Glade 87 123
The Office of Imperial Revenue was a massive, imposing building, with multiple wings and many tiny little offices and closets — with very little to differentiate the two. Alike in locked doors and layered wards, it was difficult to get the full picture just by standing outside it. Carina lingered near the steps to the front door, a cigarette held between her fingers, burning up faster than she could smoke it. As focused on her Semblance as she was, it wasn't until it was reduced to a stub and burnt her that she dropped it and snuffed it out with a boot-clad foot.
She had stopped there every night for the past week, briefly enough for a smoke, her runed eye scanning and analyzing as much as she could before she felt she'd be noticed by the guards and ushered away. So far they hadn't noticed her, neither magically nor visually. It may have been helped by the particularly large shrub she stood next to, but also her cloak of concealment, averting the eyes of people who would have normally glanced her way.
The eclipse made it dark, always, and monsters lurked in the night, but in this part of the city it was well taken care of by the Kathar. At this point, she had been waiting for one of the employees at the OIR to make a mistake — an open window, a side-door not fully closed. Even with what seemed a calamity, the magic around the building was just as strong and the money flowed through the emperor's coffers with just as much importance as usual. Tax evasion was one of the more serious crimes, Carina had found out, as it had earned her a stay in prison for nearly a season. While she could have perhaps escaped, patience won out, and she was released with a warning and a debt. Not that she had earned much in the Imperium for them to tax. Most importantly, she wanted to see what information they had on her here in the tax office. As the Empire revolved around money, she had learned that many important dossiers were kept in some wing or another in rooms of endless filing cabinets. She just had to find hers.
Carina continued her walk, this time walking towards the side of the building. No one was watching her yet. Portals may have been too flashy for this sort of thing, and she didn't want to leave a magical residue. She had already reduced her aura to be as nonchalant as possible — visible, so as to not arouse suspicion, but devoid of magic and interest.
A woman with a briefcase came out of a door that Carina had almost missed, as warded as it was from Semblance. It swung wide open and had a slow arc closed; slow enough that she was able to Blink and catch it with a finger before it was crushed. The woman heard the sounds of magic and shuffling feet, but Carina was in the door before she caught her eye.
The halls were brightly lit by electric, almost blinding lights in the ceiling. She had little hope of slinking into the shadows, but with her cloak wrapped around her and a straightened posture, she hoped to go far. The inside was far less warded. It required less upkeep to simply make the most difficult part getting in, especially in such a vast labyrinthine location. Carina's runed eye already began to fill in the blanks in her map, the things that had been hidden from view on the outside. Locked doors, closed doors. Where people tread, where people were most likely to tread. Nothing yet on paperwork, but it was technically after-hours, and the building was mostly empty.
She walked casually, though no one was nearby to listen to her gait, and one eye was trapped in the visual mess of building auras. It was a well-maintained building, for sure, and the doors were locked on both sides, an endless field of offices. Many of them did not even have names, but she could see behind the doors that they were used. Finally, finally — up a flight of stairs and to the right — she spotted a room that had been locked, but the door not fully closed, resting on the deadbolt. It was not what she was looking for, but it was a start.
Carina was normally very, very careful, but she had lost her patience for just a moment, and when she opened the door she found herself face to face with someone whose aura had seemed so unremarkable, she had not noticed them at all.