Persuade the Gracious Widow/Tables
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Difficulty[edit]
Success Text[edit]
Question before the Board | Success Description |
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3 | "I have been there," says the Widow. "When much younger. Not a pleasant territory. The ground preserves the flesh of the dead." |
5 | "It would be interesting to meet the inhabitants of those hills," she says, with a little smile. |
10, 12 - 20, 22 - 24, 26 - 33 | "We do best to remove people who don't know their own mind or who have joined the board as an entertainment," she says. "Those of us who remain should be clear in our purpose." |
11 | "The supervision of the Efficient Commissioner is restrictive," says the Widow. "In her absence, we would in time have more freedom to explore new sources of income." |
35 | "She meddles," says the Gracious Widow. "Preserve us from those who think they know what is best for everyone else." |
37 | The Gracious Widow enthusiastically encourages getting rid of the Implacable Detective. This may have something to do with the members of the Widow's gang who have been locked up through the Detective's intervention, over the years. |
210 | The Widow gives the train design a curious glance, and appears puzzled by a few of the decorative choices, but she does not oppose the plan. |
400 | The Widow nods Yea. She did buy a very large number of shares when she became a director. |
500 | The Widow nods stiffly. "The other route would be preferable," she says. "But either will do." |
510 | The Widow votes in favour. There is a particular quirk to her smile. Is she planning for a few of the Hellworms to 'escape' the Tracklayers and end in her own possession? |
520 - 523, 525 - 529 | "It will be a profitable venture," says the Widow. "And one hears of very unusual goods available in that region." |
620 | She shrugs eloquently. The person who fills the office of Lord Mayor interests her very little; she does not acknowledge their power or care for their influence. |
700 | The Gracious Widow indicates that she does not mind who holds Balmoral, as long as it is open again. |
710 | "Why not?" says the Gracious Widow, with a small shrug. |
720 | The Gracious Widow smiles and nods approvingly. A solidarity amongst the widows of the Neath, perhaps? |
905 | "She is competent at least," the Widow allows. |
910 | "Yes. He is better when occupied," the Widow says. |
932 | She agrees, on the strict condition that the resulting animal be taller than the legendary beast ridden by the Clay Highwayman. Not that it will be her animal afterwards. Not precisely. But rivalries like this have subtle rules. |
941 | "Perhaps it will make the stations safer," she allows. |
1000 - 1020 | "It would be to our advantage to have friends as strong as the Bazaar," says the Widow. "Or stronger, perhaps." |
1100 - 1110 | "It would be good to extend the reach of our arm," the Widow says. "And to gather intelligence on our operational capacities in the future." |
1200 | "We will need to oversee the connection closely," the Widow remarks. "But I will permit it." |
Failure Text[edit]
Question before the Board | Failure Description |
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1 - 3 | The Gracious Widow doubts your maps. She frowns at them and makes several pencilled annotations. |
4, 7, 9 | "Perhaps another way would be better," she remarks. She does not bother to propose an alternate route; she does not consider this her responsibility. |
10, 12 - 17, 19, 20, 22 - 24, 26, 28 - 33, 35, 37 | The Widow's phrasing is impossible to reproduce, but the gist is that once you've finally got the horses in place, you might as well drive your coach-and-six rather than make any more changes. |
100, 105, 115, 120, 140, 160, 170, 181 - 187 | The Gracious Widow does not admire the style of your proposed station. It is inelegant. She suspects that the taste of Devils has affected its design. |
130 | The Gracious Widow regards the proposal with profound distaste. "Buildings were beautiful once," she says. "And then London came down and crushed them all." |
200 | "We do not require guns. We require respect." The Gracious Widow looks around, and no one has the nerve to speak. "If our enemies have respect for us, they will not steal from us." |
210 | Is it necessary to spend all that money on train fittings that will quickly wear out […]? The Gracious Widow suggests several alternate approaches that would simply render the passengers not in a fit mind to experience (or remember) any discomfort. |
220, 240 - 280 | "A contemptible proposal," says the Widow. She is too disgusted with the idea to explain why, apparently. |
300 | "This statement is paste in the mouth," says the Widow. |
310 - 320, 340, 932 | The Gracious Widow does not approve, and says so. |
400 | "Yes, dividends are possible," the Widow admits, but her frown means that she disagrees. Perhaps she would be more comfortable removing money from the business in a quieter and less regulated way. |
500 | "Not a method to game with," says the Widow, as though you'd proposed an unsound gambling practice. |
510 | "Likely to be overcharged," she says. "The Devils never write a fair contract." |
520, 522, 525 - 529 | The Widow pauses for a long time. "We are passing beyond where the merchants of the Fourth City were allowed to go under any circumstance," she says. "We should be certain that the rewards will compensate for the risk." |
700, 720 | "Better a different ally," says the Gracious Widow, a little unexpectedly. "One who can open up lines of Surface trade." Indeed? |
800, 905, 910 | "Not that one," says the Gracious Widow, without elaborating. |
931, 933 - 934, 941 | "No." The Widow leaves it at that. |
1100 | "No," says the Widow. "This is an unnecessary risk of shared resources. It does not do, in business, to tangle different interests." |
1200 | "No," says the Widow. "It will flourish better in darkness and out of sight of the constables." |
Other Votes | Second paragraph of Failure Description |
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The portrait on the wall is snoring. Someone gets up to hang a veil over it. The furnishing of this place should really be replaced, but it's difficult to arrange when Devils are your landlords. | |
Furnace Ancona's Vote | […] the […] Widow always looks out for her own, and for everyone else not at all. The Widow makes an obscure but almost certainly insulting remark about ancient standards of integrity […] The left side of Furnace's helmet hisses like a kettle. […] |