68th Day of Spring, 512 AV (Preceding events span from the 62nd to 67th days.) There was a spider in Minerva's house. She hated spiders. It had been there the night she got home from learning glass with Montaine. She had screamed, and thrown her hammer at it. Her aim had been horrible, and she had just ended up denting one of her carving projects. The spider had scurried away, and she had lost sight of it. She ended up spending the night at the home of one of her University friends. The next day, she had come home hesitantly, searching the house for it. At first there had been no sign of it, and she had hoped it was gone. She had settled in to work on her readings for her classes, only to later feel something crawling up her leg. There had been more screams, followed by frantic stomping. Somehow, the spider had managed to evade her, and crawled under the bed. She had spent most of the rest of the night trying to kill it. She had gotten down on her hands and knees, chasing the spider around with a mallet. She had pulled out her bed and thrown blunt objects behind it. Eventually, the spider had crawled up the wall, and gotten out of her reach. Then she had stared at it. Mallet in one hand, the other clenched in a fist, she had watched it. 'Ow does 'e climb walls...? she wondered. Then it became a project. She had pulled her chair over, grabbed some paper and her quill, and a wooden board to lean on. She stood on the chair as close as she could get to the spider, peering up at it, and began to draw. It wasn't so bad, as long as it didn't get any closer. She spent hours sketching the spider, carefully balancing her paper and ink vial on the wooden board. After the third time she almost spilled the ink, she had paused and grabbed a few small scraps of wood, nailing them on the corner of the board in a square. She stuck the vial in there, holding it in place so she could draw more easily. Every once in awhile, the spider moved along the wall to another location. She dragged her chair across the room and followed it, getting different angles to view the rest of its form. She etched the details carefully, noting the way its legs bent, and the angles they moved at. She had gone to sleep that night dreaming of spiders, yet they hadn't been nightmares. On the third night, she had brought home books from the library. Books about spiders. She searched through them until she found this particular spider. The Golden Orb Weaver. It had an inch and a half wide body and two inch long legs. It was named for the golden color if its silk web, which could be quite intricate, with a huge orb design spanning as much as a meter wide. "'Oy, yer a smart bugger, ain'tcha?" she asked it, smiling up at the critter. Learning about how it worked made it a bit less scary. "Can't 'ave ya makin' a web bigger'n my arm 'ere in my 'ouse though, can I?" There were more detailed drawings in the books, and she started sketching her own from them. There was never really a point where the project became a conscious decision. It was just something that happened without her thinking about it. She started sketching joints, with small gears to help the legs move. She knew she wouldn't be able to duplicate the venom or the web weaving without some kind of alchemy, but the body? That she felt she could do. Before the end of the third night, her drawings evolved into blueprints. She didn't have precise enough tools to make the fine and tiny joints on a two inch spider, so she expanded it to six inches. With another six inches for each leg, the final product would span eighteen inches across the left legs, body, and right legs all spread out. She had to do some careful math to keep everything in proportion. Every segment of every leg had to be increased in size, the dimensions staying precise and accurate. She worked the numbers with great care, until she had a schematic she felt she could work with. On the fourth day, she brought her drawings to Professor Beadle, the University Gadgeteering instructor. He helped her go over the math, and they spent the morning adjusting the specs for the joints and gears. That afternoon, she started carving. Each leg segment and joint had to be cut out individually. Each leg had three segments, and the total leg would bend in two places, plus need a third joint to connect it to the body. She carved the body first. The main body would have no moving parts. It was just a block of wood, cut to size then carefully carved, chiselled, and smoothed out. The most detailed work went into the joints, four on each side, where the legs would connect. She chiselled out slots where the metal joints could fit, taking careful measurements to ensure a proper fit. Then she cut and carved the legs, twenty four segments in all. Small holes were carefully drilled into each end, where the movable parts would be attached. She didn't add any artistic touches to the body parts. They were just straight, smooth rods of wood. Maybe she'd paint him up nice and pretty later. It took her all day to finish the carvings. On the fifth day, she started assembly. She worked in the University lab, so her professor could advise and offer corrections as she worked. Metal joints were hooked into each of the connectors she had carved, and a network of gears was screwed into the underside of the wooden body. The gears connected the legs on either side to allow for more balanced movement. When one leg rotated on its joint to step forward, that motion turned a gear at the base of the joint, which channeled more movement throughout, adding power to gears on the opposite legs. The gears connected to rotate when a leg was raised to take a step, then unlocked when the leg lowered back into place. In this way, any legs in a 'raised' position would move the gears and aid the overall motion, but any in a 'lowered' position would be immobile. Some of the last physical touches she put in were a leather membrane on the head to simulate an eardrum, and two pieces of sharpened metal, two inches long each, to act as fangs. These she inserted into carefully carved slots on the creature's 'head.' Of course, taken by itself, there was a fatal flaw in the overall design. There was no power source to move the legs. As her professor explained, there would need to be a wind up mechanism somewhere to set the mechanical spider into motion. At least, she WOULD have needed such a thing, if not for the fact that the spider would be powered by magic. A fully functional wind up mechanical spider would have been a bit beyond Tock's skill in gadgeteering, if everything needed to work on gears alone. Making the legs move in unison was a tiny part of what would have been a much more complex machine, needing a wind up mechanism, more gears to transfer power into the legs, and most complex of all, a highly sophisticated mechanism to coordinate the movements of the legs to work in unison. Making TWO legs move in unison was complex enough; making eight work together in smooth, fluidic motion would have taken a very advanced machine. So instead, she would put a spider's mind into the device, and let it coordinate its own movements by instinct. She spent the next two days animating it. First she had to catch Goldie, as she had taken to calling the Golden Orb Weaver. "Okay, you," she said, holding up a jar and waving it threateningly at the spider. "It's been fun, but ya can't live 'ere no more." She stood on a chair and held the jar under the web the spider had been weaving in the corner of the ceiling. She used a stick to scrape the web into the jar, bringing the scampering spider with it. She screwed the lid on the jar, sealing the bugger inside. She had punched in some air holes to make sure it lived long enough to complete the process. She pushed all her furniture aside, and cleared off the floor to begin. She drew in two pairs of linked circles with chalk, then placed the captured spider and the created one inside the circles. She then pricked her finger and added a drop of blood, before sitting cross-legged next to the circles to begin. She closed her eyes and reached out through the astral plane, seeking out the tiny soul in the jar before her. She held up one hand, a soft glow emanating from it, spreading forth as it searched for the life. When she found it, she latched on, then raised her other hand towards the construction. Once she found the empty body, she began channeling and transferring energy, and soon formed the Automaton's Soulcore. The construct began to glow on its own, the newly birthed spiritual energy emanating from it. Then she began transferring the memories and persona. For such a simple minded creature as this, it was a very quick and easy process. She fed all the spider's instincts and behavior, and little else was needed. She added some basic directives, imbuing it with the command NOT to bite her. She programmed it with loyalty and affection towards her; at least, as much as its simple mind could understand such. It would be like a pet, drawn to her side and content with being in her presence, but its mind couldn't learn more complex concepts or emotions. It would simply have an urge to be by her side. It would be soothed by her touch and calmed by her voice, even though she couldn't get it to understand words. On the last day, she taught it to move, transferring the concepts of movement while Goldie crawled around the jar. With her magic binding the spider and the construct, an identical glow suffused them both. As the transfer strengthened, the Automaton began mimicking the spider's movements. It started crawling around the circle along the same path the spider took as it crawled around the jar. Finally, she severed the connection and grinned at her new 'pet.'. "Awright Bitey," she said, giving it its True Name. "Now, wake up!" She snapped her fingers, sending a last spark of energy into the circles. It suffused into the construct, then the glow faded. The construct shuddered, then stood shakily, before taking some hesitant steps. Bitey crawled around slowly without purpose until it blindly bumped into a wall. It tried on instinct to climb up it, but its body lacked the structure needed to scale a vertical surface. The wooden legs scrambled a bit at the wall, then it turned and wandered off. Tock frowned. It was supposed to be drawn to HER. "Bitey, come 'ere," she said, making kissy noises. It turned and scurried over to her, climbing into her lap. It had been drawn by the sound of her voice. But why...? "Oy!" she groaned, slapping herself in the forehead. "I done forgot ta give ya eyes!" That was why it hadn't found her until she spoke. She had installed the leather strip that reverberated with sound, mimicking an ear. But Bitey was blind! She could fix that with a second Awakening. But first she needed to make some eyes. Eyes were made best from gems or glass. She had neither, nor the skill to make multi-faceted pieces like a spider's bulbous eyes. Although... Grinning, she scooped her creation up, and headed out. It curled up its legs and nestled in her arms, content in its simple mind just to be held by its mother. Goldie she released into the wild, though she carried the jar a good half mile from her house before she let it out. Bitey was programmed not to bite her, and wasn't poisonous. Goldie? She didnt trust one bit. She got some strange looks as she moved through the city, but since the wood and metal spider wasn't moving much, no one noticed that it was alive. Likely there would have been a fair amount of fear if they had. She tried Monty's apartment first. It was late in the afternoon, so he might be home from work by now. If not she could check the glass shop up the road. "Oy, Glassman!" she shouted as she banged vigorously on his door. "Ya 'ome? I done got somethin' ta show ya!" Bitey squirmed a bit in her arms at the commotion, and she wore the wide grin and proud glow of a new mother. |