The twenty two notebooks are mysterious items, which appeared seven years ago, yet were left unchecked and were not noticed by anyone, even by those who go by the titles such as "spiritual master".
Standing for the major arcana in tarot, each has a narrow rectangular bookmark which is illustrated accordingly with the card the notebook represents. Their covers are different in design, yet always hard and firmly bind. The pages are, without exception, of the finest material, white in most cases and always A5 size.
Albeit different in the powers they grant their masters, the notebooks have more than one factor in common.
1. The first person to open the notebook becomes the notebook's owner.
2. The owner's name shall be written on the first page.
3. No notebook can be destroyed. If such an attempt were made, the notebook would only appear as such before returning to the owner twenty two seconds later, fully intact.
4. The existing rules can not be changed.
5. One individual can not posses more than one notebook at a time.
6. The effects of the notebook can not be reversed by its owner.
7. All of the notebooks create one whole.
These are simply facts, not written anywhere, but still valid. There are many more unspoken rules and rights that, for whatever reason, were not written down as instructions.
Standing for the major arcana in tarot, each has a narrow rectangular bookmark which is illustrated accordingly with the card the notebook represents. Their covers are different in design, yet always hard and firmly bind. The pages are, without exception, of the finest material, white in most cases and always A5 size.
Albeit different in the powers they grant their masters, the notebooks have more than one factor in common.
1. The first person to open the notebook becomes the notebook's owner.
2. The owner's name shall be written on the first page.
3. No notebook can be destroyed. If such an attempt were made, the notebook would only appear as such before returning to the owner twenty two seconds later, fully intact.
4. The existing rules can not be changed.
5. One individual can not posses more than one notebook at a time.
6. The effects of the notebook can not be reversed by its owner.
7. All of the notebooks create one whole.
These are simply facts, not written anywhere, but still valid. There are many more unspoken rules and rights that, for whatever reason, were not written down as instructions.