johnny silverado. (
hornswoggle) wrote in
faderift2022-10-19 10:28 pm
Entry tags:
closed / tall tales
WHO: Gela, Viktor, Wysteria, Laurentius
WHAT: Propaganda, baby.
WHEN: What is time, really.
WHERE: Hinterlands, western Orlais.
NOTES: OOC Notes
WHAT: Propaganda, baby.
WHEN: What is time, really.
WHERE: Hinterlands, western Orlais.
NOTES: OOC Notes


no subject
Why might such guidelines have come along in the first place? Don't worry about it.
"But agreed. At this stage, there is little value in continuing to discuss the thing's merits rather than just doing. There is some paperwork I need to arrange, but otherwise I would like to begin trials almost immediately once we return to Kirkwall. There will be myself and the Provost, and yourself if you're able, and Mister Dickerson and perhaps Mister Gecko,"—who Tony cannot possibly refuse if the man still has interest in the subject, given the givens—"And I would like to have accounts from Sers Barrow and Orlov, and at least one native who has never been a Templar but would still be willing to be dosed with refined lyrium so we may have a full sense or what might be considered the typical response."
Suffice to say, Wysteria doesn't share Viktor's compunctions about her voice doing that silly vibrating thing as they rattle across the various irregularities of the road. She must however occasionally defer to the necessity of breathing, and here is one such moment.
no subject
Awareness of the team roster? That's someone else's job. His is to solve problems, to transform questions into facts, to bring ideas into reality.
What Viktor has seen since joining Research bears so many similarities to his own work, the parallels draw themselves. When he compares it to his last project, the differences are equally stark: receptive oversight, a whole roster of researchers. Cooperation. Support. It's all so above board—and he can't help feeling like these trials are merely a form of appeasement, that they'll accomplish nothing real until it's done in spite of something.
But it's much too early for such skepticism; technically, he's not even involved yet. He barely knows these people, really, or the system in which they work, and conjuring up contentious spectres of home won't make adapting to them any easier.
"Or the Inquisition, if we're permitted. Drawing from familiar pools may mitigate the risks. As for the risks of the trials themselves... I wouldn't mind going over those in greater detail. Just in case he asks."
no subject
—But this question of personnel is easily the least interesting aspect of the whole affair, and so Wysteria only thinks the thoughts and doesn't bother to speak the aloud as they trundle along.
Instead, with a little flick of the reins to encourage the mule on through a great swampy section of the road, she asks: "Then perhaps you might tell me what you know of lyrium already, refined or otherwise, so that I may be sure that I'm not laboring over some point you already know."
It has been some time since they first broached the subject. Surely he has done some reading in the interim.
no subject
Viktor shifts and leans like he's attempting to get comfortable, accidentally creates a wrinkle in the blanket which will definitely be annoying under his butt if he doesn't correct it, corrects it, and settles presently.
"So... as a lead-in to investigating methods of enchantment, I read what little I could find about the extraction and refinement processes, just to get an idea of the whole picture. From there I reviewed the history of its traditional use here on the surface—physical enhancement, spell blocking, and so on. That it can be used to both amplify and neutralize magic is fascinating... I had never considered the reverse approach, though it makes perfect sense once you think about it. —Anyway, I'm aware of those side effects."
Just those little old side effects, barely worth a footnote, even though that's what they're discussing.
"I was particularly intrigued by the impact on native mages, not only in its unrefined state," you know, the insanity and death and all, "but with prolonged use over time. The transmutative qualities. Especially after reviewing your recent studies on Rifter physiology and the potential for lyrium's use as a reconstructive healing agent."
The parallels draw themselves.
no subject
"A very small initial test of that theory—lyrium applied topically to a small wound—proved inconclusive. Highly unpredictable and the effects proved entirely temporary." That's one way of saying Oops we gave someone a few extra eyeballs for a few hours. "Though given the state of The Arm and the records regarding the resolution of the Rifter plague, I've my suspicions that we must simply identify the correct dosage, as it were, either in terms of sustained proximity or direct ingestion or otherwise. Does your interest in the work have anything to do with your own physical limitations?"
She asks it so directly, shifting smoothly from the conceptual to intensely personal inquiry without a glance in his direction much less any polite prevaricating. Some might consider this a bad habit.
no subject
"It does."
Of greater concern than the topic of his physicality is how much he ought to tell her, or tell anyone, and whether those details would legitimize him or make him sound dangerously stupid—or if the reason beneath it all would change the quality of the attention he's paid. He'll take pitiless probing over that any day.
"Before I was brought here, I was— I'd been working on something to that effect. My subjects at that stage were plants, a variety of them, and the results were... not so temporary."
Nothing in the way he says this implies the successful kind of permanence.
no subject
"I would ask what sort of results specifically, but truly I doubt the specifics are very applicable here in Thedas. Yet the theory may remain sound enough, and it would be very fine not to start the whole matter entirely from scratch. I've found that's rather often the case wherein things don't work quite like you imagine they ought to or instance where properties of certain otherwise familiar materials have been rendered unpredictable, but the general trajectory of an idea is more or less—
"Why, it has only just occurred to me that I might have you look at my drawings," she says, cutting herself off. Her attention has wandered away from the road and turned in Viktor's direction. Luckily the mule in charge of their way is the confident sort of animal who can be relied upon to recognize the benefits of continuing to travel along the roadway rather than wandering up the embankment into the fields adjacent to it. "Although they are entirely a matter of enchantment and have nothing at all to do with this business of lyrium interacting with flesh and blood and that sort of thing and teaching Rifters enchanting. But remind me when we return to Kirkwall."
no subject
In any case, it's good she doesn't choose to pursue that whiff of failure, because being carried along in a stream of optimistic chatter is precisely what will keep him from dwelling on it. (But they had all better hope those results aren't applicable.)
"I will," he says, and means it. "And I might have something to show in return, should you be interested... also enchantment-related. And arm-related."
aren't you glad you waited a million year for this incredibly short tag
Well, the road certainly doesn't have it.
i'm a million glad
This is by far preferable to following that other conversational path to a place that makes him feel like he's trying to pry an idea out of the clenched fist of a corpse to show her it's still good. It's gone. Dead. He should get over it. Can't, won't, and should.
This one is dead, too—
"But an arm. A mechanical one, with thirteen hinge and rotary joints and a pressure-adaptive gripping claw, and equipped with a coherent ray emitter."
—but at least he finished it.
"Its movement was remotely controlled," he says, and lifts his hand like he would have, "by a glove. It would track your hand precisely, sensitively, and with a gesture," such a this little peck at the air, "discharge a concentrated optical beam capable of slicing through matter almost instantly. Engraving, carving, welding... you could put it to any creative purpose, with ease."
He drops his hand. "That is, I'm drawing up the plans. Eh, re-drawing them. You know. Just for fun."
no subject
From the sound of this easy agreement, Wysteria is quite familiar with this particular brand of entertainment. Yes, why not re-draw old schematics? It's rather like the particular pleasure of putting together a puzzle one's already solved once, the pieces all so charmingly familiar.
"Have you given much consideration to attempting to replicate it here? Or adapt it according to Thedas' rules, I suppose. It doesn't sound entirely divorced from the concept of Mister Stark's version of a golem— Have you seen it yet? I think he calls it Fred. I trust it stands for something, though I couldn't tell you what. How did you link the arm to the glove originally?"
Three questions are better than one.
no subject
—isn't how he linked the arm to the glove. Yes, he's seen it. A remarkable example of craftsmanship, though aesthetically a bit dry, in Viktor's opinion. Cultural differences. He doesn't hold it against you, Fred.
"And the link was simple, actually: one gemstone powered the machine, and another was housed on the glove, each with corresponding components. It took a great deal of trial and error to find precisely the right runic sequence for this effect." And the system was still glitchy last he left off, but that doesn't need to be volunteered. "Given leave to piggyback on the remote control system Provost Stark has already developed, we could have a comparable model up and running in... I want to say less than half that time, but I'm a little fuzzy on fabrication timelines here."
Little fuzzy comes with a little wobble of his hand amid the other gestures.
performs necromancy
Or both. What does she know about the work of shipwright? Nothing that can't be divined from the study of schematics.
"Is the sympathetic principle of magic one of the rules where you come from?"
performs double necromancy
"I'm— not sure. We were still working out the rules when I," achieved the aforementioned extra-dimensional nap, "left. You'll have to explain what you mean by sympathetic." But she's left with no room to do so, because here it comes: "A-about the airship, though—"
The airship.
"They're a common form of transportation where I'm from. Aerostats. The Hexgates were designed for them, specifically, all shapes and sizes. So... if you find yourselves in need of insight..."
https://youtu.be/sABdtEaKMYE
"How fine! Yes, that would be very good of you. Mister Stark and I have discussed the subject at length. And at beam and draft, as it were." Ha ha ha, ship puns. Wysteria slaps the reins at the mule's back as a sort of thoughtless punctuation to the joke, or perhaps out of simple instinct—the animal having begun to lapse back into a slightly more moderate and evidentially unacceptably less jostling pace.
"What a happy coincidence. No! I suppose we might actually use this as an illustration of that very intraphysical principle. That was the focus of my excursion to the dwarven city in the summer. The airship was. I was developing a prototype, which is obviously very secret, of a device designed to power it. I'm very pleased with it as it does something that Thedas mages seem to be entirely unable to accomplish, and I think the Venatori will find it very frustrating. When we return to Kirkwall, we must review it together and compare notes."
no subject
Viktor's lips do actually tighten in amusement. Not a second after it appears, the cart gives them a noteworthy dip and bounce, wrought by a particularly ambitious puddle's crater and exaggerated by the refreshed speed; this promptly resets his focus.
"Absolutely. It would be my pleasure."
Can they turn around, go back and look at it now? Right now? Oh no, they'll say, we were unable to complete our assignment because of reasons. Please accept our deepest apologies. And then they'll huddle around the— whatever it is.
"In the meantime, provided it won't, eh, compromise the secrecy, would you mind describing it? What's this... something... it can do?"
no subject
"However, I only carry enough poison for myself. So if we were to be captured during our excursion, you must promise to me that you will find some alternate means of destroying yourself. Otherwise the Ambassador will be very displeased with me. Posthumously, I suppose. But it's the thought that counts."
She is all smiles as she says this.
no subject
But he wants to hear about the Something, so, easing out of his perturbed look,
"Ah... yes, of course."
no subject
"Very good," she declares, as if this is the answer she expected. "In that case, the prototype in question is a thing that creates wind and the expansion of air to create a sort of constant upward pressure. You can't use force enchantments to keep an airship up, obviously, as eventually you reach a position where there isn't anything substantial to push off of. So we must create something the exploits what is naturally there. Now, some time ago Riftwatch recovered a strange device from Orlais which the Venatori had been using to effect the weather there by generating a constant cold in the region. You of course need no more explanation as to how that would be useful."
Something something the thermodynamics of creating a current of hot and cold air.
"There is still some issue as to the scale of the thing, and obviously now that we have the device to power the concept, everything must now be tested extensively, but— well. I thought it was very clever, in any case."
no subject
Indeed, no explanation required. As Viktor's thoughts come spinning up his hand stills, poised in pre-gesture, then opens to movement.
"Multiple units positioned around the ship could enable precision control—for an aerostat, anyway. Plenty of room for improvement there. And that would of course depend upon the unit's size, as well as our ability to replicate the technology." His attention snaps from the middle distance of compulsive inspiration back to Wysteria herself. "Do you think it's possible? How much testing have you done so far?"
no subject
She flashes Viktor a wide, unladylike grin.