Part 05 – Astral magic - Chapter 17

In the revered halls of the Arcanic Academy of Alykarn, a library of profound magnitude loomed, a sanctuary of enlightenment amidst Equestera's lush terrain. It held the essence of wisdom and solutions, a vast collection of ancient texts pursued tirelessly by alicorns in their quest for understanding.

Within this bastion of erudition, three esteemed scholars found themselves entangled in a bitter irony. Throughout their illustrious careers, truth had yielded to their intellects effortlessly. But now, an elusive answer remained just out of reach.

In desperation, they enlisted Feyn, a novice with a sharp mind, to aid their endeavor. Together, they delved into the archives, each table a haven of books and scrolls. Time slipped away unnoticed as they combed through the wisdom of ages.

The air grew thick with the scent of parchment and the murmurs of pages turning, punctuated by the thud of heavy tomes passed between them. As twilight bathed the library of its light, frustration crept upon their brows, save for Naegissa, whose serenity remained untouched.

Observers, lesser alicorns seeking knowledge, watched as these titans of intellect grappled with rare consternation, their pursuit of truth unyielding amidst the shadows of uncertainty.

These onlookers, both awed and curious, stood at a respectful distance, witnessing minds grappling with the unfathomable. Among them, Raybarn's reputation loomed like a shadow at noonday, signaling grave matters.

As the audience watched, spellbound, Naegissa's gaze swept over them, swift as a hawk's. Her sharp, silent reprimand scattered them like leaves in a gust of wind, their retreat marked by the cacophony of their fleeing steps, which drew Feyn's attention from the enigma that had ensnared his thoughts. He observed, only for a moment, as Naegissa's formidable focus returned to the sea of words that lapped at the shores of her mind.

Feyn's own gaze met Naegissa's, and in that silent exchange, they shared understanding, fleeting yet potent as lightning. Her spectral smile left Feyn unsettled as he returned to his books, the chill of her expression lingering.

And so the scholars delved on, each lost in their own world, Raybarn and Nerath as statues carved from stone, their focus unyielding, while Feyn wrestled with the shiver that clung to him, a remnant of the day's strange alchemy.

Merely minutes more, they toiled, with the specter of futility hovering close before Raybarn surged to his paws, his sigh a tempest of defeat resounding through the cavernous library. The echo of his discontent drew Nerath's eyes skyward from the parchments that had been her world, fixing upon Raybarn with an expression as raw as a fresh wound.

"What's wrong, Raybarn? Nothing?" her voice, laced with concern, cut through the thick silence. The great Raybarn, a pillar of their scholarly pantheon, could only muster the weary shake of his head, his visage the very picture of a stallion who had jousted with shadows and lost.

"Nothing. And truthfully, I should have expected as much," he confessed, the taste of disappointment bitter upon his tongue.

"What do you mean, Dad?" queried Feyn, his brow furrowed in consternation.

"I've combed through these books before, during my early days here. What eludes us now eluded me then. The collection has remained unhelpful," Raybarn lamented, his voice a low thrum of resignation.

"But surely something must have changed. New discoveries, new books…" Nerath proclaimed, her disbelief a banner unfurled in the dim light of the library.

"The updates I've come across haven't shed any new light on our problem," Raybarn intoned, "They're insubstantial." At this, Nerath's countenance fell, despair seizing her features as though she'd been told the stars themselves had been plucked from the firmament.

Raybarn's declaration heralded his intent to depart, and confusion knit Feyn's features tighter. "Are we leaving, then?"

"Not all of us. Just I," Raybarn clarified, a note of mystery threading through his words. "I remember an important contact who might help us break through this impasse."

"And who might this enigmatic alicorn be?" Naegissa inquired, interest piqued, her eyes sharpening with the acumen that had carved her reputation.

"A shadow among shadows, preferring the cloak of anonymity," Raybarn replied, while wary glances stitched a silent conversation between Naegissa and Nerath. Sensing their trepidation, Raybarn's chuckle broke the tension like a warm breeze dispersing fog. "You have no cause for concern. I'm not here to disrupt our work but to further it," he quipped, a sentence woven of two threads, an assurance coupled with a whisper of caution.

With a scrutinous glance, Raybarn sought a sign upon Naegissa's inscrutable façade, but her expression was as unreadable as a sealed scroll. With nothing more to glean, he cleared the remnants of uncertainty from his throat and, like a ship unmooring from a familiar harbor, turned his back on the ocean of books and set his course toward an unknown horizon.

The imposing figure of Raybarn halted in midstride, summoned back to the circle of his peers by the sudden arrival of two fellow academicians, gasping for air as though they had raced against the wind itself to deliver their message. "We bring urgent word," they panted, the cadence of their breaths punctuating the gravity of their news, "of a new spirit taken into custody."

The quartet repositioned themselves, a collective air of intrigue enveloping them like a cloak. It was Nerath, her voice steady and commanding as the ancient stone that buttressed the Academy, who broke the silence, "Tell us more."

With scant pause for breath, the messengers divulged the latest marvel: Protectors had returned, not from a hunt, but with a spirit enigmatic and unplanned in their capture. The others received this intelligence with widened eyes and quickened pulses, for the chronology of such events, was a rare and ominous dance of the spirits.

A flicker of astonishment escaped the chasm of Naegissa's usually unfathomable expression—a rarity as precious and as telling as a flaw in a diamond. Raybarn's eyes, sharp and calculating, lingered on her just a moment before he wrapped the observation in the folds of his mind.

Clearing his throat as if to dislodge the portents of their discoveries, he sidled Feyn away from prying ears. "Son," he intoned with the gravity of the sacred halls around them, "I want you here with your eyes and ears open. Learn everything you can about this and give me a full account when I'm back."

Feyn, absorbing the weight of his charge, offered a dutiful nod, his query about the identity of Raybarn's secret contact smothered by the urgency of the task at paw.

Raybarn acknowledged the remaining scholars with a solemn nod, the unspoken language of departure. "Good luck, Raybarn. We're all counting on you," Nerath's voice chased after his receding form.

Once Raybarn's presence had been swallowed by the labyrinthine stacks, Nerath's attention snapped back to the messengers. "Have the Protectors documented their encounter?" she demanded, the steel in her voice a match for the strength of her gaze.

The messengers nodded, their movements synchronized, their faces alight with the fervor of their report. "They chanced upon this spirit unexpectedly," they revealed, a mystery enveloping their words as they spoke of the underground laboratory—the scholarly sanctum where Arcane knowledge danced with the palpable and where another spirit had been detained for study.

Silence enveloped the group as they contemplated the implications of these discoveries, each mind grappling with the threads of a tapestry that seemed to weave itself ever more complex with each passing moment. The game of knowledge and power was afoot, and in the Arcanic Academy, even the walls seemed to listen, to whisper of the shifting tides in the world of spirits and alicorns.

The revelation struck like a lightning bolt, sending Naegissa from her seat with a force that had the very air in the library retreat in alarm. She rose, a tempest given form, her wrath so fierce and so sudden that Feyn, Nerath, and the academic messengers recoiled. In her eyes, a storm was brewing, and her companions could not help but step back lest they be caught in her squall.

"Why is the sanctity of our laboratories now a joke to be laughed at in the open?" Naegissa's voice thundered, each word a sharp slap against the complacency she accused. Her outburst was a cascade of anger, washing over the hushed tones of scholarly pursuit that usually filled the chamber.

Nerath, the picture of studied calm, observed Naegissa with an arched brow of inquisition, awaiting the tempest's end. When the fuming tide finally receded, Naegissa reclaimed her seat, her displeasure an aura that none dared approach.

With a measured tone, Nerath addressed her, "We'll address the lapses in protocol, Naegissa. But right now, let's focus on this new spirit. It could be crucial for our understanding, wouldn't you agree, Feyn?"

Caught adrift in his own sea of thoughts, Feyn was abruptly lured back to the shores of the present by Nerath's voice. A quick, somewhat uncertain nod was his reply, hoping it sufficient to mask his momentary absence.

Satisfied, or perhaps accepting of Feyn's silent support, Nerath directed her attention back to the messengers who, having regained their composure, continued. "The Protectors' instincts were right, but they encountered something unexpected."

"And that is?" probed Nerath, her inquiry sharp as a maester's scalpel, wings moving in trepidation.

"They found the spirit alone, unaccompanied by threat or ally, and it was…unwell, in distress, hitting its head against a stone," one messenger explained.

Nerath and Feyn lapsed into contemplation, minds racing to fathom such an anomaly amongst the spirits, for never before had they encountered or learned of a spirit thus afflicted.

Naegissa, however, was still steeped in the bitterness that the breach of secrecy had brewed within her. Her reaction, fervent and excessive, did not escape Nerath's perceptive gaze, who quietly vowed to unearth the roots of her friend's vexation at a more opportune moment.

The messengers made to depart, yet one paused, turned, as though a final piece of the puzzle beckoned to be placed. "Just one more thing—though the Protectors were unharmed, they returned quite paranoid. Take their testimony with care," he imparted.

Acknowledging the warning, Nerath motioned for the messengers to leave. Her gaze then settled on Naegissa. "We need to examine this spirit closely." Although still simmering, Naegissa stood, her resolve steeling her. Nerath followed suit, and with Feyn in tow, they departed the grand archive, setting forth toward the holding cells where the latest piece of their enigmatic puzzle awaited.