Genji heard Silas' apology and noticed that he seemed genuinely apologetic, even offering to give him some information about it and he just shook his head, grinning. "Nah, its alright, I did say you can learn from it if you wanted to and having the book get destroyed in the process means I don't have to put it away. You saved me a trip to a bookshelf." Genji chuckled a little at his joke, not really mad at all that Silas made the book practically vanish from existence. If anything, he was impressed and somewhat baffled by it. "Besides, I can just ask for another from the Hiragaiyas and I was done reading it anyway, I was just... a bit surprised. I mean...I take it you now know the technique now?" He guessed from whatever Silas just did and his attempt to try and tell Genji that he would explain the Skill he just learned meant that he could not only perform it, but knew how to. "So from my understanding of what just happened, if you do know how to use that technique... you all can learn anything as long as its written down in a book or something... like the characters in videogames can or whatever, like that one a friend gave to me... Skyrim was it?" Genji thought for a few moments, nodding to himself. "Well... your power just seems to keep popping up new tricks. If you really can learn anything from books, it'll make teaching you the basics of martial arts alot easier... so ill be right back. Just stay here and hang out for a bit or whatever." With that Genji ran off quite quickly, exiting the area, leaving Silas and Sasha alone for ten minutes. When Genji returned about ten minutes later he came back with a box, a cardboard box, which he sent down on the ground before the two of them. He opened it up and it was filled with two stacks of books. "Well I'm back. Lets see if your power lets you learn from these books. If so, then your power will be more broken then I originally thought. Makes me a little jealous actually, that you can learn things that take others years to learn just by touching a book." There were two stacks of five books in the box, a total of ten books, five for the each of them. The ones on top had the same colored cover, but no title on them.