pirated, that is revealed by search.”
“You mean you could use the watermark to follow the dissemination of a given image or video clip?”
He nods.
“Who does this, the actual watermarking?”
“There are companies.”
“Could a watermark be traced to a particular company, its number?”
“Would not be so good for client security.”
“Would it be possible for someone to detect, or extract, a secret watermark? Without knowing the code, or who placed it there, or even being sure it’s there in the first place?”
Voytek considers. “Difficult, but might be done. Hobbs knows these things.”
“Who’s Hobbs?”
“You meet. Man with Curtas.”
Cayce remembers the mean Beckett face, the filthy fingernails. “Really? Why?”
“Maths. Trinity, Cambridge, then works for United States. NSA. Very difficult.”
“The work?”
“Hobbs.”
THE Children’s Crusade is remounting in force, this sunny morning.
She stands in Inverness with Voytek, watching them troop past, looking dusty in this sunlight and medieval, slouching not toward Bethlehem but Camden Lock.
Voytek has put on a pair of shades with small round lenses. They remind Cayce of coins placed on the eyes of a corpse.
“I must meet Magda,” he announces.
“Who is she?”
“Sister. She is selling hats, in Camden Lock. Come.” Voytek pushes off into the current of bodies, clockwise, “Saturday sells in Portobello,the fashion market. Sunday, here.” Cayce follows, thinking, framing questions about watermarking.
The sun on this shuffling press is soothing, and they soon arrive at the lock, carried along by a current of feet responsible for all those billions in athletic-shoe sales.
Voytek has implied that Magda, aside from designing and making hats, does something in advertising herself, although Cayce can’t quite make out what it is.
The market is set back in a maze of Victorian brick.
Warehouses, she supposes, and subterranean stables for the horses that drew the barges down the canals. She isn’t certain she’s ever really gotten to the bottom of the labyrinth, though she’s been here many times. Voytek leads the way, past sheet-hung stalls of dead men’s clothes, film posters, recordings on vinyl, Russian alarm clocks, sundries for smokers of anything but tobacco.
Deeper into the brickwork vaults, away from the sun, illuminated by Lava lamps and fluorescents in nonstandard colors, they find Magda, who aside from those cheekbones looks nothing at all like her brother. Short, pretty, hennaed, laced into a projectile bodice that seems to have been retrofitted from some sort of pressurized flying gear, she is happily packing her goods and preparing to close her stall.
Voytek asks her something in whatever their native tongue is. She answers, laughing.
“She says men from France buy wholesale,” Voytek explains.
“‘She speak good English,’” Magda says to Cayce. “I’m Magda.”
“Cayce Pollard.” They shake hands.
“Casey is advertising too.”
“Probably not the way I am, but don’t remind me,” says Magda, wrapping another hat in tissue and putting it into a cardboard carton with the rest.
Cayce starts to help. Magda’s hats are hats that Cayce could wear, if she wore hats. Gray or black only, knit, crocheted, or yarn-stitched with a sailors needle from thick industrial felt, they are without period or label. “These are nice.”
“Thank you.”
“You’re in advertising? What do you do?”
“Look sorted, go to clubs and wine bars and chat people up. While I’m at it, I mention a clients product, of course favorably. I try to attract attention while I’m doing it, but attention of a favorable sort. I haven’t been doing it long, and I don’t think I like it.”
Magda does indeed speak good English, and Cayce wonders at the difference in their fluencies. But says nothing.
Magda laughs. “I really am his sister,” she says, “but our mother brought me here when I was five, thank God.”
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