Question before the Board | Failure Description |
1 - 2, 9 | "The Terrain is not the primary concern," says the Efficient Commissioner. "But the direction takes us towards local populations that we might do better to leave alone." |
3 | "We ought to avoid the Pitiless Bog if possible […] There are recorded cases […] of entire parties of soldiers disappearing […] it is not clear whether this occurred during the First City or the Second…"
"Fairy tales," grumbles someone else. […] |
4 | "The Terrain is not the primary concern," says the Efficient Commissioner. "But the direction takes us towards local populations that we might do better to leave alone." |
5 | "I remain gravely concerned about this route," she says. But when you ask her to suggest a better one, she draws a line in entirely the wrong direction, one that wouldn't advance your cause at all. |
7 | "We really ought to consider whether this part of the enterprise is wise at all," she protests. |
10, 18 - 19, 21 - 22, 24, 27, 29 - 33, 35, 37 | "Each time the composition of the Board is changed, I am required to file new papers with the Bazaar," says the Commissioner. Her tone suggests that you are making her do this out of spite. |
12 | "The Contrarian wastes a great deal of Board time," she agrees. "Nonetheless, I estimate that removing him would require more time loss in filing paperwork. He should stay, for the moment." |
13 | For once, the Efficient Commissioner does not want Jenny to go, and does not want to explain why. At a guess, her reasons are personal. |
14 | "He was, I have to assume, introduced to the board with a specific purpose in mind," says the Efficient Commissioner. "Even if I am at a loss to see what that might be." Then she demonstrates for you the stack of forms that she would have to fill out […] |
15 | […] the Commissioner chooses to read you just a few sentences from the red book she keeps at her side. "'In the Event of a Contretemps with an Infernal Power,'" she intones. "There are sixteen chapters devoted to variations of this Tragedy. […]" |
16 | "You brought her on […] I filed all the paperwork to assign a directorship, together with secondary paperwork reporting her likely counter-Bazaar leanings. I had a portrait commissioned […] And now you wish to remove Furnace again." |
17 | The Efficient Commissioner sighs deeply. "Is she truly an obstruction? Occasionally she insists on telling an anecdote about her tentacled goddess. It is misguided but innocuous. Removing her is not worth the bother of the paperwork." |
20 | […] "The paperwork […] requires me to affix their signature […] I may use the print of their hand or, in extreme circumstances, a drop of their blood. Shall we place a small side wager about what fluids the […] Entrepreneur is even able to supply?" |
23, 28 | "His Guild might take offence," says the Efficient Commissioner. "And they have stewardship of the Sleeper in the Tomb, and cannot be antagonised." |
26 | "Antagonising a Mayor while they are in power would be unnecessary, […] No, no, I'm not saying it would be a Tragedy. […] But if you did not want her on the Board, it would have been better not to ask her in the first place. […]" |
100, 105, 115 - 150 | […] She inspects the elevations from all sides […] She cross-compares the diagrams […] At the end […] she informs you […] that this plan will never be acceptable, and that you might have known as much had you paid more attention to the forms. |
200 | "I wish to reiterate that we are not authorised to go to war with the population of the western Neath," says the Efficient Commissioner. Evidently the manifests of weaponry have begun to unnerve her. |
205 | "I hope I am not alone in observing that this appears to support illegal activity," says the Efficient Commissioner. She does not intend to help you furnish your trains for this sort of endeavour. |
210 | "These do not strike me as necessary modifications," says the Efficient Commissioner. She has specific notions of what necessity looks like. |
220 | "I do not like us to commit ourselves to a payment per worker, without having a strict inventory by name […] You would be astonished by the trouble arising when one allows careless multiplications to enter into one's contractual arrangements." |
230 | "I suppose they could be owners," she says dubiously. "I know of nothing in law that would prevent it. But it is not what the Masters would like." |
240 - 260 | "We have some obligations to the Union," she says. "We must be certain not to break our given word." |
270 | "Ordinarily, one would file a complaint in the proper quarters," […] "They would then have a period of five years to offer initial redress."
Since everyone is looking at her, she adds, "Matters of this gravity are dangerous to rush." |
280 | "The excision of a city block may not rise to the level of a Tragedy," says the […] Commissioner. "Nonetheless, I doubt it is properly addressed by lay practitioners of..." She trails off before the words 'Red Science'. "...whatever this might be." |
300 | "There is no objection from the perspective of the Bazaar," admits the Efficient Commissioner. "But the statement falls short in both substance and form." She then quotes a passage from the Tragedy Procedures of the Bazaar as inspiration. |
310 | "Charity is a corruption," says the Efficient Commissioner. "The Bazaar does not approve of giving what hasn't been bought." |
320 | "Fully half of our past Incidents have involved excessive curiosity or a conflict between multiple purposes," says the Efficient Commissioner. She rests her hand on […] the Tragedy Procedures as though she expects this input to end the conversation. |
330 | "We should not be embracing Hell," says the Efficient Commissioner. "We should not be offending them either. I recommend a studied middle position." |
340 | The Efficient Commissioner looks pained. "An affiliation with the Church is bound to bring us into needless conflict with the Infernal powers," she says. "And I refuse, absolutely refuse, to open our board meetings with a hymn." |
400, 931, 933, 934 | The Efficient Commissioner makes a short speech in favour of financial conservatism and care for the longevity of the Great Hellbound Railway. |
500 | "Absolutely under no circumstance will we take the train into Parabola," she says savagely. "It is both dangerous and forbidden, and risks waking the Sleeper." |
510 | "We have no previous disasters on record," says the Efficient Commissioner. "But I am inclined to think that only means no previous neighbour of the Infernal Realms was fool enough to request one. Let alone several." |
520 - 523, 525 - 529 | "No, and no, and no and no, and a thousand times no, from here to the end of the earth," she says. |
620 | "F. F. Gebrandt!" says the […] Commissioner. "She has been consistently uncooperative with the Masters. What's worse, she is promising London a series of wild and experimental undertakings, far more dangerous than anything the Viscountess intends." |
700 | "Better him than someone else," she concedes. "But it's a change we need not make. Why disrupt the delicate balance?" |
710 | "He sounds incendiary," sniffs the Commissioner. "Do we want to invite further complications?" |
720, 800, 850 | "I would rather see someone a little more predictable," says the Commissioner. |
905 | "I don't think we should be encouraging unorthodox views at the Burrow Church," says the Commissioner. The Dean makes a face. |
910 | "I don't think we should spirit the Bishop away from London more than is strictly necessary," the Commissioner says. "We must never forget where our true loyalties lies." |
932 | The Commissioner is unmoved. "We are absolutely not going to use company resources to rearrange the Chain willy-nilly in pursuit of this aesthetically confused utopian project." |
940 | "The Railway barely pays for itself as it is," the Commissioner claims. "Giving away space on the trains out of charity would be beyond the pale." |
941 | "Absolutely not," the Commissioner snaps. "The Railway barely pays for itself as it is and now you want to give away money?" |
1000 - 1030 | […] "No, and no, and no, and a thousand times no, and this is exactly the thing that I was put here to prevent. […] My death would not be enough to silence me […]
[…] The Secretary offers her a glass of water half-way through, as she starts to get hoarse. |
1100, 1110 | The Commissoner gives you a stony look. "Is this the face of someone who approves of sending several screaming tonnes of metal hurtling through a mirror and into the lands of dream, loaded with powder, pistols and bombard sufficient to sink a port?[…]" |