Timestamp: 41st Day of Spring, 513 A.V.
Slightly apprehensive, nervy and unsure of herself, Alses hovered, torn with indecision, on the threshold of the Starry Chalice, havering over whether to move on inside or not. The sun was at her back, yes, but Syna's infinite energies were still far from the planet and weak by dint of the journey. Dew beaded the skyglass still, its gentle heat not sufficient, at this time of year, to completely drive it away when it rolled in with the mists off the high peaks of the untamed Unforgiving. In the still-weak dawn light, just touching the higher awnings and banners, the dewdrops gleamed hard and cold, a carpet of diamonds in the chilly air.
It was too cold to be standing around outside. Mind made up in no small part by the low temperatures - Winter's last, spiteful gasp - she darted into the lily-scented interior, finding it much as usual, with philterers dancing carefully through the narrow mazes of shelves and endless racks and ranks of bottles, the occasional spiralling spire of smoke and scented fumes billowing up into the rafters, mixing and commingling into a shimmering fug that perpetually shrouded the upper beamwork.
Tian J'net's magisterial armchair-throne, from whence she surveyed her chemical dominion, was the only oasis of space in the crowded, interesting shop, and thus the place that Alses made a beeline for, taking care not to disturb the apprentices padding about their business, armoured in leather and glass goggles and heavy gauntlets.
The philterer wasn't occupying her overstuffed throne, but Alses had little enough time to ponder her location, for in a clatter and rattle of rings along a metal pole, the curtain covering the entrance to the mystical back rooms and laboratories of the Starry Chalice was swept aside and through the darkened opening thus created sailed Tian J'net, a wide smile parting her lips as she saw Alses waiting, uncertain and nervous – or as outwardly nervous as a celestial Ethaefal got, anyway.
“Morning, Alses,” came the breezy greeting, the philterer sweeping a foreshortened bow in the cramped confines of the Chalice proper. “Raring to go?”
“I-”
“Good, good.” That was Tian J'net at her finest, energetic and mercurial, already sailing back towards the mystical laboratories beyond the curtain. “This way, this way.”
Beyond the curtain was an Aladdin's cave of philtering excellence – a large and high-ceilinged room, with wide aisles between workbenches and incomprehensible towers of equipment, large skylights pouring down plentiful light and vast racks of shelves holding all manner of ingredients. Philtering apprentices moved carefully and with purpose here, intent on their tasks, tincturing, decanting, heating, cooling and other, more arcane processes Alses had no clue about.
“Few safety bits and pieces, before we continue,” Tian said briskly, turning to a rack of garments nearby and busily selecting several. “Apron. Heavy leather, treated to make it corrosion-resistant – we work with a lot of corrosives here – and it'll stop most things, long enough for you to get out of it.” Tian pointed towards one of the regular recesses set into the walls on each side.
“Those are the water washes. Basically a barrel of water on a tilting platform with a bellpull release. Get splashed with some of the nasty philtres, run there and give yourself a good soaking before anything else. They can save lives, and certainly beauty.”
Alses nodded intelligently; it seemed to be the correct response, for Tian J'net continued deeper into the laboratory.
“See the ventilators, up there?” Tian pointed, evidently proud, and Alses squinted upwards, eyes confused by the oddly-strobing light – sunlight, she knew. “I had our local animator do those,” she announced. “Whatshername, you'll know who I mean, of course." Tian seemed to take it on trust that every wizard in Lhavit knew everyone else. Alses, to whom this was news, filed it away under 'interesting'. "The fans are invaluable for getting rid of some of the fumes, they don't need paying and they don't ever stop. No idea how it was done, but it was worth every kina. Stops us choking on the smoke from our philtering. Ah, and here we are.”
'Here' appeared to be a small clearing, recessed off to one side from the main laboratory and bordered on three sides by arcane equipment. She had to take it on trust that things would soon be explained.
In front of them, seemingly the centrepiece to which they were drawn, a tall, teardrop-shaped skyglass creation bulked large, surrounded by a boil of piping and – were they bellows? Perhaps.
“This is called a Mason furnace,” Tian intoned, slapping one meaty hand on its tapering, shimmering side. The noise echoed dully; the teardrop-shape was obviously hollow. “Bit of a complex bit of equipment, but essential for making vitriol in any real quantity. I worried about gettin' one, since they're expensive, but it's been worth it in the long run. See that pipe at the top there?” She pointed imperiously to an arcing curve of metal that ended in a broad nozzle, positioned directly over the tapered tip of the furnace.
Alses nodded. “We see it,” she agreed, curiosity piqued.
“It's part of a water pump. The furnace has to be constantly cooled by water flowing over it once we've got it up to temperature, and there's a secondary system – here-” she pointed at a boil of coppery pipes in the approximate midpoint of the teardrop, penetrating the pearl-gray skyglass and sealed tight with some sort of putty “-which turns the water into a sort of fine spray inside.”
“Is that good?” Alses asked, curious. Tian nodded.
“Aye, it is. 'Tis part of how we turn yellow sulphur and nitre into vitriol. Now-”
Alses coughed. “How does it work?”
Tian closed her eyes for a moment. “Rather like a perfume bottle,” was her eventual reply. “The bellows over there-” she pointed to a fine specimen of the breed that Alses had missed in the boil of piping “-force air along this pipe-” her fat fingers danced nimbly through the coiling copperwork “-which blows across the top of that water pipe. The conflict of the two changes the pressures in the pipes, draws up water and blasts it into a fine mist inside the furnace, which is perfect for us. It's called the Venturi Effect, after a wealthy gentleman dabbler.”
Alses blinked. “I...see,” she said, in appropriately mystified tones. Tian picked up on it, for she sighed and cast about for a demonstration.
“Stay here,” she urged, and then vanished into the nether reaches of the laboratory, hunting high and low for Syna-knew-what.
Alses used the time to examine the furnace and its attendant apparatus more closely, marvelling at the pipework and examining the firebox underneath the flared base of the teardrop, curious to see the whole thing in operation.