Ask her to help with ordinary research (April) 1
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From: Rely on April
She has a technical and scientific sort of mind. When she's not being pestered by Revolutionary visitors, that is.
Success
She knows what she's doing.
(see table below)
Description summary:
The text varies based on your current .
Experimental Object | Description |
---|---|
10 | April covers a sheet of paper with equations, logos, demarcations that mean something in the language of the Red Science. It is too advanced for casual understanding, except for the phrase WHO BECOMES WHY, underscored several times. |
40 | April proposes the use of internal combustion, rather than a steam engine. Better acceleration. Lower fuel weight. |
110 | She writes notes. This is an older style of weapon than she uses. It will not blow anything up. But it belongs to a ritual time and a ritual place, and if used correctly, it will require almost no skill from the bearer. |
120 | She writes notes. You've made this blade before, and therefore she remembers how it's done. She always has that kind of thing written down. |
130 | This? Child's play. But she's willing to indulge you in constructing your own. It's obvious she considers it a bit of a training exercise for you. |
140 - 160 | She writes notes. She is intimately familiar with the Principles of violence. She engages in lengthy correspondence with your Principle while she works. Are they sharing notes? |
210 | Glassmen, cats, and certain varieties of serpent know how to enter the realm of Is-Not. For everyone else, the suspension of reality is more challenging. |
220 | […] The place used to belong to the Khan of Silks, but Veils now neglects it[…] She thinks someone else may have the lease of it, and she has heard rumours of a factory. "Hot as the face of a Judgment" […] such power could be a threat to the Revolutionaries. |
230 | She circles a few locations on the map you're currently annotating. This sewer extends further than you think; that one is occupied by foxes... |
240 | She can make a handful of recommendations, based on her personal knowledge of all the best places in the Neath to hide unnoticed. |
250 | She handles the scrip gingerly, with gloves. "Burns well," she says. "Leaves less ash than you would expect." |
260 | April squints. Most of the Roof is an enduring mystery – even to the Calendar Council. |
310 | April makes faces. She plainly considers this kind of item to lie in the domain of Mr Fires; she would be more comfortable designing a nice violent bomb. But she does have some ideas, all the same. |
320 | April studies the designs intently. They come from Hell, but some of the principles can be expressed in terms of the Red Science. She makes many eager notes, only some of which are for your benefit. |
410, 430 | She takes a pencil and in a few brief strokes outlines a plan: the Focused Albatross with a bomb where its body should be. It has such a wingspan and weighs so little that it could be a powerful delivery system. If, of course, one were inclined […] |
420 | April diagrams the throats of the Warbler, a miraculous bit of plumbing, in which venom is generated by their speech, and carried away […] via tiny vessels. It is clear she regards this as the most dangerous and therefore the most interesting aspect […] |
440 | April measures and weighs the Storm-bird. Not a bird, she writes succinctly on a paper. Dream-projection. Rest of this being is much larger than we see here. She cannot elaborate beyond that, however. |
450 | April is delighted by the chance to dissect a subject that isn't presently moving, and identify the various toxins, venoms, biles, and other useful substances that might be extracted from the Pinewood Shark's labyrinthine anatomy. |
460 | April tests the extraction of toxins. Not useful as weaponry, she writes. Some power to dissolve soil. Not designed for skin. Unless the enemies are Clay Men? |
465 | April nearly takes the animal apart looking for poisons, venoms, stingers, horns, bone spurs, etc. She looks a bit disappointed with the results of her study. |
470 | Not a poison, April writes, about the drug. Animals appear hearty. "Hearty" is how she describes most experimental animals that are not currently dead. |
480 | April has nothing to say about the creature that laid this egg, or the method that made its shell so resilient. Might be good medicine, she speculates. That shade of red is sometimes good for the blood. |
485 | April has nothing to say about the creature that laid this egg, or the shapes that writhe within. Looks like a fish egg, she speculates. Maybe it tastes good? |
490 | […] she writes. Manufactured. By illegal methods.
[…] a tea rose. She leaves it overnight in a glass jar beside the aged egg. In the morning, the flower has not only withered, but altered: the petals are more primitive, the colours more garish[…] |
510 | She looks thoughtful, then makes several sketches: […] a tigress tries to take a bite of ox, and gets a mouthful of spines […] Less effective defence than a shell, […] Definitely not offensive, possibly not even defensive. Might be mating display. |
540 | She looks at you incredulously, then mimes clubbing someone with a length of amber-warped bone. It's plain she doesn't think much of your military imagination. |
610 | She looks at you incredulously, then mimes clubbing someone with the bone. It's plain she doesn't think much of your military imagination. |
810 - 820 | She looks at you incredulously, then mimes clubbing someone with the rock. It's plain she doesn't think much of your military imagination. |
830 | She stares at the sample in the vial, seemingly disappointed it doesn't smell anything like kerosene. |
910 | April covers a sheet of paper with explanations. Ordinary gunpowder is a matter of chemistry; Perfumed Gunpowder carries certain expectations about who is being exploded by whom. |
920 | This isn't weaponry, but in the course of her work April has had to learn some metallurgy. She writes instructive notes about furnaces and the proper amount of carbon to introduce to the iron. |
930 | April's notes explore the use of the drug as a poison, as a corrosive to destroy armour, or as an irritant to the lungs. She finds it disappointing in all regards. |
940 - 950, 990 | April has a shimmering halo of silver on the tip of her nose when you check on her. She has, however, made a sheaf of notes. |
960 | April's notes explore the use of the excretions as a poison, as a corrosive to destroy armour, or as an irritant to the lungs. She finds it disappointing in all regards. |
970 | April has nothing to say about the creature that laid this egg, or the method that made its shell so resilient. Hair not particularly flammable, she writes. Will look for other uses. |
1010 - 1020 | April squints at the page, then writes a number of annotations. These can't be right! Which means that they must be. Is that a non-existent number she just wrote down? |
1210 | April eats one of the Orange-Apples and distils several others into poisons of various levels of danger. Then she writes Correspondence symbols on the outside of one and causes it to erupt in a cloud of citrusy oil. |
1340 | She probes the creature's exterior, looking for some means of ingress. Perhaps a defensive outer shell? she writes. |
1350 | April knows more about weapons than about armour, but the topics are related. This piece impresses her. The substance is rare, and much stronger than it ought to be[…]. The surface is a bit shinier than one would like for a stealth mission[…]. |
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- You've gained (5/3 × Equipment Level) x Laboratory Research