Chapter 12: ancient magic
While the sisters were discussing, Corantin was observing a wall located deep within the manor basement. On it was a magic circle that had frustrated his family for generations. The legend was that the mansion had been built on top of ancient ruins and this magic circle sealed them off. His family, since even before the foundation of Viclardie, had tried to break the seal and explore whatever it protected with no success. Like many before him, he was analyzing the various interwoven lines, hoping to find the detail that had escape his ancestors' scrutiny.
He moved away from the seal and peer through the many documents created through the years seeking differences that could open new possibilities. His ancestors had long ago determined that rather than a single large magic circle, the seal was actually multiple smaller circles combined. Therefore, they had started insolating each individual circles. As Corantin constantly moved his eyes from the paper to the wall, the endless tangle of magical ink became almost hypnotic. At the slightest slip up, Corantin would lose his marks and find mistakes where there was none.
Eventually, he had to concede that no mistake had been made or it had long been corrected by someone. Leaving the sheets containing parts of the complex magic circle, he took the notes written on the part he was observing. Unfortunately, he found no discrepancy. He thought most research on the seal had been about studying and understand it, this is why Corantin had focused his energy trying to find errors in the manuscripts. But he now had to admit that this method led nowhere. If something was incorrect, he lacked the knowledge to find it.
Dejected he left the basement and headed toward the library. If his first approach had failed, he had no choice but going back to basics and scour for more knowledge about ancient magic. His family library was probably one of preeminent collection of books on ancient magic. No surprise when for generation they had tried to crack an ancient seal.
Once he got there, he took out a catalog of all documents and started to classify them and rank what he had to read in the coming days. When his gargantuan task was done, the day was almost over. As he was leaving, Emily followed him.