"You're definitely going somewhere," Miles concludes. "And coming back again in one piece. It's not, I don't know, creating you spontaneously from nothing every time. Just - swapping you out with the alternate model."
"Well, Lialenan theory is on the right track then. I can't tell if conjured matter comes from the same place without an example, of course."
"Pulled from somewhere, not created out of nothing," says Miles. "Huh. Does that mean your magic plain can't create things out of nothing, I wonder? Creating things out of nothing is one of the simplest elementary applications of taieli, the trouble comes when you want to create particular things with desired characteristics and not just undirected explosions."
"Huh. Well, I guess it's only fair; taieli can't do interworld transport." He reflects on this statement for a second and then adds, "Yet."
"As in one of the other simplest elementary applications of taieli is copying and altering an existing thing, and spells definitely qualify as things for this purpose. I suspect if I put the work in, learning how interworld wizardry works and learning how to use rilte, I could make altered iltaiel copies of summoning or sending spells and use them to move between worlds."
"I have an interworld transport spell on me right now," he points out.
"Yeah, I've noticed that. I'm definitely going to avoid letting my results express themselves as more wizard spells. I'm not even sure that's possible to do on purpose, and I'm pretty confident it's possible to avoid."
"Can't help you there. I couldn't begin to explain the actual impressions I get from this thing; the most I can do is articulate my conclusions."
"No, the monument taught me the whole language. For some reason. It's handy for thinking about taieli in, I'll give it that."
"Oh, huh," says Miles, likewise in Aiha. "Being a dragon must be really convenient."