The chapter contains several lengthy descriptions of the R.M.'s experiments with the Polymorph spells, which, for some reason, he expected to prove his statement in the chapter's title. You stop staring at the title and start reading. You could swear you heard a few reputable researchers say that genes are not blueprints. You try to leaf through the chapter one of your book on genetics, but get stumped on its title: "Genes Are Totally Blueprints". The spell draws the rainwater from the open window and throws it at one of the potted plants furiously, knocking over the pot and leaving a dirty puddle on the floor. You make a half-hearted attempt at casting the spell, twisting your fingers in all the right gestures and directing the arcane energies the right way even though you lack the focus. The moment the steam's onslaught stops, Burly takes a blood-red potion off his belt and downs it in a gulp his face and hands, boiled red with huge pieces of skin missing, are restored to their normal state in mere seconds. Burly, caught off guard, screams and backs away from the jet, stopping only when his back hits the wall. A huge jet of steam blasts out of the cauldron, striking at Burly and covering Nathair in a thin layer of water. Burly's stike doesn't seem to slow the mage down: he raises his hand, clenches it into a fist with a thumb covering the index finger, and mutters something quickly. His strike throws the enemy mage against the wall, a deep cut showing across the mage's ribs. Burly charges at his enemy with an angry roar, slapping an orb of boiling water out of the air and shoving the stumbling Nathair out of his way.
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