moral of the story / august
Sept 25, 2024 4:28:00 GMT -5
Post by florentine, d4b ❁ on Sept 25, 2024 4:28:00 GMT -5
florentine.
i am tired after a full day of being pretend-florentine.
i take refuge in the library. the sorts of people i am trying to impress are unlikely to be behind the ornamental doors, because they know everything already. i am hopeful that i will not be disturbed.
the room is brilliant in a way that other capitol things are not. although everything here has screamed expensive, its in a sleek, soulless way; too many touchpads and buttons and sliding doors, and very little in the way of decorative bouquets carved out of coloured oak. the library attempts to make up for the entire city's lack of curved lines all at once. it's just as pretentious, but in a new and interesting way.
even as someone who is against both the stockpiling of wealth in gold-detailing and the hoarding of knowledge in rooms closed off to the public, i find myself a little impressed by its grandeur. it spans three levels - interlinked by impractical spiral staircases, which appear to have been designed with the sole purpose of breaking ankles - all of them adorned with floor to ceiling bookshelves, crammed full.
i was not aware that so many books had been written.
i decide that it would be a good idea to learn something, while i am here.
the first book i pull from the nearest shelf is a bound collection of stories about elves. the second is similar - the cover shows a fearsome dragon breathing fire over a closely-guarded mountain of gemstones and gold coins. that's got to be a metaphor for something. evidently, i have landed myself in the not-useful section.
i climb the spiral staircase to my left very slowly and carefully. i aim to remain unmaimed for another week or so. at the top, i restart the process of picking up books and turning them over in my hands. they are all similarly useless as the ones downstairs: they are about goblins and princesses and fairies and small counsels going to war over hands in marriage. i try another bookcase, and then another, until i am very certain that not a single book in the entire place will tell me something worthwhile, such as how to build an explosive device using only my sock and some tree bark.
before conceding, i make my way to the uppermost level.
there is a boy sitting in an armchair, reading a book. it is august, i recall, the boy from seven who told his little sister he was coming back. if i believed in god, i'd thank him for leaving me nobody to lie to.
"what's that you're reading?" i ask him, and his whole body stiffens in surprise. i hope he pays more attention to his surroundings next week.
i keep talking, pretending i don't notice his shock at my presence. i don't want to embarrass the poor kid. "you know, i think they overlooked the dewey decimal system when they were organising this place."