May 23
rd
, 1886
I had seen many things in my times on Arcanum -- but few struck me as uniquely beautiful and melancholy as the sight of dawn over Tulla, the city of mages. The entire edifice felt isolate and venerable, with an ancient sense seeping from every humble sandstone and brick building. The palm trees that grew around several magickally sustained oasis waved in the morning breeze, and the distant, eerie sound of song echoed from tall minarets that were situated at each corner of the perfectly rectangular wall that surrounded the city. Robes men and women of all races went to pray at their alters, to commune with the universe, to meditate. The scent of magic was so strong in the air that I could practically feel it, and my pocket watch had seized up and almost immediately upon our arrival and I had given up even trying to wind it.
I watched all of this from the patio on the roof of the humble home that Simeon Tor had graciously given over to me and my companions. From the kitchen, I could hear Beatrice instructing Gillian on how to cook without servants, while Sally stolidly listened to Maggie grumble about how the magick was giving her a headache. I felt a twinge of guilt for keeping Maggie from her promised homeland -- the Iron Clan of the dwarves -- for so very long. But with Beatrice once more among the living, we could easily dart around Arcanum, teleporting from place to place as many times as Beatrice's endurance could allow.
And considering last night, her endurance had not suffered any degradation for her time in the strange river that she described as the afterlife. The faintly wistful tones she had used filled me with a sense of disquiet. I had not fought my entire life to choose my own way to want to have my agency stripped from me so effortlessly. I stood, stretching my arms behind my back as the sun finally escaped from behind the curve of the cliff, spilling across the city directly. It swiftly banished the night chill that swept across deserts, and brought with it my desire to see through the clues of Pelojian. And I knew exactly where to start, after all.
Bee and I came to the Mural of Enlightenment after a simple but sumptuous breakfast. We cut an odd pairing in Tulla as we walked through the groves and gardens, past the homes and libraries. Me, a half-orc in a fine three piece suit that I had only just now gotten a chance to launder and iron properly, with Beatrice in her chainmail armor and gambeson, which she had spent some time deying to have the symbol of the Panarii faith -- an unbroken golden ring. It was like modernity and the early middle ages had decided to stride through antiquity, while thumbing its nose at mores towards race and relationships. To the credit of the mages of Tulla, they took no mind of our holding hands, nor the times that Beatrice stopped me, claiming an incredibly important thing required my attention, only to instead kiss me upon the lips, then laugh.
The Mural itself looked exactly as I had described it previously: The robed man (Pelojian) standing between the desert and the city of Tulla, and the entire scene was banded about by five symbols -- corresponding to the five symbols that ringed around Pelojian's pool out by the front. And four of those five symbols -- in order from left to right: a star, a crossed circle, the glaive symbol, a sticklike figure, and finally a spiral -- was themselves ringed by four more symbols. The only symbol that lacked four minor symbols was the glaive symbol, which sat at the apex of the banding's central arc.
I rubbed my chin as I observed this -- and started when I heard a footstep beside me. I turned and saw Simeon Tor. He smiled, politely, at me while I nodded to him. "Mr. Tor," I said, bowing my head.
"Dr. Cog," he returned. "I see you have come to examine the Mural of Enlightenment." He shook his head. "We have used this for centuries."
"How?" I asked -- supposing that might itself be a clue.
"Well," he said. "A mage looks at the world rather differently than a scientist. We take in the totality of the image -- the color, the light, the sensation it evokes." He gestured to the image. "We reflect on how all the parts work in synthesis. So too, does magick work. One does not picture each individual step upon the route of casting a spell. One simply wills..." His brow furrowed and a green glow shrouded his palm. A moment later, it had faded, revealing a rose. "...and it is so."
I tapped my chin. "Well, Mr. Tor," I said. "As you say, scientists do look at the world differently. We believe you can only understand something by knowing how each component functions. And so, we begin by taking apart a thing to the basic, most fundamental parts of its construction." I grinned. "This is how we've finally learned the reason behind cancers and how they spread, via the vivisection of chimney sweeps in Tarant who dropped dead of cancer in the lung." I turned back to face the mural. I noticed Beatrice leaning close to the star symbol, as it was the most easily observed from her perspective, being so near to the ground.
"What is it, Bee?" I asked.
"Oh, it's just I know these symbols," she said, nodded. If one could picture the star as a compass rose, then know that she pointed first to the northern most symbol, then to the eastern, southern and western -- her finger moving in a clockwise circle. "This is the symbol for magickal college of Divination, Metaphysical, Mental and Temporal."
My brow furrowed, while Mr. Tor shook his head -- and I saw a wry look of amusement flit across his face. For a moment, I felt a sense irritation flare within me. I could see Mr. Tor thought we were going about this meditation business in a backwards way. I could imagine him telling a student becoming overly fascinated by the individual symbols and their placement that they were missing the
point
of the Mural. Well. Let him do as he would -- I would do as I would. And I was putting some pieces together. My fingers caressed my mustache. "There seems to be a relationship in those colleges, no?"
Bee shrugged as she stood, her armor clinking softly. "I suppose...the four schools are all somewhat introspective and inward looking, handling concepts that are a bit, you know..." She wiggled her fingers and giggled. "Airy?"
I chuckled. "Though, what is exactly the school of the metaphysical? I've never heard of it."
"Well, mages hate to talk about it," Bee said. "Meta handles spells that prevent spells from functioning. With so many technologists about, I can see why."
I nodded, then pointed to the crossed circle. "And those symbols?"
Bee counted them off on her fingers: "Starting from the top? Earth, Air, Water...Fire..." She trailed off.
"Again, quite the correlation," I said, nodding. "And that?"
Looking upon the stick-like figure, Bee frowned. "Good heavens, those are the symbols for White Necromancy, Black Necromancy, Summoning and Nature."
I nodded. "That figure could be taken as a crude symbol of a humanoid. Or, maybe, a symbol for all kinds of life. Can Summoning...well, summon a humanoid?"
"Several of the spells do involve the summoning of sentient beings, yes," Beatrice said, nodding. "And for the last, the spiral? Those deal with space-"
"That one is the symbol of Conveyance is it not?" I asked, pointing at the top of the star symbol.
Beatrice punched my shoulder lightly. "Resh! Knowing this is my job! How did you know the symbol for Conveyance anyway?"
"It was on that strange..." I paused. "That strange...tile...near our home!"
Beatrice gasped as I got out one of my many pieces of paper, scribbling down the exact notes of which colleges were dedicated to which symbol. Then we both hurried to one of the minarets -- they clearly had the best view of Tulla. Once there, we were allowed up by a bemused looking man whose job it was to sound the call for the monastic orders of Tulla. Once there, we had a view of the entire city from on high, and there, we could see that there were symbols scattered about it. The bemused man, upon seeing our reaction, chuckled. "Ah, the symbols of the colleges?" he asked. "Sometimes, when they are touched, they light up, but no one has ever made them light up twice in a row."
I nodded, slowly. "A pattern..." I rubbed my chin. "And the symbols of Pelojian's pool, do they repeat elsewhere?"
"There are four doors," the man said. "In the temple's crypts. But they are sealed by the most powerful magicks that we've ever seen -- and each has one of those symbols. Not the bladed one, though."
"Clockwise, I'm thinking, starting from the north," I said, softly.
Beatrice chuckled. "Why from there?"
"Well, we'll have to try every order if that doesn't work," I said. "But fortunately, there are only twenty four permutations. It shouldn't take us more than a day to try each one -- and I bet once we find the permutation that works for one, it'll work for all. But even if each has a unique permutation of symbols, it's only ninety six different permutations -- twenty four for each." I grinned. "If we didn't know which symbol went with which door, we'd be looking at..." I paused, then started to scribble down some back of the calculations. "Roughly? ...twenty trillion possible combinations."
"Good heavens!" Beatrice exclaimed.