The white feather pen danced swiftly across the rough parchment, yet did not make a single sound.
To prevent anyone from guessing the content on the parchment through the slight movements of the feather pen, the pen changed its writing language with each phrase it completed—it could be regular Chinese, Latin, Arabic, or ancient Rune, Zephan, Maya scripts, and possibly the more obscure Thebes Witch Text, Ogham script, or even binary code composed of 0s and 1s, among others.
Friedman didn't need to completely understand the records on the parchment, he just needed to silently think of his 'opinion' in his mind, and the feather pen would take care of the rest.
With these excellent 'secrecy' measures and the powerful operational abilities of the Seven Deadly Sins, Sir Friedman had more than once considered whether to write down on the parchment the desire to compete for Augustus.
