"Copper is very soft and malleable is it not?" Jilitse said, "It is unfortunate I do not have my own forge at the moment, I can understand what you mean by having most of what you need in another place." Her usual cold tone was almost dreamy. "A good thing these pieces are thin enough to be pounded together. They would easily fall apart if we don't fasten them together, so we must, at the very least, secure them with something."
The Nuit gave Hadrian a length of wire that could be wound around the body and the spring to secure them in place. She pointed to her drawing, "This here, try to secure the two springs underneath and then secure them tight enough by wounding the wire around the body." She handed him a cutter and pliers, "Use these as you see fit." She pointed to the tip of the frog, "When you get here pound it lightly with the hammer, and do the same underneath. That will somewhat secure the coil in place, and if you do it right it won't fall apart."
"Golems can be made out of any material, but they cannot function properly if the mechanisms do not allow the enactment of the desired movement," Perhaps, this was a lesson in itself. Jilitse was feeling a little uncanny towards Hadrian, as this was the first time she ever had someone volunteer to help her. Not quite an apprentice, though. "This thing will have springs underneath it, giving it the ability to jump like a frog. That's about it at the moment. Sounds basic, but then again if you think about it, Animation deals with transferring one soul into another. That means I'm copying the frog into that thing right there. Four limbs, two limbs." She made Hadrian note the difference in anatomy. "In Sahova, as you may have seen, most golems run on wheels. That's because imitating the limb functions of a human, or any animal, requires one to be a highly-skilled gadgeteer. Animating something that does not have the same kind of parts requires a little bit of creativity. It is a marvel to know that we are able to give life into otherwise useless pieces."
"I expect you do not only wish to watch the ritual, but you plan to learn the discipline as well?" She asked, opening another small wooden box.
She then proceeded to demonstrate how to draw a ritual circle. Using a drawing compass and a fresh sheet of paper, she drew two circles touching on their sides and then showed it to Hadrian. "So that you will understand how it works." Marking the first circle as 'source' she explained, "This is where we shall place the frog in the jar. The frog is our pattern, a guide to the kind of life force we will imbue to the animated object." She wrote 'destination' in the other circle, "You little craft will be placed here, where it will receive the transferred soul vector from the source. It is akin to pouring water from one bucket to another, only that you are not able to transfer water as water itself."
"Animation allows us to imbue life, or at the very least, life-like traits into our creations. There is a method in creating a soul, although it varies depending on the animator. Do remember that creating a soul does not exactly mean like your soul, or mine. Animation cannot create all four layers of the soul. We can only work into creating the," she raised one finger each count, "soulcore, persona, and astral body."
She smiled, "It does not deter us, though. At the most basic levels we only need to teach one directive to the golem. In this case, I shall teach it to jump. If you become more competent, you can incorporate a little bit of sentience to it. Nothing extremely complicated. I shall teach the same frog to respond to a challenge, and I shall teach it how to jump over certain obstacles. That's the plan anyway."
