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The Sneeze That Nearly Silenced History
LLaura
Secundaria
Diario
English
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October 14th

The air in the Great Library of Oakhaven is always thick with the scent of aged parchment, linseed oil, and the dry, sweet smell of dust. To most, it is the scent of knowledge; to me, it is a constant, tickling threat. My name is Ignis, and I am a dragon. I am also the head conservator of the Rare Manuscripts Wing. This is a precarious combination of identities, much like storing a lightning bolt in a glass jar. My kin usually spend their days guarding mountains of gold in drafty caves, but I found my calling among the vellum and the ink. The problem, however, is that I am biologically programmed to be a walking furnace.

Today was particularly difficult. While I was cataloging the First Age Cartography scrolls, a stray bit of dust—likely from the ceiling rafters—drifted down and landed directly on the tip of my snout. I felt that familiar, terrifying tingle. My chest expanded, my scales began to glow with a dull orange hue, and my internal temperature spiked. I had to drop the scrolls and shove my head into the stone basin of ice water I keep by my desk. The resulting hiss of steam was loud enough to startle a group of visiting scholars three floors up. I managed to suppress the flame, but my throat felt like I had swallowed a handful of hot coals. This is the third time this week. If I cannot master my internal combustion, Master Eldon will surely suggest I find a more ‘resilient’ career path, perhaps in the blacksmith’s forge.

October 16th

I spent the morning practicing the Deep-Breath Method recommended by the Elder Monks of the Frost Peaks. They say that if one can visualize their internal fire as a small, contained candle rather than a raging bonfire, the physical symptoms of the ‘flare-up’ can be mitigated. It sounds simple in theory, but the monks do not have lungs the size of bellows and a stomach full of flammable gastric enzymes.

I was testing this visualization while shelving a series of oversized herbals when a young apprentice librarian, a human named Pip, accidentally dropped a stack of metal bookends. The sudden clatter echoed through the marble hall like a thunderclap. My startle reflex is, unfortunately, tied directly to my ignition system. A small puff of smoke escaped my nostrils before I could clamp my jaw shut. Pip stared at me, his eyes wide, as a single, glowing ember drifted onto a nearby rug. I had to stomp it out with my clawed foot before he noticed the scorch mark. He asked if I was ‘feeling congested.’ I told him it was just the humidity. I am a terrible liar, but a very determined librarian.

October 19th

Disaster nearly struck this afternoon. I was handling the 'Codex of Sunsets,' a manuscript so fragile that even the oils from a human hand could degrade the ink. I wear special dragon-silk gloves, of course, but the real danger isn't my touch—it is my breath. While I was translating a particularly dense passage regarding ancient celestial alignments, I felt a sudden, sharp hiccup.

A hiccup for a dragon is not a small, rhythmic quirk. It is a volcanic event. I barely had time to turn my head away from the Codex before a thin, concentrated jet of blue flame erupted from my throat. It shot past the reading table and struck a stone pillar, leaving a blackened streak of soot three feet long. My heart hammered against my ribs. Had I been facing the other way, centuries of history would have been reduced to gray ash in less than a second. I spent the next hour scrubbing the soot off the pillar with a pumice stone, my claws trembling. The guilt is becoming as heavy as the stone walls of this library. Am I being selfish by staying here? Does my love for these books justify the risk I pose to them?

October 22nd

I have reached a decision. I cannot simply suppress the fire; I must learn to channel it. Today, I began experimenting with a new technique. Instead of fighting the heat when it rises, I am trying to redirect it into my extremities—specifically my tail. It is a strange sensation, feeling my tail-tip glow white-hot while my chest remains cool, but it is far safer for the collection.

I put this to the test this evening during a particularly cold spell in the library. The enchantment on the hearth had failed, and the temperature in the Rare Manuscripts Wing dropped low enough to threaten the binding glues of the older books. Normally, we would have to evacuate the scrolls to a heated room, a process that risks tearing the pages. Instead, I sat in the center of the room and allowed my internal heat to radiate steadily, keeping my breath shallow and my tail coiled tightly away from anything flammable. I acted as a living radiator for six hours. My throat didn't itch, and my chest didn't flare. For the first time, I felt that my nature and my profession were not at war. I am a dragon, and I am a librarian. Perhaps I do not have to choose between the fire and the word; I just have to be the master of both.

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Glosario
  • Conservator: A person responsible for the repair and preservation of historical items or museum collections.
  • Vellum: A high-quality writing surface traditionally made from the skin of a young animal.
  • Precarious: Not securely held or in a position that is dangerously likely to fall or collapse.
  • Mitigate: To make something less severe, serious, or painful.
  • Radiate: To emit energy, especially light or heat, in the form of rays or waves.
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