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INTRODUCTION

The Nature of Magickal Energies

.....I3 The Theory of Harnessing Magick ....14

..............

poralis (Temporal Engine) 67 Ingenium Integrita (Integrity Engine) ..................

..

Magick Through Mechanical Contrivance ....................... .I6 Miscellany and Addenda ............I8

BOOK ONE: 1495

...............20

Infundibulum Potentia (Draining Engine) ................. .21 Imagum Illusorius (Optical Illusion Engine) ............25 Imagum Melos (Auditorial Illusion Engine) .........28 Ingenum Infernus (Inferno Engine) .30

Ingenium Sustentaculus (Li Sustenance Engine) ........... " . Ingenium Curareus (Healing Engine) .. Ingenium Phlogiston (Levitation Engine)

.............74

BOOK SIX: 1500

Via Peregreus (Dimensional Engine) Ingenium Perplexus (Cipher Engin Ingenium M a (Magnetic Force Engine Censurum Veraceus Ingenium Confunderus

Ingenium Frigidus (Glacial Engine)

BOOK TWO: 1496

..............36
.............

. .32

Ingenium Fascium (Imprisonment Engine) Ingenium Gnocereus (Intellect Embodiment Engine) .............. .39 Ingenium Auditorius (Clairaudience Engine) ............. .41 Ingenium Vedereum (ClairvoyanceEngine) .............-43

Ingenium Tulmultuosus (Earthshaker Engine) ....... Dissolventum Universalis Testudo ElementaIis (Elemental Engine) ........

BOOK THREE: 1497

............47

Ingenium Meteoricus (Weather Engine). ..................48 Ingenium Alchymia (Alchemical Engine) ....... Ingenium Deflexus (E thereal Interference Engine) ............... -52

BOOK FOUR: 1498

.............55
...

Imagum Somnus (Dream Engine) .56 Ingenium Insanus (Madness Engine) .58 Ingenum Vaderus (Imparted Motion Engine) ....................61

SORCEROUS AUTOMATA IN THE GREAT GAME MAKING A SORCEROUS

.. ..

BOOKFIVE: 1499

..............66

TIONS & GAME STATISTICS STAR IRO

......i i 8

ONN&

srla ,otmstil oi s - e e c s NON 4sq s& s m s d

02:oimscJ*(

-1-

swxwieaid irwshq st~smlovs~oiea.c &4aq

ile O Z O N ~ N N ~ O V ~
b p ON NO^

NOW!atio+2 stNse-*sttsl
iwtla'llsb
-N-

rss~az omo s^rsaasoi ~ n ~ l l r s ' l


o i ' b ilat

' ovtrsrw se0qei.c oivawsmcn ie ,is*q a

SAD

i l N :obNsibwsbnoqw ie oi ,rm w 1s p ii w

isi.rlnq
b o u t 4C . w s b r ra i r

oNnileov NON omi-bm

sm a sim 3 ONYO YO ONNO? i r w i z & w w Qe s&ita? 1

s &

ib OIISNP

sqib Nsd 9.cstoq NON , s v s i t s l

oi -SVO

NON

4sq s

.&srlplla i e r u i i t l ~Hi olls~p oieiq al ) s

-siq
Hi s

,0803

011-

lot ib sr v r e s ahajsqh otm'wph tm ori s ,oirkuorrie Ii nvqoe o ~ FUN IS)^?: 01 m

S ~ N db iNosNib , m s P
s c n + m mi i n s sim si

'wp Ni imobrmpiq

3 .ail+

... stmaaddo sIh mdsrrst i-?

otae

im nvtesb

sb~a4e 01

imotatsiv 0 1 2 9 ~ ~ s aecn ONN&

iezsrrcsaib iv ovtrisb 92 svkev 4sq 6'

ab 6 sNpNNbA av*sqzwq d .haei)-2svNiillsb i N p e N i ' l s t n s w o d q hiq air4 01 SLNP lsllsb oqmru ISN ,SNOPNN sNilqbaib s iNoirJJbavt SI sit& a akoqs*rq rsi.sole a QVONV~ S I O N ~ afls~ 1 ie ,irroisn+orcuib sllsb ibom i Ab ntwilqmneoibaq
4 9 ~ 2 9

.-is4

alisb o t t v n N p

1o3itmstnNv allsb otrmt NON

Se guarderai le stelle savua raxzzi (comesi fa vederle per un piccolo fovo fatto colla strema punta de la sottile acucchia, e que1 post0 quasi a toccaw I'occhio),
t vedrai esse stelle a s e r e tanto minime, &e nulla wsu pare -sere minore. u veramente la lunga distanzia d A low ragionevole dimunizione, ancora &e molte vi sono, che son moltissime volte maggiore che la s e l cV&l terra coltla a I'acqua. Ora pensa que1 che parrebbe qfiessa no* stella in tanta distanzia, e
considera poi quante delle s i me+terebbe'e per longitudine e latitudime inpa seminate per esso spazio tenebvoso.

mondo, B dato per penetevuia

&e lor medesimi sivazino essa vita, e che MOM

possegghino la utilitb e bellezzza

del wondo.

case has a l s arrived, a n d just as t at

are my puvsuits,

the world about is in.fwed wi as my benefactor has increased his benevolence.

F v with g w t a-d o
with t e passing of h Frederick 11, may he rest in peace, has indeed invested o u r g r a n d Lodovico
Sforza with t e Duchy of milano, gracious city of the Alps. At l s , a duke, h at
pageantvs Ill\aximilian I, now the tIoly Roman &peror/

and no longer a regent, to give Milano the place among the cities of the world as she s o richly d e s e r v e s . And 3 mora, though born but a 1
g r a n d s o n of a lowly condottiere, is how royalty, a n d 3 find p a t r o n a g e i s now greater, and also that renown for my retained

that his

have acquired greater

work among this Jtaly,

for 3 a m seen as one wo&y of being

by the illustvious House ofsforza, which is as it should be, as there i s not o n e whom 3find excels m e in any manner of avt or architecture, let

alone industdous invention a n d such puvswits.

( must also m a k e mention that he, that is, /2/la,ximilian 4 has faken for a bride 2 B i a n c a maria Sforza. m y fheir marriage be f;MiifuI a n d a joy to all. A n d a speaking ofmarriages, &e sforza family has fltrher expanded their connec-

yet fail to fitlfill the intent for which 3 developed them, which, inescapablB indicates that my observations or deductions are at times found wanting.This 3
find most appalling, a n d thoroughly inexcusable. Fovtunately, the Duke is a patient man

with my dabblings.

h e covered chariot w a s the d e v i c e which most a p p e a l e d to the Duke, a n d the one upon which 3 e m b a r k e d most enthusiastically. hen at last J had completed construction of the first example of this

o p e n i n g s which allow

the opera-

o M t s i d e world.

m method of Orga y

3
1 I
of

must be organized in this mannev of investigation, more s , J a d m i t , o


&an is my

usual wont, for J too readily allow my enthusiasm to overrun

a n d stampede down my deliberation, a n d as a result my f k m oversights a n d ineficiency,

work can suffer as J have learned anew with my invention

the armored chariot. J s h a l l here, then, apply to myself an unaccustomed oPganization, that, while pursuing &is heretfore unexplored s c i e n e , J might avoid the glaring e r w r ofoverlooking significa in my haste to reach the ends.
Tshusly shall
my newest

Codex be o r d e

The j v a h r e The Theory o f f l a m e s s i n


/Mechanical ny

and Addenda

Tshere.POWa m ovganized. J

shall have to conduct m y researches careful


spection, for His Holiness the Pope JnnocentV Summis Desiderantes condemning non-Church ten years ago, a n d Stalians have a long memory, esp

great circuma papal bull


1y &e pious ones, Jt 1
n of same.Or pel.-

witchcraft a n d sorcery only

i tragic to see fear of the unknown impede the explo s

haps i t i s the abuses of s o m e self-styled practitiomers of black a&, the like of which abound in this superstitious 1 a n d . t h e s e unhallowed few bring unwarranted disgrace upon those of us who, with scientific reasonimg,
a c M t e

percep-

t o , a n d a clear conscience, in Mnivevsal Force. 2

seek to shed light upon

F o h n a t e l % the old goat was called ngregate Direct Superior a few years ago a the ripe old age of too long, so pevhaps this bull will not be t prosecuted with as much energy as perhaps it would have befow. Jndeed J

have hopes that filexandervl will be a more curious a n d forgiving Pope. Mnfoviunatels old Rodrigo Borgia-no, he no longer exists, indeed c\e is now t e pevfect filexandevVI-hhas already revised his Jnter cetera divina within h
two months of i t s original pevfect incarnation, a n d i t w a s

by a n d large ignored a n y w a y . t h i s Pope may not have a significant impact o n history, despite appointing family membevs like his son Cesare to impovtant clergical posts. fit l e a s t so 3 hope, for 3find that those who impact histo
e that as it may, 3find 3have attr
some atkention

in a n injurious manner.

the woman reputed to be a witch, a n d hen inspections for the nonceu3 shall resume them wh
m a d o n n a of the Rocks, a n d can move fL1l-y d

11 have to shelve these

3 have finished the madonna ofthe Rocks, a n d find now that the world i s at
wa*tl?eTurkmen have invaded Hungary a n d Dalmatia.l%is since, although word

they did

long

took some time to arrive in these places. J n a similar mannev CharlesVI11 of F r a n c e has sent his h o p s against ztalia, a n d taken
ttte

Rrenza a n d Roma.

Pope is said to have

d to Castel Sant'Angelo. J a m glad for

it/ for

wodd not see the head ofthe church thhreatened.

TtE jVATURE OFjWAGJCK$IL E . E R G 3 E S

3
s e e n to

udicious eFamination, a n d no small part of surreptitious and secre-

tive meetings with the woman from

the village, who at last, with s o m e plying of wine a M d gold, has condescended to share with m e some of her insights, although she has a tendency to stray +m the

swbject at hand, has demonstrated to my satisfaction that h r are ee

indeed four facets

of the magickal powers which permeate the Gav&.Tlqis

is

as 3 had surmised, for t e effervescence which h

these powers eFude can b e

be offour slightly differingaspects, that i s color and vibrancy, and, for lack of a better word, taste, indicating that they indeed are separate manifes-

tations ofthis unknown a n d

3t is m y belief, a n d by w a t c e method with which these energies interact with the world abowt, that the best naming of these facets is &at they are hea~enl.2r, spiritual, natural, a n d mundane, this being the best eFplanation of the method by which God might cause these powers to b e apportioned among His creation.4

0, Mmxw&ly Power of t k c a w e w l y Delights

tL

eavenly power is that which flows from Heaven, borne upon angels, a n d connects the ea&

the wings

to the divine. J a m uncertain whether

or not t e heavenly power may also be u s e d by the Deceiver a n d h

his minions,

trapped between Heaven and Hell as though the poles of a magnet, o r whether t e Lord smote S a t a n such that he and his angels m y no longer h
touch the heavenly powevs. tleavenly powers may

be what divine spark remains within these paltry a n d sinfMl human shells. With the heavenly powers might one s u p e r s e d e &e limitations placed upon us by God as w e live within

His Creation, a n d perhaps even +avel to sit at +tis feet.


Spiritual magicks are those which impinge directly upon

the human spirit,

that eternal and

inviolate part

of all of us, granted to us for our eternal salva-

tion by our Creator.'tt.\ehealth a n d state of our spirit i s of paramount import

to the health of o u r bodies, as c a n be demonstrated by t e dilapidated posih tion of hose most sinf..l a n d corrupt people, who then succumb to leprosy a n d
other ailments. With spiritual magicks might one influence o r dominate the
activities of t e pevson.6 h

OMS

effovts of human o r

mechanical will u p o h ~e

magickal enevgies, preventing them from wnvaveling, as is their wont. Since hamans ate pc~
sessed of weukness

mechanical contvol of
magickal energies

]MEctlfiJvJCfiL CON
have studied ca~~?fLlly manners in whi the

of the manner in which Mzechanical devices might c w t e s w c k aberrations in the lines of magi&l fovce.
m e* t +,
a s i t i most s

illclsh.ative

-these ave some methods by which J believe we might be able to entangle &e magickal ene-ies such that they shall pvoduce unusual resulf~, the w n t o r for
tion of natural

C m t i o n about tfieentanglement,

lines ofmagickal energy shall itself cause a contohaon ofthe and hence what might be termed an abnormal situation, al&ough magick is, itsel5 natwral. /Much as credting a n alchemical $re causes an abnormal heat, yet all is perfectly natural.

SOMI, nor COn-

that the tireless appliccltion of the machine to the task shall be balanced discrimination, a n d that t e result shall b e as efficacious as h
a n y as might

b e obtained by human will a l o n e . A n d 3 have no training in h magick thvough t e application ofthe will besides.

3do not believe that the magickal energies ave infinite in nature,

does the grass, there is never s a n infinite supply of gwss for the harvesting, either. CJt i unfortunate that the
in a given time. For although they may gvow,
AS

mechanical devices bindings, or knots,

shall consume the magickal energies in the i y i m g of& o r what have you, and therefore that it shall be impossible

to create a permanent magickal effect,for to have a building suppov+edaloft


o n ai5 by means of a magickal contrivance, would be most impressive to

all, a n d a sure construction to d r a w the curious from across t e continent, and h bolster trade. A n d intewst in my works shall be widespvead indeed. 1 1

jA~other CovMlnissioM
to paint a vendition of

The Last Supper.

monastery of S a n t a maria delle G r a z i e has asked, a n d has ofered is most

the sum he

wo.thY, especially in the service of these men ofGod. J find it somewhat amusing that they wish for me to pla painting in &e dining hall of their monasteT. Perhaps hey wish the that they dine with O u r Savior, o r pedqaps some of them prefer to think of their bvethven as 3udas. J a m certainly merely jedng, here. J p n d the monks most pious individuals, quite unlike h e i r spiritual leader, filexander VI. J look forward gveatly io this task,
for J s h a l l endeavor to exceed all my works gone before with
this one, for their benept a n d approbation.

they a r e suvely most

intelligent to

turn to me for such a decoration, as none is my compare.

d that the methods of powering the magickal mechanisms which all design a r e few indeed, especially when 3 co esirable that the method of power rely upon living creatures, like men, o r mules, o r the like. J have at my disposal water wheels,
a n d clockwork springs, a n d muscular effovt as from a team of
of a clocksmith,
of

ho-es.

And 3

have counterweights as well, which, with severe gearing and &e assistance

might be

able to g e n e r a t e a steady, though small, amount


not at all.

f o r e for a lengthy period of time. Of these, only t e clockspring is particuh

larly suited to being moved abotct, a n d the water wh-I


3 shall have to create new methods of powering
therance of my testing a n d experimentation.

these m a c

3 visit from U M old f r i e m d


icardo Del Cantone, the philosophe9 is in T=i home in Milano. Good old reliable Ricardo! How often w e sat upon the cout+yard a n d practiced o u r perception of the huma pipit bz) scrutinizing

It"

e first metho

c r e a t i o n of many knots of m a g i c k a l force, tying

mechanical means, in a n e n d l e s s

them together by s u p p l y . T h e s e knots shall b e tied t o

have n o p a r t i c u l a r effects;a least 3 know not yet how to e n g a g e them t with effect, however, by their creation, they shall deplete the magickal
potential of the region, cofisuming

the

m a g i c k a l e n e r g i e s in a

M s e l e s s

fashion, much as a fire in the d a y t i m e burns scrap wood than for its disposal.

t n o use o

other

( O F t Y C f i L Y U W Y O f l EJVG3flG)
iven that J h a v e been metallccrgical

able to create an 3ngenium Solaris,


learnings, are less than expert,

although indeed a faulty a n d short-lived version, for my own

skills, despite m y

shall create an entire image. Comprised of a series of Jngenia Solarii, e a c h of which contvibutes one portion ofthe image, a shape and projecting a certain color of light, each of which pieces is seen to provide a portion of the whole i m a g e . t h a t is, by carefLI arrangement of patches of light a n d color, a n entire
it should be possible, to create an ingenium which
illt-tstration might

be made.

-temptation has arisen,

that J make my rendering of The Last Supper


will ceriainly
Cause

of

such ingenia, instead of a standard painting. t h i s rendering to be more

the

detailed, to have a more smoky

aspect, &an &e normal

the vision so created shall be of threedimensional nature, i t shall better appear that O u r L o r d w e r e seated with his twelve in the very dining hall, which shall be most pvofowndly moving, J a m
fresco painting method. find, since
sure.

the entirety of the image shall require a um, far beeer than J c a n possibly create here,
Furthermore, i t i s doubtful

a n d would

that the monks,

being

take much time. disposed to follow the writs


being magickally created.

of the Pope,

will tolerate such a piece of artwovk,

J a m instead working with a new a n d experimental compound, of my o w n invention, a paint which shall allow me to take my time, a n d render t h e L a s t S u p p e r in g r e a t detail a n d realism, a n d with &e smoky pavor which others
have found so appealing in my work. Fresco is

Of &kxgikaI r i e s o ~ u ~ c e

eratea by the that the flare of light, or iIIum unraveling of one of these magickal knots, is c a u s e d by the magickal r e s o n a n c e of friction as the magickal lines of force pu a g a i n s t e a c h other,
i s my belief

much as among mundane ropes, s u c h friction produ

the color of light so disposed a knot shall d e p e n d upon its shape, which is to say what additional shapes are bound into the knot, beyond the basic form which produces light. A n d the aspect of paleness or deepness of the light so produced . shall d e p e n d on how much extra of the lines i pulle s which is to say, how much slack is afforded the kno or intensiv, or translucence of the light so created s the tightness of the magickal knot so bound. 3
t my best observations, o

3 had originally believed that it would be n e c e s s a J n g e n i a S o l a r i i t c a u s e a detailed image t b e created, linked together o o a n d carefully a r r a n g e d . B u t MOW 3 see that is a single device, an J m a g u m Jllusorius c a n be built t perform the work of many 3 n g e n i a Solarii, by the o addition t the Jvlgeniam Solaris of several adjustments, e a c h of which shall o affect the c r e a t i o n of the knots which the Jngenium produces a that t
moment, and,

which moving,

c a u s e their effects t wax a n d w a n e in a perio

odic f a s h i o n . t h e adjustments ofthis, as Y shall c a l l it, J m a g u m Jllusorius, in their orbit and rotation a b o w t the central portion wherein the magickal knots a r e tied, efigender differences between the knots, and h e n c e c a n b e so c l aibrated, through careful a n d studious efforts, t c a u s e an image of any sort o which might be imagined, a n d the more conscientious the calibration a n d alignment of these effectors, the m o r e detailed a n d pleasing the i m a g e shall be t the eye. Given a sufficient speed of operation of the J m a g u m o Jllusorius, the rapidity with which the knots a r e tied shall b e of such great moment that the created illusion shall not be s e e n t flicker or pulsate, o much as the wings of a hummingbird proceed with s u c h swiftmess that a p p e a r t b e a mist, a n d n o t solid. O n c e 3 have found a suitable crafisman o here in Milano, p e r h a p s 3 shall pursue this for the pleasure of the Duke, for 3 could create a statue of his father far greater than a n y 3 could of metal
alone. J n the meantime, 3 shall not build

this ingenium,

for J find the City

Watch m a k e s frequent passes by my w

J h a v e d e m o n s t r a t e d to my satisfaction, that a n ingenium which shall create a visual i m a g e is completely feasible, e v e n within the c u r r e n t limits of technical expertise, although preferably e n g i n e e r e d by o n e m o r e practiced t h a n 3 it shall , b e likewise possible to create a n ingenium wliich shall manifest a n unreril s o u n d for the h e a r i n g a n d entertainment.
ince
T h i s ingenium bodied

J most c e r t a i n l y c a n n o t test, for the presence of disemvoices or sounds which are not seen to Le c a u s e d by a n y naturshall
indeed c a u s e me to

al

resource

be s e i z e d by

the authorities a n d

burned a s a spiritist, my reputation for invention notwithstanding. t h e J t a l i a n s a r e a superstitious offen obtuse, tation,

lot,

love them though

Jdo, but they

are

especially when i t
a r e at a

c o m e s to manifestation of experimen-

which they

loss to explain. Jt i s

certain

that the a v e r a g e

peasant w o u l d not understand, nor even

wish to a

ept, my explanation

of m a g i c k a l ingenia, a n d even w e r e

they

should s e i z e upon me a g a i n .

J to m a k e su n undertaking, the w o r d magickal, a n d the same fate should

befall

D e s i g ~ this Y ~ g e ~ i c r m ofhe d e s i g n of this ingenium r e q u i r e s a differing s o r t of magickal knot, which shall b e as illustrated here, with the alignment of the gears not in right angles, as with the J m a g u m JIIusorius, but instead a t a n a n g l e of sixty degrees, as illustrated here, which shall create the sort
of knot requived.

While the
a

J m a g u m JIIusorius should

be a visually

leasing device, it is

necessary

that is, that i t b e forged of pmrest metals, a n d carefully e n g i n e e r e d that the o p e r a t i o n of the ingenium shall be pleasing a n d not jarriMg to the ear. Jndeed, it must b e a well-turned ingenium, the better to s u p p o r t the noises which shall e m a n a t e from it. For myself, 3 believe that silver b e the best of
ingeniwm

that this

be

of a

pleasing sound,

materials, or else brass, into

bell shapes,

or

both of which are m o s t pleasing w h e n formed c a r e f d l y forged t be the stuff of tubular bells or o

G e r m a n i c g l o c k e n s p i e l s . t h i s also r e q u i r e s
J m a g u m /Melos

that the pieces of the

b e of uniform thickness a n d cross-section, a n d b e tested to ring t r u e . Or else that their diminishment in size o v e r the c o u r s e of their length b e a g a i n d e s i - n e d for a pleasinq effectto the ear. Glass a n d q tin should not b e used, neither lead.
v
I ,

the careful

attention

erfumer, of great

dedication.5

such a contrivance is c a r r i e d out, a n d i t is engaged to operate, shall cr-eatea great warmth, as though A fire burned in the a i 5 but without
tion of scorching.

t h i s i s d o n e by creating

which p r o d u c e heat, and not light, as they a p e pulled apart. 3t is possible to -use this to c r e a t e a fire, just as placing a piece of wood o n the top of a very hot f u r n a c e wight c a u s e i t to ignite, though i t not be in contact with a ~ actual flame. y
knots

J have in mind a method of pvoving great power, for which purpose i t is unimportant, which relies upon this Jngenium Jnfernus. J call it my Jnferno
ssary to place a n Jngenium Jnfernus

era1 version of

the water wheel. 9 s the Jngenium Jnfernus operates, which shall have fo be for a lengthy time, a n d hence shall require a very large a n d powerflrl mainspring, i t shall cause the w a t e r within the sealed contain-

moving against

the paddles

of

the wheel,

it shall cause it to rotate. A n d

Ir

been captured at Rapallo,

and these prizes which have been captured

might become suitable experiments for Jnferno-empowered vessels, which shall not then b e forced to rely upon oatrsmen o r the winds for their mobility. B u t with these prizes tests may b e undertaken without removing a n y ready warships from commission.The design of s u c h a vessel will m e a n that the Jnferno jMechanism shall propel a sort of w a t e r wheel, which instead of using moving w a t e r to propel an engine, i t shall move the engine along stationary w a t q propelling the ship forward. J n this m a n n e r might a vessel
run directly into the wind, without tacking, a n d escape pursuit, o r ovevtake

'

which i t p u r s u e s . Similavly, while a n enemy oarship ill be forced to contend with the exhaustion of those pulling strokes, the vessel powered by a n Jnferno jMechanism shall find g r e a t e r energy in the pwtrsuit, for leaving a n area w h e r e its operation had depleted the local magickal energies shall i n c r e a s e the efficacy of the ingenium.7
those sailing vessels

BOOM jUaMk;Md t o
%

the M e c h a n i s m distributed a b o u t the building, a n d shall convey the s t e a m so p r o d u c e d by the M e c h a n i s m to the variows rooms. When inside these rooms, the s t e a m shall be m a d e to pass through a n array of thin pipes, the better with which to c a u s e the s t e a m to yield M p its heat, a n d c o n d e n s e o n c e m o r e into wate9 whereupon the water shall d r a i n of its o w n accord, a n d gravity, back to the bottom of the building, there to poMr a g a i n into the ,Mechanism, where it may be heated o n c e m o r e into s t e a m , in a continuous cycle.
i n g s . t h e pipings which e m a n a t e from

7 ?

e Znferno M e c h a n i s m c a n also

be used

for the heating of

builditself shall be

J derive g r e a t enjoyment from the fact that A l e x a n d e r VI i s being


be
Ferdinand

&owe to

ineffective, a n d cannot even control one fiery Firenzan preacher,

while
if i t

II is w a g i n g a very effective
by

campaign against better

the French. For


these ft'ndlearned men.

w e r e not for his interference, ings ofmine, a n d g a i n

J should be

able io publish

the exchange of ideas with other

J.
J a v e now

.S

heard tell that the F r e n c h h a v e been defeated utterlyj that their a r m y has capitulated a N o v a r a , a n d that CharlesV1II t a n d his soldiers h a v e retreated back into F r a n c e . n i s h a s shown that Ferdinand I1 has more of God a b o u t him t h a n the entirety of the self-proclaimed Holy League, for they crumbled in battle, while Ferdinand's troops enacted the will of God by driving the French back home, a n d freeing Jtalia from their tyranny.
J
have not h e a r d

thai the Pope h a s

made a n

omment o n

the

matte

has run its c o u r s e , a n d CJ a m devoid of new a n d interesting

ideas at

this

with much a p p r o b a t i o n on my part, as i t will give my h a n d s a better c h a n c e to heal, that 3 might not only write, but also continme t h e painting ofthe Last Suppet; which J have had to postpone temporarily, d u e to the incident of which 3 h a v e a l r e a d y m a d e mention.8
moment.this i s met

J n a n y event,

the lack of
great and renowned inspirations

leads m e to
pursue

the

antithesis of my previous invention, t o wit: a n

which i s simil a r in relation

the J w a g u m
Jllusorius is to
the Jmagum

i\;l

/MelOS. that
is, it is a simi-

lar concept, but a differing knot. J n


into dissolution,
Jngenium

this case,

they radiate coldness, which to i n c r e a s e in the a m o u n t of c o l d n e s s

the knots are driven c a u s e s the area a b o u t the


as

i t possesses.-this is

b e c a u s e although the knot is virtually identical to t h a t of those which emit heat, these knots a r e tied in a mannev which, stepwise, i s the opposite of t h e other; a n d thcts, they emit c o l d n e s s which infuses the s u r roctndings, e v e n to t h e point of smmmoning frost. Or so is my theory.
done
J is to t

the g r e a t c r e d i t

of

Duke

Lodovico S f o r z a ,

of

o u r city,

that

J shall e n d e a v o r to build o n e o f t h e s e for the Duke, which eforts w o u l d m a k e him the most r e n o w n e d host in all the Coniinent, for J a m c e r t a i n h e w o u l d put this
t h e r e is peace o n c e more in fair Jtalia. P e r h a p s

is J n g e n i u m F r i g i d u s is perhaps the most serviceable a


i l e

of the magickal inventions which

3 have yet

created, and per-

haps as well of those

3 have yet to

create, for the more 3 think upon it,

the more it becomes obvious, that could aught but be carried out

this accomplishes a n effect which


magickal influence.that is, we have

by

mundane, or non-magickal, inventions and methods, readily produce

by

which we can

light,

or heat. Or paintings and sculptures.

OPbeautiful

music. And perhaps each of these methods is more easily accomplished

than the design and engineering and assemblag

of a magickal ingeni-

urn, and some have the benefits of social interaction in their accomplishment, as well. But here, with the J n g e o i u m Frigidus,

3 have created an

effect which is most difficult to obtain, and is far the lighter for the effort, which is involved in the creation.

the midst of the city, SAY in Roma, w h e r e i t i s large a n d thick, a n d dusty with the passage of many people, and, with the
hut) in J n g e n i u m Frigidus engaged, in mid-3uly or August, for

charge to the passers-by admission


to relax, however

the opportunity

briefly)

cool b r e e z e AS from early spring. J c o u l d also sell from the other side of the hut beverages of a n y sort) a n d a l l as cold as
and a from
A

mountain stream. Gven including

hot

tea, although i t w o u l d

be as if iced.

t h e Jngenium
fa

Frigidus can also be used in

cold voom, which 3 hereby term a"fbigidatou;"as illustrated

best to isolate it from the heat of the outside, and surrounded by thick stone or wood, and tlTe walls covered with fmrs. 3 n h i s frigidator might wine and other foodstuffs be safely stored, and for a great length of time. As no spoilage will occur when the corruption of the heat is done away with.

fi smaller
chill a

ingenium) but well powered, might also be used t properly o of wine, when events unforeseen necessitate the immediate

bottle

replenishment of same when none i s to be had. Which would be a great embarrassment to any host.

of a n y t o r c h or lantern

which i s

b r o u g h t withi

irolamo Savonavola is again the talk from where

ofthe town,

even this far

en.

he preaches. And, all tliings being taken into consideration, 3 a m most pleased, a n d shower my kudos upon his name, although J a m cautious to whom 3 divulge my preferc Friar S a v o n a t b l a has been quite n o t e w o h y these past months, a n d his
here in jUiIano, m y sta-

sermons are always well-attended. 3 myself would attend him speaking whenever possible, were 3 back in Ptrenze, howeve6 tion is comfovtable, a n d

the kip to Grenze for a S a b b a t h s e w o n is too difficult. fi s h a m e i t is, for word has finally reached here that SavonarOla was actually oideved to Roma, by the Pope, a n d =fused to go. tte has stated that, 3t is not the will of God that 3 leave Ptrenze,or so it is said.The P o p e is apparently most anxious to hear of his divine revelation, with which the friar predicted dire punishment of the R o m a n Cutholic ChMrch, a n d in fact all Ztalia, for the immorality of P o p e AlexanderVI, which effects,in fact, are already being felt, in my opinion, for the corruption spreads.
For me, 3 think the presence

of highwaymen is more to the tvuth, both in remoti

pa& of3talia a n d in theVatican itself, but cevtainly obedience to filexander the Borgia cannot b e said to be the will of God, not fvom what 3 have s e e n a n d heard. Other stories have been related to m e as well, but 3find them less credible. For altlqomgh 3 have it upon reliable resource that S a v o n a w l a s language is at times colorfLl,there are stories attvibmted to him which 3 sincerely doubt that such a good-hearted and noble gentleman preacher would ever convey to his pious audience. 3 believe some of these stories might be deliberate slandevs engendered by those who suppovt the Pope
filexanderV1, whom S a ~ o n a ~is most vehement in denouncing. ~ l a

these matters, 3 have imagined a new a n d creative magickal ingenium/ which could be m s e d to retain S a v o n a w l a within Firenze, Papal edicts to the contvary.this ingeniam sc\all use t h e
ut in contemplating

powers of the magickal forces to prevent a person +om cwssing a certain barrieq which is erected by

the power of the ingenimm, for the imprisonment. J t shall function not by creating a great steel wall, for although 3 a m certain it i s possible, 3 have m o t yet developed my theories enough to admit s u c h an invention, but instead by the impressing of a state of mind upon those subject to its influence, that they s t o m t l y a n d without reserve believe that they may not cross the barrier so presented. F r a n c e s c a is always fond of saying that only that which one believes is impossible truly is impossible, therefore this ingenium shall m a k e those people within its g r a s p believe exit is so, and it shall be so.

mation to thirteen.'there

shall be a gvouping of numerical

arrangement plates

as is necessary for the calculations

expected fvom the Jngenium.

tl?e method of operation ofthe Jngenium upon the numbevs given is enacted by the dial set to the right ofthe nccmerical plate, which can b e set for addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, &c.

AMd

iM

Wutbevs

mostL m p o r a l

VI forbade Friar Savonarola from the pulpit earlier this year, well before Gaster. J wonder if i t might be possible to design a more complicated Jngenium Gnocereus, which shall be possessed of a capacity more akin to personal intellect. J n this fashion, might Savonarola speak with the Jngenium, and give the device homiletic coaching and explanation, and then let the Jngenium itself speak from the pdpit in his stead. while i t may be possible, J do not believe that Firenzan churchgoers will consent to being lectured by a machine, especially affer their lengthy exposure to the passionate and theatrical Savonarola. Jt is a pity, however, for the Jngenium would have no fear of excommunication, execution, or the like. Jt may, however, be said that Savonarola likewise evinces no such feaps.4

13

ope Alexander

n, o

this Jngenium, it should be possible to create a n Jngenium Fatidicus, which, by means of a variety of protrusions, not unlike the antennae of insects, shall detect the present weather conditions about, and calculate the future weather conditions which shall occur. 'these calculations shall be based upon what the surroundings are currently like, for i t is evident that there is a cause for all weather. And this Jngenium shall be able to make those calculations, and predict, for example, that here shall be rain, which a human being canno6 at least not until the rain has begun to fall. 5
Jn a
manner to

similar

J~~~~~~~ AhDnoRJus
( C L f i m U D 3 E j V E EjWGYjWG)
is now

the S u n d a y afterGaster, a n d while attending services this

that the Fiar Savonavola has continued to cause grief t o the Pope. the story i s t a Savonarola, despite being enjoined from preachht
ing, c o n t i n ~ e d do so all thvough Lent, and with more passion a n d fervor to

than before, as he is now quite fiwly considered to be a leading figure in the

city. Why, i t appeaw that the entire city of Rrewze shall rally unto him a n d

back upon this Pope, a n d not a moment too soon, for my opinion, for this Alexander i s so vile, that to tmrn a w a y from him is to e m b r a c e God. 3t is time that these protestevs sought to reform the church. B c 3 wonder what ct
tmrn i t s
for very much longer.

no o n e knows),

h a s been
and

w e d to j u a n a of Castile.t h a t is,

the d a u g h t e r
by the S p a n i s h

of King F e r d i n a n d

Queen

Jsabella

of

Spain.

find

this

so shortly after the discovery of the flew World

expedition, 3 would not

be

s u r p r i s e d if i t i s j u s t f o r

this

V~ASOM

l\/taximilian a r r a n g e d
tlabsburg,

the

m a r r i a g e , for it is well known

that that he, a

s e e k s to

expand

his family's

power. tlabsburgs h a v e ruled

the tIo1y R o m a n E m p i r e since, 3 believe, 1438, a n d h a v e held t h r o n e s about the continent f o r nigh O M 300 yLars. Z J f j u a n a is t b e a r t him a o o son, then i t shall be'cevtain that a t l a b s b u r g shall also s i t upom the t h r o n e of S p a i n . J a m not c e r t a i n that 3 a p p r e c i a t e this effort, for c e r tainly the m o r e p o w e r the family holds the m o r e g r a v e the situation for the e n t i r e continent. For in m y opinion, no squabbles a r e so grand or vicious as those within one family, a n d a family s q u le of this nature
would b e so broad in scope as could embroil all
of us.

hopes that t h e e n t i r e new d i s c o v e r i e s of Columbus, &c.,shall b e the sole purview of S p a i n , the J n t e r C e t e r a Divina notwithstanding, nor e v e n paid heed, a n d t h a t t h e r e f o r e the power of the t l a b s b u r g family will t h e n c e b e e x t e n d e d across the

r h a p s jVIaximilian

h t l a n t e a n Ocean.

J h a v e a l s o noted that
may
Whatever

Frederick

111 i s

now c

ing of jVaples.

he h a v e a long a n d glorious reign well into

the next

millennium.

the c a u s e of the a r r a n g e m e n t of t h e m a r r i a g e , i t is c e r t a i n that is was a splendid affaiu;a n d o n e which 3 had hoped to see, for the p a g e a n t r y . Perhaps 3 shall s p e n d s o m e time, MOW, as i t is raining out-

side, and q u i t e heavily, t p o s t u l a t e a n J n g e n i u m Vedereus, which could o do j u s t that, by c r e a t i n g a funnel for visions which may b e piped back
from a f a q as though

they w e r e water.

Al k

Yklgekliclm

most Pleasiklg

these pages, althoctgh the materials thereof m u s t be of a most pleasing m a n n e r to the eye, which is t say o a n y gold present, a n d all metals used in the construction should b e of gold, must be most highly polished, and smooth of s u r f a c e . And that the wood, which i used in a r e a s , must needs b e carefully s a n d e d as though s to a mirror, a n d layered with s e v e r a l applications of lacquer, that i t b e smooth and glossy, as well as d e e p and lusterful t the eye.T&e operation o a w d aiming of the Jngenium shall b e done in a m a n n e r much similar t o that of the Jngenium jE\udiforius. Howevev) as the funnel brings back visual images, and not those of sound, the aiming shall be much facilitated, wi& visctal r e f e r e n c e s for assistance.t h i s also m e a n s that for those O M one side of the ingenium, they shall see in one direction, while those upon the o t h e r shall see from the opposite side. S o that it may b e n e c e s s a r y for all attending to the i m a g e s d i r e c t e d hereto by the magickal effectsshall set themselves upon the s a m e side of the inqenium, for viewinu.

e r e it is, as illustrated upon

-Vatican,

L Dominican GiroIamo S a v o n a r o l a first b e g a n to speak, in a ,


notewovthy fashion, for

this yea5 it is indeed troublesome. Worst of all calamities, is the news +m Firenze a n d the w h e r e the spiritual struggle has raged, since the
o much

has happened

already

the last five o r ten years. find now: Rodrigo Borgia, who poses to b e n e Pope fileyanderV1, has struck a blow a g a i n s t him, t a is, Savonarola, a n d all those who attend his church, a n d 3 a m certain ht a t t e n d a n c e has never been b e t t q n o r more regulaq than of late.n\e Pope h a s ordered S a v o n a r o l a to s u r r e n d e r to his autlqori% to a n s w e r for his continued preaching, in spite of the fact of his excommunication. Worst upon this, i s that the Pope has leveled a threat against all Firenze, which, as 3 witmess is this: that the e n t i r e city of Firenze, or p e r h a p s it i s the e n t i r e Republic, for the sins of their capital, shall b e placed a n d held
under interdiction, until s M c h time as they yield up S a v o n a r o l a t b e sacrio when i t

ficed. fis this n e w s w a s old has already suwevxdered,1

reached

my ears, i t is certain

that he

heard that h e h a s indeed given himself u p to the civil authorities in Firenze, a n d they h a v e dutifully, though 3 a m certain with great regret, turned him over to the a u s p i c e s of the R o m a n Catholic Church. 3 have heard that h e h a s been s e n t back to Roma, to face t h e old holy hog himself. M t o n top of everyihing else, 3 hnve heard that there i s also a famine in Firemze! How c a n this be? 3s there no God? Cuuld He actually invoke His wrath a g a i n s t Firenze at the behest of o n e like Rodrigo Borgia, Pope ' though he be? J t c a n n o t be so!B u t a famine there is, a n d all those 3 know in 1 Firenze are reported to b e going hungry, a n d suffering for it. find 3 know I that many f e a r the Wrath of God for the supposed sins of that Dominican. h a v e had no reliable reports on the climate in firenze, nor the wenthe* Perhaps i t has been unseasonably dry, o r hot, o r the rain has trampled down the c v o p s . Or p e r h a p s there h a v e been floods, which have killed the grains. 3 do not know, and the information 3 h a v e garmered +om travelers whom 3 h a v e met in the taverns and public shops are difJ
h a v e now

I 3

ferent stories, all sworn t r m e .


Perhaps it is that the Pope has also quietly ordered merchants to avoid selling foodstuffs to Firenze under pain of eternal damnation, or perhaps

they have enacted this oftheir i

own accord, having themselves witnessed

the impending threat of interdiction, and thence avoiding the city at all costs, so save their own sorry hides, in such case as interdiction might come. t h i s is a

logical conclusion, that the Firenzen countryside has not d, but has instead been robbed of its food by th

A m 3 m g e m ; u W L Perma~utlAs
stead, 3 shall consider a lesser version
rmuiaftts,
of this, a n J n g e ~ i u m

which shall not alter the substance of the mattev; but merely
where the plate which is inserted into t e i ~ g e ~ i u m h shall

its manifestation.-this i s a different matter entirels a n d may be accomplished

with this constvuction,

be, t be altered in shape t &e new fom, o o according t the carving ofthe plate.ne material t be altered must be o o placed in the center ofthe spherical chambe3 using a support t hold it there, o if such i ~CXESSAVY for small or limpid objects. With this, might a bmken sword s be m a d e as new, a l a r g e block of cheese evenly divided into pevfect cubes, or s c r a p s of wood be m a d e into the best of tvays. 3 i possible, as well, 3 s believe, kat a bowl ofgraiw and yeast and water be m a d e into a loa$ w d y for the baking, or possibly t a a small cat b e m a d e into a large rat, though ht for what pctrpose 3 cannot imagine. P e r h a p s &e reverse woctld be bettecz6 v e just had word back from Ricardo Del Cantone, in Firenze.

c a u s e the material, whatever it may

philosopheu; although persuasive in his arguments a n d vigorous in his presentation, w a s unable to s w a y the city coctncil of Firenze. t h e y h a v e had enough of trouble with the Holy R o m a n Catholic Church, and although 3 a m there revered, t h e final decision was that, the ingeMium i s said to work through the t r a n s f e r e n c e a n d manipalation of magickal powers, which, they believe, is sorcery, which i t is not, for s o r c e r y is a black magic.yet sorcery, by p a p a l bull, has been condemned, and the city shall not avail itself of this technology for t h e mitigation of their famine, for they wish not t run afoul of the Pope again, a n d risk interdiction o n c e more.. o R i c a r d o has said im his m e s s a g e that s o m e present tkoctght to fuvther appease the P o p e by revealing t him my dabblings in these experiments, o blnt that he was able t d i s c o u r a g e s u c h a C O L W S of action. 3 a m glad t o ~ o
as, the

h a v e s u c h a friend as Del Cantone.

T
OntinMe t be a w a z e d a the a r r o g a n c e of our AIexaHderVI. o t

No,he i s not ours really, he i s a S p a n i a r d , for no Jtalian that 3


could act with shch an unashamed abandon, and so flagrantly violate the laws of ethics. Here 3 h a v e had news that the
know Pope

has annulled the m a r r i a g e of Lctcrezia of the Borgias, to Giovanni S f o r z a . t h a t which the Pope himself a r r a n g e d is now annulled! H e has, with a Pick of his ringed hand, declared that all that has h a p p e n e d between Ciiovanni a n d Lucrezia has never occurred! As if he had the
power to rewrite history.

-they w e r e only married fow years ago.3 witnessed the c e r e m o n y . t h e y e n t e r e d togethev t h e bridal suite, after much E.,,elry of course, a n d have

been together since. And

MOW

the Pope is going to pretend for all time that

Ah'
a ball on being. Or

these events never occurred. 3 must wondeu; what of their consummation? Does this annulment of the marriage make Lucrezia into a n adulteress? O r has that been swept away by divine license as well? Perhaps she is a virgin anew. Next, the Pope may annul the fact that the wind blows. What then? And at all this, he still has the audacity to have Savonarola arrested. 3 hear he is to stand trial, but 3 have no hopes that right will win out, for he is indeed a devilish Pope. 3t may be blasphemy to say i , for the Pope is t held to be infallible'by the grace of God, but it is true, and 3 shall say it. 3 shall not, however; repeat it to others. o now the plot is s e e n t thicken, and the plans of the Pope to bear fruit. For no s o o n e r is Lctcrezia's marriage annulled, than she is
betrothed to Alfonso of Napoli. Her father and brothers kick

her about like


or well-

the street! And with as much concern for her happiness,


her respect,
for

a m certain that in the upper circle of society


to be had for favors to

she is now looked upon as a doing o r a prize horse, the Pope. Ah, 3 am incensed.

Of the F'mi-e

figaim
than the Pope, who is the great
timing of

have been wondering of late ofthis famine in Firenze.Therehas been a papal bull against sovcery, which is now in its thirteenth offourteenth

year. And who better to know about sorcery

leader in the war against deviltry? And they say a man must know his enemy
All of this has caused m e to wonder at the fortuitous
a coincidence of this sort is far to remote. 3 believe,
himself, who has caused &ere to be a famine,

this famine

t which tortures my people. J cannot be the will of God, and the possibility of

then, that it is the Pope

by exercise of black arts.

Small indeed the chance he would be caught, when all other practicing
sorcerers have abandoned their craft or

fled across the Mediterranean.

find

none would dare question him, at least not in the publ' square. IC

3- eHgiure f i g a i m s t S o r c e ~ y

o contest this,

3 shall here illwstrate the construction of an

ingenium

which

shall detect and destroy any such evil spells which are cast into
of this creation is that it must be of

its protective encirclement.The diffcul*

a different construction of

the aspects of magick, that is, a fundamental ingevrimm cannot be designed, for both the aspect of magick against which
the ingevrimm must

one seeks protection must by its very nature be itself employed in the
defense, and because the knots which are produced of be constrmcted of a manner in which best to employ the auspices of each

the withstanding of assaults. For example, the knots prodmced by the forces of nature must be stout and inflexible, while those which seek to mitigate the magicks of the mind are more slippery, like unto slipknots, and
aspect in malleable.therefore, you need to build a different ingevrium to defend against each different sphere of magick.7

h a v e not b e e n recent

a b l e to apply much effortt this Codex, in o


as J h a v e b e e n embroiled in

weeks,

The Last Supper in the monastety,

and a

the completion of mighiy task i t is.

G q x x i a l l y s i n c e 3 a m assailed by the most effervescent a n d odors o f t h e monksculinary skills all the day, while J a m at
work.

a m most definitively f a v o r e d of plain a n d simple

monks h e r e a r e most

cookery. t h e kind a n d g r a c i o u s hosts, a n d Godly men, a n d 3

believe 3 h a v e put o n a

hearty girth in the

months,

which J h a v e b e e n at w o r k upon this project. At last J c a n see the completion of h pai-tin e


a month more or so to see it throccgh, so 3sha

shall fake m e but a n d other works

aside t finish this employment. 3t is cx bea o


have ever done. 3 am most pavticularly praud assemblage of disciples. A n d of

efthe composition of h entire e O u r Lord Himself, J a m most pleased.

J humbly believe h t even H e would find the vended a J t is finished. J a m going back out to the plaza, for Giovanni, bless his doughty heart, i s relieved to see me completed at %e m o n a s t e r 3 that J might design fuvther buildings, in jVIilano, for t challenge his skills, a n d has o vowed t drink me u n d e r the table this evening, in celebration. o

all people. t h i s is a h o r r e n d o u s o c c u r r e n c e . no s o o n e r h a v e J completed my m a s t e r p i e c e at the monastery, t h a n 3


a m cursed a b o v e

discover

that my most inventive experimental compound, that with which J coated the walls of the monastevy, the beiter t hold the paiat, a n d o allow m e t w o r k in light a n d shadow, in m y smoky technique, which i s o MOW famous, for the betterment of realism, that this compound is a failure!

Ah! maria

incarnate!

What

ignominy!

z has b e g u n to peel itself t

flakes as a d a m a g e d insect, a n d c a r r y i n g a w a y my w o r k of these past three years upon its feckless b a c k to the floor.Why, dear God in Heaven, why? 3t worsens, every day, 3 c a n see it. Others cannot, they tain that 3 am envisioning the worst, that i t i s but the slightest bit worse, a n d shall
a w a y from
curling itself up into s o o n stop, for certain, but J c a n see it. 3 see students of art, a n d monks, s t a n d about, a n d r e n d e r my w o r k for themselves, for their own experie n c e and stwdy, and

the walls,

3 know that s o o n theirs

&a

e only executions
e e n a s k i n g them to

of my m a s t e r p i e c e left upon

this E a r t h . J

a m torn

hurry, t complete their studies of my art, befor o instead asking them to b e patient, a n d copy i t
preserve

the i m a g e a n d color for postdty. 3

eye poked asunder, for carelessness. J n m y b r o w n

moods,

J a m

likely

to

be

careless.

ing to

the labels

given, of durationj pace o r swiftness of

'

color o r in shades ofgrayj and t e m p o r a l basis,

or w h e n in

including fear, love, a n d enjoyment, a n d


'

J have

not

the funds

at this tim

e patience, to cre-

potentially, neither shall w o r k .

( j V W D f l E S S EflGYNE)
at 3 were not

forced to endure all that has transpired! J

h a v e just now l e a r n e d of

the fate which h a s

befallen

the

Dominican friar GiroIamo S a v o n a r o l a , a n d


of Pope A l e x a n d e r V , a n d to f o r e v e r s i l e n c e I

3 am outraged! 3t
of S a u o n a r o l a ,

the voice,

which

called him to t a s k for his e)ccesses, a n d his sins! 3 a m c e r t a i n that this ecclesiastical
court, which

has

convicted

S a u o n a r o l a , must to a m a n poisoned of

be

the

mind by
else b e

the

Borgia Pope,

OIL

w r a c k e d with guilt for having m a n as S a u o n a r o l a . But, no,

they shall surely mollify their c o n s c i e n c e s with the fact that lie
did i n d e e d preach, despite beiwg b a n n e d from so d o i n g by the

J shall render t

the brain
the sinful

the subject with incoheent thought, in compensation for which, will be forced to rely upon those instinctive behaviors, which, given
especially, shall be akin to madness.

naiiire of man, a n d &e Pope

3f the operator of the d e v i c e w e r e to mount it upon a c e n t r a l axle, which should spin t h e ingenimm a b o u t as it operated, t h e n the ingenium shall h a v e effectsupon all who s t a n d about it, s u c h that it might s t r i k e a n e n t i r e c r o w d with the frenzy. P e r h a p s 3 should build many of these,
a n d secret them inside crates a n d wagons a b o u t Roma, a n d d r i v e e n t i r e city into the m a d n e s s which lives i n c a r n a t e in t h e v a t i c a n . 3

the

if3

erhaps

J am

being too cruel. Better still, instead of inflicting chaos

upon the recipient, to implant more coherent though$

by

means of

controlling sword.

the subject.
must

t h e n J c o u l d have

the Pope fall

upon his o w n

t h e settings

be m a d e

rehand, or else carefully a l i g n e d d u r i n g

operation. t h i s

J do not

recommend, for if

the alignment i s

careless, the

subject may be able to c a s t off the efects. the Pope does not c a r r y a sword, c u r s e d

no,this shall never work, for


be
his c l e r i c a l restrictions.4

( Y j W P A R t E D ]\/207JOjVEjVGYjVE)
o w many months now, through

has

it been, s i n c e 3 h a v e b r o w s e d
not certain, for 3 a m n o t in

this Codex? 3 a m

the

habit

of

d a t i n g my thoughts, but i n s t e a d of returning to past

pages a n d inscribing additional ideas or illustrations as

od. 3 do not therefore know. J t has i n d e e d b e e n a long time, however., judging by the last e n t r i e s which 3 m a d e upon these p a g e s , a n d by the dust which h a s accumulated, upon these pages, betwixt that d a r k time a n d now. 3 h a v e healed myself of my grief, and
despaiu; a n d self-reproach for the loss of

t h e L a s t S u p p e r , for lose it 3
and

shall,

eventually, but for the nonce, it s t a n d s still, a n d elicits much inter-

est a n d excitement, a m o n g

the peoples of&lilano,

all those w h o

travel to view it. 3 t is a very

good painting, a n d m o r e poignant still that it fades, e v e n before o u r eyes. 3 t i s in that fashion, much like a summer., ain, as i t fades to autumn. which w e shall never se

A 1 m u s t eventually p a s 1 this C a r t h , and it i s simply my i l l fortune, that 3 shall s e e this p a s s , or a least begin t do so.f l o w 3 c a n better t o u n d e r s t a n d the grief of those who, t h r o u g h calamitous accident, lose o n e of their children, b e f o r e they a r e g r o w n .

JRnew Conazption

shall

move

ahead

upon

which to h a r n e s s

these theories, and build new ingenia, with 1 forces which envelop the globe in

with spikes, for

the impaling

of

m a d e of a s i z e large enough to s c a l e city w a l l s without assistance of l a d d e r s o r siege towers, a n d w o u l d

be stout

enough to resist everything

s h o r t of a direct s t r i k e with a cannonball, a n d then only if the artillerists used a n increased charge of p o w d e r . 6

be able to move

properly a r r a n g e d ,
b a r r e l of ould

the
higher

the c a n n o n
elevated to angles far

be

p r o p e l explosive shells, as rain, over

the battlements

a n d d o w n upon

the heads of the enemy. U p o n the defensive, in the resistance of a siege, the J n g e n i u m V a d e r u s c a n be used to deceive the enemy, a s to the strength of the city g a r r i s o n . t h e
ingenium shall be connected a n d pikes a n d other arms, w a v i n g in

by tortuous linkages, to a plethora of spears placed a b o u t the w a l l s for the city, a n d set to
of

the ingenium. n this fashion shall the garrison a p p e a r to b e doable o r more its si and the enemy, set t inaction for f e a r of the g r e a t garrison which o appears apon the walls, may b e s e t ctpon by sarprise by the trcte garrison
of

the sun by the action

the city, and destroyed.

' t h e r e a r e less s a v a g e applications of this J n g e n i u m Vaderus, as

well.

Jt may

be set

to a n y task r e q u i r e d . Jt m a y

be

used in

land, for example, when

applied t9 a n

automaton

the p l o w i n g of similar to this design:

(TejU-POTIJ\L EjVG3jVE)
the Duchy of M i l a n o a n d F r a n c e are strained, a n d J fear that Lodovico E l Moro, despite all that h e h a s d o n e for his people, will head into yet a n o t h e r fruitless w a r much to the dilapidation of the Duchy in g e n e r a l .
c o u r s e of r e c e n t events. Relations between

3 h a v e taken my leave, to p u r s u e a sabbatical in my home city of Firenze,

Most JIIustrious D u k e himself, to r e n d e r his wife, Jsabella dEste, for the purpose of posterity, a n d presumably so that h e might be a b l e to rem-

the pyramids, though they s t a n d yet, s h o w the deleterious effectsof time, as does t h e most r e g a l profile of the
all
b e n e a t h its feet, for even

along

with

it, as though d o w n a stream, o r instead a n a q u e d u c t , which

shall o v e r c o m e t h e n a t u r a l c u r r e n t of time, which is to s a y s t a n d fast a g a i n s t i t s flow, s u c h that it might be s e e n to c a u s e time within its effect s t a n d s t i l l . 3 to
cor\struct a n ingenium which
O f c o u r s e , it

i s obvious

that a n

ingenium

which is

to

be used for the

stoppage of the flow of time must of c o u r s e constrain the operator o u t exception, for i t

shaN encompass all a r o u n d . However, it is r e a d i l y seen that the interior of the ingenium i t s e l f m a y n o t be affected by the rnagickal bindings upon the times, but instead be allowed to operate freely, for if the ingenium d o e s not experience the passage of time, i t may not operate, hence time will n o t be stopped, a n d a conund r u m or paradox becomes evident. t h e w o r k i n g s of the interior mechanism ofthe ingenium must thus be shielded a g a i n s t the m a g i c k a l

withalso

-. .

sure,

and

the magickal

re

nts thereunto would

be

c e r t a i n to pre-

the employment of my 3 n f e r n o mechanism to the g e n e r a t i o n of sucl strengths, as the J n f e r n o mechanism itself has n e e d of magickal p o w e r s u c h as shall b e consumed in the reversal of time. 3 find 3 h a v e n o theoretical or observational basis upon which to d e d u c e the effectsof s u c h a temporal treversal, except p e r h a p s to believe that the i m a g e s s e e n through s u c h a portal would themselves b e m e r e images, the stuff of d r e a m s , in much t h e same m a n n e r that when w e r e m e m b e r events, the people whom are seen to o c c u p y o u r memories are not the true flesh a n d blood relations w e know. J n a like manner, J hope that by reversing time, w e do not c a u s e p e o p l e to exist in a n y real m a n n e r within the field, for s u c h would be a n impossibility, they
clude being e x t a n t elsewhere, a n d very much alive.

ne conceivable u s e for

the J n g e n i u m t e m p o r a l i s

w o u l d be in the

c r e a t i o n of a means of preserving the life of one

ill

o r mortally

w o u n d e d until such time a s a c h i r u r g e o n might remedy. J n this fashion,

the patient

is lain

be found to administer a upon a table, beneath which


may

the ingenium

processes its m a g i c k a l knots. Then, when

appears, a n d

all

is in readiness,

the J n g e n i u m

the c h i r u r g e o n be halted, a n d the

healing commence.

Jt becomes obvious
ing

that for

this ingenium, a t i m e d method of empowerthe

the unit

is r e q u i ~ e d , r o

o p e r a t o r of efects,

else that a shielded line of c o n t r o l from the J n g e n i u m , be extended through the time-stopping

a n d to

impossible

the fundamental s o u r c e of operation. d s e w i s e , i t will be to c o n t r o l the function of the machine, but merely to allow i t
fop

to run its course, until at last i t w i n d s down, spent of power,

any

who e n d e a v o r e d to penetrate the m a g i c k a l restraints w o u l d f i n d their time, too, had been halted in its flow, a n d they w o u l d be unable to halt the 3ngenium's progress. 5

(3IVTGGR3Ty C N G Y N E )
the ballets. 3t is a beautifml city, and 3 enjoy my recreation here greatly, but the days are soured with the talk of the w a r which has broken out between theturkmen of the Ottoman
a n d attending Empire a n d fairvenezia.
t h i s darkening of my relaxation i s

am now visiting Venezia,

the city of the canals,

a n d have

passed

many a n enjoyable hour tomring at the whim of t h e gondoliers,

doubled by word

fleetat S a p i e n z a , although 3 h a v e h e a r d so m a n y
u n s u r e which are true. Verily

the defeat of the varied stories that 3 ai


of

do these common J t a l i a n s embellish every


inflate the d r a m a of his discoutrst

story, for J h a v e heard

the s a m e person

the short s p a n of one day, and he s w o r e that w a s struck upon the fleet at S a p i e n z a ! A4ayhap h e w a s t h e r e indeed, head, that h e has gone silly. J t i s painful to m e to hear of the defeat of the fleet, with so being upon the coast, w h e r e any barbarous i n may put ashore. With this concern in mind, 3 went to the shipyard to speak with the shipwrights, a n d to e n d e a v o r to find the truth of the matter. As it befell, when 3 arrived, they were in the process of keeling a vessel for th ke of repairing her, a n d they were putting about the task in a most un ly a n d inefficient manner, that 3 had to exclaim, as though to children, my astonishment. to which exclamation, m o r e t h a n one of the w o r k e r s at the d
over

great offense, and brandished a boathook with which


extort a n apology out of me, or nately recognized

blood,

or p e r h a p s

bot

by a learned man, who c 3 must remind myself to hold to my tongue the future with seamen, for they are roguish rapscall'
After speaking

with the shipwright, for such my defender turned

out to

be,

designed for them a system of lines a n d pulleys

will m o r e effective-

ly tvansfer the forces of their strength against the s which effovtsthey w e r e most gratefi.1, a n d tveated inner, at the most rancid establishment 3 have ever had the displeas b r e a d was quite coa-ely ground, a n d the beef wa though i t had been hacked off the cow with a halberd. And the wine is best left without description, especially the way 3 feel this morn.

hile inspecting the damage to the vessel,


have

of which

3 knew little, as 3

m a d e no serious study of n a ~ t i c a sciences, i t occ l thut a magickal ingenium emplaced upon a vessel could be used to e n h a n c e its durability in battle, most specifically against the power of an enemy vessel stviking i t in the side, below the waterline, with a vam. A different ingenium would have to b e used to protect the vessel, a g a i n s t attack by Greek fire, o r other pyrotechnical assaults, b m t J shall here work upon an Jngenium Jfitegritas, which will b e employed in the d e f e n s e a g a i n s t raws, collisions, and bombardments, a n d would also b e useful w e r e the vessel to b e plying t w c h e r o u s waters, w h e r e t h e r e might be rocky s
sctrface of the water, invisible reefs, 8tc.

t h e method by which the ingenium sC\all work will into a webwork, l i k e undoing a net or fabric, the gleaned by watch those skilled at knitting, a n d in
webworks, one contained completely within

the

(of which 3 h a v e one h e r e before me) has a n inn glass, and i s hollow, yet the inner a n d outer SM

like manner shall the webworks of magickal

the otheu; yet be separ the hull of the vessel, which they in turn shall press upon, the better with which it shall keep its shape, as a n y a t t a c k by bombardment or ram shall have to overcome t e durability of the magickal h net as well as the stvength of the hull of the ship.
Agaiurst

the 'timkmeur
this
ingenimm must

o afford any efect,

by m e a n s be very well powered,


or

as to protect a vessel against

the hostiliiy of theTurkmen

the irve-

be woefully inadeqmate. any vessel upon which this ingenimm might be employed, i necess sarily a larger vessel, and therefore may admit to a larger s o u r c e of power for this ingenicrm, for its increased efects, of which 3 believe a mundane revision of my previous Jvlferno mechanism for empowerment might well be
sistibiliiy of a n underwater half-measures will adequate, for although s u c h a motivator is unforgiving of damages inflicted

rock,

upon it, i t shall be protected within


than

the interio9

below

decks, of a magickally

reinforced hull of a n Jtalian-built warship, a n d

there is no place more safe

that. Previous incidents at S a p i e n z a notwithstanding. This will require that a f i v e or s o m e alchemical s o u r c e of heat b e employed below decks, but as 3 understand that fire is likewise used by a ship's cook, 3 cannot see that here would be a n y objection to such an e q u i p p a g e . t h e
only difficulty arises in that if it w e r e necessary, d M e to the great length of a protvacted naval battle, to buvn for consumption unimpovtant portions of the

ship itself, the stvength of the

ingen;crm's magick would prevent even hardy

sai1ov.s+om prying ornamental planks or woodwork from the


burned. Mpon the other hand, i t should
sHch a g r a v e position

hull to b e

be noted that should the ingenium run completely out of fuel a n d cease to function, i t is likely that t e vessel in h

shall c a u s e here to be an immediate supply of scrap a n d flammable woodstmffs.6


which

shall take d a m a g e from the enemy,

c
( L X E SMS'tEflllr\lVCE E f l G Z f l E ) per 3 had completed the design of my Jngeniuwr Jmtegritas, 3
r e t ~ ~ n e dthe docks to display m y invention to the shipwright to

J fret visit& that place. Sad13 he w a s not receptive to my ideas fov the impmvement ofthe s, a n d in fact was appalled at t e idea of employing a five-powh ered version of my Jnferno mechanism below decks of a warship e n g a g e d in battle. H e could not see that the Jngenimm Jntegritas would protect itself, a n d with itself also &e c w w a m d the ship herself, +om enemy activities as
who favowd my c a u s e when well as the mechanism's fire. J t i s perhaps as well; here are significantly fewervenezian

warships now, a n d a given one which were to employ my Jmgenimm JMtegritas has a greater chance of being caphtred by theTurkmen, at which time w e should see all &e vessels of t e Ottoman &+re invincible. h

The Lost

734s ingenium = l i e s upon the technique of infising additional lifeenergies into he subject even as these energies ave extinguished by whatever means.The heat+ being the mmcle which pumps these enevgies abomt t e bo& it is most necessavy h

that the ingenium be held within close pvoximify to the heat+,or else that the ingenium b e of lavge design.7
Swll ingenia
exceedingly

be safely opemted by clockwork, with a mainspring of

stiff steel, and pvotected against water o r whatever elements might

impede i t s fCcnction.So made, the ingenium shall allow the weclrev being the peec son affeded by i t s mgickal infctsions, to opemte in places under water, o r wheve

there m a i n s but only bad ai9 as in a mine shap OF in a building ablaze. tIew 3 must tell t a the ingenium only pvotecis the vital ovgans from beiy destv0ye.d by ht suffocation or poisons; it shall not provide any pvotection against the inferno, which hall dive+ axme the weaver's flesh to be roasted until it no longer fctnctions, althowh the weare? by the g r a c e of my ingenium, shall not be ovecow\e by the smoke before the fire.
a

larger version, this

ingenium might be

dto power a ship which would

h ~ v e under t e waves as do whales l h

fish.Pockets of air must be m i n t a i d in cases ofmevgen- and to allow forthe maintenance ofthe ingeuium itself,as well as any smaller ingenia which might be used for personal depavtuves from the vessel for explomtion, &c. S c a vesuh
and &er

the C W o m a n Empire, and thence sewe to launch mines, which shall goat up, a d axbrecldes to the keel
'this undersea vessel has a n

advantage ovev my pevious

design for a non-magickal


submersible cr~lfi, wheve&is vessel is not vul-

erable to having its


WCkSOPother

yf

the sea, as its m a g i c k a l effects p r e c l u d e ti$ inside the c r a f f . 8


be
constmcted, ne vepc

S t a t i o n a r y edifices m a y a Is0 sion of

the

w i n d m i l l common in

/vetherlands, upon it, m i g h t depleting IuXury. 9

which

mill,

by

using

the lowlands the force


unduly
in and ing

afford a

comfortable living environment without

the area of m a g i c k a l potential,


ingenium, it might also

the occupants

ith this

b e pos

great heights, where the air become

o normal human endt-trance, and thence t e

inventions. This
Sustentaculus,

modification of my previous JngeniMm

which, by inuerting the ratios a n d realigning the mechanisms to w o r k in the r e v e r s e o r d e q would from those surrounding, c a u s e the vital force to be depleted, instead of held buoyant. J n this fashion, tlqe c r o w d s would g r o w w e a r y before they colnld bombard m e with their praise, a n d 3 should h a v e a moments peace. 10

New Work t C o m m e m c e o
better day, now, a n d my t e m p e r a m e n t is less stormy t h a n i t w a s in the previous days, for surely MOW 3 reap the benefits of my
is a

this town. F i r e n z e is building a new hall to h o u s e her city council, a n d the government has retained m e to decorate the walls of the new edifice with my works, representing the many F i r e n z e n victories on the field of battle. 3 n light of r e c e n t events, 3 c a n n o t resist but to b a s e my first work upon the Battle of Anghiari, wherein F i r e n z e n f o r c e s defeated the M i l a n e s e a r m y s o m e sixty y e a r s previous. 3 h a v e c a r t o o n e d this
f a m e in

pleased by my initial resfilts, of t e n s e a n d fervent soldiers, hovses rampant, a n d c l o u d s ofdlnst kicked u p by the tumult. 3 shall h a v e
work, a n d a m

to revise /My

the plans,

howeveu; a n d find a Letter method of working t h a n

fresco. 3 h a v e in mind a new paint which should s u f f i c e my n e e d s .

high

repute has also attracted the attentions of several young and

aspiring gentlemen, each of whom shows promise, but have a% /

hopes to paint as J do. Raffaelo Santi


del Sarto is yet too young.

J find that Andrea

J
my

that one ,Michelangelo Buonarroti is interested in

heard complimentary reports a b o u t his statues of Bacchus, a n d Pie+& at St. P e t e r s . J myself shall withhold j u d g m e n t until J c a n see his work personally, which J shall be able to do, since J a m told he also has been commissioned to help to d e c o r a t e the hall of the city council.
led m e to think of warfare, a n d what J c a n perhaps accomplish for the betterment of the welfare of the soldiers of Firenze, a n d J h a v e devised a n o t h e r variation upon the t h e m e elucidated by my Jngenium Sustentaculus, which, by infusion of vital enevgies into the body of one wounded or ill, as from battle or plague, a n d focused in the m a n n e r by which the Jngenium J n t e g r i t a s effectsits works, shall c a u s e the d e c r e p i t u d e to b e flushed from the patients system, that they might spring whole a n d hale from their beds anew.
u t my w o r k o n this painting has

J t is

fear a most difficult ifigenium to d e s i g n a n d calibrate, for insuf-

ficient infusion of vitality will not h a v e believe a n e x c e s s i v e infusion uuhealthy,

the desired effect, while J will c a u s e the i l l p e r s o n to evoke s u c h a

f e v e r as might p r o v e fatal, or else to feel c u r e d of all i l l s while yet

that

is, a w o u n d e d man might feel so vital

the chirurgical table a n d socket, a n d bleeding, which would b e most unseemly. r the most accurate imparting of the effectsinto the ailing person, the effectsof the ingenium must b e conveyed with a wrapping woven skillfully of gold a n d silken threads, which may c o v e r the patient all around, as though a cocoon or a s h r o u d . t h e silk should b e of the brightest a n d most cheerful colors available, that the patient may not believe a shroud it i s indeed, a n d thereby p a n i c a n d d a m a g e the ingenium, which is very delicate by n a t u r e a n d design, a n d poorly-disposed to a b r u p t shocks or motions. t h i s is b e c a u s e of the fact that the ingenium itself must b e blown of glass, so as to afford itself to b e perfectly unreceptive of the e n e r g i e s it produces, for a n y build-up, w h e t h e r in the ivrgenium or of the surroundings themselves, c a n c a u s e a wave, which, suddenly imparted upon the
patient by w h a t e v e r circumstance, c a n b e deleterious in effects. s yet 6

that he arise from walk away, with his arm yet d a n g l i n g from the

know of no J t a l i a n s so well-versed in

the art of

glass blowi-g

that 3
c a n per-

d e e m them suade

skilled

e n o u g h to u n d e r t a k e t h e prodcrction of e c c e n t r i c

gears a n d precision-cast meclqanicat contrivances.

Perhaps J

the government to a n n o u n c e a reward for whichever a r t i s t c a n p r o d u c e the best blown-glass clockworks, a n d t h e n employ that p e r s o n 11 in the production of this most merciful J n g e n i u m C u r a r e ~ s .
O n e final w o r d of warning: t but it
m M s t

he

m a c h i n e itself must not only b e of glass,

b e k e p t fastidiously c l e a n . t h i s cleanliness i s his a w a r e n e s s will likely not proceed past the w r a p p i n g s in which he is laid, but for the prevention
also necessarily

not for the p l e a s u r e of the patient, for certainly


of a n y build-up of m a g i c k a l potential upon

the e n g i n e itself 12

invention, a n enced and

skilled

in a r t i f i c e . t h e r e was q u i t e s o m e a r g u m e n t a m o n g

those p r e s e n t upon which of these worthies stood i n d e e d a b o v e t h e others, a n d while the debate gvew m o r e heated, J quietly e x c u s e d myself a n d paid a call u p o n o n e of the gentlemen whose n a m e h a d a r i s e n fre-

73

e p p o n e 3 fouiZd a most interesting a n d e n e r g e t i c character., a n d a g r e e d at o n c e t o

he

build

a m a c h i n e t my specifications. H e s e e m e d o

ceased moving t h e e n t i r e time w e spoke, not even t partake of wine, which h e did while working ~ p o his lathe, o n a custom which J found mildly alarming. 3 g a v e him a n a d v a n c e sum,
a most curious man, a n d never

h a v e n o d o u b t s but

this

is

the evening

that he shall c o m p l e t e the project in the stated time. of the d a y M p o n which h e b e g a n his labors, s o 3 shall

m y hands.

the combination to bear a great rock aloft. T h e kite shall cause the assemblage to drift in a downwind direction, while t h e J n g e n i u m shall

hold the missile aloft. B y manipulating the kite from the ground, i t shall be possible to aim the rock most accurately. B y a calculation employing the triangle formed by the string of the kite, the elevation of the kite, and the angle of elevation of the kite string itsel5 the true distance from the holder of the string to the city may be readily calculated, and the rock sighted along the string to drop where i t will.

Great calamity Befulls

has resmlted from Camillos engineering my ingenium. t h e technician has taken the presumption of testing his skills by powering the ingenium, befove informing m e of the completion of his labors. 3 c a n only a s s u m e that he had the device
is a most calamitous effect which

switched to

maximum effect, s i n c e that w a s the position in which J

each kind, each with a f o r w a r d s a n d b a c k w a r d s mechanism, J c a n ensure that rival inventors shall not be able to steal each ofhers' letters, saving only by theft of the competitor's J n g e n i u m P e r p l e x us. 2
a n d o n l y two of

't"

shall be equipped with s e v e r a l quills, e a c h welle q u i p p e d with ink, a c c o r d i n g t o t h e d e s i g n for a n improved quill, which J h a v e in a n o t h e r C o d e x around, though 3 c a n n o t find i t at this moment.3 t h e s e quills shall b e set in a free-floating manne9 b a l a n c e d as illustrated here, to be manipulated by the magickal e n e r g i e s c a u s e d by the written p a r c h m e n t passing into the c e n t e r of the ingenium. t h e s e quills must b e most finely balanced, as to r e a c t to the slightest pressure, for surely the pressLtres e n g e n d e r e d by the magickal field of the ingenium shall b e delicate indeed. A n d the ingenium must b e operated o n a solid s t o n e flooq in a sealed room free from drafts, o r insects, a n d the o p e r a t o r mtmt remain perfectly still, lest h e also reduce the ingenium's w o r k to nonsense by j a r r i n g o n e o r m o r e of the quills. A n d a n Jngenium S o l a i r s must be built inside, to illuminate the pages as they are encrypted. Jt is also possible to send d r a w i n g s encoded, as the m a g i c k a l operation of the J n g e n i u m o n l y encodes the pvesence of lines; the J n g e n i u m
e Jngenium

Perplexus k n o w s n o t a line

of a letter from a line of a d r a w i n g , hence

d r a w i n g s a n d illustrations shall likewise

be

r e d u c e d to nonsense.

t h e sheets of p a r c h m e n t upon
m a d e must e i g n cities,

which

b e fed individually,

the e n c i p h e r e d m a r k s shall be however. For items which are of utmost

importance, s u c h as m e s s a g e s s e n t to c l e v e r a g e n t s o p e r a t i n g in for-

b e attached s e v e r a l thin blades, which shall reduce the original p a r c h m e n t to ribbons. B u t 3 n e e d not this m e of security, for 3 intend to m a k e several copies of my Codex, twenty or more, for the selling, although e a c h shall also be given with a n Jngeni~m PerplexMs, which shall at o n c e pro a n d p r o v e my work.
can

there

No, this 3 c a n n o t do, for i t would break me, o e the fees which 3 would b e forced to levy upon those, w h o are interested in my book, to pay, would d r i v e them away, a n d again 3 shall h a to s h a r e my enthusiasm. 3 shall h a v e to publish thi course, c e r t a i n comments edited out, to avoid the f i n d also, 3 shall l e a v e c e r t a i n ingenia o u t of thi the Viu P e r e g r e u s . t h e copies shall be ready in

the effectsof magnetic axes o f f o v c curved across the l a n d s c a p e from one e n d of the earth to other. ;In this 3 recalled my visit t o v e n e z i a , w h e r e the ca are plied by boatsmen, a n d where 3 saw gondoliers a work, t a n d also provided technical aid in the shipwrights in keeling a vessel for repairs. 3 n this, the magnetic forces J believe a r e as invisible a n d
h a v e thought a g a i n upon unbreakable ropes, bmt deformed not by stresses in a down

but actually buoyed in a graceful a r c a b o v e the l a n d s from Earth to the other, w h e r e each line of magnetic force is rooted or attached.

fi g o n d o l i e r pulling
a likewise manner,

boat with

a pole propels a a t

his

craft forward, a n d in

do men pull

boat with ropes. W e v e the ropes to

be

the work of the shipwrights, a n d w e r e t h e gondoliers pole to e x t e n d from the e n d of the earth to the e n d of the earth, h e could still ply his craft by pulling his body a l o n g its length. J n this manner, i t c a n be readily s e e n that the
g r o u n d e d miles away, it would m a k e no difference to lines of m a g n e t i c force, being of themselves inviolate a n d permanent,

may

b e used, with a n

ingenium d e s i g n e d for s u c h a purpose, to propel

a craft across

the smrface of the the

p l a n e t in much
o f a chain.

gears c a n

be u s e d to propel links

a n d invisible, yet a p p r o a c h i n g t h e infinite in number a n d of exquisite fine r y of detail, m a y b e passed t h r o u g h its system repeatedly a n d without loss of efficacy, e x c e p t i n g by which the ingeni

n essence,

ingenium will act as though i t were a

system, which, using lines of m a g n e t i c force

hi&

a r e intangible

t h e orientation of the d e v i c e is most easily accomplished, being merely the d i r e c t i o n of the pulleys with respect to the ingenium, that is, the
ingenium perform

will be

d r a w n irresistibly t o w a r d s the magnetic pulleys a s o n the magnetic lines. J\s designed here,

they

the eforts
be

the ingeni-

um c a n n o t

w o r k e d in reverse, for the pulleys

rely

upon the tension of

the magnetic
effect,

lines to d r a w themselves t o w a r d s them, a n d in reversed

by

pushing a g a i n s t the ethereal rope, the magnetic lines w o u l d

become hopelessly snarled, magnetizing

the ingenium
require

beyond u s e .

Arise, 0 , M e c k a w i s m ! uch a n ingenium would necessarily

the

u s e of some sort of

elevating mechanism, in a v o i d a n c e of having to ovel*come t h e


M p o n

that which is to be t r a n s p o r t e d . J t i s far easier to propel a craft t h r o u g h the ai5 which is frictionless, t h a n t h r o u g h the ground, which i s filled with r e s i s t a n c e . t h u s , employing the J a g e n i u m
forces of friction
A

jMagneticLts into a s u s p e n s i b l e craft of my o w n design, we find

vehicle

suited to

the comveyance of people rapidly

over g r e a t d i s t a n c e s .

ind

that the

b a l a n c e of su

d e v i c e is no+ in ordeq

J might rotate forward, a n d by t h e rocket as t h e Jngemium /\/lagneticMs pulls m e f o r w a r d . Truly walking the earth should be far easier on the constitution t h a n it. P e r h a p s this shall b e m o r e b a l a n c e d .
such a m a n n e r

that used in be thrust into the grounc

No,this would be a

most undignified m a n n e r of transport.

J shall

have

t counterweight a n d b a l a n c e o

the

initial d e s i g n . fib, but i f 3 w e r e to7

C
(COflFG5SYOflGflGYflG)
ve

had

plenty e n o u g h of the B o r g i a family! 3 a m furious!


are mothing of

Borgia,

the s o r t - h a v e m a d e a c o m p l e t e m o c k e r y of all that is tloly, let a l o n e all that is Jtalian. We h a v e heard tell that the h u s b a n d of L u c r e z i a a n d this is her first hwsband, s i n c e the other m a r r i a g e s w e r e
h e s e v a l e n c i a n nobles-they

annulled, a n d h e n c e never w e a k e n i n g of the

existed, h a s died. P r e s u m a b l y he died

of a

hearts h a v e b e e n w e a k e n e d w h e n Cesare s k e w e r s them with a stiletto. With Cesares bloody hands, he should t a k e the n a m e C a r d i n a l S i n . tt a m
which is n o t a s u r p r i s e s i n c e m a n y fuvious!

heart,

that he shall d e M y any w r o n g doing, a n d a s h e is a n ordained m e m b e r of the clergy, he is incapable of lying, thus w e shall all h a v e to accept his i n n o c e n c e in the matter. tle is as innocent as a mongrel dog, or a plague-ridden rat! What this country needs, in fact w h a t the e n t i r e Catholic Church a r o u n d th
Of course, Cesare being a Cardinal, it is c e r t a i n

gears being the ratio of five to seven, tion that which will

this

being according to my calcula-

r i m g from the imperative field

the opportunity for

untruth, without the loss of the imperative to speak, for it does no good to force someone to speak the truth, if he will not answer the questions put to them.

Of course, tr
ver

is as pure a ma

r as possible, so it is required that

the ingenium be created of the purest materials possible, however

sil-

shall

be of n o use. Better much that it be made of beaten gold or

perhaps platinum, and lubricated with pure oil or perhaps holy water, if
significamt amount can be had withoHt complaimt from the local

t o make thi

geniuw powevful in aspect and irresistible in dominance,

it is my intention to imstall it in a room o f a tower built among the banks


of a fast-flowing stream, therewith to build a water wheel with which to

provide the i n g e d u w a constant and unwavering source of motivation, which

shall be seen to invest most thoroughly the area with the impera3t will be necessary to admit a disengagement mecha-

tive for veracity.

nism to allow the imgenium to rest while the magickal energies of area are being restored.

the

Anotlqer Ydea 0
OM

must know, of course, &at to interrogate a n y of the

Borgia fam-

ing ingenium would c a u s e

g r e a t c a l a m i t y to in

befall all who

dertook

the pursuit

of

the L o r d s

truth

the matter.

E s p e c i a l l y if those

who questioned

the B o r g i a (whichever

o n e i t w a s ) w e r e themselves u n d e r the influence of my Censurum

their o w n dispositions towards this most powerful a n d c o r r u p t family. To that end, i t is but a simple endeavor to m a k e a s e c o n d a r y ingenium which shall w o r k at the same time as the C e n s u r u m V e r a c e u s , a n d which shall have a similar i m p a c t upon the persons psyche, by using a different construct i o n of wagickal enkrgies to influence the mental processes o f t h e perVeraceus, a n d thence s p o k e freely a n d honestly of
son. T h i s 3 n g e n i u m O b f u s c a r u s w o u l d c a u s e those so affected to forget

all which had


n o t to cause

occurred

while the
to forget

mechanism of

the engine
as

were

engaged. J would t

be

r e q u i r e d to

be

of smaller i m p a c t in radius,

so a s

the police

the confession
be

well,

although

the

inclusion of a l a r g e g l a s s lens w o u l d the effect to be focused in nature. 8

ea) assistance in causing

-a dy
well,
s u c h force that just s u c h a

3 a m d i s m a y e d by the slow pace with which bad n e w s


c a n sometimes travel
for J t a l i a n s

through Jtalia. J t i s suvprising to me, as are fain to talk a great a n d exhausting t


and to g e s t i c u l a t e with

length about all m a n n e r of subjects,

they cause your inkwell t spill upon yomr p a p e r s . 3t is in o m a n n e r that 3 h a v e received this latest a n d most ~ n w e l c o m e

bit of tidings.
3 h a v e b e e n given word that the F r e n c h have r e t a k e n the City ofIl/\ilano from t h e forces of the Duke Sforza of Milano, my f o r m e r p a t r o n , J t is

said that Lodovico now languishes in prison, awaiting the pleasture of L o u i s FII. S u c h are the forttunes of w a r a n d politicking, but 3 had better hopes for 3 Moro, a n d n o w i t is a p p a r e n t that 3 shall n e v e r be g r a n t e d 1 the p l e a s u r e of completing the s t a t u e he wished of his father. A n d a magnificent statue it would be, with not its e q u a l in all the world! 3 will not return to that city of M i l a n o a g a i n , for 3 a m c e r t a i n that should 3
appear, the F r e n c h will force m e into making s o m e a r c h w a y commemorating their trimmph at the city gates, a n d 3 h a v e no desire to bring their t r e a c h e r y t qlory. Or p e r h a p s they would press me into devisinq a new o
m e a n s of interrogating

the Duke. Bah!


rzas

cannot

bear t h e thought of the S

imprisoned by

the French. 3 t

h a s s o u r e d m y stomach, a n d now 3 must a b s t a i n from w i n e a n d spicy dishes, a n d r e s t r a i n myself t p a s t a s . J shall h a v e t find a means o o of purging myself of this phlegmatism, a n d so shall p u r s u e the invention

shall affect but a


can arrange for
of metallic

small portion o f t

the effects

of

the i M g e M i u m to b

cords, so as to erase more evenly t which distribution was designed and tested by constructing a manm e q u i n of cantaloupes, Necessarily, large people might r e q u i v e a different distribution. Fdditionally, a n independent sot,wce of motivation i s not pe-d on the blowing of the wind, feasible, as a n escapee cann ium shall have to especially o n a dark Nedite be empowered by a* small but vigor
s shown in drawing ith the distribution of the tra Z, shown here, the small effects of the imgefiium will be distributed in a n arrangement such that it shall conceal the entirety of the

hile meeting with Albert0 Rizzutto again, over dinner this day, he c h a n c e d to bring to m e s o m e ill tidings, which is that thetmrkmen have at last wrested the city of D u r a z z o f r o m v e n e z i a n presence, therewith robbing their army of its strongest hold upon the lands of Asia Mino9 south of Dalmatia, which could b e said to be m o r e o f t h e B a l k a n s than Asia M i n o r propenthis a l a r m s m e greatly, for i t is a possibility now that t h e t u r k m e n will launch a great fleet, with the intent and purpose of landing upon t h e v e n e z i a n coast, striking at that fair city, a n d conquering her at once for subjugation into the Ottoman Empire. Or else that they may m a r c h along the Adriatic

Coast, moving a g a i n s t Zara, a n d dismemberVenezian holdings piece-

by Constantinople.this is worrisome to me, for the effectsof the M o h a m m e d a n zealots linger s t i l l in S p a i n , a n d J wodd ill
meal for consumption
see that h a p p e n to f a i r v e n e z i a .

E w g q i w e to Smite
v

the earth!

n preparation for such a n event, 3 must c a l c m l a t e &e n e c e s s a r y engineering of a device of magnificent destructive capabilities, with which 3 might

b e a b l e to bring to a s u d d e n demise any Ottoman aspirations to J t a l i a n lands, whether by invasion of fleeto v m a r c h of army. t h e brightest inspivation J have had is to create a n engine which acts upon the ground as does

itself,that is, a n ingenium which shall, by its nature, c a u s e a great trembling among the elemental forces of the earth, a n d thereby the tangible earth propeu; for the disarray a n d disruption of the enemy. Also for the destruction of his fortifications a n d siege engines. J n w i h e s s of which, the terror of his people would b e g r e a t s u c h that they would b r e a k at the sight of the approach of the Venezian army, a n d the new magickal engines of w a r employed by same. J n this manneu; i t i n e c e s s a r y to c a u s e oscillations among the lines of eles mental force. Or perhaps random vacillations would be better. yes, that i s the solution, for although cyclic forces c a n indeed create l a r g e disruptions, as evidenced by the method by which children disrupt a piece of rope in a
the wind
a g a i n s t ao ill-rigged sail, which c a u s e s it to whip regular fashion to play at jumping it (3can see them doing so outside my window, a n d 3 hope that they will cease their squealing,
m e concentrate),

the better to help

but in a similar fashion, it is possible that s u c h a disruption

will result in a minou; o r even a pleasing effect,much as a violin string is set


to vibrating for o u r ammsement. Furthermore, r e g u l a r disrmptions depend in

large p a r t on the regularity of the medium


tyss

of

transmission, a n d

&&

of a

battlefield a r e likely to be very poorly homogenous, dirt a n d s a n d . 3 r r e g u l a r stimulation i t must be.

the grounds a mix of stone and

inner suvface of the ingenum.


of the m a n y c a m s is s u c h

c Z s seventeen grapnels, since sevenC oe

t e e n is a p r i m e numbeq a n d n o t divisible by a n y

other. A n d the

gearing

that the g r a p n e l s will

not a l i g n themselves in

the s a m e s e q u e n c e for some several thousand revolutions of the main drive shaft, which shall require several houvs of continuous effort, o n &e part of he ivlgeniuuur. the beatings ofthe grapnels causes the sphere to vibrate (these vibrations also facilitatet e continuing revolutions of the cams). Fu&emore, h
be stable in aspect, a n d in fact is detachable from i t s stand.O n c e t e correct vibratory fequency is acheived, &e b r a c e s holding h t e ingenum in place are =leased, a n d the sphere s t f&e to bounce about h e
the engine i not created to s

the landsdcape, transmitting its vibrations into the very ground, a n d causing it to convulse with tremovs AS the suvface of the sea i s convcllsed with waves,
until s u c h time as its c a m s cease mtating. j+er
s e q u e n c e s i played out, s

the compete cycle of i t is impossible t a the ingenium shall be seen to be ht

standing in the s a m e position as when i t w a s fbst begun t operate, and h s o i as shall continue to cause the machine to have a n irregular effect. when a violinist bows the s a m e notes but holds his wrists a a different angle, t he plays a different string, so shall the Jngenium-tumuliuosus provide a nevev-ending s e q u e n c e of random a n d a b e r r a n t pluckings of he elemental forces. A n d m u s i n g tvemovs as a result.

fter great thought a n d meditation upon


Ifuosus.

the

ect, J find +ha+ now J

a m unable to s e c u r e a suitable testing location for my J n g e n i u m

needlessly, balding

that a n y n e a r b y would suffer a n d doubtless c a u s e the full force of the law to fall upon my
Jts effect would b e so great,
after great concentration,

head. Furthermore,

a m Mnable to elu-

cidate the m a n n e r in which 3 might t r a n s p o r t the effectof my ingenium to a location m o r e r e m o t e than that of the device, for it would be a n ill-advised
e n d e a v o r to c a u s e a t r e m o r of the

eav-th a a n y location within twenty miles t of the ingenium, to s a y nothing of the ingenium being the very c e n t e r of the trembling. 3 shall h a v e to shelve this d e s i g n Mntil J have a better patron, funding, a n d s o m e o n e m o r e reliable than Camillo to do my engineering. 1

r
-a

DYSSOLUTYOJV EJVG
decided to undevtake a different approach to creating AM

ince 3 a m unable to test m y Jngenium tt,tmulfuosus, 3 have

instead

effective ingenium for making w a r upon theTurkmen.n\is device,

properly deployed a n d employed byVene2ian or Firenzan tvoops

Id, will hold inviolate J t a l i a n fvontievs against &e most ingenious inventions a n d stvongest forces which &e m o m a n E m p i r e

array agaiMst

thing that theturkmen have so as to bring them to a peaceable and favorable resolution of this war

With that 3 thought of endeavoring to create

the direct destruction of their fortifications, instead of employing the indirect method of shaking their uery foundations through a quaking earth.

Of course, poor Rizwtto may have been taken somewhat aback, as he did not understand whereof J ejaculated my excitement of inspivation, and 3 left him abandoned in the plaza without explanation. J is unfortunate, at t times, that 3 must write my inspirations immediately, lest 3 forget them. Perhaps the remainder of my biscotti and the bottle of wine which 3 fovgot

by the side of the table both will

have served to solace my effrontevy. and is thereby consum-

this device has a smaller radius of invocation,


device or the device mechanism pvoper

mately easier to aim and set off without Mndue effects upon the user of the

For its effect itself, it is best

described, that it imparts to the affected material an acute lack of cohesion ofthe stuffs of which it is made, causing it to fall into disarray, or powdeu;

as though eaten

by termites or

rusted through completely, although even if

the item affected were not iron or wood, even were it stone or glass.'the Greeks might say the targeted material were rendered into atoms.

t h e dewice

is a i m e d

by the

dishes mounted o n top of

the contraption,
be
syn-

which, being g e a r e d together that

they a l w a y s move in tandem, a n d by

e q u a l a m o u n t of tlqe radius, a n d being properly a l i g n e d a s to

chronous, p r o d u c e a n isosceles t r i a n g l e of projection,

which point, being

the focus

of aiiack, is r e n d e r e d dissolute.

Xime Pvesses
ince the

days are pressing upon the w e l f a r e o f v e n e z i a , 3 h a v e

<

that J must m a k e every effort to create and d e m o n s t r a t e this d e v i c e for the benefit of the city, a n d theveby a l l Jtalia. For the p u r p o s e of the demonstration, i t would b e most seemly were the d e v i c e to be selfmotivated, to which e n d 3 shall u s e a tightly wound spring of metal, as a mainspring, the tensile power of which shall be e n o u g h to motivate the m . Of course, for the winding of the spring, 3 shall h a v e to u s e a lever a r m of sufficient moment, but J believe 3 c a n borrow a w r e n c h to
determined suit my n e e d s from Ciniffa, w h o m a k e s carriages outside of town.
Despite been

the

r e c e n t results o b t a i n e d

by that

c a r e l e s s Camillo,

J have
excel-

able

to r e t a i n

the services of o n e

flernani

Bellizzi,

a very

lent m e t a l smith a n d m a k e r of clocks. J is most important t entire a s s e m b l a g e of this Dissolventum Universalis closely- fitted a n d studiously c a l i b r a t e d metals, for t o l e r a n t of nothing in

that the
itself

be

m a d e entirely of

the d e v i c e

is

the

line of deviation; e v e n

the flexibility

of w o o d e n

boxes is too g r e a t for its admission.2

O n c e the d e v i c e i s tightly w o u n d upon set u p


iM

the

mains

a s u i t a b l e location, it is only n e c e s s a r y to a i m

engage t h e m e c h a n i s m
determining

the dishes and into o p e r a t i o n . T h e aiming of the dishes involves


is difficult for e v e n experienced artillerists.
A

tiie d i s t a n c e of the height of the t r i a n g l e f o r m e d by their foci,


s y s t e m of reflecting m i r r o r s a n d lenses,

the estimation of which

H e n c e 3 h a v e also desigMed

dishes, but s o close in aspect to their position as to be nearly identical, a n d which t r a n s m i t the f o c u s of the dishes to their v a r i o u s reflecting mirrors, which g u i d e the light to a
single plate, thusly g e n e r a t i n g a d o u b l e image, which c a n therefore u s e d for aiming
a

which l e n s e s are mounted a b o v e the

be

the device. For w h e n t h e i m a g e o n the viewing plate i s least distorted by the twin images, then the operator of the Dissolventum Universalis knows that the d e v i c e is properly a i m e d upon that spot.

E ~ o r t iRobbery! ~ ~ !
h e p r i c e s which that t l e r n a n i Bellizzi has levied a g a i n s t m e for this project are exorbitant! Gvidently h e has had a m that r a s c a l Camillo, who J c a n only a s s u m e g a v e him a heavilye m b r o i d e r e d version of the incident, and though being disposed of a b a n doning the job thromgh Camillos detractions, nonetheless found himself unable to r e n e g e upon his word, a n d in p u r p o s e of forcing m e to a b a n d o n his services, raised his prices to levels which he thought J w a s unable to afford. He has underestimated me, howeve6 for 3 h a v e s e q u e s t e r e d quite a fair r e s e r v e in my years, a n d paid his inflated prices, in surprise of which he vowed to perform for m e his finest craftsmanship.
y mother! t

L -l -l - .- .l

- c -

1___cI_----

-"I^.

-.

bloody hands. Perhaps h e thinks Louis will n o t remember his resistance to his cousin Charles. 3 do not pretend to understaMd tlqat man's mind.There is no telling to what depths A l e x a n d e r the Borgia will MOW stoop.
/Michelangelo

that he aspires to paint a fresco next to those of Botticelli, Signorelli, et al; in the S i s t i n e Chapel. tle is a dreamer, and J myself w o u l d distance my work from that ofthe church. t h e n e e d for this Testudo lementalis is now greater than eve5 for w e find
Buoncxrroti confides to me

omvselves SurroMnded with enemies, from thetctrkmen to the French to &e

Church. With B i a n c a maria Sforza's m a r r i a g e to &Iaximilian I, the tIoly R o m a n E m p i r e i s s t i l l on o u r side, although even h e i r valme is qmestioned a this time, with S w i t z e r l a n d MOW standing in sovereign testimony to the t tloly R o m a n Gmpire's ineffectuality in enforcing their will t h m u g h military means. With these notifications in mind h a v e 3 constructed the design for
Y r Fmurctiour u
s

illustrated

in drawing a the transmission ,

pod

of

the

surround my invention. J n

this, the circumscription of the rod must Ly its

that through

the c r e a t i v e impediments io the motion


of

lication
of

of

a tvammel o r other such e l a b o r a t e

the rod,

that a n elliptical perimeter to the

t e s t u d o lementalis c a n without needless w a s t e

be

derived,

the b e i t e v io protect a

line of men

m a g i c k a l enevgy a n d abrogating

sion of the protection to incorporate empty space into

which a body of

b r a v e enemies might breach

the e x p a n in front of the soldiers, a n d cause havoc.3

t h e central mechanism of this ingenium is, as illustrated here, the crucible, which c o n t a i n s the material to be c o n s u m e d by the ingenium, which in turn, shall be sekn to affectthe elemental manifestation of the output of the device, thereby determining w h a t m a n n e r of wall shall be erected, for

the protection. 3 must consult with those v e r s e d in the alchemical arts to u n d e r s t a n d exactly which materials a r e best suited to the c o n s e c r a t i o n of the ingenium to c e r t a i n elements, although from conversations with a chirurgeon, 3 a m led to believe that bile, blood, phlegm, a n d urine are the
materials associated most efficaciously.4

3ts Msuges

e ingenium, being designed foe a n d e m i n e d y suited to, t e pvotection of h

k a body of soldievy, in maneuvevs against the foe, i t


manual eyevtions,

shall be obvious that i t is

which are most readily obtained by soldiery. J n this fashion, t e ingenium MM be carried upon the back of one of the soldievs h to allow for maXimal povtability, or else, should the size afthe device be prohibitive, as might be the case for a device large enough to protect a fLll regiment, it
best powered by
a n be povted about in a small wagon designed for that purpose, with a modi-

fied c r a n k m a d e expressly fov the use by two or four men,

or possibly mules.

A n d now 3 have indeed o n c e more, a great personal expense a n d considt

erable diff;culty, obtained the materials needed for the constvuction of this ingenium, for with it 3 c a n prove o n c e a n d for all time that indeed my
designs are sound. No more will the craftsmen here build of these engines in

their completeness, but instead 3 w a s forced to dispevse the pieces of the


ingenium among several craftsmen,a n d undevtake t e completion of t e h h

the a s s e m b l a g e of the ingenium myself. 3t appeavs that word of GmiIIos roof a n d Bellizzis workshop has spvead rapidly about the city, a n d none othevs will risk their o w n houses.
parts a n d

jh&er

Fu;!mve.
ached,

..

T
my

e experiment is a failure. After cranking t e handle h

ofthe ingenium until


labors. 3

3 m ya r m s

no ctwtain of fire arose in testament t my o

moved about a n d felt the g r a s s at the radius ofthe t e s t u d o Elementalis which should h a v e arisen, according to my calcuIations, a n d felt about w i h

hands.-e

grass was most cevtainly parched a n d withered, a n d a r v e -

fect ring of browned grass

stood about me, but unfovtunately this is not


L
v

enomgl/tto forestall a n enemy. J endeavored to w a k e another s h n g e r spring

with wlqiclq to wind the inaeMium, but durinq the crankinq the linchpin split d u e
v

to inferior constvuction.

this day that JV(aximiIian I, the E s t e e m e d Holy o m a n mperor, has, in w h a t is now known as the Peace of Trent, r e c o g n i z e d the F r e n c h o c c u p a t i o n of her c o n q u e s t s in our f a i r 3talia as legitimate. 3 t i s now obvious that tttalia is a b r o k e n and d i v i d e d - l a n d , which both a n g e r s a n d s a d d e n s me, a n d m o r e so that s h e shall not h a v e the b e n e f i t o f f o r e i g a s s i s t a n c e to d e f e a t o F r a n c e . Jtalia shall h a v e t d r i v e out the Fre h herself, e v e n if i t t a k e s
received word

twenty y e a r s , but d r i v e t h e m out w e shall!

Ordinarily 3 do not like t lose my temper, o

the

n e w s f r o m Ciiovanni while b r e a k i n g fa

er, e v e n as

3 did so, 3 was able t draw o


indeed

that w h i c h routing the F r e n ch from the field.


explosion of rage a n d a n d less d e s t r u c t i v e t h o m e s t h a n o wonder find

shall b e

most p r o d u c t i v e in

3 t is s u c h a s i m p l e variation of my o w n previo

the J n g e M i

y y I ~ I ~ ~ . L ( o s ~ s ,3

that
J

that 3 had

not previously invented its mechanism. However,

3
am

that

my t h o u g h t s a n d s u c c e s s e s both flow m o r e readily w h e n O M the contemplation of m a t t e r s martial in nature. 5

e ingenium should

b e c o n s t r u c t e d of p u r e s t iron, the better t focus o

the destructive forces which this shall unleash, a n d aiming may be effected through the manipulation of the scope mounted O M top of the device. 3 keeping with the necessity of military ingenia t be 1 2 o p o r t a b l e a n d i n d e p e n d e n t of water, wind, &c, a n d other s o u r c e s of exte n a l power, it is n e c e s s a r y t turn the c e n t r a l axle of the ingenium manuallyj o however, wiih a proper series of gears, this method of empowering the d e v i c e c a n b e calibrated to a n y s t r e n g t h or rapidity of fire desired. J estim a t e that in o r d e r t bombard a n d destroy a city wall, with a series of o fiery projectiles like unto a storm, that a t e a m of twenty horses or m o r e
and amplik might be required, but although a lesser a m o u n t might not rock,

strike d o w n t h e

the conflagration would cause great fear a n d c o n sion a m o n g +he d e f e n d e r s . J m u s t also someday test this device, however, t e n s w e that o i t does not heat u p as a result of g e n e r a t i n g s u c h temperatures itself.6
t last the w o r s t e v e n t which 3 h a v e
s t a n d i n g only A l e x a n d e r VI,

feared has c o m e

that of being b
s c h e m i n g uswper of the bull, for

as c r u e l a n d unseemly a f a s h i o n a

that vile

noble of mortal m a n

all books

which

and the C h u r c h , h a s now ordered, by papal are said t b e set a g a i n s o

---

the C h u r c h ,

". . t h r o u g h fiat of

his

o w n p e r s o n a l distastes J a m c e r t a i n , to

be

burned, as t h o u g h in which a r e to

the fires of Hell

itself. F o r e m o s t of these

books

b e c o n s u m e d by

flamesa r e

the m e r e two dozen copies of

my o w n latest n o t e b o o k which a n d great t r a v a i 1 . t h e offense

J have

published, a n d at my o w n e x p e n s e

book h a s c a u s e d is so great, a n d e n g e n d e r s s u c h tremulous feelings in t h e hearts of the c h u r c h , that the pope has o r d e r e d , as well, with g r e a t solemnity of p u r p o s e , that no written r e c o r d of my n o t e b o o k s having existed is to be m a d e , and all kr\owledge of this Cudex having been created is to b e smitten from the
my minds of m e n for all time, u n d e r penalty of excommunication, e t e r n a l damnation, purgatory, &c. my Cudex is to

which

be struck from the pages of history, destroyed utterly as w e r e the untold volumes of the Library of A l e x a n d r i a . A l t h o u g h J myself face charges of heresy, this 3 c a n n o t
allow to h a p p e n , for J h a v e s p e n t my y e a r s in a tireless q u e s t for

the uncovering of m u c h k n o w l e d g e to the b e t t e r m e n t a n d enjoyment of the common man, a n d to tMrn my b a c k so upon my own d i s c o v e r i e s into this
other. 3 c a n n o t let it b e
so.

most mystical of p o w e r s i s a b u r d e n m o r e heinous and w e a r y i n g to m e

than any

h a v e items of s u c h great p o w e r as brimstone in

this

ingeMium of f i r e a n d

the h a n d s of the u n s c r u p ~ l o u s Borgias would c a u s e g r e a t calamity, upon the rest of Jtalia, a n d perhaps all of E u r o p e . A g a i n s t those w h o would c o n s i g n k n o w l e d g e to oblivion, as though i t

tion.

The objective is to s n a v e a line of magickal force


r a w it towards the
iMgeMiMm

and

itself, but without consmming

in the act of capturing it, much a s a drawn in to

fish is captured and

the fishers vessel, by m e a n s of a barbed hook

line itself, p r e s e n t i n g a t a n g e n t i a l line to


urn, with a

the

ingeni-

great amount of additional power d u e to

the stresses i m p a r t e d upon the elasticity of the force, a n d h e r e shall b e illustrated that i n g e ~ i u m . which c a n d r a w m a g i c k a l p o w e r s into the area
f r o m l a n d s far beyond.

o f a s FUMCtiOM

U d Jvu.tcrwe M
shall b e as
fashioned of
purest
of the

ne b e g i n s with s n a r e s , w h i c h

hooks,

but f o r m e d in c o m p l e t e circles, a n d

turned o n c e around

back

upon t h e m s e l v e s a n d protection to

gold, to afford the greatest

the

u s e r . t h e s e are w o u n d in

the

m a n n e r s o illustrated, in d r a w i n g s

b t h r o u g h e, for the making

spool itself is intricate, a l t h o u g h s c h e m a t i c a l l y i t is difficult to illumi-

lawdl

so,3

jUUSt

Close

v e n thowgh my burning of wy notebook was seen, a l t h o u g h

rough papal edict not r e c o r d e d , a n d even deliberately remembered to b e f o r g o t t e n by t h e m o s t f e a r i n g of the pious, i n d e e d the suspiained henchmen i s c i o u s a n d untrfisting m a n n e r of the Pope a n d his e v i d e n t s t i l l . 3 r e t u r n e d to my domicile last w e e k , a n d upon entering, found that the s a n c t i t y of m y d o m a i n had i n d e e d b e e n violated, a n d many
of my w o r k s in p r o g r e s s

had

b e e n t a k e n a n d r e m o v e d . Fortunately,

practiced foresight, for i n d e e d 3 had o b s e r v e d

that s u c h a n e v e n t might t a k e place, a n d had taken care to hide this manus c r i p t b e n e a t h the a s h e s in the fireplace, which is a b o v e all the last place
one might

expect A stu-

dious a n d careful man s u c h as 3 to s e q u e s t e r invaluable d o c u m e n t s . my

stolefi w o r k s h a v e

bee@n o w

r e t u r n e d to me, peremptorily, upon

by a n

u n n a m e d priest, but as obnoxiofis Pope, they

the v a n d a l s acted

the g u i d a n c e of the most

offered, a-d

in fact r e q u i r e d , no e x p l a n a t i o n of

their

activities. Without respect, a n d

3 c a n n o t a b i d e this t y p e of hounding, to be trea

to h a v e my p r o p r i e t y a n d p r i v a c y violated, a n d with s u c h a c a s u a l disregard for m o r a l i t y . t r u l y n o w do 3 u n d e r s t a n d better the w o r d s of the

Christ w h e n +le s p o k e to the P h a r i s e e s of his time, althowgh 3 c a n n o t r e m e m b e r exactly w h a t they w e r e , a n d 3 do n o t wish to m i s q u o t e Him in these p a g e s , s o 3 shall h a v e to look u p the passage in qmestion this evening. But s u f f i c e i t to s a y that J agree with t l i m that the holy men of

the day

were, a n d for

m e yet are, c o r r u p t

individuals w h o

hold
but

not

God

sacred,

instead revere more

their
position. Why,

poweq a n d

privilege,

their and their

that the P o p e has s i r e d a n o t h e r child. B y i m m a c u l a t e conception, 3 a m s w r e , s i n c e h e is u n w a r r i e d . 3 c a n only p r a y t h a t this Pope A l e x a n d e r V I and his s c h e m i n g offspring r e c e i v e their j u s t rewards both in this world a n d in the I~ereafteu; the sooner for they r e a p the t r e a c h e r y a n d c o r r u p t i o n they h a v e sown, the sooner 3 shall b e a b l e to c o n t i n u e these studies. J n fact, w e r e the Pope to die next the word
is y e a 6 3 couldnt

b e m o r e elated.

m a y perhaps know why m a d e upon my

these illegal and affronting s e a r c h e s w e r e house. J h a v e had w o r d that a n f i r a b m e r c h a n t h a s

c a u s e d one copy of my m a n u s c r i p t to d i s a p p e a r . H e c l a i m s to h a v e

the papers u p o n h e a r i n g of the edict, bat the c h u r c h a u t h o r i t i e s d o u b t his word as he is merely A h e a t h e n and not a all a C h r i s t i a n . T h e y t s e a r c h e d his h o u s e a n d those items which he w a s shipping back to his homelands, but they found not my book. H e c l a i m s that it c a n n o t b e r e c l a i m e d from the fires which c o n s u m e d it, a n d so is held in prison a t this time at the Popes 1eiswre.There are those w h o s a y he c o n s o r t s with
burned supernatwral forces, a n d m a y h a v e u s e d d a r k arts to secrete my Codex hatever

3 will l e a v e these m a g i c k a l researches t l i e fallow for t h e p r e s e n t time, until the Papal f i r e s o nation are cooled. p e r h a p s 3 c a n d i v e r t my o w n attention from

the trath

of that sfory,

3 g h i a r i yet awaits m y brush. 3 have also r e c e i v e d n o t i c e from the merc h a n t Ciiacondo that he would like m e to r e n d e r his wife, Lisa, for posterity. 3 hope this will help d i v e r t me, although t h e f a s h i o n of s h a v i n g ones eyebrows does not e n d e a r f i r e n z a n w o m e n to m e . P e r h a p s w e r e 3 to include m o r e of her in the d r a w i n g , this farcical depilation will not b e as noticeable, a n d the painting will also look less like a d e c a p i t a t i o n as do so many portraits. B u t these are t h o u g h t s for a n o t h e r day. 3 m u s t
MOLL,

sequester

think a g a i n

this Codex among upon i t no more. 10

my m o s t p e r s o n a l belongings, a n d

e),, Mike. Youre probably wondering all this stuff is stLlcli at the back ofthis book. well, theres two reasons.

there, though not many. 1 ended up malung a bunch of little slips of paper, each with the name of one engine, and sorting the list that way, and then copving it over by hand again. Sigh. Well,

stuff to write down all the game mechanics Have funfor these things, wondrous as they are. HOW SORCEROUS EflCiJflES Second, when youre playing a role-playing game, especially the Great Game (which is WORK Jfl REAL LXE really getting popular over here), you realnpredictably No, wait, thats not what I ly shouldnt worry about petty things like meant to say. Actually, sorcerous engines are pretty predictable, difficulty numbers. although I can tell you that We dont in real life, 8 they are not all alike. Not right? We just make a even the engines we use for reckoning of the odds 1 our aerodreadnoughts, all ! made to the same plans, are PVOPeV e M e V So, when someone I alike. Thats because of the in the Great Game way they are built and q i e s are wants to make a magv tuned and maintained; harickal engine, o r if he monics can be different for finds a copy of the each one. Furthermore, Codex, or just a page, utkenfions there is some unpredictabilor whatever, you can hand him the book, f ity in a magickal engine, E because the energies it conand use a heavy-duty create [, sumes to do its work can clip to hold these pages shut. That way, cause some strange effects. 8 1 Unlike gasoline back there, hell deal with the info I which is pretty much unias he would in real energies t life, without suits and 1 form, magickal power varies greatly. feat difficulty numbers and required Anyway, there are two skills. Itll make suspension of disbelief eas- types of sorcerous automata: spontaneous and ier, role-playing more realistic, and what continuous. Spontaneous engines gather up the heck, it lets you, the Host, fiidge all the enough power to fire off an instant spell, and numbers if you have to for the sake of dra- when they have it, the spell gets cast. An exammatic interest. Speaking of dramatic inter- ple of a spontaneous magickal engine is the est, I have a dinner date with Marianne destruction engine o n page 104: Crank it up, tonight, and-well, never mind. and a few moments later a blazing fireball vomits forth to smite the enemy, as Morrolan would Ive taken the time to alphabetize the list of engines described in this book, and put it. I<eep the destruction engine running, reference them all by the page number and fireballs will continue to be spit Out at lvhere they appear. And let me tell JTOU, slightly irregular intervals, depending on the
~

Wheo

+he

used,

+he mechanical
1

peu.fectjy bOMnd 1
I

enough power to create a temporary change in conditions, enact that change, and then theyre done. They act just like wizards do, drawing up power and using it-except they cannot selectivelv eliminate unwanted power. The brainless things just use it all. Continuous engines are different. They weave a complex and long-lasting spell, creating all these subethric ltnots which can redefine the reality around the machine. Since these Imots try to unravel themselves, the magickal engine has to hold them together, which it does by continuing to run. It keeps the tension off the knots so they wont untie, if you want to think of it that way So what they do is gather up large quantities of energy, larger quantities than the spontaneous engines do, and use them to alter the qualities of the world immediately around them. The reason they need to usc so much energy is that the spells must be able to last for a lot longer. The curious thing is that the engine itself is what does the work, not the magickal power.

The engine uses thc magicli as a catalyst, but when it is shut off, it releases the magicltd energy back into its surroundings. This means that when a continuous sorcerous automata starts up, it gathers up a bunch of power, depleting the area. When its shut off, the power returns pretty rapidly. However, if you moire the magiclcal engine, the power it has accumulated goes with it, held by its mechanical arms. If its shut down somewhere else, that place will have more power than normal. We havent done much experimenting on what happens when a place has more than a normal amount of magickal energy. Mer all, weve only had these aerodreadnoughts a short while, and were keeping the few other engines weve built securely under guard back at Falkenstein. So what happens when an area is ovcrstoclted on magick? It could be that anyone casicing a spell in the area gathers more power than intended. You could simulate this in the game, if you like. Take your normal sorcerv deck, and shuffle in extra cards from another deck. When

someone draws a card from the sorcery deck, have to wait for the normal regenerative properand the top card on the deck after they draw is ties to generate enough extra magick before we a card from the extra deck, they automatically can leave. Not a terribly great situation, espedraw that card too, and add it to their hand. If cially since this means that our magnetic force the top card after that is also an extra card, they engine is a sitting duck for the capture. Ive draw that one too, and so on, until the top card brought this problem to the attention of the is a normal sorcery deck card. Perhaps the wiz- king, and suggested we install auxiliary proard has the option of discarding these extra pellers on the front of our aerobattleships as an cards forced upon him or her, or perhaps not. emergency propulsion system. Not is definitely more fun., and I think its more realistic. Casting a spell in an area supersaturat- HOW SORCGROMS EflCiJflCS ed with magick would seem to be as risky as WORU J f l GfijMGtERNS lighting a torch in a fireworks warehouse. very sorcerous automaton has an associated Especially if theres another joker or two in the activation level, which is the amount of extra cards. magiclcal energy the engine needs to cast the You could take a simispell its designed for. If you lar approach when somelook over the list at the end one fires up a magickal of these pages, youll notice tinfo v e s e e n engine in an area where that continuous engines theres a lot of magickal mani- require a lot more energy to power. activate than do spontaneous engines. This is due You can imagine that festations to the effects I described as magickal engines above. However, there are become more common, come spontaneous magickal whatever wizards are in engines which require more the area are going to get power than a mage would to peeved. The things will do the same thing with a suck up the energy and spell. For example, the keep it, perhaps-if theyre transformation engine takes a magnetic force engine or 16 points of power to actisomethin g-even carry vate, while a Templar can that energy away. This change the shape of an item might be incidental to the engine operators purposwith a 12-point spell. This is es, or the user of the because the effects of the Templars spell will fade, but engine might even do it the spontaneous engines deliberatelv, to disarm the local mages. Let me tell you, when we launched effects are permanent! Once a transformation the airships from Bayern, we were magickally engine changes the shape of an item, it will forever be that new shape-thats its new natural destitute back in Munchen. It was bad. This also means that continuous magickal condition. When a magiclcal engine is switched on, the engines can be used to trap or disable other continuous magickal engines. For example, imagine Host begins to draw cards for it from the sorone of our aerobattleships resting at anchor. cery deck, one card per round (or at whatever Someone comes in with another magickal frequency the Host deems suited for dramatic engine and sucks LIPall the power in the area for effect). All cards are added to the engines pile; its effect. Now our aerobattleship cant gather the engine cannot refuse any card. Once the up enough power to get out of there; there sim- value of the cards in the engines pile equals or plv isnt enough power left around, and well exceeds the engines activation level, the mag-

magickal

may into being

pull the Star Iron-laced control arm back to nor-

automaton and apply any harmonics that are For spontaneous engines, backlash is a popudestruction engine called for. These harmonics will affect the indi- lar approach to take-the vidual casting of the spell for spontaneous fires off such a powerful fireball that it also melts engines, and they will be- sustained with the itself in the process, that sort of thing. effects of a continuous engine for as long as its SORCEROMS operating. Magiclral engines are designed to use AJMJflCi

14

engine exhibits no harmonics at that time. associated with them, depending on how well they were put together and calibrated. This craftsmanship value is added to the number of cards O the appropriate Suit that were drawn for f the purposes of determining harmonics. Thus, if an engine draws two cards of the appropriate suit, and three cards Of another suit, it would normally exhibit the harmonics of that second suit. However, if the engine had a craftsmanship of two, it would have effectively drawn four harmonics. deck as do human mages. Continuous engines deplete the deck temporarily; when a continuous engine is shut down, all of its cards are returned to the deck at whatever rate the Host deems appropriate (usually, unless the characters are ~mbroiled combat, W just dump the whole in e slew back into the deck) its best if these fireballs hit the target. Therefore, you have to aim them. Aiming an engine is different from calibrating it (calibrating an engine is covered under Making a Sorcerous Automaton). Consider aiming the magickal engine to be like steering a car, while calibrating it is like tuning h e engine and aligning the wheels. This is an especially appropriate simile for things lilre magnetic force engines, which are used to move and steer the

netic force, you need to be able to do it in a conAiming a magckal engine requires that the operator undertake a Tinkering feat, and the more difficult the job ofaiming, the tougher the feat becomes. Also, the more important it is that the magickal engine not affect anything else nearby, the more difficult the task becomes. For example, its easy to aim a destruction engine to

impact on the engine itself. The second time we launched the Vakyrie, one of the knots of magickal energy got itself caught around the control arm for the magnetic force engine and Pulled it to maximum. Suddenly We found ourselves hurtling at an impossible speed out over the North Sea headed straight for the Arctic in win-

orphanage on the other. I havent bothered to note which engines need to be aimed; its pretty obvious which Ones they are. Besides, players are so clever, they might think of a new way around such restrictions.

W
En&, is not as easy as it might seem. This is because the technology, the knowledge of .how to create one, is not known to the world at large. Unlike malung a new-fangled device with Tdiering, which relies on commonly held knowledge, the possibility of creating magickal engines is an idea unknown to many. Its sort of like trying to make an atomic bomb in 1950; you can only get the technology &om the Soviets or the American-British Manhattan Project. Yeah, right, and good luck to you. This means the dramatic characters have to gain access to the knowledge of how to build magickal engines through their own activities. Thats right: This isnt invention by feats, this is Creation Through Adventure. Creation Through Adventure requires that the dramatic characters jump through five hoops:

r skim a Madckal
Y

no end with the leaders of Bayern, theyll have to come up with a darned interesting scheme to get hold of the plans.

flEW SKJLL: S O R C E R O ~ S

ENGJNEERJflG (e)

1) Get the Plans 2) Get the Materials 3) Build the Engine 4) Tune the Engine 5) Determine Its Efficiency
Ill explain each of these in order. There may be one or two things you dont understand at the l moment I explain it, but al shall be made clear, so stick it out.

GETTtlE PLANS
bviouslv, you aint a-goin nowhere untd you do this. You can obtain copies of the plans fi-om my copy of Leos Codex, or discover a longlost page of Leos original notebooks in some widows attic in Genoa, or acquire the plans from someone else who, by hook, crook, or genius, has a copy of his own. Or, hardest of all, you can design your own magiclial engine (dont even try untd youre Excellent at Sorcerous Engineering). Getting the plans must be played through in the game. We of the Inner Circle are loathe to give up our secrets, as would be anyone else the Host decides has a plan for a magickal engine. Unless the dramatic characters have ingratiated themselves to

his is the ability to design and tune sorcerous automata (building them in and of itself is a Tinkering feat). A Poor Sorcerous Engineering skill means you are technically illiterate with magiclial engines; you dont know how to operate them, and if you tried to design or tune one, others nearby would run for very solid cover from the impending blast. Good Sorcerous Engineering is still not particularly good; you can probably adjust very simple devices, but your designs are only the most basic, and are still unreliable at best. Tuning complex magickal engines is still a nervous undertaking. Great Sorcerous Engineering ability allows you to readily design very simple engines, and even undertake some more complex ones. Tuning engines is something which you perform with confidence. Those with Exceptional Sorcerous Engineering skills can design a wide variety of engines, and tune them quickly and efficiently. Characters with an Extraordinary ability at Sorcerous Engineering can create any magickal engine imaginable, and tune even the most temperamental and explosive engine without a fuss. Those with such skills are on par with Leo himself, and are probably bent on global domination besides. Designing an engine from scratch involves a Sorcerous Engineering feat. Use the complexity of the engine as the difficulty of designing it, i.e., the harder it is to build, the harder it is to design as well, right? If the engine being developed is a new one, use our complexities as guidelines. If its a combination of engines given in this book, you might want to take the higher difficulty and add half the lower to determine how tough a feat it is. There are several restrictions on the use of Sorcerous Engineering. First, anyone with the skill must also have Sorcery at a level equal to or

greater than Engineering. You have to be able to see the subethric knots to be able to adjust the way the engine Produrn them, and YOU can Only adjust the engine as Well as YOU can S e e the knots. (well, O b 5 SOrneone with a @ magician for a mentor might be able to deign an engine to tie speCifiC bo@, but he Y C COuldnt tune the engine Once its built-) second, dramatic CharaCcannot take &mxmus Enginering as their mandatory Poor skill without the permission of the Host. Third, dramatic characters cannot have a Sorcerous Engineering skill greater than Good without having a great background story (feasible, or at least interesting and fun) which the Host accepts. Generally, characters should only be able to improve their Sorcerous Engineering skill beyond Good through game play-and extraordinaryactivities, as well. The only method we know of in New Europa to leam this skill is by being a member of the Bayernese Inner Circle, which is composed of Ludwig, Rhyme, Morrolan, Auberon, and myself. W dont even e let Or in On the saeq at least not much. The fewer who the better* to the a character must either join Opefullythe former*

didnt work well, but that was after Bellizzi lost h s disintegration engine-and, presumably, swept up his Star Iron and threw it away.) The amount of ron you must have to build the magickal engine depends on its size and the base complexity of its construction. This chart shows the sizes of engine which can be created, how much Star Iron is required for each one, and the increase in the engines base cost given as a result of its size. Big engines get very, very expensive.
Engine

Size
Tiny
Small

Comparison Complexity Range Guide S M Y 1/2 oz. 2 oz. 40z. Toy Chest

Cost

Medium Large

Ds ek
Carriage Locomotive

8oz. 1lb. 2Ib.

1Ib. 2 lb. 4 Ib.

2Ib. 4 lb. 8 Ib.

Increase x0.5 xl x1.5 x3 x8 x20

Key: S Simple (ifcly1-20). Dfiut M Moderately Complex (ifcly Dfiut 21-50). V: Very Complex (ifcly51+). Dfiut

Obviously, this is just a guidehe. For better suspension of disbelief, the Host should adjust the numbers for engines at the edges of the complexity range, and promote or inhbit the development of those engines which are deemed dangerous. Also, remember that the character building the engine can subtract 100 times his Tinkering ability or glass that fi-om the base cost of the sorcerous automaton whatever other materials fie COSt by the engines price the engine requires. A lot oftJGs can be done wt before mdtiplfing ih a flick of the Hosts wrist, as role-playing a shop- increase due to size* ping expedition to the hardware store usually isnt that exciting. The persons involved in the creation uilding a sorcerous autom of the engine must part with a lot of cash at this building a steamtech invention, as I covered in time, in all likelihood. the basic game rules I sent last year. Aside &om the mundane materials, its also First you have to figure out how difficult the necessary to have some St engme is to b d d . Take the complexity of the magbig secret of sorcerous some amount of Star Iron to work, otherwise the iclcal engine as gven under Sorcerous Automaton mechanical assembly will be unable to actually seize Definitions at the end of thls section. This is the and control the magickal power around it. (As an base difficulty. This base difficultv might be f aside, it seems that Leo was lucky enough to have increased by the duration o its power source, and the reliability of the power source, as shown in the had some Star Iron in whatever iron he used in his .. devices. Considering they were all small engnes, a following tabies: very little bit would have been enough. Perhaps he also recycled his iron from his previous efforts, which would explain why his engines generally

~~

Power Source

Tinkering

LevelCostPeat
Gross

10

Poor

source the magiclial engine uses, although one must be chosen. You never know when some circumstance might make it impossible to power the engine. Pick any of the ones you \vmt from the base rules [thats Cnstle Fmlhenstein page 210Mike]. The Cost increase is added to the base cost of the engine after all other adjustments have been made-after subtracting for the slull of the builder, multiplying by the engine size, etc.

Good

Fine

Exact

Description of the Craftsmanship Within a mile or two, ponderous control, a lot of interfeknce Within a thousand yards, sluggish control, high background Within a hundred yards, reasonable control, some slop Within ten yards, room-by-room control, a little static or noise Perfect aim, precise control, no l interference at a l

Thus London-bombing destruction engines can have gross control, because even if they miss the Tower of London by a few his kitchen well done by a magickal howitzer, and the desired effect of terror will be achieved. Our Bayernese aerobattleships have good controls on their magnetic engines: Thev can maneuver effectively on the battlefield, but their ability to drop bombs on Prussian Landfestungen is marginal (thank God for our excellent pilots!). Victorian medicine would love to have an exacting clairvoyance device to allow for internal exams. It is Possible to upgrade Craftsmanship by one level. YOU Cannot go more than that, because YOU can only improve on bad en$neering by SO much before Youre already rebuilding the thing from scratch with all new parts. To upgrade, calculate cost and time as if you were making the thing from scratch, but cut the time involved to one half normal and the cost to one tenth normal.

Reliability is not defined here. Pretty much, its up to the Host to determine how unreliable a n unreliable power source is. Generally, though, unreliable means that the engines operation can be interrupted relatively easilv; the steam pressure must be kept h g h , so the boiler is very susceptible to rupture, for esample, or the hand crank has a tendency to slip off the main camshaft. Escellent means that the power source is very difficult for an enemy to disable; perhaps it is very simple or well armored. An indestructible power source is just that; perhaps the magickal engine runs off a radium pile or a giant well-armored battery or geothermal power or something. Next we must talk about craftsmanship. This determines how easily the engine can be directed or aimed, or how tight the controls are. The actual mechanics of the control device are not

Engine Size

Complexi

Immense

Key: SE: WP. DW:

Superefficient Works Fine Doesnt Work

E:
RE BU:

Efficient RunsPoorly BlowsUp

Yes, immense magickal engines get very expensive. What would you expect from an engine that could melt New York when fired from some mad scientists secret base in Antarctica? Subtract the characters Tinkering slull from this final value, and that number is the time in weeks it will take to manufacture the parts and assemble the engine.

The result of the draw of a joker is entirelv up to the Host. Once the machine is running, and with any luck hasnt blown vou to pieces, the magician must make a Sorcerous Engineering feat equal in difficulty to the activation ofthe spell to bring it into good running form.

t u j w ttE EjVGJflE
nce the magicltal engine is all put together, no ones going to guarantee its gonna work right the first time. Lord knows when Rhyme flipped on his first engine, we thought the castle was a goner. After an engine is built, youve still got to tune it. This requires a sorcerbuilt it, er. Well, it could be done by the guy ~ l 1 0 assuming he was also magiclially inclined, but such people are rare. But before you can tune it, youve got to flip it on. Put the controls u.here you think they ought to be and power it up. And hope for the best. Magiclial engines are very temperamental things, and even after the best engineering and pre calibration, things can still go wrong. So, when first powering up an engine, add together the values of the building characters Tinkering ability and the calibrating mages Sorcerous Engineering. The players can add 1/5 the value of any cards they wish to play at this time to this total (ix., diamond face cards are worth a little over two points). Once the players have played whatever cards they want, the Host turns over the top card of the Fortune Deck and compares the draw to this table:
Quality Tinkering t Sorcerous Engineering 0-8 Result - 9-12 13-16 17-20 21-24 A SE E A A Q-K 10-K 9-K WF A K-A 6-J RP 6-8 4-5 8-9 I< J-Q DW 4-5 3 9-Q 7-10 5-7 2 2-4 2-3 2-8 2-6 BU

DGTERjMJjw n PAl?jIjwtERS

ow that its built and running, we need to take note of exactly how it works, its activation level, range, etc.. Every magiclial engine has an activation level noted for it under Sorcerous Automaton Definitions. T h s activation level is how

&
K-A 10-Q 3-9 2

Effect is what exactly the magickal engine does. If the engine can be adjusted in effect, it will be noted here. These effects are based upon the illustrations Leo gavein this Codex. With a little bit of ingenuity, you can engineer the sorcerous automaton differently to alter the effect it has-you know, customize it.

odd materials. After an engine is calibrated, it will only alter the substance for which it is prepared; if you calibrate the engine to change lead to gold, and put steel into the conversion cham-

of the spell, which is the amount of power it goes off. Finally, I give the suit aligned to the engines spell. Engines require aligned energy just like human mages do; when drawing from EflGJflG (Pgn 28) the sorcery deck for an engine, non-aligned Effect: This creates sounds-

Making a Sorcerous Automaton, above.

simple toot is easy, but a good rendition of a

crowns. The cost covers materials and costs asso- Operation: Continuous, 16 points (Y) ciated wt crafting the device. If the dramatic Investment: Difficulty 20, Gost 1500 ih characters farm out the job to a contractor dwarf or something, or else hire a wizard to d o the

Effect: This engine transforms the material put ed in this fashion

Operation: Spontaneous, 16 points (e) Investment: Difficulty 60, Cost 6000 c

C L f i m h D J E f l C EEflGJflE (pg, 41)


Effect: This engine creates a magickal pipeline of extradimensional nature, which carries the sounds made at a distant location back to the engine so that the operator can hear it. It does so without eliminating the sound at the source. The area of effect determines how much sound is pulled out; a large area of effect might transport every conversation in a large ball room, while a small engine will eavesdrop on just one corner of it. Also, the amount of energy used by the engine determines the quality of the sound: volume, static, distortion, minimum audible sound, etc. Operation: Continuous, 18 points (4) Investment: Difficulty 30, Cost 3500 c

truth, no matter what, and n o matter how trivial or pithy the remark. Gee, thats a terrible coat you have. You should really have it tailored. And you nicked yourself shaving again, you maladroit, but I should have guessed by the stumbling way you m7altz. I shall ignore your contemptible babbling. Youre always cutting me down, old chap, because youre so conceited, and insulting someone as much more handsome than you as I am makes 370u feel better. Oooh. Trouble. Operation: Continuous, 20 points (Y) Investment: Difficulty 60, Cost 7000 c

DeTTRMCTJOfl GflGJflG (139,104)


Effect: This unleashes blazing wads of doom, much akin to explosives or fireballs. Its not exactly either, because its magickal in nature-it just tears stuff apart in a kmd of photon-torpedo mix of all the elements. Like maybe it engenders a molecular-level steam explosion like the one that took St. Helens apart up in Washington in 1980. The amount of damage the shot causes is equal to the amount of energy used in the creation of the fireball. It is possible to build this engine with a higher or lower activation level, and in fact, its recommended that smaller engines have very small activation levels. You dont want to hold onto something when it unleashes a fireball thatd take apart the World Trade Center. Operation: Spontaneous, 16 points (e) Investment: Difficulty 35, Cost 3500 c

CL~mvOyfiflcE EflGJflE (Pg, 43)

Effect: This creates an extradimensional gate, the location of which may be moved around. This gate is paired to another gate a t the engine by an ethereal tunnel which transcends normal space. This gate allows people at the engine to look through the gate and see whats on the other side as if they were there. This means that people on opposite sides of the engine will be loolung in different directions of the target area, and will see opposite walls of the place the far gate is placed. This gate allows only for the transmission of light, yet it does not diminish the light present at the location being spied upon. D J f l E f l S J O f l f i L GflGJflE ( 1 3 ~ ~ 8 2 ) Operation: Continuous, 20 points (4) Effect: This creates a dimensional gate between the engine and whatever plane it is built for. Investment: Difficulty 3 5 , Cost 4000 c Although it can be aimed at any place in the tarEflGJflE {pg. 89) get plane, a dimensional engine, once built, can Effect: This causes all persons within the field of only access that particular plane. It is possible to its effect to want to speak the truth, no more design the engine to create a different gate and no less. They may endeavor to lie, but the which will access a different plane, but frankly, difficulty of the task is the power drawn by the were not going to play hunt-and-peck with a engine to start the spell, modified by the Host if transdimensional doorway. You never know; the the lie is particularly large. Evasions and half- way things run around here, Id expect to open truths can result in a slight decrease in the diff- a gate on Cthulhu himself? Whatever the case, culty. Obviously, then, a large and powerful when you draw a joker while operating this gate, engine will be nigh irresistible in its sodium pen- expect company. tatholic effect. Jokers make everyone speak the Operation: Continuous, 24 points (4) truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the Investment: Difficulty 25, Cost 2000 c

cofll=EssJ~fl

DJSSOLUtJOfl EflGJflE (Pg. 98)

EjYlTttlStlfi

targets can resist the effects, both by force of which is dependent upon the amount of mag-

solution). The dissolution engine requires a Id recommend that an exceptional Athletics variable amount of power, depending on the feat be required to shut one down before it runs

from there. The amount of power required also you want it, for example

into component atoms.

Investment: Difficulty 70, Cost 7000 c

DRAJflJflG GflGJflG (Pg. 24)

leech, used to disarm those sorcerers and wizards who might oppose you. With a joker, you might consider having the magickal knot get tangled in the engine, growing bigger and bigger until something has to happen ... Operation: Spontaneous, 1 point (any suit) Investment: Difficulty 15, Cost 1000 c

is, the more difficult the engine is to build and calibrate (the stats I give here are for a circular wall). The strength of the wall is equal to the power put into it by the engine, though the exact effects depend on the elemental manifestation. Earthen walls take damage equal to the power before they are temporarily breached, while walls of fire will burn anything that tries to

DRGAjM GflGJflG (139.56)


to fl the persons sleep. This can be used in psyil choanalysis, to help someone resurrect suppressed memories. It can be used as a punishment or

GflGJflG (pg. 52)

Operation: Continuous, 16 points

(Y)

Effect: This causes all wounds and illnesses to be removed from the person wrapped in the gold and silk shroud of the engine. The amount of power the engine requires depends on how badly injured the person is. It takes one point of power per wound incurred to heal someone, plus extra power as determined by the Host to compensate for illness or poison. Once the activation energy is acquired, the actual healing process is impossibly fast. If a person is healed CEjVERJC JLLMSJOjV EjVGJjVE with a joker, he gets hyperactive for a long while, and demands immediate action in all situations. Effect: The engine is a vehicle for casting illu- Operation: Spontaneous, variable points (+) sions. The actual illusion created depends on Investment: Difficulty 70, Cost 7000 c what module is attached to the engine, because its the module that contains the mechanisms JLLUjKJflfiTJOfl EflGJjW (Pg. 23) that actually tie the subethric knots. Each mod- Effect: When activated, this engine creates light ule is a little easier and cheaper to build than a all around it. It does not glow of itself; it causes hll-fledged engine of that type, but the cost and all itcms within its radius of effect to be illumicomplexity of the generic illusion engine more nated, in essence to reflect a magickal light. The than makes up for the difference. light has no source, so there are no shadows within its area of effect. The magick causes items Operation: Continuous, 16 points ( 0 ) outside its radius to be lit as well, simply because Investment: Difficulty 40, Cost 2500 c Difficulty 15, Cost 1200 c for an illusion mod- there is some reflected light from items within the engines radius. However, this reflected light ule (any type) is scant at best. By the way, youll notice that this Difficulty 20, Cost 1500 c for a moving illusion is a hearts spell; its psychic magick. I think this module (any q p e ) is because the engine doesnt actually cause real light, just the illusion of it. Im not sure why it works that way, and Morrolan is tired of trying Effect: This causes everything \;rrithin the area of to explain it to me, so just accept the fact. effect of the engine to decrease in temperature, starting with the hottest items, &e torches, lamps, Operation: Continuous, 14 points ( 0 ) etc. Given enough time and magickal power, Investment: Difficulty 15, Cost 1500 c everythmg in the icy grip of a glacial engine will freeze solid. The lowest temperature to which the glacial engine cools the surroundmgs can be set with a control lever. As illustrated here in the Effect: This causes whatever device to which it is Codex, the lever runs from about 4O0 F to a good attached to move in a manner determined by the step below zero. Humans inside its effect wdl like- operator of the engine. This engine cannot be used wise decrease in temperature, although their spirits on its own, but must be mechanically connected to force acts as a bit of a buffer. Stay inside a glacial whatever it is that the operator wants to move. In engines radius too long, though, and youll die h s sense, the imparted motion engine is much like from hypothermia. Heres a clue: When you no a magickal internal combustion engine. And when longer feel the cold, run like hell and dont stop a joker is drawn, your accelerator gets stuck on 111 until youre sweating like a pig. power! The difficulty of the Tinkering feat required to control the engines effects depends on what Operation: Continuous, 14 points (e) kind of mechanism is being moved. A go-cart is Investment: Difficulty 20, Cost 2000 c easy, but a giant robot battle suit is very difficult.

against any person or place inside radius of effect is increased by the amount of power the engine has accumulated to trigger the spell. If a joker is drawn, perhaps the area acquires a permanent deflection against that type of spell, or perhaps the engine draws in a 1 the 1 power of its aspect in the area. Operation: Continuous, 14 points (any suit, by design) Investment: Difficulty 35, Cost 3500 c

tlEJ\LJjVCi EflCiJjVC (Pg. 74)

Operation: Continuous, 14 points (+) Investment: Difficulty 40, Cost 4000 c

J~MIJSolVlM@J~l G J W (Pga 37) Ef


Effect: O n further discussion between Auberon and Morrolan, it was decided that Leo was wrong about the action ofthis engine. It actually creates a sort of dimensional barrier, an invisible, intangible, but nonetheless very real wall, which is all but impossible to pass through. Thats how its possible to weave it with spikes; the spikes are there, and the person feels them,

Colder items are the first to be affected. Allowed to increase enough, and lacking any means of dissipating that heat, eventually something i l under the influence of an inferno engine w l melt or burn or whatever. The mc&num ternperature to which the inferno engine heats the surroundings can be set with a control lever. As Leo designed it, the lever runs from about 200 F (boiling water) to just Over 450O (burning wood). Humans inside its effect will likewise increase in temperature, and although their willpower and the bodys natural mechanisms

well, actually a sphere, which traps intelligent

deep yogurt.

to the amount of power drawn by the engine. Operation: Continuous, 16 points (4) Investment: Difficulty 35, Cost 3500 c

J N t G G R W GflGJflE (Pg. 69)


Effect: This engine reinforces the natural , like the walls of a tower or the hull
forms of attack. Add the energy accumulated by the integrity engine to the natural strength of whatever structure is reinforced. For example, if youve determined that a particular wall is strength 15, so that itll take a strength 16 blast from a destruction engine to breach it, and someone fires up an integrity engine which gathers ten points of power before it activates, then the new wall strength will be 25, and the attacker will have to come up with a 26-point fireball from the destruction engine to put a hole in the defenses.

Effect: This causes all within its grasp to forget everything that occurs while the engine is operating. I mean everything. Its as if those affected by the engine are in a continuous state of complete confusion. Memories and training which occurred before the engine was switched on may still apply, so someone would probably remernber that he is facing his arch-enemy, although the moment someone turns his face away from his long-hated nemesis, hed forget that person was there. While under this engines effects, acts
engines spells power. Yeah, use Courage for this, because it represents the difficulty in forcing your brain to work against all the effects of

GNGJflc (Pg. 39)


Europas answer to the TI-59. Its a calculator, pure and simple, and gives very accurate answers very quickly, even if the operators dont exactly know the math involved. To generate an answer to any equation, no matter how difficult, the

Operation: Continuous, 16 points ( Y ) Investment: Difficulty 50, Cost 5000 c

JjvFGRflO GNGJjVG (Pg. 30)

Calculating the escape velocity of the planet is very easy; the result is easy to explain and obtaining the gravitational contestant is simple. Calculating th ickness of steel necessary to withstand vac and provide protection nearly impossible, since no against asteroi one here really knows what's involved. Remember, the intellect embodiment engine isn't intimidated by math, just defi Operation: Spontaneous, 6 points Investment: Difficulty 35, Cost 3500 c

the Perception feat. Other senses are not affected; it's every bit as easy to hear an invisible person as a normal guy. This makes it very important to calibrate an invisibility engine properly. Finally, lower the feat difficulty for someone close at hand. And with a joker, it might be fun to have the invisibility field deflect all light, making the persons within perfectly invisible, no chance to be seen at all, but also blind as a bat. Operation: Continuous, 20 points (e) Investment: Difficulty 25, Cost 2500 c

[i

JflTELLJGEflT GflGJflE (Pgm 41)


Effect: This creates an artificial human Dersona. the personality of which depends o n how the engine was tuned. You might ge n antisocial ly religious pacifist chauvinist schizo, or a de gluttonous child. Impossible blends are possible with poorly tuned engines, and in fact it is conceivable that with an abject failure of tuning, you might get a personality that deliberately lies to you. In any event, the persona is intelligent and can communicate with the operator. I suggested ach a Morse code key to make things easier. All information gathered from an intelligent engine should b gathered through role-play, not through fea and cards. It is, after all, another intelligence. Operation: Conti Investment: Difficulty 80, Cost 8000 c

LeVTtj4tJOfl EflGJjW (Pg. 77)


Effect: This engine causes itself and evervthina attached to it to rise up in the air, or else to grind itself firmly into the ground. The amount an individual engine can rise up depends on its area of effect; if all of the vehicle can't fit into the area of effect, it probably can't be held up. The more energy the engine gathers to activate the spell, the more rapidly it can cause its vehicle to rise and fall. Yeah, these are loose definitions, but I don't want to bog the Host down with all sorts of strict and exacting definitions about vehicles, size, shape, mass, and stuff like that. Even if I did, the players would just find a loophole and pilot an aerobattleship through it. Operation: Continuous, 18 point Investment: Difficulty 45, Cost 4500 c
v

J f l V J S m J L m ERIGJflE (PgEffect: This engine causes the light to flow about it at the periphery of its effect, though not uite all light, o r else the person made invisible As Leo would never be able mentioned in his expi to those to the invisibility field, t en through the field seems to warble bout, as it coalesces back into a natural state. Kind of like it did in Predator, although in that movie the light seemed less fluid and more like it was refracted through crystal. At longer distances, it will appear to an observer that the invisible field is a light smudge or shadow or dim spot, because some of the light which strikes the field is held within it so that those inside can see. To spot an invisible person, add the power of the engine to Effect: This engine turns all environments it ' encounters to c'np n1;t.lhlp fn,- hiirnan hqhitation. other that's fatal to something that's non-fatal. As I understand the engine, it will only affect that which might poicon nr drown o r ~ ~ ~ nee- & f f ple; don't coun, -___J -- -ZY-----the inside of a volcano, because you'll burn like a flare as as you ht the lava. But against smolte and water and poison gas, it's great. T~ defend against smoke and thin ai must gather 20 points nerve gas require 3 ints of power to be gathered for activation. Operation: cor+:-,7n,,o ,A,
v
v

-__

- ~ ~

---I--

p p p

~~y~

Investment: Difficulty 50, Cost 5000 c

MADNESS EflGJflE (Pgu 58)


Effect: This causes the basest measures of a man to come out to play. Essentially, it instills a sort of immediate mob mentality on people, where human ethics and social mores are suddenly no longer a consideration. The way each person reacts to this will vary from autism to cavorting to mayhem or murder. Its up to the Host to decide what exactly shall happen. A person may resist the effects by making a Courage or Charisma feat which beats the strength of the spell. But if the engine draws a joker from the deck ... Operation: Continuous, 20 points ( V ) Investment: Difficulty 60, Cost 6000 c

]\/1ESjVER ENGJflE (139.61)

Effect: This is a variant of the madness engine, but instead of creating random chaos in the victims brain, it imposes commands instead, and allows the operator to control the victim. The engine must be calibrated for each command or set of commands, but it is a flexible enough design that it can deliver almost any type of control the owner wants. Despite its name, the mesmer engine does not allow for post-hypnotic suggestion. When its effects are ended, the victim returns to normal. The only after-effect is that it might be possible to cause the victim to immediately forget all events while under the control of the engine, although thats doubtful, NfiGflctJC FoRCc EflGJflE (pg,86) because then hed also immediately forget the Effect: When fired up, this engine causes itself commands the operator had given to him. and the vehicle in which its installed t o move Operation: Continuous, 22 poi about, pulling itself along the magnetic force Investment: Difficulty 70, Cost 7000 c lines of the Earth. The amount an individual engine can push around depends on its size; the OLFjlCtQRy JLltZSJOfl bigger the engine, the bigger the vehicle that EflGJflE (Pg. 29) can be hauled about. Yes, you can use under- Effect: This creates smells for the amusement of sized engines in a vehicle, if you want something all. Obviously, some will choose to flood their that moves ponderously slowly. The more ener- apartments with nice smells; others, to flood the gy the engine gathers to activate the spell, the apartments of their enemies with foul stinks. more rapidly it can move itself about. Yeah, as Since it is the illusion of smell, and not the real with the levitation engine, these are loose defin- smell itself, the bouquet (be it fair or foul) itions, and for much the same reasons. Just use remains as fiesh with every breath as it was for your common sense. the first. One of the worst tortures I can imagOperation: Continuous, 16 points (+) ine would be to have an ever-changing foul stench illusion gagging some hapless prisoner Investment: Difficulty 45, Cost 4500 c for hours on end. This way, the foul bouquet is MGGAPtlQNE G f l G J W (Pg 42) ever-fresh and ever-new. Yeaugh. Effect: This engine creates a magickal pipeline Operation: Continuous, 16 points (0) 20, Cost 1500 of extradimensional nature which carries the Investment: sounds made at the in8eniztm to a distant location. The area of effect and the amount of ener- Difficulty 25, Cost 2500 c for a moving illusion g y used by the engine determine the quality of QptJcfiL JLLMSJQfl EflGJflE the sound: volume, static, distortion, minimum audible sound, etc. If a joker is drawn, tlie (Pg. 25) dl sound awa), Effect: This creates an optical illusion, a magmegaphone engine might from the source, leaving the operator unable to ickal hologram sort of thing. The exact illusion communicate with those close at hand. Plus generated depends upon how the engine is calitheres the difficulty of speaking when you cant brated more than on its engineering, although hear yourself do it-your volume and tone may certain engines might not have enough flexibility in their controls to allow them to create any take on weird characteristics. illusion one might imagine. Ordinarily, the illuOperation: Continuous, 18 points (a) sion will not move. With extra effort, though, a Investment: Difficulty 30, Cost 3000 c moving illusion can be created.

RCCORDJflCi EflCiJflE (Pg. 45)

Operation: Continuous, 16 points ( Y ) as within the engines effects, as ~7ell to those outside trying to hear whats going on inside. Investment: Difficulty 20, Cost 1500 c Difficulty 25, Cost 2500 c for a moving illusion Operation: Continuous, 16 points (+) Investment: Difficulty 20, Cost 2000 c

Effect: This combines the effects of the clairaudience and clairvoyance engines, and directs their output into a derivation of the cipher engine, thereby recording all events that the engine perceives for future .playback. When the engine plays a recording back, it creates an optical and auditorial illusion of sorts, but it is actually the delayed imparting of the images of the actual event. Operation: Continuous, 24 points (4) Investment: Difficulty 50, Cost 5500 c

TEjUPO&ilL EflCiJflE (Pg. 67)


Effect: Wlien activated, this engine dramatically slows the passage of time for all within its grasp. The amount that time is slowed depends o n how much power the engine gathers to do its work; for each point, time slows by a factor of one. Thus, if a temporal engine activates with 30 points of power, then for each 30 minutes of real time, one perspective minute will pass within the grip of the engine. Its possible (at least in theory) to make a personal harness which will protect you from the engines effects. This lets you move through the engines field normally. Thus, in the above example, youd be able to move thirty times as fast as the people who were trapped in the temporal amber. Operation: Continuous, 28 points (4) Investment: Difficulty 90, Cost 12,500 c Difficulty 40, Cost 5000 c for a protective harness

REPMEOR EflCiJflE (Pg. 39)


Effect: The inversion of the imprisonment engine, this one is designed to keep people out of its radius of effect. Since its a magicltal barrier, people may pass f?om the inside to the outside freely, but they may not reenter. If 1understand my magick, even a person half in and half out of the barrier will be unable to get back inthe thing ~ o r l t sort of like those tire spikes they s used to have at drive-ins. To overcome the strength of the wall, the persons who wish to cross must make a Courage or Etherealness feat equal in difficulty to the amount of power drawn by the engine. There is apparently some benefit to trying to rush the cvall en masse, but not a great one, so well leave it to the Host to determine, especially since en masse carries very different meanings for a small engine as compared to a huge one. Operation: Continuous, 16 points (4) Investment: Difficulty 35, Cost 3500 c

WflSFOR&lj4tJOjV EflCiJfiE (Pge 52)


Effect: This takes any item and alters it in shape to something else. It does not make any chemical changes to the item; something which starts as wood ends as wood. The shape of the item to be made is determined by a carved plate which is inserted into the machine (this also requires calibration of the engine), but once the shapc to be made is determined, anything can be transformed. Given the shape of a sword, you could put sawdust and make a wooden sword, a book to make a paper sword, or a chandelier to make a glass sword. It works this may because the engine doesnt actually change the molecules, it just rearranges them. It doesnt even break matter down to the molecular level, I dont think, just to small chunks. Operation: Spontaneous, 16 points (4) Investment: Difficulty 45, Cost 4500 c

S J l E f l C E GjVCiJjVE (Pg, 42)

Effect: This engine dampens sound within its area of effect. This means that sounds inside the engines area of effect are made much quieter, and also that those within the sphere of influence will be less able to hear sounds made outside the engines reach. To simulate this in game terms, add the amount of energy the engine has LtLtJjVj4tE EjVciJNE (Pg, 106) accumulated to the difficulty of any Perception Effect: Although this was not completely task involving sound. This is applied to those described in the Codex, I thought Id indude it

S t A R ZfRoIV: t l A t JS Jt? W
tar Iron, also l a o w n as Cold Iron, is the key ingredient for a magickal enginewithout its effects, a magickal engine cannot manipulate the raw power of sorcery. But what is Star Iron? I mean, to me, iron is iron is iron, right? Chemical symbol Fe, and thats about all I remembered from my chemistry class. It rusts, it melts, is presses clothes when heated, and youre supposed to take some _every day with your vitamins. Iron. But no, I was very wron as Auberon took great pains to demonstrate to me. See, over here, Mike, theres two types of iron: the normal stuff, and Star Iron. Yeah, always spelled CI with caps. Normal iron is what the Prussians are beating into sabers and bayonets and land fortresses even as we speak. Normal iron has some negative effects on magick, too. The iron railways the Prussians and English Steam Lords are building are hampering the normal flow of magicli about the land. But Star Iron, well, thats something different.

gveat

ivon,

OF n

s jvAtLRG

s its name implies, Star Iron is extraterrestri1 in origin (I had to explain that word to the gang when I first used it, but now its become very chic among the salons). And Star Iron has a great effect upon magicli, far more so than normal iron. To hear Auberon explain it, Star Iron is a lot like plutonium to the Faerie. Yeesh. Star Irons effect is so pronounced that the Faerie can actually die just by being too close to it-they dont even have to touch the stuff! And were talking the True Death here! No one knows why Star Iron has these effects. Grey Morrolan believes that is it because other planets out there do not have magick. That may

or may not be, but its almost certain that there is no magick in deep space. Since the iron here has been exposed to the Earths magick for thousands of years, its suppressive effect on magick has been reduced over time. Its been denatured. But Star Iron, Morrolan thinks, has never been exposed to a magickal field, and so has a very serious effect on magick. Over a few hundred thousand years or so, he thinks Star Iron will be indw tinguishable from normal iron. This sounds pretty reasonable to me; I mean, the planet is supDosed to have been made by a whole bunch of iron-nickel asteroids mushing together, right? So, in theory, all the iron on the planet is Star Iron if you go back far enough. And since it doesnt act that way, that indicates that maybe Star Iron can be denatured by chronic exposure to magickal energies. Whatever the case, Star Iron is needed, so Star Iron the characters s must get. A you might figure, you just cant go trot on down to Freds Convenience Store on the corner and pick up half a pound of Star Iron. While it is possible to buy it fi-om time to time horn collectors and governments, it is a rare instance indeed, and very very expensive besides. Instead, the dramatic characters must find a way to go where some Star Iron may be found, and get it themselves.

t o w t o CiGt J-t

ou have to go somewhere to get the Star Iron. This can either be a meteorite crater or a museum which has a meteor on display. Whichever the case, the dramatic characters must first figure out where the stuff is. This can be accomplished through interviews, research, spying, or whatever, depending on what sort of Star Iron source theyre trying to pursue. For example, it might be easy to determine that the Smithsonian Museum has a few meteors on &splay. But crossing the Atlantan to the New

&
Ari7~na Crater

Amount 50 Ibs.

_ _ _ k t It How to
Prospecting a lot of small rocks, but the stuff is only 1/4 effective If the Bay is really a crater, go diving a t the center and look Grand theft, defying the impeccable Prussian security Pay a lot of money for his meteor Have a good reason, work for the Bayern Inner Circle Wait for the meteor (?) to hit in 1908 Break into Mousseaus private estate Steal the Emperors katana, rumored to be forged of a meteor

Hudson Bay

unknown

Bedinkhe Stadtvwseurn
Smythe Estatej South Africa Festung Falkenstein Siberia Chateau Mousseau

er-the better the characters sorcery, the easier it is to identify the subethric changes Star Iron causes. The easy way to tell if a chunk of ore has Star Iron in it is to walk up and bonk a Faerie with it. If the Faerie vaporizes, its Star Iron. Then its time to run like Hell before the rest of the Faerie roast your body alive.

10 lbs.

Gwects OF S t f i R rrriofl
tar Iron has a nasty effect on Faerie, Seelie and Unseelie alike. This table shows what kind of effects Star Iron has on them. The effect depends on the amount of Star Iron present, and the Faeries range from the Star Iron. Star Iron which has been denatured over time (very old Star Iron, in other words) should be treated as a lesser amount, in proportion to its effectiveness.
d

2-4 OZ. 3 lb.


Unknown?

7 oz.
2 Ibs.

Tokyo

Add your own ideas, and change these listed here so your players cant get an unfair advantage. There is no known way to refine iron ore or steel to extract the Star Iron which mav be

Amount 0 - 4 oz.

4 - 8 oz.

8 - 16 OZ. 1 - 2 Ib. 2 - 4 lb. 4 lb. and up

Disturbing 2ft 5ft 10 ft

25 ft 50 ft 100 f t

Pifl anu lft 2ft 5ft 10 f 3 25 ft 50 ft

Deadly touch

lft 2ft 5fi 10 ft 25 ft

- , - - -

i l

eople will kill fo them. Wizards will sell their souls for hem. Wars could be
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e wrong hands. Beyond the Faerie the Secrets conained inside this

mes everyone in

CF-6061

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SBN# 0-937279-68.4
d Leonard0 da Vinci IS e , k. Rights Reserved All

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