The air inside tastes of copper and lightning. It is never silent. Glass beakers bubble with liquids that shift through colors not found in a normal spectrum. A brass astrolabe, the size of a dinner plate, spins lazily in midair, charting the orbital decay of a theoretical star. The floorboards are scarred by containment circles, some scorched black, others still faintly glowing with residual aether.
Tonight’s log reads: “Iteration 47: Attempting to distill fear into a solid state. Early results promising—the crystal is brittle but sings at 440 Hz. Side effect: test subjects report a metallic taste and the certainty that something is watching from inside the mirror. Note: Proceed to human trials only after silencing the mirror.” magus lab
To the passerby, it is merely a shuttered curiosity shop. But to those who know where to knock—three sharp raps, followed by a single pulse of latent will—it is a crucible where science, sorcery, and obsession merge. The air inside tastes of copper and lightning
In the Magus Lab, magic is not a mystery. It is a discipline. It is a scalpel, a soldering iron, and a gamble. The door is always locked from the inside—not to keep intruders out, but to keep the reaction from escaping before the conclusion is written. A brass astrolabe, the size of a dinner