It depends.Lily's tears would make the perfect sort of regent for any artifact meant to reject her mantle and enforce her morality, yes?
It depends.
RaW they don't matter at all, because the only reagent that matters is the stolen essence of our enemies. That said, the build up of reagents in our vault and the various ways they've been awarded sort of imply we'll be allowed to use them for something.
Edit: for splendors anyway. Prodigies can use this stuff, but the most powerful ones also require killing things.
So if we give Lilly something that protects her from mental influence does she then become able to lie or is not being able to lie now part of her base nature?
I would expect that to be an application of Formori Charms.The latter. Your splendors are not Nemesis. Molly might conceivably be able to do that for a lesser fey by carving the changes right on their souls, but that is outside the bounds of the current craft system, which only deals with carving things onto the souls of Exalts. She would have to figure out how fey souls work.
That's because humans are so nicely malleable. Why else would every other type of supernatural creature seem to have started out as a human? Unfried clay with the free will to choice to become anything.Fomori charms work on humans, there is only one that works on supernatural beings and it is not nice. The words 'being devoured by maggots' are involved.
Carefully, oh so carefully you say: "You know there's a odd owl in the south-east, they call it the burrowing owl, it doesn't roost in trees or on houses high up. What it does it is finds the burrows of prairie dogs and lives in there. Even though it can't dig since it has claws and wings, it can still live in the places it likes. Just needs a little help."
Ohhh burrowing owls! Lovely little things. To expand on the whole point about burrowing owls being the weirdos of the owl world theyre diurnal vs noctural or crepuscular. Their eyes are adapted to working during the day, and their skulls dont have as dramatic ear channels as other owls typically do either!
Cool, I did not know all that, always nice to learn. The point of the owl in this context was to play off Lilly's earlier comparison of her being a gofer, human, that did not want wings, to become fey, but got them. Here is a bird that lives part of its life underground in a burrow.
Lol now I want to burn a favor on Slate even less. Also is it Slate or Slade?"He would make me dance. In front... in front of... of everyone." There's so much unsaid in those pauses, a knots of pain and shame all wrapped in anger.
Ah I was reading the metaphor as "even if you've been turned into an owl (fey) you can still be the weirdest/nonconforming owl ever"
I have a feeling this is very much relevant:Carefully, oh so carefully you say: "You know there's a odd owl in the south-east, they call it the burrowing owl, it doesn't roost in trees or on houses high up. What it does it is finds the burrows of prairie dogs and lives in there. Even though it can't dig since it has claws and wings, it can still live in the places it likes. Just needs a little help."
It might have been accidental, but this was the highest form of punning where both meanings of the word in the sentence are correct."You don't have to talk about if it you don't want to Mom. I get it. When Dad says he finds it hard to be charitable to someone there's not much reason for charity."
It's only when she smiles in response that you realize the accidental pun. "Not much reason for me is there?"
Not sure I understand this? I men, if we use a material for X, it'll get used up, that goes without saying. Or do you mean that we'll lock in the potential uses of Lily's tears from here on out?What is the catch then? The catch is if you use it to help Lilly you cannot use it for anything else no more and no less. The choice if yours
It might have been accidental, but this was the highest form of punning where both meanings of the word in the sentence are correct.
Not sure I understand this? I men, if we use a material for X, it'll get used up, that goes without saying. Or do you mean that we'll lock in the potential uses of Lily's tears from here on out?
... This is modern world. Do Molly and/or Lily know Warhammer 40k? Because we are basically making Lily a spirit stone to guard her soul, and are using tears as the source material. I mean, she's Lileath, not Isha, but still.
Form of Dreams and Nightmares (1 pt. Form Element)
The Splendor takes the form of something that is evocative of the fantastic. It might be a child's toy, a brightly-decorated banner, a monster or carnival mask, or a treasure chest. It might be a kaleidoscope, or a bundle of bright balloons. This Element defines the Splendor's physical form and gives it a character, and that character is aligned with the power of the Dreaming. Other Elements may draw upon this fact.
The Splendor stands out as a powerful work of magic when seen with chimerical eyes or mystic scrutiny, but it seems nigh-impossible to credit it with any specific significance if observed with purely mundane senses. Even when presented with compelling evidence that there's something weird about the object, anyone who hasn't made a magical survey of the Splendor must make a Willpower roll against difficulty (4 + Splendor's rating) to accept such a conclusion.
As an Adornment, it raises the difficulty to affect the user with hostile works of Glamour by one. As the basis for a Fascination, it may have one minor impossible feature such as floating in defiance of gravity, reflecting people's true selves when looked into, or aging backwards in time
Form of Portentous Moonlight (1 pt. Form Element)
The Splendor takes the form of something otherworldly. It may be a religious symbol, an overtly magical object such as a wand or pentacle, or a strange haze. It may be an inchoate thing of coalesced light which can be held and touched. This Element defines the Splendor's physical form and gives it a character, and that character is aligned with the power of the Spirit World. Other Elements may draw upon this fact.
The Splendor can be summoned directly into the Umbra when made to manifest, if its owner desires. As the basis for an Adornment, it grants its user the ability to see and interact with spirits on the other side of the Gauntlet. As the basis for a Fascination, it can interact with both the physical world and the Spirit World.
I think using her tears works more than well enough. We get a lot of advertisement out of it.If we don't want to use white jade we could also use vampire bones, but that might give the wrong impression.
Maybe. We have a decent amount of vampire bits and can get more, tears of a fey Queen are a bit harder to come by.I think using her tears works more than well enough. We get a lot of advertisement out of it.
It's magic. Crystallize the tears and form a diamond-like gem out of them. If those were Maeve's I would say "freeze them and the magic of the splendor will keep them frozen". I mean, splendors are congealed spells. They are normally dissolved in one's anima, so the material component is more symbolic than anything.Maybe. We have a decent amount of vampire bits and can get more, tears of a fey Queen are a bit harder to come by.
In any case the body needs to appear to be made of something, so even if it's fueled by her tears the white Jade look would still work.
Maybe we boil her tears to trap and enhance into "clouds" or something like that if we use them here, or ritually polish stone with them to transfer the power.