You cross the room to the table, setting the chair aright and settling down for a read. Absentmindedly you snap the candle on the table free from a puddle of hardened wax and pocket it, then flip the book open. You're slightly surprised to discover that you can read it, even if the language is rather archaic. It appears to be some sort of historical account, though it is so heavily laden with embellishments that it could be described more accurately as a legend. Skipping forward to the paper marker, you set the folded scrap aside for the moment.
A particular passage has been marked with a scribbled star; it seems to reference a magician who conducted some sort of sacred ritual to call forth aid from another plane, though you doubt that some of the things depicted are physically possible
once, much less for three days and nights. Several sentences about the "servant" summoned by the ritual have been underlined. They discuss the servant's preternatural ability to form something called "grafted prana" into coherent spells within minutes of absorbing it; apparently this is a notable ability and was believed to be an effect imposed by the ritual. However, given that the next paragraph is devoted to a description of the magician and her servant beating a dragon to death with another dragon, the veracity of this information is questionable.
After a moment, you unfold the paper. It carries a few notes written in a cramped hand.
Health: Bookbookbook
Equipped:
Ragged black robes
Candlestick (lit)
Inventory:
Rocks
Severed arm
Candle