It takes him about an hour and a half of skimming and note taking to discover the broad, overall contents of the three books:sulldawga wrote:Telemachus starts here, trying to parse the subject(s) of these three old books.thirdkingdom wrote:The library contains the same books it did last time Telemachus looked through it.
Three more books are old, likely almost twice as old as the oldest ledger. Each is bound in a different material; one in beaten copper, another in thin sheets of mica, and the third in snakeskin. They are all written in the Common tongue, but an archaic kind that he has difficulty reading.
*The first, the one bound in beaten copper, discusses the geomantic properties and existence of invisible streams of magical energy called "ley lines" that flow over the surface of Absalom like rivers. It seems to discuss how to locate and harness the energy within, and he also notes there are several maps within the pages, but without a closer inspection he does not know what they represent.
*The second one, the one bound in mica, seems to be written by one Ahborg Ket (what race this Ahborg belongs to is not mentioned). It looks to be a history. One name that jumps out at him almost immediately is "Layngol", a king of olden times, with a name suspiciously similar to what the twin skalds mentioned last night.
*The third, the one bound in snakeskin, is a journal detailing a voyage to one of the realms of Faery, the Court over Sea and under Stone, and the dealings with the denizens -- dwarves, mostly, it seems -- therein.
Telemachus figures that in order to thoroughly read and record the pertinent information within will likely take somewhere between one or two days per book*.