She'd been here for 11 days, and this was officially a new record for the longest period of time Tali had ever spent planetside. It was still a lot to get used to, particularly how there was no constant hum of engines and life support systems, and even the Normandy seemed noisy by comparison
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So, when she caught the tail end of Tali heading out toward the roof, she gave her a bit of time and then followed.
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"Oh, hi," she said with a wave of one hand.
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Mostly because people tended not to want them there.
"Though we don't travel timelines. Only space. How do the Corvichi manage that?"
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She thought about it for a moment. "The larger ship I think has its own method, but they taught us to build Doorways through which you can access other timelines. You adjust the tuning of them for the one you want, or you can program them to search for one meeting your specifications." She made a disgusted noise. "I've been trying to build one, but the parts are impossible to come by here."
[OOC: I STG, I looked it up and it specifically says in canon they needed biomass to genegineer for their amino acid requirements. It was too good not to include!]
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She considered for a moment.
"I'm still interested in how those Doorways work, though -- and what's that about modifying biomass?"
Now that could be something useful.
[OOC: HAAAAAAAAA perfect. :D]
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"I never worked much on the biomass machines." Despite jin'Ish's best attempts. "ghess'Rith explained to me the Corvichi require different amino acids than persons - humans," she corrected herself. "So, they take biological material from Earth - mostly plant waste - and genetically alter it to produce what they need. It takes a lot to make a little change, because of the energy, but once started, the change perpetuates itself."
Part of what Tali had said finally registered. "Fifty thousand? Tchai, how many of you are there?"
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She picked up a small pebble and turned it over in her fingers.
"Your Corvichi don't sound too different from my people in some ways, especially if they're dextro-based like we are."
That was oddly comforting in a way, if a little bit surreal.
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She eyed Tali curiously. "I don't know if they were based the same as you, but I could diagram what I remember of the machines, if it would help."
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"Purple's a good color. As for the machines, I'd like that," Tali said quickly. "I don't know if we'd be able to use the same process, depending on how much energy it would take, but if there's a chance we can adapt it somehow it could help. Everything has to be rationed carefully in the flotilla, so anything that might make life easier would help. It's why I'm here in the first place."
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