Reverse Index
Referencing “Codex 'Doubt' Auditor”
Every codex entry that links to Codex 'Doubt' Auditor. 21 entries.
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Advocates Guild
Licensed cruelty with gloves, seals, and a fee table
Licensed fraternity of Citation Advocates that turns Synodal quarrels into ledger-duels, sells precedent, polices pits, and calls the resulting injuries civil peace.
Codex Ref. XII.28.01-001

Blessed Clerk Harlowe “Dry-Ink”
The closed stamp pad by which mercy learned its office hours
Tolerated vocational patron of Confessor-Booth Clerks: a devotionally sufficient blessed whose dry stamp pad sanctifies refused mercy and audit-safe cruelty.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-102

Blessed Marrow-Eye Lestine
The saint who heard doubt until she heard herself
Blessed Marrow-Eye Lestine, restricted patron of Codex Auditors, heard hesitation in choirs, confession abstracts, and finally herself.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-100

Booth Proliferation Decree of A.S. 112
One wooden box every three blocks, and Europe called it grace
A.S. 112 Bureau of Rites decree mandating one registered confession booth per three city blocks, turning confession into local, billable, auditable street infrastructure.
Codex Ref. VII.8.10-015

Citation Pragmatists
The useful lie, properly receipted, may keep a district alive
Informal Citation Advocate faction that argues intent, exploits ambiguity, and keeps clients, convoys, widows, and districts alive long enough to be billed.
Codex Ref. XII.28.03-001

Citation Purists
The clause is the mercy, and the Creator help the client
Audit-favoured faction of Citation Advocates who worship clean custody, strict text, and clauses sharp enough to execute a client while preserving the file.
Codex Ref. XII.28.02-001

Confession Reform of A.S. 104
The paragraph that made sin stand in columns
A.S. 104 Bureau of Rites reform that standardised sin categories, introduced rubric cards, authorised lay intake clerks, and made confession countable at scale.
Codex Ref. VII.8.10-014

Erasure of Veyss
The man who asked for arrears and received absence
A.S. 148 trench-court erasure in which Lieutenant Veyss lost standing over a missing ancestral tithe-stamp, and every dependent ledger corrected him into absence.
Codex Ref. VII.8.10-048

Market Drift Years
When Tuesday briefly defeated theology
The A.S. 98–103 Rhineland civic-devotional decline in market Creed recitation, turnip theology, barter-oaths, and the embarrassment that birthed the Street-Vicar Corps.
Codex Ref. VII.8.10-025

Marrow-Quill of Cologne
The advocate who taught grammar to leave bodies hungry
Cologne Citation Advocate and Ledger Duellist whose week of three duels struck a rival household from standing, bread, gates, contracts, and consecrated earth.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-128

Mercy Rationing Reform of A.S. 134
Processing decides who may survive meanwhile; forgiveness is filed elsewhere
A.S. 134 Bureau of Rites reform, affirmed by Bureau of Doctrine, that restricted mercy stamps to licensed confessors, separated booth processing from forgiveness, and made unauthorised kindness auditable.
Codex Ref. VII.8.10-017

Mercy Vicars
The quiet hand still writes names
Internal Street-Vicar faction favouring private correction, whispered Creed repair, delayed marking, and mercy so thoroughly filed that even compassion becomes evidence.
Codex Ref. VIII.1.07-001

Pragmatists of the Bureau of Records
Mercy enters the Ledger wearing a counterfeit collar
Night-correction faction within the Bureau of Records, tolerated for making the Roll function wherever pure truth would freeze the queue before Matins.
Codex Ref. XII.9.03-002

Red Lanterns
Correction must be seen, preferably before the skin cools
Bureau of Purity street squads who turn doctrine into immediate heat: seizure, crimson-glass branding, witness shock, and the public paperwork of scarred faces.
Codex Ref. VIII.1.07-001

Rubric Clerks
Compress the confession, preserve the pension, burn the remainder
Dominant Trench Court faction that compresses dangerous testimony into sanctioned categories, preserving morale, pensions, and the furnace's appetite.
Codex Ref. XII.47.03-091

Saint Oren of the Corner
A gentler ancestor for a harder office
Tolerated patron of the Doctrine Street-Vicar Corps, Saint Oren corrected a Cologne market corner by repeated Creed-song before the Corps acquired chalk, quotas, and teeth.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-112

Shadow Archivists
The second copy is always a heresy until Records needs it
Alleged Records Scribe faction preserving unsanctioned copies of corrected rolls, officially absent, practically feared, and dangerous under the right lamp.
Codex Ref. XII.9.03-003

Silent Confessional of Vienna
A cabinet need not hear you to make you confess
Rumoured Viennese black-iron confession apparatus whose victims emerged senseless yet speaking, preserved by Doctrine as a repurposed warning to every booth clerk who trusts furniture.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.61-001

Standing Order 22-D
The law that taught silence to file itself
Standing Order 22-D makes silence legible: the pause before assent, the scar before paperwork, the late answer that becomes evidence.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.99-084

The Lintel Pogroms
When fourteen correct doors made a district homeless
The A.S. 112 Lintel Pogroms stripped Cologne's river-quarter doors after fourteen perfect false Knots exposed stolen stencils, counterfeit punches, hidden bodies, and a trembling hand fit for a wall.
Codex Ref. VII.8.10-112

Warden Sermon Trials
Seven comforters tried, and seven hundred mouths learned caution
A.S. 134 sealed Purity tribunal where seven Licensed Consolators were tried for pastoral overreach, creating the precedent that taught Lantern heresy to hide better.
Codex Ref. VII.8.10-044
