4th of Ash, 124th Year of the Age of Steel
Neither Gunnery Sergeant Jamison R. Dusseldorf nor Private John Baccas were comfortable. Two men, one only accomplished through mere longevity (gosh, was he old), and the other young and anxious enough that Olga wondered if he’d accomplish anything at all. Neither had managed much, outside of Dusseldorf who only refused to retire and die, and yet Olga found herself dependent on both. It wasn’t any fault of her own. She was enough of an engineer to understand the tank and its designs. She was thought of highly, enough that she could simply decide new instructions for the tanks and have Baccas and his compatriots learn something else entirely.
But that sort of mentality wouldn’t see her rewarded.
No. Her inability to collaborate, to even see a perspective that wasn’t hers and hers alone had cost her greatly during her years of service. Four years wasted. Nothing gained and almost everything lost. Everything had gone so horribly, and even now, she couldn’t make any sense of it.
“Will it hurt?”
“Will what hurt?” Olga wasn’t sure who asked, and she didn’t particularly care who. She rolled out the designs in front of her, as she sat down in the circle marked with her own name. “The process? No. It shouldn’t. You’ve consented.”
“Would it if I hadn’t?”
Olga shrugged. “This isn’t a violent magic,” she said, placing notes of information they’d pulled from Private John Baccas. What she didn’t say was that she wasn’t sure. It was an idea, after all. She could force information out of someone, with better efficacy than any torturer she knew. Not that she knew many. Still, this is what Artifice did. This is how a core developed. This is how a golem came to be.
Yes. She could take their thoughts and make them hers. But Artifice wasn’t a violent magic. It didn’t make sense as a weapon itself. Although, she thought looking at the tank, it certainly could make them.
It was only her, Dusseldorf, and Baccas. All three alone in the stretch of cavern that was her laboratory. Them, and the tank. The massive behemoth of a thing that they’d bring to life, forcibly or not. Olga smiled, enjoying the discomfort of men. This was her place more than it belonged to anyone else. Her lab. Her place of being. And no one could ever take it from her. This place, or this magic.
“Are you both ready?” She asked, very sure she didn’t actually care. She watched as they both nodded, and then with force and direction, she pointed her focus, touching it to the Scrivening diagram. And then, the magic started.
And then, they were in business.