Tina Strobos' Pocket | |
---|---|
Origin |
Tina Strobos |
Type |
Coat Pocket |
Effects |
Miniaturization for concealment |
Downsides |
Partial perception filtering |
Activation |
Touch |
Section |
|
[Source] |
Origin[]
As a student of medicine, Tina Strobos upheld the Hippocratic oath - do no harm. Her aid appeared as support for the Dutch resistance against Nazi occupation. She hid Jews, communists, insurgents and more in a secret room within her attic. An emergency bell and walkway out were also installed to help any refugees escape during raids. Arrested nine times by the Gestapo, Strobos calmly talked her way out of every interrogation without letting any information slip.
Bicycling across Amsterdam was really a cover to ferry weapons, radios, food and paperwork between resistance members. Passports were either hand-forged or fenced from local pickpockets; she even nicked papers from guests at her aunt's funeral. Her family had no problem, as her mother and gran were just as intensely invested in the operation. She also hosted underground pathology classes and completed her medical degrees after the country was retaken.
Effects[]
Anything the user touches can be shrunk down to miniscule size and kept in their pocket like a random keychain without arising suspicion. Can also compress people into miniatures, but will result in sickness if kept tiny for long periods of time.
When returned to full size, the object will experience partial invisibility. It will disappear when concentrated upon by viewers, but still be visible within the corners of their eye. At least until they turn to look, and then it's just emptiness in front of their face. Comes in handy for smuggling sensitive tools and large equipment undetected, but not when trying to read data gauges or transport normally.