tony stark. (
propulsion) wrote in
faderift2023-08-03 01:41 pm
Entry tags:
player plot: when my time comes around, pt. 2.5.
WHO: Stephen Strange, Tony Stark, Viktor, Wysteria de Foncé, feat. James Flint, Yseult, and sundry!
WHAT: A sleepless month.
WHEN: First week of August
WHERE: The Gallows
NOTES: Partially open! Within are some closed threads for time travel solutions and geniusing, but feel free to use this post as a catch all if you wish to RP about time travel and sciencing or talking to people about time travel and sciencing.
WHAT: A sleepless month.
WHEN: First week of August
WHERE: The Gallows
NOTES: Partially open! Within are some closed threads for time travel solutions and geniusing, but feel free to use this post as a catch all if you wish to RP about time travel and sciencing or talking to people about time travel and sciencing.
Something is happening!
And at first, who could possibly say what, with the research workrooms kept closed? But the sounds of other voices muffled on the other side can be picked up at just about any hour. Eventually, this becomes more erratic, but only because there is the sound of metal grinding, clanking, and quiet conversation drifting and pattering up through the lyrium-glowing stone passageways that funnel down into the basement of the Gallows.
Eventually, an announcement is made, and the cause for at least four of the Research division being utterly consumed by work becomes apparent. Do feel free to stop by, whether to register your disapproval, make sure they are eating, or to lavish upon them your tearful gratitude, but don't expect to stay too long regardless.

no subject
"Oh, well," is a little uncharacteristically demurring when she does answer. "I've studied runic enchantments and the use of lyrium, and obviously have helped Provost Stark with his work on the Rifts and the Gates and so on.
"And—" A very brief hesitation, a number of years spent dodging around the topic among most of the company having become something of a well versed habit. But no time like the present (or the past, as it were). So: "And I do have some Talent, speaking in the arcane sense. I might be able to help you with your adaptation issues, Doctor. Come now, Viktor, you don't really mean to sit there in silence, do you?"
no subject
Fine is maybe not the word, but it's the one that comes out of his mouth. Too restless for quirky table-sitting, Tony levers himself off, landed two-boots down. "The problem," as if this is the only problem and not the whole damn rest of it, such as tampering with the timestream at all, so he amends this with, "the first problem, is generating the kind of power necessary to supercharge a rift into doing the job.
"But we've got a thing. The thing's a Magrallen, because—I don't know, ancient Tevinter was bad at naming stuff, but it'll give us the juice once we hammer it back into shape. We construct something capable of harnessing that power, containing and tampering with the rift. Like a door. Window. Some kind of gate, maybe."
Maybe Viktor can sense the very vivid experience of Tony Stark's full focus bearing down on him from where Tony has paused his wander about the room.
"Like a magitechnical gate of some kind."
no subject
"That would be the way to go about it." He's quiet. After a pause to clear his throat, so as to sound less like he's emerging from a crypt, he goes on.
"Every stage of this plan will be arduous, but the greatest challenge lies in directing the resultant tear in the Veil to a precise purpose. That and acquiring the fuel to achieve it," he grants, dry, with a tip of his head. Fortifying momentum achieved; now he does raise his eyes. "But, that fuel requirement can be mitigated. Triggering a destabilizing feedback cycle to amplify the Magrallen's power would be relatively easy."
''''easy''''
"With a stabilizing cycle to oppose it, the system should reach a controllable equilibrium. The trick will be creating a mechanism robust enough to withstand the massive energy output."
As an afterthought, off his own glance down, Viktor lifts the page he's been writing on (was this one important? oh well), briefly turns it around to show a glimpse of scrawled notation, including the roughest of circular diagrams—not the full solution, but a solid start to the hours upon hours of work unfurling before them.
Behold: his résumé.
no subject
He’s too far off to the side. The sorcerer rises from his desk, moves closer to see the diagrams being flourished at them. This part’s all Greek to him, but it sounds— promising. Yes. Good.
“All three of you will be better at the Magrallen and the engineering part of it, I suspect,” he says. “But directing the tear in the Veil— I’m sure I could learn to do that. I’ve done something like that.” A glance over at Tony; he’ll remember. Doctor Strange’s jerking spasms, limned in eldritch light, flicking through timelines like the world’s fastest tickertape.
“If you all can generate and stabilise that energy, I can try to direct it and find the specific, precise timeline we need to reach.”
All of this is theoretical so far, but everything has to start as a theory, so —
no subject
"The matter of generating power would seem to be an important question as well. Even with the anchors and lyrium work and, forgive me, whatever it is precisely that Doctor Strange might work out—I believe the Magrallen is powered by blood, isn't it? We can hardly afford to go sacrificing more members of Riftwatch to it"—sounds, alarmingly, more like a logistical quandary than an ethical one when she says it.
"Something will need to act as a substitute, yes? To activate the device once it's been modified. Or we'll need to alter it sufficiently to the point that it doesn't require that component."
no subject
A gesture. "Dragon's blood is more than a substitute and according to what I've read, we wouldn't even need a lot of it, not if we're talking about just activation. We destabilise, amplify," a nod to Viktor and his helpful diagrams, "and build something to channel and loop the overflow. We have a decent stock of material I don't mind completely burning through.
"It'll be fun," is just true, discounting the high stakes, the absence of reliable Grey Wardens to bring him coffee during the wee hours, and so on.
no subject
First come first served: he offers up the page to Strange, for perusal or passing off. Meanwhile, being no longer in the middle of a thought, he now takes advantage of this tiny notes queue to have his turn at giving Wysteria a belated Look of his own. This one happens to favour aggrievement.
"The fuel collection team should still be encouraged to collect more than is needed," he says. "Best to assume this will take multiple attempts to succeed." And then, with barely any inflection, he confirms, "It will be fun."
no subject
Fun is an alien word these days, but he can still feel it: that kick of brutal satisfaction, building momentum, firing up the engine without guard-rails and without any of them looking at each other and asking are you insane. If anyone can do the impossible, surely it’s the four people in this room.
“That means we need to rope in Forces and Scouting and others,” he says. “People with muscles to go fight a dragon for us.”
Then again, other members of Riftwatch might be looking for somewhere to pour all their energy. Maybe they’re angry and grieving enough to go fight a dragon about it.
no subject
But there are more pressing things to squint at other than directly back at him, and so her attention reverts back to Tony. "We should also test to see whether lyrium has effect on the power generated by the anchor. Take it as a mage might," Ser Orlov had recommended. "We can open a Rift or two in the dungeons and close them right away as soon as we've takes measurements. That way if something were to begin to— fray, I suppose, when it comes to overtaxing the machine. We could be certain then of how far it might be pushed while retaining some stability of the Veil about it."