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The speaker talks about their talent for weaving spells efficiently and learning new spells quickly. However, they lack the talent for acquiring arcane energy. The conversation then shifts to a discussion about the balance between rationality and a wild side in every person. The speaker mentions that some individuals lose this balance and become monsters driven by a hunger for sadism and depravity. The conversation abruptly returns to the previous topic of someone seeing them and the need to leave. I have the worst kind of talent. I'm very efficient at weaving arcane energy into spells, and I can learn new spells at the fraction of the time it takes the other students. But I have no talent for acquiring arcane energy in the first place. There you go. Slow and steady. Oh, just like that. Oh, hey, I think someone saw us. Gavel, you're close. Let's go. That is the logical line of thought, Geneviève. But what I am saying is that inside every common human being, there is a rational person and, of course, a wild side. Rabbis lose this balance over time and dive into a level of rationality that can transform them into real monsters, fueled by a hunger, by a cold power which pursues an evil fetish for sadism and depravity. Oh, there you go. Slow and steady, just like that. Oh, hey, I think someone saw us. Gavel, you're close. Let's go.