer, and I figured the glyph that might correspond to that would be “I”. |
|