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Vigdis buried her face in her hands in resignation when Ixtaro took a bite of the bread, her mind drawing up the good doctor’s character sheet. High intelligence, above-average charisma. Wisdom was a three. Let’s hope the bread was edible or that she hadn’t dumped her constitution either. ”Stomach pump on standby…? How does it taste, doctor?”

”Oookay, you two need to calm down. Nellara, we’re aware of what he’s doing, and I doubt your motives are as pure as you claim. That’s fine, it’s only natural to desire profit. But like the Ascendancy as we’re told, most of our societies have moved past religious and noble titles, so they mean little to us either beyond being respectful to foreign cultures, and we’ve generally come to see the peaceful resolution to problems as the preferable one, so whichever side casts the first stone will not win much favor with us.” She addressed Nellara and Silbermine at the same time, hopefully making that clear by pointing at them both. At least she was suspicious of Nellara’s claims, she couldn’t speak for anyone else. Which was her next point. ”Just wait for our commander, so she can… here she is, wonderful.”

Vigdis had come out here to test a hypothesis and get to know people, diplomacy was above her pay and past her tolerance for bullshit. She was more than happy to leave the actual dealings to someone else, only interjecting when Zey said her piece. ”Maybe let’s hang onto those metals, Captain. Especially those the locals can’t make, because that’s the entire supply available to us, we don’t know for sure how much we’ll need ourselves, there’s always hidden problems that could crop up later.” Remembering their interaction from four days ago, Vigdis phrased it as a suggestion, even though a voice in her mind was saying it in a completely different tone. Still, she was relieved to see Zey wasn’t just nodding to whatever the locals were saying. Appeasement never worked.

But with the Captain present, Vigdis took a step back, subconsciously toward Kareet, the only person present beside the Captain who so far hasn’t said anything stupid. Maybe Shirik, the tree man hadn’t said much at all. ”I’m so glad I chose to become an Engineer and not a diplomat. Imagine if this was your job, no thank you.”
Having recetly lost a game and completed anther exam period, I definitely have time.
@Leidenschaft
Just to make sure I read everything right: Split 73 points between STR, DEX, STA, BUE, INT and WILL (Same as DG, but replacing CHA with BUE), with BUE capped at 5.

Unless I can't add double digit numbers (which is possible, math is a crime against my sanity), you can do 3 in BUE and 14 in everything else, is that intended?
If so, right now I'm looking at a U.S. Marshall with:

STRENGTH: 12
DEXTERITY: 16
STAMINA: 15
BUREAUCRACY: 3
INTELLIGENCE: 12
WILLPOWER: 15

Which looks fairly high for starting stats, though I have seen rolled stats like that.

Question 2, when assigning skills, each tier (gifted etc.) gives a % range. Do we go low on that? Or high? Middle?
Couldn't get my TTRPG group to try Delta Green, so definitely interested.
At the bark of Bethan’s rifle, Hayden let the BREN loose both clearing out the area a bit and drawing the remaining attention to himself. She left cover and advanced along the left wall to match Sean’s pace, catching the skinnies in a crossfire from three sides. It was a fucked situation for the locals. One moment everything’s calm, the next it’s pandemonium. Take cover from the machine gun and you’ll get shot from either the left or right. Take cover from one side and you’ll expose yourself to the other as well as the hellish, unrelenting machine gun barrage. It was just as well it came out like that. ‘If you’ve gotten yourself into a fair fight, you’ve fucked up along the way.’ after all. She kept moving deeper into the compound, two to three rounds per target, mindful not to overextend and periodically checking above them to make sure no one else tried to be smart like the last balcony guy. And yet still, she almost got got, evidenced by a whizzing noise and a spray of plaster and brick dust from above her head. Looking toward where she guessed it came from, she was greeted by the sight of a skinny collapsing to the ground with 5,56 in his gut and chest. Yekaterina didn’t bother looting the bodies just yet. There’d be time for that later.

Before long the courtyard was clear with the exception of a few skinnies running their clocks out on the floor. Seeing that Sean and Hayden were handling the breach and noting the grenades Sean had salvaged, she left it in their hands and instead went around the room, finishing off, dead checking and looting the defenders before reloading and joining Bethan in keeping security. “Appreciate the help.” She gestured to the near-miss skinny. The locals were sadly behind the times, running 7,62x39 in their AKMs and SKSs, though one of them did have a semi-preserved, if rusted, 6H4 bayonet and holster.

The clearing method was definitely unorthodox. She’d seen things. She’d seen thermobaric weapons deployed against open-ground and urban targets, she’d seen an Su-25 strafing infantry. She’d even seen a BTR-70 and an RPG-7’s PG-7VL antitank grenades used against a target that’s barricaded himself in a brick house. She’d never seen anything like that until then. Like spraying a fire extinguisher into the burning engine bay of a car. “Friendly coming in!” She called out before she rejoined her compatriots, not feeling like getting shot by a strung-out Hayden, just in time for the finishing shots. “Ear pro. Add ear pro to the shopping list, fuuuck.” She groaned, trying in vain to rub the ringing out of her ears. The inside of the panic room looked about as she expected it to. After a grenade and a hosing like that, it could hardly have been worse. And then fucking Sean… made it worse. “Oh, come ooon.” The Russian groaned as she watched Sean’s chosen machete retrieval method, “You couldn’t have just taken it, maybe broken her fingers?” She just had to ask, not seeing any reason for that. Even if they’d left her there for a few hours, she doubted she had enough intact muscles in her limbs for rigor mortis to be a concern. “Anyway, we should make tracks. With some luck it’ll be some time before anyone notices anything’s wrong.” She set herself up for departure. “You think we should check for captives? If not more meat for Edgar, at least a distraction to help us get out of here?” She offered a suggestion, also realizing where they were. Maybe if a bunch of angry locals were set free to take revenge on their captors, a small and careful team might slip away.
”Differing goals by the looks of it. Apparently it’s got to do with disputed borders and that big old treasure trove we dropped on that disputed border. Basically the same mess as back home, but with centaurs and magic.” Vigdis tried to sum it up to Arancini after retrieving her wristpad from Kerchak, ”He showed up with a platoon’s worth of troops in full kit and they’ve been tense at first sight. Though let’s not pretend I wouldn’t have shot Nellara out of fear when she first boarded the ship if my weapon hadn’t been unloaded at the time.” She added, staring in fascination at Kerchak’s display. She’d give her kidney to be able to do something like that. Just the ability to make her hand smaller would help so much with her work whenever some designer didn’t think about how a technician was supposed to reach something.

”The Running sounds like a hoot, but as I’m sure you realize, we have plenty of our own problems to solve here.” To his credit, Silbermine was a lot more patient than Vigdis expected him to be. Either he was a very good politician, or there was more to him than Nellara made it out to be. ”And nope, never heard of your god. Like I just told Kareet, we’ve had over 2000 gods throughout our history alone, couldn’t keep track even if I cared to. How could we possibly know about your deities on top of ours when we didn’t even know this planet existed a week ago?” By all rights she should’ve been walking on eggshells, scared half to death of saying something that rubbed Silbermine the wrong way. But knowing Nellara - who obviously was no fan of Silbermine’s - was standing right over there provided no small amount of reassurance, even if it was perhaps a false sense of security, not to mention the very real possibility of saying something that angered her. ”Which means we’re really far from home, because if a planet in the star’s goldilocks zone with an oxygen-rich atmosphere was close by, astronomically speaking, we would’ve known about it a hundred years ago and there’d be probes all over this place…” She got a bit lost in her own thought process before snapping back. ”And if you’re suggesting that our ship was created by this… I’m not going to insult you and your beliefs by trying to pronounce this sky god’s name, then that would make me and Dr. Ibarra here parts of said god, along with almost 3000 other people who worked to build it. If you don’t believe me, I could show you the ventral beam where the entire Hull and Structure team signed our names.” She shrugged, swallowing a remark about Kareet, Kerchak and Shirik being the first who found the Jotunheim and therefore the ‘worthy ones below’.

”We don’t yet know if this is safe for us to eat. I trust you understand if we don’t join the feast right away and instead wait for our…” How to say this so it would translate? ”One of our scholars to determine that?” Vigdis explained to Silbermine & Co as she accepted the Glen bread before calling the command channel, ”We’ve got a food sample for Dr. Lambert if she’d like to come collect it. Looks like pastry that’s been left sitting out for a week.” Fuck, she should’ve muted the translator for that bit. The to her unknown knight's reaction to Kerchak was pretty much on track as far as her image of nobility was concerned. She’d seen elements of such a mindset on Venus, in the officers and managers who attained their rank and post not through work, but through nepotism or cronyism, and who were usually the ball and chain tied to the ankle of whatever organization they were settled in while considering themselves the best thing to ever happen to it, although it was interesting to hear that Mythandian nobles competed for positions of power directly as opposed to being assigned land and duties by the monarch based on favor like she expected.

When Silbermine asked about the droids, Vigdis turned to Nellara. ”You see, this is why I wanted him at the previous meeting. Now we have to explain it again.” She said before turning back to the Glen nobleman, ”We are looking for sources of food and materials, as well as learning about magic. In exchange, we are offering some of our knowledge. Our cap- commander” She caught herself, using a word that stood a better chance of making it through the language barrier intact, ”would explain the details of what we can and can’t share better. Personally, I would gladly show off some of our more advanced capabilities if they won’t terrify you, but I can assure you neither side will learn much about our ‘golems’ as you call them. From our limited interactions, I can guarantee your finest minds would need decades to be able to understand them and the underlying principles behind their construction and function, nevermind the actual ability to build intricate machi- mechanisms smaller than the thickness of your hairs.” A late medieval society, however magical, building things on microscopic scale they likely couldn’t even imagine simply wasn’t happening in her mind, unless Silbermine just wanted the mechanical hardware to be given life through arcane means, which - although significantly easier - would still require a metallurgical revolution. The scary thing was, between Vigdis, Zhao and Ibarra, they had everything they needed to set that off. Explain atoms and crystal grids, show them the periodic table, build a blast furnace and a Hall–Héroult cell and they’d be off to the races. Even if they had to power the thing with enslaved lightning and/or heat mages, using human behavior as a template, there was no doubt in Vigdis’ mind they would do it without a second thought if they only knew half of what the new alloys could do for them.
”Just have him stream it to my wristpad, I’ll make due without it for a few minutes.” She told the captain, unclipping the device from its mounting. The wireless connection would keep the translation going, except the device would be speaking from Kerchak’s hands instead of wherever she was standing. ”Kerchak. We can’t let you into the ship at the moment, but I have a way of showing you some medical procedures. We have devices we call ‘cameras’ that record what they see and hear just like eyes and ears do, and store it to be viewed later.” She explained as she set up the remote viewing and handed the device to the birdman, ”If you tap the display once, it stops or resumes the recording. By sliding your finger along this blue bar down here, you can move it back and forth if you want to see a part of it again. Just don’t use your claws, try a knuckle.” She demonstrated the basic media player controls to the bird. The touch screen was one of the heavy-duty, graphene-based industrial ones that could handle being hit with a hammer and was designed to work with gloves on, so she wasn’t too worried about Kerchak damaging it or it not registering his fingers. ”Here it is. Looks like… Okay, I admit I have no clue what they’re doing, I’m an engineer, not a doctor.”

Kareet’s offer was frankly better than anything Vigdis hoped they’d get. ”I don’t think anyone will object to that agreement. Just a warning, there are over 5000 years of history, over which we venerated around 2000 gods and more civilizations past and present than I can recall to cover.” She cautioned the Seeker, who would need a lot of paper or invent computers fast. ”I’m just not sure how much of the knowledge we have with us.” Maybe Ixtaro could help her in that department, she though she remembered Ixtaro saying something about medieval history at some point? Or was she misremembering?

There was clear animosity between Nellara and Silbermine. It was radiating off them like heat from a boiler. Vigdis had many flaws, not being one for solving interpersonal conflicts among them, but she considered herself a damn good engineer and knew that when a machine was misbehaving, sometimes it needed one good whack to shock it into compliance. And a proverbial cold shower could do the same to nip a heated situation in the bud, simply create a situation so awkward it breaks the flow of the argument. ”I'm sorry that our life or death emergency that already took the lives of several people is getting in the way of your political disputes.” Vigdis' voice was dripping with sarcasm which she desperately hoped the locals could understand. For now she refrained from referencing their intent to leave though. She didn’t want to be this close to Silbermine when that was revealed. His next words were a shocker though. ”The what is approaching, who brought us together and WHAT are you looking for?” Vigdis’ tone and facial expression must’ve conveyed absolute disbelief at the last part, even through the mask. It was also the only thing stopping her from laughing at the thought of a centaur nobleman talking to her with the stammer of a high school nerd addressed by a girl. ”Champions? I hope that’s the translator failing or that word having a different meaning to you than to us. We’ve already outlined our conditions for sharing knowledge, and you’re welcome to that agreement, but we’re not here to fight, especially not on someone else’s behalf.” She also didn’t say anything about the impression he’s giving not making many people care all that much about his house, if he was a representative of what they were like.
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