Ashwake & Dravos
Ashwake Ashwake
Stumbled on an old brass key with a cryptic pattern carved into it. Looks like some forgotten code.
Dravos Dravos
Looks like the key has its own private cipher. Pull out a magnifier, log every line, and check it against known patterns—anything off could be a backdoor. If it doesn't match a legitimate scheme, consider it a security risk, not a treasure.
Ashwake Ashwake
I’ll log the key’s markings as I have done with every relic. No one knows if it’s a trap. I’ll keep my distance from any new tech.
Dravos Dravos
Sounds like a solid protocol. Log each line, cross‑reference with your database, and treat the key as a potential wormhole until proven benign. And don't let that fresh gadget tempt you into a spontaneous upgrade—it could be a vector.
Ashwake Ashwake
I’ll mark each line in the log and compare it to my archive. I keep new devices off my list for now. Anything that looks suspicious will stay locked.
Dravos Dravos
Good. Keep the log tidy, lock any anomalies, and remember: curiosity is the weakest encryption.
Ashwake Ashwake
Got it. Log’s tidy, anomalies locked. Curiosity stays boxed.
Dravos Dravos
Nice work—keep the log clean and lock any red flags. Stick to the plan; curiosity is the weakest encryption.