closed || nothing sacred, all things wild
WHO: Nikos, Caspar, Nell, Carla, Max, Kitty, Marisol, and the letters of Ilias Fabria
WHAT: the assassination of Grand Cleric Agathe of Cumberland
WHEN: mid Cloudreach
WHERE: Kirkwall, Antiva, and the long and lonely road to Val Royeaux
NOTES: part of the mod plot
WHAT: the assassination of Grand Cleric Agathe of Cumberland
WHEN: mid Cloudreach
WHERE: Kirkwall, Antiva, and the long and lonely road to Val Royeaux
NOTES: part of the mod plot

no subject
She touches everything, running her fingers over the impressions of the letters and texture of the paper.
"Anything special in the ink..." she asks absentmindedly.
no subject
That doesn't quite answer the question, but like Nikos will miss the opportunity to shade the rich by calling attention to their stupid luxuries. Expensive ink. Does it write? If so, why spend extra coin, except to say that extra coin was spent?
The letter is written in a neat hand, its code contained within the ruled parameters of the page. Whoever wrote it was taught how to write well, without smudging or obscuring the lines with poor penmanship.
In truth, it is close to how Nikos writes, which is proved when he lays the cipher onto the table, too, for Carla to next look over. His penmanship is good, too. Someone spent a long time with him as a child, going over letters and margins and the rules of composition.
"Otherwise I have ink from Antivan. Someone with a keen eye might be able to tell the difference. Could you, if it was presented to you?"
Like how worried does he have to be. Does the enemy have a forger? Probably. Is there another word for someone who can tell the difference between inks if presented with the opportunity?
no subject
She looks up from the papers then, "And I assume someone has checked it for any little magic charms."
As much as she hates magic and finds it an excuse for anti-intellectualism... the idea of encrypting things with its specificities excites her in its own way. Makes her think of the little eleven artifacts they sometimes let her fiddle with like a child twisting a rubix cube. There was the suggestion of some logic in there; geometry and mathematics which in turn built language and command.
no subject
A small benefit to having mages on the side is being able to confirm for that sort of thing, nearly definitively. A small benefit to Marisol being one of those mages is that Nikos doesn't have to worry about someone thinking him an idiot for asking questions of what might be actually impossible to have done with magic.
With the papers successfully delivered, he can pick up his cup of wine and take a sip. It's a small reward, sort of.
"P-H," he says, repeating the initials she'd spoken aloud. "You're first, as far as I know, to have asked after-- whatever that is. Maybe it's not a thing, in our ink." After all, stranger things have happened. "If we have any luck at all, there will be such a confusion in what follows that no one will be so detailed as to wait for fungus to grow. Quick action should follow. Chaos."
no subject
"But that's work for a chemist," lips licked, setting one letter aside to compare its contents to the others, checking between writers for any further little marks or stains that would add to the authenticity. "If no one else is doing it, we should."
Then no one would be playing this same trick on them.
no subject
"If no one else is doing it, they can't be looking for it, either. It buys us nothing. If it could somehow prove useful, it might be worth it. What would be needed, to do the work of creating it?"
no subject
"You would create a custom litmus test," she answers with distraction. "They're made with plant dye that's sensitive to acidity. They turn certain colors depending on the acid level."
She looks up then, and seems to realize it might behoove her to explain herself. "They test for it, in paint. You won't fool any inspector with a counterfeit painting if the chemistry is wrong. Counterfeiting can be as much a game of organics, as appearances."
A little hint of a thing: that she faked more than just signatures. That one, Isaac, had asked her are you sure you're a good liar? Yes. Yes she was.
no subject
Counterfeiting. His interest piques that much more. A little smirk twists at the corner of his mouth.
"Is there any ink-based deception you aren't gifted in."
It's rhetorical. Mostly. How many other ink-based deceptions are out there, outside of forgery and counterfeiting? More seriously--
"Who do you work for, where you are from?"
no subject
A nasty, prowling teenage girl looking for something, anything to sink her teeth into as she realized that the world disappointed her and there was only so much joy she could out of wrecking the people around her. She'd found Cotnari because he was the type to keep teenagers around, clever or not. He was disgusting in that manner, but he'd had something she'd wanted. Knowledge and finesse and contacts.
"I'm a contract worker. Smugglers, drug runners, art dealers..." she makes a lazy twirling motion with one hand. He gets the idea. "I'm also a con artist, pick pocket, embezzler, hacker, bounty hunter, and when I really can't find anything else to do I, a mechanic."
Perhaps that resume sounded disjointed, but in Carla's mind it all centered around a few key concepts. Details and mechanisms, understanding systems of finely granular nodes that one leveraged to create results. As for the question he'd asked though:
"Organic materials -- inks, paints -- they're much more difficult to fake in the future, the challenge is most of the fun."
no subject
He lets himself take a generous sip of wine and stares down into the cup. Gives it a swirl, half discontent and half thoughtful.
"This--" The letters; he lets the swirl of the cup indicate them-- "will not involve fake ink, or anything but the forging. But there may be more. What we do will change the outcome of this election, if we are successful. And much will change with that. We will have the opportunity to do more, and contract workers could benefit. And help the cause."
More important is the second part. Nikos' mouth twists a little as he admits it. Ardent speech still doesn't agree with him, unless he's in an argument. Then it comes almost naturally.
"If you don't work for anyone, what do you work for. Money," and while that's a guess, most bounty hunters work for bounties, so it can't be too far off. "Chaos. Does anything else make the list?"
no subject
She had tried to remake a life that was dead in an ecosystem that played by different rules. She worries the very tip of her tongue against the point of one sharp tooth. She's changed since then, in subtle ways, the damage of escaping her homeworld's destruction has blossomed in her over time and experience. Her indolence now wears a shade of rage.
"Does it matter?" she finally decides, quirking one of her full eyebrows.