[b][center][u]-Somewhere on Arexia Prime-[/u][/center][/b] Though almost entirely unnoticed during their operations in the mass commotion the fleet was thrown into during the time it spent adapting to the current arrangement between the Master Inquisitor and the new Emperor, the infiltrators would not leave totally successful in their endeavour. As the infiltrators' employer would eventually discover, one section of information was conspicuously absent from the massive logs of schematics, manifests, personnel and civilian records and reports, observational reports, and maintenance records was anything substantial pertaining to the Ordo Chronos itself. Everything on the records of every last civilian, human and xenos, as well as all militant forces of the Errant Cohort (now thoroughly mixed in with Gregori's own forces as an extension), and all cargo were fully accessible, but not a single thing about the Ordo Chronos itself showed up with anything but a name and their title within the Ordo. Indeed, beyond the locations of their personal quarters and set aside chambers for Ordo business aboard "The Wandering Chronos" and the fact that their names were listed upon the grand lists of occupants aboard the various vessels, any data or logs pertaining to Ordo business or members were redacted from the main ship cogitator banks. Only public declarations, requests, orders, or commands handed down by Alexius himself, or any of his numerous Inquisitors and authorized members of their retinues, or queries posed to said people showed up in the main cogitator banks. The Ordo obviously kept a private cogitator for its own use that was not linked to any main system, or did away with one altogether and kept their own records some other way. Either way, they kept their private dealings, and any classified information they wanted stored away, under tighter scrutiny than anything else in the fleet. Nothing Ordo specific left those sequestered and vaulted halls of "The Wandering Chronos" unless it was deemed public, and no Ordo business was discussed in any public setting unless it had been cleared by Alexius, otherwise it was only in those private chambers where the Ordo held its meetings and internal affairs where such matters were discussed. Evidently, Alexius still enforced the old maxim which the old Inquisition had stuck to when it came to access to Ordo information: "Blessed is the mind too small for doubt."