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Won't burn? Bricks for you, then!

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Jay Scott Raymond

So that grimoire's defenses were still active, if weakened. I assume Mink checked her aura, so presumably this person lacks a gate. Perhaps the spell was to make a non-magic-user return the tome to its owner?

Jay Scott Raymond

I also wonder if that is a Bereki grimoire. No reason to think a mage would only have one. Of course some of the other mages, while not being as overtly vile as Bereki, might also have had little respect for non-mages.

Winkin

Okay, first things first, bring this poor person some relief cause wow if ever there was a time for a little memory editing now seems like it. Unless the fact she could read it at all implies some minor level of hidden power. Not impossible, if Mink is a descendant of one of the major mages could stand to reason that another of their line could just so happen to come into contact with those books.

Robert

Dead by Dawn dead by dawn dead by dawn!!.....

Sleepy Dave

That is an entirely rational response.... Though as far as I'm concerned, it's a bit minimalistic. Seeing as she's working with mortar, I'd have gotten a bucket for each of them and encased them in cement first.

Jose Rosa

Not gonna lie, I'd probably do the same.

Paul Lenoue

A possible witch with common sense? She's a keeper!

Siyu

Along with a very fine cask of Amontillado

Sonicrailin

Genuine Grimoires of that caliber definitely need to be handled with care . . . being resistant to fire "could" mean evil or demonic influence, or the author was just very thorough at protecting their knowledge . . . but the words actually trying to infest the reader . . . that you don't see very often if even at all! That could mean that volume carried possession qualities, trying to fill the reader with it's knowledge directly . . . needles to say, that book in particular will need to be handled with care by an experienced arcanist.

Threyon

Ahh, the Cask of Amontillado method.